In the Matter of Central Ice Cream Company, Debtor. Appeals of Joan G. Rafel and George S. Kamberos, Bernard C. Chaitman, Trustee

836 F.2d 1068
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1988
Docket86-2116, 86-3111 and 87-1022
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 836 F.2d 1068 (In the Matter of Central Ice Cream Company, Debtor. Appeals of Joan G. Rafel and George S. Kamberos, Bernard C. Chaitman, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Central Ice Cream Company, Debtor. Appeals of Joan G. Rafel and George S. Kamberos, Bernard C. Chaitman, Trustee, 836 F.2d 1068 (7th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

People who win a big jackpot in the lottery discover that they have more lifelong friends than they remembered. Central Ice Cream Co. won a $52 million verdict in state court in a fraud and contract suit against McDonald’s Corp. and discovered that people owned 372% of its shares. Lawyers, too, have queued up. This case is about their requests for fees as sanctions for overzealousness in pursuing claims to the kitty.

I

When it won the verdict Central was bankrupt, its suit the estate’s principal asset. McDonald’s filed post-trial motions but offered a settlement of $15.5 million if Central accepted before the trial court acted. Central’s board of directors accepted. McDonald’s also wanted a release of any personal claims of Thomas Cummings, Central’s president and the record owner of a majority of its stock; the board and the trustee agreed to apportion $4 million of the $15.5 million to satisfy Cummings. The remaining $11.5 million would pay Central’s trial counsel and cover the firm’s debts; if it would not leave anything for equity investors other than Cummings, the creditors were unconcerned.

The board, joined by the trustee, recommended that the bankruptcy court approve the settlement. Some of Central’s purported shareholders accepted this, but “holders” of more than 300% of its shares protested and attempted to intervene as parties. McDonald’s then agreed to pay $15.5 million to Central without a release from Cummings. The bankruptcy judge accepted filings and received evidence offered by the shareholders but neither granted nor denied the motions to intervene. The shareholders’ evidence included the testimony of experienced attorneys, who opined that the 70% discount from the $52 million verdict was too steep, given the merits of the case and what they saw as the likeli *1070 hood of its affirmance. In the end the judge approved the compromise of $15.5 million. 59 B.R. 476 (Bkr.N.D.Ill.1985). The bankruptcy judge wrote (id. at 487):

In approving a settlement in a liquidation proceeding, the Court must determine what course of action is in the best interests of the Estate, with major consideration to the interests of the creditors. ... Given the fact that approval of the settlement will result here in sufficient proceeds to pay in full all allowed claims of creditors, no creditor has or can maintain a legitimate objection to the proposed settlement. The Court has considered the views of the objecting shareholders and persons who claim an equity interest in Central.... [Ujnder all the circumstances the settlement is also fair to stockholders, in that it will provide a million dollars to distribute to stockholders. To seek greater return for the shareholders at risk to the creditors would be most unfair. A creditor supplies to a business in return for getting paid an agreed price. A stockholder puts up risk capital as an investment. The creditor’s interest is given major consideration because it is fair that creditors who expected and deserved no risk should not now risk losing all in an effort to recover more for investors.

The bankruptcy judge withheld some $143,-000 of the fees of Becker & Tenenbaum, the trustee’s special litigation counsel, on account of its role in negotiating the $4 million payment to Cummings. Theodore Becker was Cummings’s personal lawyer as well as the trustee’s special counsel, which the bankruptcy judge thought to be an unpardonable conflict of interest. 59 B.R. at 489-92. And foreshadowing what was to come, the judge chastised the trustee's counsel for submitting a blunderbuss request for fees. Id. at 494-95.

All but one of the purported stockholders appealed to the district court. When the trustee moved to dismiss these appeals on the ground that shareholders’ interests are represented by the trustee, Nicholas G. Ma-nos of Epton, Mullen & Druth, representing Joan G. Rafel and George S. Kambe-ros — the record owners of 49% of Central’s stock — filed a brief defending his clients’ right to appeal. The appeal was appropriate, this brief said, because the bankruptcy judge had allowed Rafel and Kamberos to intervene as parties, and parties may appeal as of right. The brief also contended that the trustee could not represent the stockholders, because of the conflict of interest and the trustee’s apparent preference of the interests of creditors over the equity claimants.

The district court dismissed this and all of the other appeals for want of jurisdiction, concluding that the stockholders were not the proper parties. 62 B.R. 357 (N.D. 111.1986). The court later denied the trustee’s request for sanctions under Fed.R.Civ. P. 11 against stockholders other than Rafel and Kamberos. 1 This claim the court granted in part. The court concluded that the shareholders had a plausible argument, given the trustee’s conflict of interest and the fact that the dispute in the bankruptcy court largely was about the size of the surplus that would be available for equity investors. The brief filed by Rafel and Kamberos, however, represented that the bankruptcy court had allowed them to intervene. The district court catalogued eight misrepresentations that it viewed as serious and substantial, writing that “[n]o attorney who made a reasonable inquiry into the facts of this case before drafting a response to the motion to dismiss could have been mistaken regarding this central issue.” The court also concluded that attorney Manos's request for sanctions under Rule 11 — a motion contending that the trustee’s request for sanctions was a violation of Rule 11 — was itself sanctionably frivolous. The court thought this motion untimely in part, addressed in part to matters that occurred in other courts, and just plain silly. (Mr. Manos contended, for example, that the trustee’s papers violated Rule 11 by referring to Rafel and Kambe- *1071 ros as “putative” shareholders rather than “prima facie” shareholders.) The district court specified:

The Trustee is to submit to this court a statement of attorney’s fees and costs incurred in responding to the misrepresentations made by Manos, [Rafel, and Kamberos] in their response to the Trustee’s motion to dismiss. The Trustee ... [is] to submit to this court a statement of attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in responding to the motion for sanctions presented on behalf of Joan Rafel and George Kamberos by Manos.

The court had called for two statements of fees — one dealing with the cost of responding to a single paper, the other dealing with the cost of responding to a portion of another paper. What the court received was a horse of another color. The trustee submitted a single request for $172,491.82, representing 1,335.55 hours of attorneys’ time. Scraping himself off the ceiling, the district judge vacated the award of fees— although he left standing, as a sanction, the conclusion that Manos had violated Rule 11.

The proceedings in the district court so far had been conducted on paper, with no new discovery or hearings. The judge remarked that it “is unbelievable that 1,335 hours could have been spent reasonably or anything even approaching that figure” for the whole proceedings in that court. “Even a tenth of that figure ...

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Bluebook (online)
836 F.2d 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-central-ice-cream-company-debtor-appeals-of-joan-g-ca7-1988.