Jensen v. Dunivent (In Re Dewey)

237 B.R. 783, 16 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 236, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1025, 1999 WL 641627
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 1999
DocketBAP No. WY-99-005. Bankruptcy No. 97-21166
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 237 B.R. 783 (Jensen v. Dunivent (In Re Dewey)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Dunivent (In Re Dewey), 237 B.R. 783, 16 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 236, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1025, 1999 WL 641627 (bap10 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

BOHANON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Georg Jensen (“Jensen”), former counsel to Curtis D. Dewey, the Chapter 13 debtor, appeals three orders of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Wyoming: (1) an order continuing a hearing on his fee application (“Continuation Order”); (2) an order denying his fee application without prejudice (“Fee Order”); and (3) an order denying his motion to alter or amend the Fee Order (“Reconsideration Order”). For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the bankruptcy court.

I. Background

Jensen represented the Chapter 13 debtor in his bankruptcy case. The bankruptcy court confirmed the debtor’s Chapter 13 plan, which provided, in relevant part, that Class 1 administrative expense claims were to be paid prior to Class 7 general unsecured creditors. The only disclosed Class 1 claim was Jensen’s claim in the amount of $910 for attorney’s fees and expenses, but this claim had been paid by the debtor prepetition. The plan stated that additional attorney’s fees incurred postpetition would be paid as a Class 1 administrative expense claim, provided that the bankruptcy court allowed such a claim. A liquidation analysis provided to the bankruptcy court in conjunction with the confirmation of the debtor’s plan stated that the debtor’s attorney’s fees were in the amount of $0.00. Under the plan, the debtor was to make payments from future earnings to the Chapter 13 trustee *786 (“Trustee”) in the amount of $115.00 for a period of 36 months.

At the confirmation hearing, Jensen was ordered to submit a confirmation order, which he did approximately 20 days later, and the bankruptcy court entered the order on the date that it was submitted. One day prior to submitting the confirmation order, Jensen filed a “Chapter 13 Fee Application.” In the Application, Jensen .requested $3,922.50 in fees and $380.56 in expenses, and disclosed that he had been paid $950 (contrary to the $910 disclosed in the debtor’s plan) by the debtor prepetition. The fees and expenses were to be paid outside of the debtor’s plan. With the exception of $225.00, all of the fees and expenses requested in the Application were incurred well before the confirmation hearing, and the $225.00 was incurred on the date of the confirmation hearing.

The Trustee and Doris Dewey, the debt- or’s former spouse (“Dewey”), 1 objected to Jensen’s Application, arguing that Jensen could not be paid outside of the confirmed Plan, and that if the Application were approved, the term of the confirmed plan would need to be extended beyond 36 months. Dewey also maintained that the plan was filed in bad faith because the debtor’s intent to pay Jensen outside of the plan indicated that he was capable of making a larger payment to the Trustee.

Jensen later submitted a “Corrected Chapter 13 Fee Application,” in which he subtracted the $950 he had been paid by the debtor prepetition from the total amount of fees requested in the initial Application, and stated that the balance of his requested fees and expenses would be paid through the debtor’s confirmed plan. The Trustee and Dewey renewed their objections to Jensen’s corrected Application, arguing that if the Application were to be approved there would be no funds to distribute to Class 7 unsecured creditors. Dewey also argued that the debtor’s plan would not have been confirmed had the bankruptcy court known of the fees and expenses requested in Jensen’s corrected Application because it would not have been feasible. See 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(4) and (6). 2 The bankruptcy court sustained the objections to Jensen’s corrected Application, stating from the bench that:

[I]f the parties show that if, in fact, the Court were to approve these fees as they have been applied for, that combined with the plan that has already been confirmed, we find that nothing would go to unsecured creditors. It’s my thought that if such a plan were originally proposed, it probably would [not] [sic] have been confirmed by this Court. It seems ludicrous that we go down the line and then we amend the plan into something that would not have been confirmed in the first place.
What I’m going to do is I’m going to continue pending the debtor’s motion to modify the plan to accommodate at the same percentages that are in the plan now for unsecured creditors. I want that done within 15 days from today. If that is done and modification is approved, these fees will be approved as part of the plan that is modify [sic].

The Continuation Order memorialized this bench ruling.

During the 15 day period ordered by the bankruptcy court in the Continuation Order, Jensen filed a motion to withdraw as the debtor’s attorney. -He maintained that his interest in having his fees paid through the debtor’s confirmed plan created a conflict of interest because the debtor was not obligated to modify the terms of the plan to include payment of his claim as suggest *787 ed by the bankruptcy court in the Continuation Order. The bankruptcy court granted Jensen’s motion to withdraw.

Several months later, the bankruptcy court entered the Fee Order, denying Jensen’s corrected Application. In so doing, the bankruptcy court indicated that at the time that Jensen filed his initial Application requesting payment outside of the debtor’s plan, he knew that he was required to be paid through the plan. See In re Gantz, 209 B.R. 999, 1003 (10th Cir. BAP 1997) (Jensen was a party in this case). The bankruptcy court stated that there were insufficient funds to pay Jensen’s Class 1 claim even if Class 7 unsecured creditors were to receive no further distribution. The bankruptcy court also noted that Jensen had failed to remedy the problems with his claim by modifying the debtor’s plan to extend its term or by reducing the amount of his claim.

Clearly misunderstanding the bankruptcy court’s Fee Order, Jensen moved for reconsideration, arguing that the bankruptcy court erred in finding that his fees were objectionable because they were to be paid outside of the plan. Denying Jensen’s motion in the Reconsideration Order, the bankruptcy court stated that it understood that Jensen’s corrected application sought payment of his fees through the debtor’s confirmed plan, but:

[T]he confirmed chapter 13 plan does not contain sufficient remaining funds to pay the full amount of fees requested and to satisfy the hypothetical chapter 7 liquidation analysis. Furthermore, the court considers a return to unsecured creditors of 0% a serious question of good faith.
To allow an untimely fee application in excess of the amounts stated in the plan created potential problems that jeopar: dized the chapter 13. Therefore, the court provided counsel with an opportunity to propose a remedy. Counsel chose not to proceed further.

Jensen timely appealed the bankruptcy court’s final Continuation Order, Fee Order and Reconsideration Order, 3 and the parties have consented to this Court’s jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
237 B.R. 783, 16 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 236, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1025, 1999 WL 641627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-dunivent-in-re-dewey-bap10-1999.