Kagan v. Stubbe (In Re El San Juan Hotel Corp.)

239 B.R. 635, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1255, 1999 WL 787877
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 1999
DocketBAP PR98-048, PR97-083, PR98-057
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 239 B.R. 635 (Kagan v. Stubbe (In Re El San Juan Hotel Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kagan v. Stubbe (In Re El San Juan Hotel Corp.), 239 B.R. 635, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1255, 1999 WL 787877 (bap1 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

These consolidated appeals raise a central question: When creditors vote to replace a chapter 7 trustee because of dissatisfaction with the trustee’s management, does new counsel for the estate have a conflict of interest by reason of his existing (and undisclosed) representation of the original trustee in his capacity as trustee in another bankruptcy case? Resolution of this issue implicates the compensation to be awarded to both counsel and the successor trustee. The questions of conflict and compensation are highlighted here by the refusal of the successor trustee, on the advice of counsel, to prosecute mismanagement claims against the original trustee notwithstanding the later successful prosecution of such claims by the United States for the benefit of the estate. The bankruptcy court denied some, but not all, compensation of counsel, Rodrigo Otero Bigles (“Otero”), and made no deduction from compensation due the successor trustee, Hans López Stubbe (“López”). It declined to remove López as trustee. Otero and a creditor, Marshall J. Kagan (“Kagan”), appeal. Concluding that no compensation should be paid Otero and that López should be removed as trustee after a reduction in his compensation, we reverse.

I. FACTS

The material facts are undisputed, but certainly not their legal consequences. We draw them from the transcript, the bankruptcy court’s findings, the parties’ stipulation, various documents in the record, and the many published decisions which have been spawned by the activities of the original trustee, Hector Rodríguez Estrada (“Rodríguez”). 1 The tortuous his *639 tory of this case began on May 20, 1980 with the filing of a voluntary chapter 11 petition by the Debtor, El San Juan Hotel Corp. The Debtor operated one of the premier hotels in San Juan, El San Juan, which had been in financial difficulty for years and had run up some $40 million of debt prior to the filing. Kagan had been the Debtor’s comptroller for less than a year before the bankruptcy filing.

On July 10, 1980, the bankruptcy court appointed Rodríguez as the chapter 11 trustee. For reasons that are unclear, the court permitted Rodríguez to serve without bond. Kagan continued as the Debtor’s comptroller. The operation of the hotel by Rodríguez was a disaster. Kagan, a C.P.A. with hotel experience, bombarded Rodríguez with memoranda advising him of numerous actions which Kagan believed should be taken to reduce expenses and increase income. Rodríguez largely ignored the advice. For example, instead of reducing payroll Rodríguez increased it. He failed to pay payroll taxes to the federal and local government, thereby incurring interest and penalties in addition to the tax debt. He operated the hotel largely for his own personal benefit, drawing a weekly paycheck, enjoying an expense account, remodeling and making personal use of the presidential suite, and getting a 50% discount on the hotel’s charge for his daughter’s wedding reception. The Debtor continued to lose millions of dollars under his management. Rodríguez concealed this from the court and from creditors. It should have been obvious to Rodríguez early on that a successful chapter 11 reorganization was impossible in the context of such operations. Yet he continued to bleed the Debtor, run up debt and file false reports.

In December of 1982, after over two years of this, Kagan testified at a public hearing conducted by the Puerto Rico House of Representatives’ Committee on Tourism. He said the hotel would soon have to close because of poor management by Rodríguez. Rodríguez also testified, accusing Kagan of engaging in a conspiracy to close the hotel. The hearing was televised and reported in the newspapers. On December 29, 1982, Rodríguez fired Kagan on the stated ground of poor job performance. The hotel closed in March of 1983. On March 23, 1983, the court converted the case to chapter 7, permitting Rodríguez to serve as chapter 7 trustee, this time with a bond. At about the same time, Connecticut General Life Insurance Company foreclosed under its first mortgage on the hotel’s property.

The United States, to whom Rodríguez had incurred over $500,000 in postpetition tax obligations, filed a motion objecting to Rodríguez continuing to serve as chapter 7 trustee. Kagan organized other opposition to Rodríguez. In September of 1983 creditors unanimously voted to replace Rodríguez with López. Kagan immediately informed López of his allegations of wrongdoing by Rodríguez and demanded action. As conceded by López at the hearing on the present motion, the major reason López was brought into the case was to investigate the management of Rodríguez.

López decided to hire Otero as his counsel. López testified at the hearing before the bankruptcy court that he asked Otero “whether he had any conflict in representing any of the creditors” and received a negative answer. López did not ask Otero whether he had any relationship with Rodríguez. On September 26, 1983, López filed with the court an application to employ Otero and Otero’s law firm, Otero Suro & Otero Suro, as his counsel. Filed with the application was Otero’s affidavit in which he states that he and his firm “have had no business or professional connection with this case or related matter, although they may have appeared on behalf of some general creditors of the within estate and although the members of the *640 Law Firm may be a relative [sic] of some attorney of adverse parties or some creditors .... ” Otero also says in the affidavit “I know of no reason why ... Otero Bigles [and the law firm] cannot faithfully discharge their duties as attorneys for the applicant therein.”

Otero’s affidavit failed to disclose significant facts. Otero was already employed as counsel to Rodríguez in another bankruptcy case. On May 27, 1983, Rodríguez as trustee had hired Otero to be his counsel in the bankruptcy case of Northwestern Promotions, Inc., No. 81-00203(SEK). 2 Otero also failed to disclose that he was a “good friend” (according to López) of Charles A. Cuprill (“Cuprill”), who served as counsel to Rodríguez during the Rodríguez trusteeship in the present case. Based on the information (or lack of it) contained in the employment application and affidavit, the court appointed Otero as counsel to the successor trustee, López.

Kagan met with López and Otero several times in late 1983 and presented them with complaints about Rodríguez. On December 29, 1983, Kagan wrote López specifying charges against Rodríguez and requesting López to take action against Rodríguez to recover losses caused by his mismanagement. Otero, on behalf of López, responded by letter dated January 3, 1984', saying there was insufficient evidence to support such action. Similar, increasingly strident, exchanges took place thereafter between the parties. At the hearing on the present motion, Kagan testified that he at some point discovered Otero was employed by Rodríguez in the Northwestern Promotions case, that he wrote López informing him of this, and that López replied this was a “personal matter and had nothing to do with [Otero’s] work on the case.” López did not deny this.

Frustrated, Kagan filed a motion with the bankruptcy court requesting authority to file a complaint against both Rodríguez and Cuprill on behalf of the bankruptcy estate. The Chief Judge, Antonio I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 B.R. 635, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1255, 1999 WL 787877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kagan-v-stubbe-in-re-el-san-juan-hotel-corp-bap1-1999.