Keith L. Tatro

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 31, 2020
Docket19-70537
StatusUnknown

This text of Keith L. Tatro (Keith L. Tatro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith L. Tatro, (Ill. 2020).

Opinion

SIGNED THIS: January 31, 2020

Mary P. Gorman United States Bankruptcy Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS In Re ) ) Case No. 19-70537 KEITH L. TATRO, ) ) Chapter 7 Debtor. )

Before the Court is the United States Trustee’s Motion for Disgorgement of Fees seeking a review of the fees and costs charged by Attorney Michael Meyers and Ostling & Associates, LTD, for the reopening of this case and for filing a motion to avoid a lien with respect to the Debtor’s personal property. For the reasons set for herein, the Motion for Disgorgement of Fees will be granted.

I. Factual and Procedural Background Keith L. Tatro (“Debtor”) filed his voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on April 11, 2019. He was represented in the filing by Attorney Michael Meyers of Ostling & Associates, LTD (“Ostling Firm”). The Debtor’s case was uneventful. He filed all required documents, attended his meeting of creditors, cooperated with the case trustee, and received his discharge on July 17, 2019. The case was closed on August 2, 2019. On October 23, 2019, the Debtor, through Attorney Meyers, filed a motion to reopen his case for the purpose of filing a motion to avoid lien. On the same day, a motion to avoid the lien of Tower Loan of Illinois LLC (“Tower Loan”) on personal property of the Debtor, including several lawnmowers, a variety of tools, several televisions, and a DVD collection, was also filed by Attorney Meyers. The motion claimed that Tower Loan’s lien on the items was non-purchase money and avoidable. Attorney Meyers also filed an amended fee disclosure stating that the

Debtor had paid him $440 in fees plus the reopening filing fee of $260. After a hearing, the case was reopened. After further notice to Tower Loan, and in the absence of any objection, its lien was avoided. While the lien avoidance motion was pending, the United States Trustee (“UST”) filed a Motion for Disgorgement of Fees (“Motion for Disgorgement”) asking the Court to examine the Debtor’s financial transactions with his attorney and requesting that Attorney Meyers and the Ostling Firm be ordered to disgorge the $700 paid by the Debtor to reopen the case and avoid the lien of Tower Loan. In the Motion for Disgorgement, the UST asserts that Attorney Meyers, as a regular bankruptcy practitioner, should have known that loan companies such as Tower -2- Loan almost always take a non-purchase money security interest in a borrower’s personal property as part of a loan transaction. The UST further alleged that the Illinois Secretary of State maintains a user-friendly, free-access database that can be searched in a matter of seconds to find information about whether financing statements have been filed against a particular debtor. The UST pointed out that the original fee disclosure filed by Attorney Meyers reflected fees of $800 and that the avoidance of liens was included in the scope of services to be rendered. Accordingly, the UST asserted that charging an additional $700 to avoid the lien of Tower Loan after letting the case close was unreasonable. Attorney Meyers responded to the Motion for Disgorgement by placing the blame for the failure to avoid the lien during the time the case was originally open on the Debtor. He said that the Debtor was asked about secured claims during the intake process and did not identify Tower Loan as a secured creditor. He also

asserted that attorneys have a right to rely on information provided by their clients and “should not be expected to do searches to catch errors or omissions by a client[.]” Mr. Meyers wholly denied any responsibility on his part to review documents or information provided by the Debtor for possible errors. He repeatedly asserted that the issue was related to the fee arrangement between the Debtor and the Ostling Firm. According to Mr. Meyers, if the Debtor did not pay for a lien avoidance motion, then the Ostling Firm had no duty to look into the filing of a lien avoidance motion, even if the Debtor needed the avoidance motion filed to achieve the results he expected when he filed his bankruptcy case. Attached to the response from Attorney Meyers were six exhibits. Exhibit A consists of one page of what is apparently an intake interview document. The -3- handwriting is reported to be that of Attorney Ostling and includes an illegible answer to the question that asks whether the Debtor had any “fast cash or small loans.” The Debtor must have said that he did have such loans because something was written by Mr.Ostling in the space allotted to describe the loan, but what was written is indecipherable. The question on the document about whether the fast cash or small loan is secured is marked “No.” The printed form cautions the interviewer, however, to “WATCH MOTION TO AVOID!” Attorney Meyers says that this exhibit establishes that the Debtor told Mr. Ostling that he had no secured loans. Exhibit B is a one-page, unsigned “Fee Schedule” listing all of the possible charges for services that might be rendered to the Debtor by the Ostling Firm. The marked choices for services selected include a $700 basic fee, a $100 charge for one reaffirmation agreement, and a $331 filing fee for total charges of $1131. The

handwriting on the document appears to be that of only Mr. Ostling, but Mr. Meyers says that the document shows a representation by the Debtor that he had no secured loans.1 Exhibit C is part of a legal representation agreement signed by both the Debtor and Mr. Ostling. It again recites the fees and costs to be charged by the Ostling Firm, and, apparently because there is no charge listed for a motion to avoid lien, Mr. Meyers says that the agreement is proof that the Debtor did not disclose the secured debt at issue here. Exhibit D is described by Mr. Meyers as a worksheet questionnaire. One question on the document is: “Have you sold or transferred property as security 1 Attorney Ostling’s handwriting is admittedly on Exhibit A, and his signature is on Exhibit C. His handwriting on Exhibits A and C is very similar to the handwriting on Exhibit B. The Debtor’s handwritten signature on Exhibit C is distinctly different. -4- within the last 2 years?” The answer allegedly written by the Debtor is “N/A.” The line above that question asks whether the Debtor consulted with or paid any attorney during the prior 12 months. The Debtor marked the answer to that question also “N/A.” But it appears that someone else wrote “US” on the same line—presumably correcting the Debtor’s answer because, of course, he had consulted with the Ostling Firm and had paid or was in process of paying legal fees to it. Exhibit E is described as a “Your Debts” worksheet and contains at least two different handwritings. Mr. Meyers says that the Debtor wrote “Tower Loan” on the document and did not mark that the debt was secured. The document shows, however, that whoever wrote the entry did mark that the debt would not be reaffirmed. That representation was to be marked, according to the printed instructions, only if the debt was secured.

Finally, Exhibit F consists of copies of the Debtor’s Schedules D and E/F. The Debtor initialed Schedule D, but the signature page verifying the accuracy of the documents is not attached. Mr. Meyers says that the documents show that the debtor affirmed that Tower Loan was unsecured by listing Tower Loan on Schedule E/F. Hearing on the Motion for Disgorgement was held December 3, 2019. Assistant UST, Jamie Wiley, appeared for the UST. She argued that the Debtor’s attorney had a statutory duty to investigate obvious errors and that he was on inquiry notice that Tower Loan most likely had an avoidable non-purchase money security interest in the Debtor’s personal property. She said that it was not the UST’s position that attorneys must search every database across the entire -5- country to check the accuracy of information provided by debtor clients.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stern v. Marshall
131 S. Ct. 2594 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Dignity Health v. Seare (In re Seare)
493 B.R. 158 (D. Nevada, 2013)
Desiderio v. Parikh (In re Parikh)
508 B.R. 572 (E.D. New York, 2014)
In re Beinhauer
570 B.R. 128 (E.D. New York, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Keith L. Tatro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-l-tatro-ilcb-2020.