Lifetime Communities, Inc. v. Weil,Gotshal & Manges (In re Fidelity Mortgage Investors)

12 B.R. 641, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 380, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13208
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 7, 1981
DocketNo. 81 Civ. 1261
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 B.R. 641 (Lifetime Communities, Inc. v. Weil,Gotshal & Manges (In re Fidelity Mortgage Investors)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lifetime Communities, Inc. v. Weil,Gotshal & Manges (In re Fidelity Mortgage Investors), 12 B.R. 641, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 380, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13208 (S.D.N.Y. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

This is an appeal by Fidelity Mortgage Investors, debtor in possession (“Debtor”), now Lifetime Communities, Inc., from an order of Bankruptcy Judge Roy Babitt which granted an application of Weil, Gotshal & Manges (“Weil Gotshal” or “petitioner”) the Debtor’s attorneys, made after their fees as attorneys for Debtor had been determined, awarding interest thereon from the date when the Debtor had deposited funds pursuant to an approved Plan of Arrangement to the date such compensation was paid to the attorneys — -a period of 11 months.

This Court is of the view that the order directing the payment of such interest is contrary to the terms of the Plan, disregards the fact that any ambiguity in the Plan with respect to who is entitled to interest must be resolved against Weil Gotshal, who drew the plan, and that equitable considerations which militate against the attorneys’ claim require a different result from that reached by the learned Bankruptcy Judge. Accordingly, the order is reversed.

In January 1975, Debtor commenced this voluntary Chapter XI proceeding, and from its inception, Weil Gotshal represented it.1 In November 1977, Debtor proposed an Amended Plan which subsequently was accepted by its creditors. Weil Gotshal drafted the Amended Plan and all pertinent and implementing documents. As a condition precedent to the confirmation of the Plan, Fidelity was required to deposit monies for the payment of initial distributions, costs and expenses of administration, payments to priority and other creditors of various classes as provided for under the Plan (the “Deposit”). $13,750,000 was the sum estimated to meet the required payments. On December 28, 1977, in anticipation of the confirmation of the Plan, a “Disbursing Account Order” was entered appointing a disbursing agent (the “Disbursing Agent”) who was required to invest the Deposit in interest-bearing accounts and certificates pending distribution of payments. The Dis[643]*643bursing Order contained a provision that “all interest earned on such deposits or certificates shall accrue to the benefit of the debtor,” except as otherwise provided in the Plan.

On January 4, 1978, Bankruptcy Judge Lesser, before whom the matter was then pending, confirmed the Plan. The same day the $13,750,000, the condition precedent to the confirmation of the Plan, was deposited. Paragraph 7 of the Order of Confirmation provides, “[u]pon determination that there is on deposit with the Disbursing Agent monies in excess of the amounts required to complete the disbursements pursuant to the Plan, such excess monies shall be paid to [Fidelity Mortgage Investors].”

Also pertinent to the instant matter is Paragraph 5 of the Order which provides “[t]he Disbursing Agent be, and he hereby is, directed to withhold distribution of any monies to the persons whose claims are set forth in the Distribution Schedules as costs and expenses of administration, pending further orders of the court fixing the precise amount payable to each such person.” The Distribution Schedules, in addition to items listed by other administrative claimants, set forth $985,000 as the amount requested by Weil Gotshal for their services to the Debtor.

On February 21, 1978, Weil Gotshal applied to Bankruptcy Judge Lesser for fees and disbursements in the sum of $1,089,-322.82, less $93,746.97 previously paid, which was somewhat higher than the sum set forth in the Distribution Schedules. Upon an explanation by Weil Gotshal that this was due to a purported miscalculation, the Debtor offered no objection to the requested allowances; however, some creditors did oppose, claiming that the fees requested were excessive and also duplicated charges for services rendered by Debtor’s prepetition counsel, Milan & Wilbur, who also had applied for allowances of fees. The objectants were granted an opportunity to examine the time sheets of both attorneys, which were made available for inspection in March and April 1978. The objec-tants thereafter advised the Bankruptcy Judge they were of the view that the time spent by both firms was excessive and du-plicative. Needless to say the applicants challenged this and emphasized that the Debtor did not object to the allowances as requested.

On December 4, 1978, the Weil Gotshal application was granted by Bankruptcy Judge Lesser. An order was then entered awarding counsel fees to them in the aggregate sum of $1,044,247.82 less the sum of $93,746.19 previously paid, or a net sum of $950,501.63. The amount allowed for fees was $45,000 less than requested. Shortly thereafter, about December 18, 1978, payment as directed was made to the attorneys. Within a few days, on December 21, 1978, Weil Gotshal applied for an order directing that they be paid the interest earned on the $950,501.63 from January 14, 1978, the date of Deposit and confirmation of the Plan, to the date of payment of their fees. The Debtor, who previously had no notice that any such application would be made, opposed the payment of interest as did a creditor, Chase Manhattan Bank N.A. (“Chase”), and a majority of the members of the Creditors Committee, who contended that the interest belonged to the Debtor.

The matter was heard by Bankruptcy Judge Lesser on January 31, 1979 following which the parties submitted letters setting forth their opposing contentions. However, he did not decide the matter; he resigned effective September 30, 1979 and the proceeding was delayed because of the lack of immediate designation of his successor and some confusion with respect thereto.2 The matter eventually was assigned to Bankruptcy Judge Roy Babitt. After hearing the parties on November 25, 1980, Bankruptcy Judge Babitt granted the Weil Gotshal application and entered an order on December 19, 1980 that authorized a $90,000 payment of interest on January 14, 1981 [644]*644plus interest from December 19, 1980, the date of his order, through January 14, 1981 at the rate of 19.5% per year.3 The Disbursing Agent made the payment to the attorneys, and Lifetime Communities, Inc., as successor to the Debtor, appeals from the order and seeks the return of the interest so paid.

Weil Gotshal’s claim for interest upon the amount of fees allowed to them is based upon a contention that the $985,000 set forth in the Distribution Schedule and included in the Deposit of $13,750,000, as stated by them, was “reserved for [their] benefit” and that the monies “held by the Disbursing Agent represented funds in which [Weil Gotshal] possessed a vested interest subject only to the court fixing the precise amount of the compensation and reimbursement of our-of-pocket [sic] expenses to” them.4 They urge that the compensation awarded to them by the Bankruptcy Court related back to the time that the monies were deposited by the Debtor on January 4, 1978.

If this contention of “vesting” is correct, then every claimant listed on the Distribution Schedules who applied for and was allowed administrative compensation by the Bankruptcy Court likewise was entitled to interest upon such amounts from the date of confirmation to the Plan to the date of payment. I am of the view that the unas-certained amounts did not vest until they were specifically determined in a fixed amount by the Bankruptcy Judge. The administrative claims were expressly deferred under the Plan and no payment was to be made pending the “further orders of the court fixing the precise amount payable to each such person.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 B.R. 641, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 380, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lifetime-communities-inc-v-weilgotshal-manges-in-re-fidelity-nysd-1981.