Matter of Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd.

28 B.R. 120, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6782
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 18, 1983
DocketBankruptcy 3-81-00700
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 B.R. 120 (Matter of Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., 28 B.R. 120, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6782 (Ohio 1983).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

CHARLES A. ANDERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

PRELIMINARY PROCEDURE

This matter is before the Court upon “Request for Payment” filed on 5 March 1982. The request is essentially an application for fee allowance in the total amount of $22,100.00 filed by the Baggott Law Offices (hereinafter the Baggotts) for professional services rendered on behalf of Debtor documented by several pages of itemized professional services and time allocations. The Court heard the request on 22 June 1982. Note 11 U.S.C. §§ 330(a) and 503(b)(2). The interested parties subsequently submitted legal memoranda, as discussed below. The following decision is based upon the parties’ memoranda, the evidence adduced at the hearing, and the court records.

' FINDINGS OF FACT

Frederic E. Gagel, Steven Williams, and H. Garrett Frey were business associates who formed a number of partnerships for the purpose of acquiring and operating various rental properties, most of which, including the instant Debtor, were residential apartment complexes. Each partnership possessed one of the properties as its principal asset. The partnerships were, in turn, “property” of a holding partnership, G.W.F. Investment, Ltd., which together with five of the partnerships, including the instant Debtor, are before this Court under separate Petitions for Relief. Mr. Williams is now deceased, and his partnership interests, insofar as is relevant to the instant proceedings, have subsequently been transferred to Mr. Frey.

Nearly all of these various proceedings have prompted a large amount of litigation, including internecine struggles among the partnership interests, vis-á-vis an overwhelming mortgage upon which there was potential personal liability against the individual partners. In the instant proceeding, the parties, along with the mortgagee in Debtor’s property, were involved in two such adversarial proceedings, as discussed below.

On 27 April 1981, “Frederic E. Gagel, Managing General Partner of G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.,” filed a consent to an order for relief in the Chapter 11 Case, which was then entered on 1 May 1981. Also, on 19 June 1981 H. Garrett Frey (“holding the entire ownership interest of W & F Investment Co., an Ohio partnership” which was the general partner in G.W.F. Investment, Ltd., with Frederic Gagel, who had filed the petition for relief against G.W.F. Investment, Ltd. on 4 March 1981) entered a consent to an Order for Relief in the Georgetown case, expressly reserving “all rights to file proceedings ... to determine who shall serve as the Debtor-in-Possession in all five Bankruptcy estates.”

The primary figure in the case was Mr. Gagel. Mr. Gagel is President of Imperial Management, Inc., a corporation created to maintain and manage various of the subject partnerships’ properties. The instant proceeding was commenced by Involuntary Petition filed by Imperial Management, Inc., a scheduled creditor herein. Mr. Gagel also indorsed Debtor’s Schedules in his capacity as partner of G.W.F. Investment, Ltd. Mr. *122 Gagel has also indorsed two proposed plans of reorganization in his capacity of “managing partner of G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.” The attendant disclosure statement and various plan modifications were also indorsed as such. Throughout the record, Mr. Gagel frequently acted in his various capacities to indorse matters such as certificates of service and routine reorganization documents. The Court also specifically notes that Mr. Gagel and Imperial Management, Inc., both possessed scheduled unsecured claims, asserted against Debtor’s estate, but both of which were disallowed by the Court.

The Baggotts have essentially requested payment for services which were beneficial to the interests of Mr. Gagel in his various capacities, including that of a partner to Debtor in Possession. Throughout the reorganization proceeding, the Baggotts served for and appeared in some of the court hearings as attorney of record for Mr. Gagel personally; for Debtor; for Debtor in Possession; for G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.; for Acme Precision Building, Ltd.; and for Imperial Management, Inc. (which was manager of the business operations of the Debtor and Debtor in Possession). “Horace W. Baggott” as “Attorney for the Petitioner, Imperial Management, Inc.” indorsed the Involuntary Petition against Debtor. The Baggotts did not indorse either the Schedules or the two proposed plans of reorganization (or the documents attendant thereto), though the Court notes, as will be discussed, the Baggotts have requested allowance for their fees charges for services for preparation of these documents (all captioned as proposed by G.W.F. Investment, Ltd. and/or under the indorsement of Mr. Gagel in his capacity of “managing partner of G.W.F. Investment, Ltd,” as discussed above). On 22 January 1982, the Court issued an Order confirming the Plan of Reorganization filed by Hunter Savings Association, as discussed below. On 16 February 1982, Horace W. Baggott, Jr., as “Attorney for Frederic E. Gagel,” indorsed a “Motion to Reconsider” the Order of Confirmation.

In two adversarial proceedings related to the instant case, the Baggotts similarly are of record as attorneys for other parties in addition to Debtor. Hunter Savings Association v. Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., et al. 14 B.R. 72, Bkrtcy.Ohio, 1981 was instituted by a prepetition Complaint filed in state court, which was removed to this Court by Application dated 19 May 1981. In this proceeding, the Baggotts indorsed answers (in the state court) and the pretrial order (in this Court) as attorneys for Debt- or; G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.; Acme Precision Building, Ltd. (one of the partnerships allegedly owned by G.W.F. Investment, Ltd), and Mr. Gagel personally. In fact, a separate answer was filed by the Baggott Law Office on behalf of Mr. Gagel individually. In Hunter Savings Association v. Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., et al. (Adversary No. 3-81-0638) the Baggotts indorsed the Answer therein as “Attorney for Georgetown of Kettering, Ltd., Frederic E. Gagel and G.W.F. Investment, Ltd.” Even though judgment was awarded to Hunter in the foreclosure suit, this Court at the same time specifically stayed all executions on the judgment pending completion of the Chapter 11 process. See decision at 14 B.R. 72 (1981).

The Court notes that despite their representation of other interests, and particularly Mr. Gagel personally, the Baggotts did, nevertheless, appear throughout all related proceedings as attorney for Debtor and Debtor in Possession without objection by any interested parties, until the filing of the Baggotts’ fee application. The Baggotts, however, did not file an Application for Appointment as attorney for Debtor in Possession until the belated filing of a Motion on 8 March 1982 requesting that the Court order appointment nunc pro tunc as of 3 March 1981 (the Court notes that Debtor’s Petition was filed on 18 March 1981). The Court approved the Baggotts’ Motion for Appointment (inadvertently overlooked by them) by Order dated 15 March 1982, in light of the fact that they had been appearing in all of the court proceedings since inception of the Chapter 11 case.

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28 B.R. 120, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-georgetown-of-kettering-ltd-ohsb-1983.