Matter of Prudhomme

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1995
Docket93-05467
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of Prudhomme (Matter of Prudhomme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Prudhomme, (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 93-5467.

In the Matter of Daisy M. PRUDHOMME and John and Kathleen Batten, Debtors.

John F. ARENS, Appellant,

v.

Al BOUGHTON, Trustee, et al., Appellees.

Feb. 7, 1995.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

Before DAVIS, JONES and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.

DUHÉ, Circuit Judge:

The bankruptcy court required Appellant John Arens to disgorge

a $75,000 retainer he received for legal services and to pay that

amount to the plan trustee in these two Chapter 11 cases. Appellee

Farm Credit Bank had moved for disgorgement of the fee, and the

United States Trustee moved for examination of debtors'

transactions with their attorneys. After an evidentiary hearing,

the bankruptcy court ordered disgorgement of the full retainer.

The court found that the fee was paid in contemplation of

bankruptcy, that it was excessive, and that the Arens firm (a sole

proprietorship owned by Arens) consciously breached its duty to

disclose the retainer fee as well as a contingency interest in the

debtor's cause of action 152 B.R. 91. The district court affirmed,

and we too affirm.

At issue in Arens's appeal are 1) the court's power to reach

a fee paid or agreed to be paid more than one year before the bankruptcy petitions were filed and 2) whether the fee was paid in

contemplation of or in connection with the bankruptcy cases.

I.

The Bankruptcy Code requires a debtor's attorney to report to

the court compensation paid or agreed to be paid for services

rendered "in contemplation of or in connection with" the case, "if

such payment or agreement was made after one year before the date

of the filing of the petition." 11 U.S.C. § 329(a). The Code

further provides, "If such compensation exceeds the reasonable

value of any such services, the court may ... order the return of

any such payment, to the extent excessive." Id. § 329(b). Arens

first complains that the court erred in reaching back more than a

year prepetition because of the one-year period in § 329(a).

The debtors paid $50,000 as a first installment of Arens'

retainer charge in February 1990; a year later they paid the

$25,000 balance. The retainer agreement also allowed the firm a 40

per cent contingency fee if the firm were successful in pursuing a

lender liability action against the debtors' major creditor, Farm

Credit Bank. In July 1991 the firm filed Prudhomme's Chapter 11

petition, and in October 1991, the Battens'. Because payment of

the $25,000 was made within a year of the filing of the petitions,

that part of the compensation plainly falls within § 329(a),

regardless of when the agreement was made. Arens's one-year

argument fails with respect to disgorgement of that.

With respect to the remaining $50,000 ordered disgorged, we

find the bankruptcy court's decision supportable on a number of

alternative grounds. First, we agree with Appellees that § 329(a) and related provisions do not provide a limitations period beyond

which the court cannot reach. The reporting requirement of §

329(a) does not expressly provide a limitations period for

disgorgement. Compare 11 U.S.C. § 329 (requiring reporting of

payments made within the year) with id. §§ 550(e), 549(d)(1)

(specifically providing that an action "may not be commenced after"

the respective time periods). Nor does § 329(b) authorizing

disgorgement of excessive fees specify a limitations period. See

In re Bennett, 133 B.R. 374, 380 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1991) (no statute

of limitations on motion for recovery of attorney fees).

Additionally, a bankruptcy rule allows the court to determine

"whether any payment of money ... by the debtor, made directly or

indirectly and in contemplation of the filing of a petition under

the Code ... to an attorney for services rendered or to be rendered

is excessive." Bankr.R.Proc. 2017(a) (emphasis added). The rule

plainly contains no one-year limitation period. The court

determined under this rule that the fee was excessive,1 and the

remedy for excessiveness is return of any payment to the extent it

exceeds the reasonable value of services rendered. 11 U.S.C. §

329(b); 8 Collier on Bankruptcy, para. 2017.06[1] at 2017-11 (15th

ed. 1994); In re Porter, 253 F. 552, 553 (7th Cir.1918), cert.

denied, 248 U.S. 585, 39 S.Ct. 182, 63 L.Ed. 433 (1919).

Further support for the bankruptcy court's ruling lies in a

1 Ample evidence showed that the Arens firm did not render any services that benefited any of the debtors or their estates, that the firm's services were unsatisfactory, and that counsel hurt the debtors more than helped them. (Arens's belatedly offered time sheets suggesting how the fees were earned pre-petition were appropriately stricken.) Accordingly, the court did not clearly err in finding the fee unreasonable. renowned treatise which recognizes that the one-year period

mentioned in § 329(a) is based on the "apparent presumption" that

any compensation paid before the year prepetition was not for

services rendered in contemplation of bankruptcy. 2 Collier, para.

329.03 at 329-12. To recognize that the one-year period is based

on a presumption is to suggest that the presumption can be

rebutted, as the bankruptcy court reasoned. See 2 R. 309 (finding

presumption rebutted by fraud or concealment). The court's

treatment of the one-year period in § 329(a) as a presumption

rebutted by fraud or concealment is consonant with the principle

that, in a court of equity, a statute of limitations may be tolled

by the inequitable conduct of the parties. See Bennett, 133 B.R.

at 380-81 (quoting Bailey v. Glover, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) 342, 348,

22 L.Ed. 636 (1875)). The court found a pattern of nondisclosure

in both cases.2 We hold that such concealment was misconduct

2 This finding is also amply supported by the record. Bankruptcy Rule 2014(a) requires an attorney applying for employment to disclose the compensation arrangements and "all connections" with the debtor. Local Rule 4.0(9) requires a lawyer applying for appointment to disclose any compensation received in the 18-month period prepetition. If the firm had filed the scheduled required by Local Rule 4.0, it would have disclosed the $50,000 payment as well as the $25,000 in Ms. Prudhomme's case (because both were paid within 18 months of her petition).

The firm divulged in the statements of financial affairs in the bankruptcy cases the $25,000 payment to Arens but never disclosed the earlier $50,000 payment. The debtors testified that Arens requested payment of the $25,000 balance so that he could advise the bankruptcy court that nothing was owed.

When seeking to enroll as counsel in these cases, various lawyers from the Arens firm swore that they were disinterested, despite the firm's 40 per cent interest in the debtor's cause of action. Their applications for appointment did not disclose the retainer or contingency justifying the disgorgement even if § 329(a) would otherwise

preclude recovery of fees paid earlier than one year prepetition.

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