Matter of Womack, Inc.

1 B.R. 95, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 842
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada
DecidedOctober 10, 1979
Docket19-10547
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 B.R. 95 (Matter of Womack, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Womack, Inc., 1 B.R. 95, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 842 (Nev. 1979).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

LLOYD D. GEORGE, Chief Judge.

The Court now has before it an Application for the award of some $75,000.00 as a finder’s fee/broker’s commission on the sale of certain real property forming the major, if not only, asset of the present Bankrupt’s estate. At the hearing held with respect to this and other applications for compensation, Counsel for several of the creditors of Womack, Inc., objected to this claim, arguing that it was based upon an obligation which was unenforceable under Nevada law because of the failure of the Claimant, Fred Shragai, d/b/a Dale Investment Company, to possess a Nevada real estate broker’s license at the time the sale was negotiated. Moreover, Counsel further maintained that the sum requested was far in excess of any reasonable compensation which Mr. Shragai could have anticipated from his labors, particularly in light of the relatively limited amount of funds which ended up in the Bankrupt’s estate because of the sale. Counsel therefore asked that the Court disregard the Application of Mr. Shragai, insofar as it may be based upon any set percentage rate in respect to the purchase price of the Bankrupt’s real property, and that Mr. Shragai be granted, at best, a reasonable return set in accordance with an hourly rate for the actual time spent by him in finding a buyer for the subject property. The overall figure of $15,000.00 was mentioned as a possible amount which might favorably repay Mr. Shragai for his endeavors.

*97 In rebuttal, Counsel for the Applicant denied that the actions of his client were in contravention of Nevada law, asserting that although Mr. Shragai never held a Nevada real estate broker’s license during this period, he also never did any of the acts specified as construing the conduct of a real estate broker under N.R.S. 645.030 within the boundaries of the state of Nevada. His actions as a broker, Counsel affirmed, all took place in the state of California where Mr. Shragai was duly licensed. In Nevada, it was argued, Mr. Shragai did no more than that which a common “finder” would do, which actions were said to fall outside the parameters of the Nevada real estate brokers’ licensing statutes.

On the whole, the Court considers the location of Mr. Shragai’s activities to be irrelevant in the present case. Section 645.-240(3)(b) of the Nevada Revised Statutes clearly excludes from the licensing requirements of that chapter, “(w)hile acting as such, a receiver, trustee in bankruptcy, administrator or executor, or any person doing any of -the acts specified in NRS 645.030 under jurisdiction of any court.” (Emphasis supplied). Counsel for San Diego Pre-stressed Concrete Company, a secured creditor of Womack, Inc., has ably argued that the last phrase of this exclusion must be read as referring only to persons who have been specifically ordered by the court to act in the fashion specified by N.R.S. 645.030. Nevertheless, he has cited no authority for this interpretation and the Court can find no authority of its own to lend in support of this position. On the other hand, it is quite obvious to the Court that the exclusion of such persons from the licensing requirements contained in that chapter is reflective of the general deference which the legislature wanted to show for those cases in which a court would be supervising the activities of an erstwhile real estate broker, thus greatly reducing the possibility of the type of harm which this statute was intended to prevent.

Throughout the course of these proceedings, the Court has been openly aware of the efforts of Mr. Shragai and others to find substantial buyers for the Womack property. All of the Counsel here involved have also witnessed this significant attempt to find a source for repaying many of their clients. While no order ever formally issued from this Court to authorize Mr. Shra-gai and his company to find a buyer, a deficiency which should perhaps be borne in mind in future cases, the Court cannot now justly assert that Mr. Shragai was not acting under its direction when he made the arrangements for the present sale. The Court finds that this direction is the effective equivalent of the “jurisdiction” spoken of in N.R.S. 645.240(3)(b) and that the Applicant must therefore be found excluded from the Nevada real estate brokers’ licensing requirements with respect to his dealings in the present proceeding. Hence, the Court need only determine the amount of commission now owing the Applicant from the Womack estate.

As an argument in favor of granting his client the full amount of his request, Counsel for Mr. Shragai entreats the Court to consider the great value which has been done to the estate by the sale of the Wom-ack property, noting that without this sale none of the creditors of Womack, Inc., except for Cameron-Brown Investment Group, would have received anything on the obligations owed them. Perhaps in an attempt to appeal to the equitable conscience of the Court, the Applicant himself further sets forth what he apparently perceives to have been a promise by Mr. Robert N. Broad-bent, the Trustee herein, to the effect that in no instance would he receive less than five percent of the total sale price, or $75,000.00, as his commission.

The Court is not aware how Mr. Shragai may have come to believe that he would be paid $75,000.00 for his efforts, but the Court does know that from the outset of this matter neither the Applicant nor any other person who has come before this bench to sell the Womack property has been officially assured of any set amount for his or her endeavors. Moreover, Mr. Broadbent has also represented to the Court that he has never made any such promise, but has only given the Applicant estimates as to his possible commission, based upon what has *98 been paid in the past for similar sales. The Court is satisfied that this representation is truthful.

Relatively early in its dealings with Mr. Shragai and his buyer, the Court specifically delayed any determination of brokerage commissions until such time as the Court could adequately ascertain a reasonable compensation for the work done for and the benefit bestowed upon the present estate. The standard for determining this reasonableness consists of a number of factors which may include, but are not limited to 1) the commercial reasonableness of the fee, as seen in light of what would be paid in a transaction occurring in the open marketplace,' 2) the amount to be found in the Bankrupt’s estate from which such a payment can be made, 3) the amount of time and expense put into the project by the Claimant, 4) the amount brought into the estate by the sale, 5) the difficulty of finding a buyer for the property, and 6) the amount which might be left to pay off secured and general creditors after this and other administrative expenses are paid.

The Claimant has apparently only looked to the first of these factors in making his fee application. To be sure, the figure of five percent is undoubtedly typical of local brokerage fees for the sale of this type of real property. Nevertheless, the other variables laid out above must also be taken into account by this Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 B.R. 95, 1979 Bankr. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-womack-inc-nvb-1979.