Movitz v. Baker (In Re Triple Star Welding, Inc.)

324 B.R. 778, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 885, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 213, 2005 WL 1223602
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 2005
DocketBAP No. AZ-04-1442-MOSZ, Bankruptcy No. 02-00346-YUM-JMM
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 324 B.R. 778 (Movitz v. Baker (In Re Triple Star Welding, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Movitz v. Baker (In Re Triple Star Welding, Inc.), 324 B.R. 778, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 885, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 213, 2005 WL 1223602 (bap9 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MONTALI, Bankruptcy Judge.

This appeal involves a fee award to debt- or’s counsel despite his nondisclosure of numerous facts that potentially render him ineligible for employment or compensation. The bankruptcy court has broad discretion to approve employment and award fees after the true facts are known, but not when the attorney does not make a full, candid, and complete disclosure.

The bankruptcy court also applied an incorrect legal standard to the nondisclosure issues by requiring an adversary proceeding. The attorney did not disclose his receipt of a prima facie preference, and that or other nondisclosures or conflicts of interest may be a sufficient basis to reduce or deny his compensation whether or not the preference turns out to be avoidable. In addition, because the preference claim is facially plausible the bankruptcy court should not have awarded any compensation before resolving the preference issues.

*782 For each of these independent reasons, we REVERSE and REMAND. 2

I. INTRODUCTION

Chapter 7 trustee Louis A. Movitz (“Trustee”) appeals from the bankruptcy court’s order awarding fees to Barton L. Baker, Esq. (“Baker”), for his services as Chapter 11 counsel to debtor Triple Star Welding, Inc. (“Debtor”), prior to conversion to Chapter 7. 3 Trustee objected that Baker was not disinterested because he was a key player in what Trustee viewed as a pre-petition fraudulent transfer of Debtor’s assets to a newly formed affiliate and because Baker received what Trustee believes are avoidable preferential payments of his legal bills. Trustee also objected that Baker did not disclose these possible preferences and that some of his legal bills remained unpaid on the date when Debtor filed its voluntary Chapter 11 petition, leaving him a creditor of Debtor.

The bankruptcy court ruled that the pre-petition transfer of Debtor’s assets was in essence a proposed sale to be accomplished through a plan of reorganization and that this was unorthodox but not sinister or illegal. It declined to rule that Debtor’s pre-petition payments to Baker were preferential without an adversary proceeding, did not otherwise discuss the nondisclosure issues, and awarded Baker his requested fees and costs. Trustee timely appealed.

II. FACTS

Debtor was an air conditioning and metal fabricating contractor. Its primary business was rebuilding vegetable cooling facilities in Arizona and California. Debt- or ran into trouble when it purchased 80 acres of real property adjacent to its existing shop, located on ten acres of property where its founder Jorge Cabrera (“Cabrera”) also lives. Debtor defaulted on several installment payments and lost the property at a trustee’s sale in December, 2001. Debtor also fell behind on payroll taxes and material supplier accounts. Approximately ten judgments were entered in various courts, followed by attachments and garnishments.

Baker tried to negotiate consensual resolutions with Debtor’s creditors. After Debtor failed to pay Baker’s invoices he told Debtor that he would stop work unless he was paid. On December 18 and 28, 2001, Baker received payments of $1,676.50 and $1,000.00 (the “Pre-Petition Payments”), leaving a balance of $2,677.90 (the “Balance Due”).

Negotiations with creditors did not produce the results for which Debtor had hoped. On or about March 1, 2002, Debt- or entered into a sales agreement (not in the excerpts of record), shut down its business, and transferred its operating assets to a new corporation, American Mechanical Integrated Systems, Inc. (“AMIS”), formed by two of Debtor’s three principals and its comptroller. Baker orchestrated this transaction, and the transfer occurred before Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition on March 27, 2002 (the “Petition Date”).

1. Partial disclosures regarding Baker’s employment

Just over two weeks after the Petition Date Baker filed an Application for Appointment of Counsel (the “Employment *783 Application”) requesting that he be appointed as Debtor’s counsel. 4 The Employment Application was signed by Baker himself, not by Debtor, and it contains none of the representations regarding disinterestedness required by Rule 2014(a), 5 nor does it mention Baker’s involvement in the sale to AMIS, the Pre-Petition Payments, or the Balance Due to Baker, although it does state that Baker will charge $200.00 per hour and “has not received a prepetition retainer.”

The bankruptcy court’s docket does not reflect any separate verified statement required by the final sentence of Rule 2014(a) (“Rule 2014 Statement”) and the excerpts of record contained none. Nevertheless, at oral argument before us both Baker and Trustee’s counsel said that they believed Baker did file a Rule 2014 Statement. After re-examining the docket and excerpts and finding nothing we issued an order giving Baker ten days in which to produce a file stamped copy of the document that he contends is his Rule 2014 Statement. Baker served an “Appellee’s Notice of Filing [of] Rule 2014 Statement” attached to which was another copy of his Employment Application, but no Rule 2014 Statement. We thus analyze this case under the presumption that Baker failed to comply with Rule 2014 and the bankruptcy court did not independently enforce it.

Baker did file other documents with the bankruptcy court that contained partial disclosures of his connections with Debtor and fee arrangements. On April 26, 2002, he filed a Disclosure of Compensation of Attorney for Debtor (the “Rule 2016 Disclosure”) 6 which states:

*784 Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 329(a) and Bankruptcy Rule 2016(b), I certify that I am the attorney for [Debtor] and that compensation paid to me within one year before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, or agreed to be paid to me, for services rendered or to be rendered on behalf of [Debtor] in contemplation of or in connection with the bankruptcy case is as follows:
For legal services, I have agreed to accept $200.00 per hour
Prior to the filing of this statement I have received $5000.00
Balance Due $_

The Rule 2016 Disclosure does not state whether the $5,000.00 was a retainer for future services or instead consisted of one or more payments for past services. In particular, the document does not disclose that one of the Pre-Petition Payments, for $1,000.00, was inside the 90 day preference period of Section 547(b)(4)(A) and was in payment of an antecedent debt.

Debtor’s Statement of Financial Affairs (“SFA”) refers to the $5,000.00 payment to Baker and, under date of payment, states “various.” It gives no further details.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
324 B.R. 778, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 885, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 213, 2005 WL 1223602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/movitz-v-baker-in-re-triple-star-welding-inc-bap9-2005.