Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Mack v. Paparelli

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 14, 2019
Docket19-00215
StatusUnknown

This text of Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Mack v. Paparelli (Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Mack v. Paparelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Mack v. Paparelli, (Ill. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION In re: ) Chapter 7 ) Mack Industries, LTD, ) ) No. 17 B 09308 ) Debtor. ) ____________________________________) ) Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 19 A 00154, et al.1 ) Elia Sanches, et al.2 ) ) Defendant. ) Judge Carol Doyle MEMORANDUM OPINION Chapter 7 trustee Ronald Peterson filed motions to disqualify attorney David Lloyd from representing defendants in adversary proceedings in which Lloyd has been retained as defense counsel. Each adversary complaint seeks to avoid and recover transfers that the trustee alleges are preferential and fraudulent under the Bankruptcy Code and Illinois law. The trustee argues that Lloyd cannot represent any defendants in these adversary proceedings because he represented one debtor, Mack Industries, Ltd. (“Mack”), for a few days before it consented to appointment of a chapter 11 trustee, and he then represented both Mack and another debtor, Oak 1See Exhibit 1 for complete list of case numbers. 2See Exhibit 1 for complete list of Defendants. 1 Park Avenue Realty, Ltd. (“Oak Park”), while they were chapter 7 debtors. The trustee contends that, as counsel for a chapter 7 debtor, Lloyd owes a statutory duty and a duty of loyalty to the bankruptcy estate that prevents him from opposing the trustee or the estate. This is not correct. Lloyd owes no direct duty to the trustee or the estate. Instead he owes

a duty to his clients - two debtors - to assist them in performing their statutory duties under the Bankruptcy Code. Lloyd’s duty to assist the debtors in their statutory duties, however, could come into conflict with his duty to his clients in the adversary proceedings. To eliminate this potential conflict, Lloyd has agreed to withdraw from his representation of the debtors so there is no potential conflict between concurrent clients. The trustee also agues that, even if Lloyd withdraws from representing the debtors, he cannot represent the adversary defendants because that representation is substantially related to

his former representation of the debtors and is therefore prohibited under the court’s rules of professional conduct. This is also incorrect. The trustee relies on an outmoded standard regarding former clients. Lloyd is not violating the applicable standard. He is free to represent the defendants in the adversary proceedings once he withdraws from representing Mack and Oak Park. The trustee’s motions will be denied.

1. Background Mack filed a chapter 11 case on March 24, 2017. Another attorney, not Lloyd, filed the

case. On April 20, 2017, a secured creditor filed a motion to appoint a chapter 11 trustee. Mack then hired Lloyd to assist it and their original counsel. On May 3, 2017, a few days after he was retained by Mack, Lloyd filed a response to the motion to appoint a chapter 11 trustee in which 2 Mack consented to that appointment. The response disputed some of the specific allegations in the motion but admitted that substantial payments had been made to insiders during the year prior to the petition date and that Mack, as debtor in possession, would be in a “difficult position” with respect to those preferential payments. The court granted the motion to appoint a trustee the next

day. An order approving Peterson as the chapter 11 trustee was entered on May 11. Peterson then filed a chapter 7 case for Mack Industries II, LLC and moved to convert Mack to chapter 7. That motion was granted on June 1. On May 31, 2017, creditors filed an involuntary chapter 11 petition against Oak Park. Lloyd filed a consent to entry of the order for relief on behalf of Oak Park on June 28, 2017. He then filed a motion to convert the case to chapter 7, which was granted. In the months that followed, Peterson filed chapter 7 cases for affiliates Mack Industries III, LLC, Mack Industries IV, LLC, Mack Industries V, LLC and Mack Industries VI, LLC. All

of these cases are being jointly administered.

2. Motions to Disqualify In March 2019, the trustee filed 440 almost identical adversary proceedings against non- insiders. Lloyd filed a motion to obtain the names and addresses of the defendants in all of the adversary complaints so that he could send them marketing materials in an effort to represent a group of defendants with a cost savings to all. The trustee opposed the motion but the court, in effect, granted the relief sought. After Lloyd began representing defendants in 47 of the

adversary proceedings, the trustee filed motions to disqualify him in each of them. All the motions are identical. The parties agreed to file briefs in only one adversary proceeding - Peterson v. Elia Sanches, 19 AP 00154. Lloyd has since appeared in more adversaries – 52 as of 3 mid-July. This decision applies to all adversary proceedings in which Lloyd has appeared or will appear. The trustee argues that Lloyd must be disqualified because he is breaching his duties to the bankruptcy estates owed under the Bankruptcy Code and the court’s rules of professional

conduct by representing parties who are adverse to the trustee. He contends that Lloyd’s breach of these duties is serious enough to warrant disqualification.

3. Standard on Motion to Disqualify The trustee must establish two elements to prevail on a motion to disqualify. First, he must show there is an ethical violation. Second, if he establishes such a violation, he must demonstrate that the remedy of disqualification is appropriate. See, e.g., Guillen v. City of

Chicago, 956 F. Supp. 1416, 1421 (N.D. Ill. 1997). The trustee acknowledges that disqualification is a drastic remedy that should rarely be employed. As the Seventh Circuit has repeatedly held: We have observed that granting a motion for disqualification has “immediate, severe, and often irreparable ... consequences” for the party and the disqualified attorney. . . . Disqualifying a lawyer immediately deprives the losing party from the “representation of his choice” and disrupts the litigation. . . . In sum, “disqualification, as a prophylactic device for protecting the attorney-client relationship, is a drastic measure which courts should hesitate to impose except when absolutely necessary . . . [because it] destroy[s] a relationship by depriving a party of representation of their own choosing. Watkins v. Trans Union, LLC, 869 F.3d 514, 518-19 (7th Cir. 2017) (citations omitted). Trial courts are granted broad discretion to determine whether disqualification is required in a particular case. Watkins, 869 F.3d at 518; In re Allboro Waterproofing Corp., 224 B.R. 286, 294 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 1998) (concluding that disqualification was not appropriate after conducting a 4 “painstaking analysis of the facts”). The moving party bears a heavy burden to show facts warranting disqualification. See, e.g., Allboro, 224 B.R. at 294; Guillen, 956 F. Supp. at 1421.

4. Duties Owed by Chapter 7 Debtors and Their Counsel:

The trustee’s motions hinge on his assertion that Lloyd owes duties to the bankruptcy estate. The trustee asserts that Mack and Oak Park, as chapter 7 debtors, owe the bankruptcy estate a statutory duty to “assist” the trustee. He also contends that Lloyd, as chapter 7 debtors’ counsel, owes the same statutory duty as well as a duty of loyalty to the estate. The trustee argues that Lloyd is breaching both duties to the estate by representing defendants in the adversary proceedings. This is not correct. The debtors owe certain statutory duties under the Bankruptcy Code. Lloyd owes his client the standard duties owed by a lawyer to his client,

including the duty of loyalty. But Lloyd does not owe any direct duty to the estate and he owes a duty of loyalty solely to his clients - the debtors, not the bankruptcy estate.

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Ronald R. Peterson, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Mack v. Paparelli, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-r-peterson-as-chapter-7-trustee-for-mack-v-paparelli-ilnb-2019.