Shirley Foose McClure

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
Docket1:13-bk-10386
StatusUnknown

This text of Shirley Foose McClure (Shirley Foose McClure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirley Foose McClure, (Cal. 2023).

Opinion

2 FILED & ENTERED

4 MAR 29 2023

CLERK U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT 6 C Be Yn P t r g a a l r D c ii as t r i c Dt E o Pf UC Ta Yli f Cor Ln Eia RK 7

8 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT 9 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 SAN FERNANDO VALLEY DIVISION 11

13 In re: Case No.: 1:13-bk-10386-GM

14 Shirley Foose McClure CHAPTER 7

15 MEMORANDUM OF OPINION ON SHIRLEY

McCLURE’S MOTION FOR ALLOWANCE 16 OF ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES,

17 GRANTING IN PART, DENYING IN PART, Debtor(s). CONTINUING IN PART [dkt. 2143] 18 Continued Hearing Date 19 Date: June 6, 2023 Time: 10:00 AM 20 Courtroom: 303 [by Zoom] 21 22 Shirley McClure was the Debtor-in-Possession from the filing of this case at the 23 end of 2012 until the chapter 11 trustee was appointed on August 3, 2016 [dkt. 1113]. 24 The case was converted to chapter 7 on May 24, 2022. John Reitman, represented by 25 Landau Law LLP, was the trustee during the chapter 11 period and David Gottlieb, 26 represented by Marshack Hays LLP, is the current chapter 7 trustee. All of the items in 27 this administrative claim occurred while Ms. McClure was debtor-in-possession or Mr. 28 Reitman was the trustee. 1 This claim was timely filed. Ms. McClure sets forth the following as her request 2 for an administrative claim: 3 4 Property Management Agreement – In late January 2012, the Court approved 5 Ms. McClure as the property manager, with a compensation of $3,500 per month. Ms. 6 McClure then lists the various properties and notes that the cost to hire either one 7 person to manage all of them or to hire multiple people in order to cover each location 8 would have been prohibitively expensive. She lists the duties of her original property 9 management tasks. These were expanded as time went on. She worked closely with 10 Jason McClure who maintained, repaired, and upgraded the properties. 11 Ms. McClure was not paid every month because the estate did not always have 12 sufficient money to pay her. Exhibit J lays out what was due and what was actually 13 paid. She was to be paid $3,500 per month for 43 months, which totals $150,000, but 14 only received $56,530. Her services provided a great benefit to the estate and were 15 necessary and substantial. 16 17 Loans to the Estate – Ms. McClure loaned the fees that she did receive back to 18 the estate so that the case would not be dismissed. Her family provided loans to her for 19 most of her living expenses. She also deposited her exempt Social Security funds into 20 the estate’s general bank account – totaling $87,292 21 Paralegal, Case Management, and Litigation Support Agreed with Faye Rasch 22 and the Farley Law Firm - When Ms. Rasch was employed at $275 per hour, it was 23 conditioned on the agreement that Ms. McClure would be responsible for the paralegal 24 duties; litigation support duties; preparation for filing, filing and service of pleadings; 25 case expenses; maintaining all case files; and drafting filings for Ms. Rasch. [see dkt. 26 558] This agreement was a substantial and necessary benefit to the estate and 27 continued until the chapter 11 trustee was appointed. 28 1 Ms. Rasch was paid a $20,000 retainer and received an additional $19,745 on 2 her interim fee application. Her total compensation was $83,022.50. She paid Ms. 3 McClure $5,000, which is deducted from this claim. Without Ms. McClure’s work, the 4 fees would have been much higher. And it should be noted that Ms. McClure holds a 5 Corporation and Litigation Paralegal Certificate from UCLA. 6 The two most valuable assets of the estate were the pending superior court 7 lawsuits of McClure v. Litt and McClure v. Tidus. The original plan was to use the 8 proceeds from the 30th St. property to pay the then-current attorneys on those cases 9 (Makarem and Associates). When the Court would not allow the $500,000 received 10 from the sale of 30th St. to fund the state court litigation, Mr. Makarem refused to go 11 forward. Ms. McClure replaced them with the Farley Law Firm at a $150/hr rate plus 12 20% of the recovery. This was approved by the court. It required Ms. McClure to 13 provide paralegal services, though she was not being employed by the firm and they 14 were not to pay her. The Litt case was stayed, but Tidus was going forward and Ms. 15 McClure provided discovery support, etc. She was never compensated for this and it 16 was to be by administrative claim. These services were substantial, beneficial, and 17 necessary. They saved the estate attorney fees and support service fees. Ms. McClure 18 sets forth a comparison of the Farley agreement with the one proposed by the Trustee 19 with Makarem, which is at a much higher hourly rate with monthly payments. 20 Ms. McClure then itemizes her claimed expenses for which she seeks 21 reimbursement. These are for the Litt and Tidus litigation preparation as well as other items paid for by the DIP. [They also include items incurred after the Trustee was 22 appointed.] 23 Photocopies & Printer Copies – $48,085.50 24 Bankruptcy Court - $17,190.60 25 Appeals to District Court - $12,803.10 26 Appeals to Ninth Circuit - $797.10 27 Superior Court Tidus costs - $17,294.70 28 1 Court Filing and Service - $12,280 2 Bankruptcy Court - $10,295 3 District Court - $1,210 4 Superior Court - $300 5 PACER and Legal Research - $10,427.04 6 Pacer - $6,754.80 7 Superior Court - $1,872 8 CaseText - $1,872 9 Postage and Express Mail - $7,895.20 10 Hearing Transcripts - $7,065.92 11 Litigation File Storage - $7,894.03 12 Property Equipment/Staging Storage - $40,324.60 13 Other Case Expenses – $19,092.78 14 TOTAL -$153,064.96 15 16 Beyond that, Ms. McClure provided uncompensated services that were not 17 included in the property management agreement: 18 Bookkeeping, assisting with the tax audit, preparing and filing the MORs, 19 maintaining the insurance on the estate properties. Under the Trustee’s control, these 20 accounted for several hundred thousand dollars. 21 Ms. McClure requests an immediate distribution that will take into account her health and care needs and the $40,000 in unpaid taxes on Gregory. Ms. McClure and 22 Jason have provided the estate with millions of dollars of benefit which have been paid 23 to the Trustee’s professionals. Mr. Dahlberg is seeking $918,234.50 in compensation 24 for trustee services that Ms. McClure had been performing. This is on a claim of 1,727 25 hours, whereas Ms. McClure spent well over 6,000 hours on such services. 26 In summary, Ms. McClure requests the following: 27 Reimbursements - $390,648.96 28 1 For property management and loans to the estate - $150,000 2 For exempt Social Security loaned to the estate - $87,292 3 Net expense reimbursement less $5,000 - $148,064.96 4 Personal Services - $312,708 5 Minimum for combined personal services - $425,000 6 Credit for 1st TD payments on Gregory – ($87,292) 7 Credit for Gregory property tax payments – ($25,000) 8 9 Opposition by the Trustee 10 The burden is on Ms. McClure to show that the expenses are “actual and 11 necessary” for preserving the estate for the benefit of its creditors. This can include 12 services rendered after the commencement of the case including wages, salaries, and 13 commissions. §503(b)(1)(A). The claimant must show that the debt (1) arose from a 14 transaction with the estate and (2) directly and substantially benefitted the estate. This 15 motion does not contain evidence to meet this test. The controlling cases are 16 Einstein/Noah Bagel Corp. v. Smithin re BCE W., 319 F.3d 1166 (9th Cir. 2003) and NS 17 Microsolft Corp. v. DAK Indus. (In re DAK Indust.), 66 F.3d 1091 (9th Cir. 1995). 18 As to property manager – there is no evidence of this agreement. As to the 19 contention that she received certain amounts and this provides the evidence (ex.

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