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. J), 20 there are no bank statements or checks paid by the estate to support this. There is no 21 evidence that an agreement existed or was approved by the court and Ms. McClure was never employed as required by §327 or FRBP 2014. Had she been properly employed, 22 §330 addresses subsequent compensation. Section 330 details a list of items to 23 consider governing compensation – reasonable, necessary, the rates charged, what is 24 customary, duplication of services, services performed in a reasonable amount of time, 25 etc. Authorization of the employment is a requirement to a claim. 26 27 28 1 Further, it is unclear what specific services were rendered and what benefit was 2 provided to the properties and to the estate. No evidence has been submitted as to 3 this. 4 Lastly, because Ms. McClure is an insider, she is not entitled to compensation in 5 a chapter 11 unless a notice of setting compensation is provided to creditors. §503(c); 6 LBR 2014-1. No notice was sent. 7 It should also be noted that the math is incorrect and the maximum requested 8 under this category should be $93,870, not the entire $150,000. 9 As to loans to the estate – There is no evidence of a loan agreement or any 10 approval by the court of any loans from Ms. McClure. Section 364(a) allows an 11 administrative claim for unsecured debt in the ordinary course of business. But 12 otherwise there must be court approval for the loan to be an administrative claim. Here 13 there is no evidence that the estate intended to repay Ms. McClure for these funds. 14 Ms. McClure asserts that these loans were to keep the case from being 15 dismissed, but that does not necessarily provide a substantial benefit to the estate. 16 For paralegal services – Ms. McClure was not employed by the estate as a 17 paralegal. It is unclear how Ms. McClure calculated the $83,022.50 that she asserts 18 and that this was a substantial benefit to the estate. 19 For case expenses incurred – Although hundreds of pages of receipts are 20 attached, there is no explanation of what the receipts were for and how these directly 21 and substantially benefitted the estate. For additional services rendered outside of the alleged property management 22 agreement – There is no evidence that Ms. McClure completed the listed services or 23 that they benefitted the estate. As a DIP, she was the estate’s representative and not 24 entitled to seek compensation for her time managing her own case. 25 /// 26 /// 27 /// 28 1 Opposition by Landau Law 2 Ms. McClure, on multiple occasions, filed sworn documents that she had no 3 administrative claim against the estate. A list of these is as follows: 4 First Disclosure Statement documents – dkt. 251 (filed 10/1/13) 5 Second Disclosure Statement documents – dkt. 299 (filed 12/20/13) 6 Third Disclosure Statement documents – dkt. 1016 (filed 5/3/16) – specifically, if Ms. 7 McClure had included the administrative claim that she now asserts, it would have 8 eliminated the anticipated distribution to unsecured creditors. 9 As to property management fees – This is barred by §1115. In an individual 10 chapter 11 case, services performed by the debtor after commencement of the case, 11 but before it is closed, dismissed, or converted become property of the estate. This was 12 explained to Ms. McClure in 2019 (dkt. 1739, p. 19). Beyond the mathematical issue 13 raised by the Trustee, any agreement to pay Ms. McClure was actually to pay the 14 estate. 15 As to loans to the estate – The disclosure statements and sworn declarations in 16 support thereof fail to reveal any loans, even though she contends that loans were 17 made before these dates. In her MORs, she shows the receipt of the social security 18 income, but not that they are loans or accruing administrative expenses. 19 Beyond that, no loan was authorized by the court or made in the ordinary course 20 of business. §§364(a), 364(b). This approval must be obtained before the debt is 21 incurred. An appropriate remedy for failure to do so is cancellation of the transaction. Thompson v. Morgen (In re McConville), 110 F.3d 47 (9th Cir. 1997). Also, the lender 22 may be relegated to the status of a general unsecured creditor. 3 Collier on Bankruptcy 23 P 364.03 (16th 2022). 24 There are two tests to determine whether the transaction is within the ordinary 25 course of business. The vertical dimension is the creditor’s expectation, which looks at 26 whether a hypothetical creditor is subjected to an economic risk of a nature that is 27 different from when he decided to extend credit. This often involves a comparison 28 1 between the debtor’s pre-and-post petition conduct. There is no showing that Ms. 2 McClure had a pre-petition practice of incurring debt to herself for spending her own 3 Social Security funds and no creditor could have expected that such expenditures in her 4 bankruptcy case would result in an administrative claim superior to their own claims. 5 The horizontal test looks at whether this is the type that similar businesses would 6 engage in as part of the ordinary course of business. Ms. McClure has not presented 7 any evidence that it is ordinary for an individual to loan themselves their own money. 8 For reimbursement of expenses – Because under §1115 all of Ms. McClure’s 9 post-petition earnings are property of the estate, whatever expenses she paid was from 10 property of the estate and not her personal property. To the extent that payments were 11 made by someone else (ie. her son), she cannot have an administrative claim. 12 For uncompensated services – She cannot claim compensation for services 13 provided once the trustee was appointed. The disclosure statements do not contain a 14 claim for administrative services and neither do the MORs. 15 The Farley employment application says that they will not request compensation 16 for Ms. McClure’s services and does not indicate that she will be seeking compensation 17 from the estate. It discusses the benefit to the estate of the use of Ms. McClure’s 18 knowledge and paralegal services, but that benefit would be wiped out if she were to 19 receive an administrative claim for them, particularly if she were to receive the $530- 20 $550 per hour that she seeks – the Farley Law Firm attorneys charged $150 per hour. 21 Similarly, the employment application of Ms. Rasch does not mention Ms. McClure receiving any compensation or an administrative claim for such compensation. 22 Beyond all of that, §1115 bars her claim for compensation as does §327(a) and 23 §330(a), Paralegals provide professional services and require employment by the 24 court. She was never employed by the court. 25 For the period after the trustee was appointed – Beyond a lack of detail, there is 26 no showing that these actions benefitted the estate and that the Trustee induced her to 27 litigate with him. Both prongs are required under §503(b)(1)(A). Her exhibits show that 28 1 some were from filing voluminous papers in opposition to the Trustee’s proposed 2 settlement with Litt, which was approved by the Court. 3 4 Omnibus Opposition by Weintraub & Selth 5 This should be denied because creditors and the trustee were never given an 6 opportunity to evaluate and be heard as to the alleged loans and advances. Also, the 7 alleged loans and advances were not authorized by the court. Debtor did not seek 8 approval of her employment and has disinterestedness issues, consistently acting in her 9 own self-interest, and her filings have not benefited the estate. There is insufficient 10 evidence. This request is long after the alleged loans were made. 11 Section 364 requires a notice and hearing. This is especially true when the 12 proposed lender is an insider or the debtor herself. These are not “ordinary course” 13 loans and would not be approved as such. Therefore the loan transaction may be 14 relegated to unsecured status or cancelled or disregarded. 15 As to working as a paralegal, she was not and could not be a professional in her 16 own case. 17 18 Supplemental Opposition by Landau Law 19 In response to the tentative ruling posted on January 25, 2023 – specifically as to 20 §1115 – Landau Law filed its Supplemental Opposition [dkt. 2270]. The arguments 21 concern the plain language of §1115 and the fact that there are no exclusions listed. [Some cases are listed, though the Court finds that they are not on point or even 22 factually similar to the McClure situation.] The Thirteenth Amendment simply does not 23 apply because this is not forced labor, but it was Ms. McClure’s choice to work for the 24 estate. It asserts that there is no form of estoppel that can apply. Also, no notice was 25 given through the MORs to creditors and, since Landau Law was not part of the case 26 during the DIP timeframe, Landau Law had no ability to object. Landau Law requests 27 that an evidentiary hearing be conducted in person. 28 1 Supplemental Opposition by Trustee [dkt. 2290] 2 [At the request of the Court, the Trustee filed this brief as to whether post-petition 3 earnings in a chapter 11 case remain property of the estate when the case is converted 4 to chapter 7.] Once the case is converted to chapter 7, the law of the Ninth Circuit is 5 split as to whether post-petition personal service income earned by an individual 6 chapter 11 debtor is considered property of the estate or is recharacterized and treated 7 as property of the debtor. Various courts have struggled with congressional intent when 8 it added §348(f) and the interaction of that provision with §1115(a)(2) and §541(a). The 9 ambiguity created, particularly in light of the certainty when a case under chapter 13 Is 10 converted to chapter 7, leads each court to draw its own conclusion. 11 Although the majority have ruled that property obtained by the debtor during the 12 chapter 11 period remains property of the estate after conversion, there is no dispositive 13 decision by a court of appeals. The majority of courts that have dealt with this hold that 14 any post-petition personal service income earned by the chapter 11 debtor prior to 15 conversion to chapter 7 continues to be property of the estate. In the 9th circuit, this is 16 demonstrated by Mann v. Copeland (In re Copeland), 609 B.R. 834 (D. Ariz. 2019). 17 The opposite ruling is in Wu v. Markosian (In re Markosian), 506 B.R. 273 (BAP 9th Cir. 18 2014). There has been no dispositive ruling. 19 20 21 ANALYSIS There are many lessons to be learned from this case. Unfortunately, most are 22 being learned at the expense of Ms. McClure. 23 The number of unfortunate choices made in this case are legendary and this is 24 not the motion to catalog them. They were not all by Ms. McClure, but many of them 25 were and some led to the results in this motion. 26 /// 27 /// 28 1 Property Management Fees 2 The centerpiece of this motion is that Ms. McClure, while a debtor-in-possession, 3 managed the real property owned by the estate (which included renting, collecting rent, 4 making sure that repairs were done, overseeing maintenance, paying taxes and 5 mortgages, etc.). The Trustee argues that as a DIP, she was required to obtain court 6 approval for her employment and compensation. To some extent this is true in that she 7 was using cash collateral; but other than that it was not required. 8 Section 327(a) requires court approval for the hiring by the trustee or debtor-in- 9 possession of any professional person. This specifically deals with “one or more 10 attorneys, accountants, appraisers, auctioneers, or other professional persons, that do 11 not hold or represent an interest adverse to the estate, and that are disinterested 12 persons, to represent or assist the trustee in carrying out the trustee's duties under this 13 title.” 14 “Section 327(a) has no applicability to the post-petition employment of existing 15 management for a debtor-in-possession. This should be apparent from the plain 16 language of the statute when it requires the professionals being employed to be 17 ‘disinterested.’ As defined by § 101(13), a disinterested person cannot be an insider…. 18 The continued employment of existing management of a debtor-in-possession 19 constitutes part of the operation of debtor's business and is within the ordinary course of 20 business authorized by the Bankruptcy Code.” Matter of All Season Industries, Inc, 121 21 B.R. 822, 825 (Bankr. N.D. Indiana, 1990). The few cases that seem to fall into this category concern DIPS who are 22 corporations and not individuals. While property managers are usually employed by 23 order or consent of the court, a property manager is not a professional person and its 24 fees do not fall under §§327-330. The request for property management fees sought in 25 this motion is for the type of work usually done by a property manager such as renting a 26 unit, collecting rent, accounting, preparing information for the accountant to prepare and 27 file tax returns, making repairs, paying bills, etc. 28 1 It should be noted that there is a difference between the work done by a property 2 manager and that required of a debtor-in-possession or a chapter 11 trustee. Ms. 3 McClure is not entitled to compensation for such things as preparing the MORs, 4 responding to requests by the OUST, hiring accountants and attorneys, etc. But there 5 is no showing that she sought or received money for these tasks. 6 The Trustee argues that §503(c) prevents an administrative claim by an insider, 7 but that is only when the claim is for things that are outside the ordinary course of 8 business and not justified by the facts and circumstances of the case. §503(c)(3). Here 9 Ms. McClure merely continued her prepetition duties as the property manager and this 10 is the ordinary course of business for a person or entity who owns some 18 pieces of 11 residential rental property, let alone in multiple states. 12 Beyond that the payment of property management fees was not hidden or secret. 13 Seven of the properties were subject to liens for the benefit of Pacific Mercantile Bank 14 (PMB), while four were secured to City National Bank (CNB). It was uncertain who held 15 the lien on the Hewitt property. Beyond that there was Ms. McClure’s home. All except 16 Ms. McClure’s homes were rentals or subject to being sold. 17 As required in order to use the rents – which were the sole liquid assets of this 18 estate – Ms. McClure entered into cash collateral agreements with both lenders and 19 these were noticed to the required creditors and approved by order of the Court. To the 20 extent that a creditor entered the case after the cash collateral agreements had ended 21 (as is the situation concerning the Trustee and his counsel in this case), he cannot now object that he did not have timely notice before the money was used. Beyond that, 22 these agreements and orders were on the docket at the time that a trustee was 23 appointed and could have been discovered by due diligence. If this was a concern to 24 Mr. Reichman or Landau Law, they could have refused appointment. But they did not. 25 The cash collateral agreement with Pacific Mercantile grants the following 26 monthly fees for “Property Management (including bookkeeping). This does not 27 include extra-ordinary circumstances should they arise.” [dkt. 14]: 28 1 Corbett #1, 2, 3 - $335 2 Harrington - $245 3 Riverside - $260 4 Dalmation - $245 5 Hanapiilani #1 - $155 6 Gregory - $0 7 8 The stipulation with Pacific Mercantile states that it is not to cover insiders until 9 such time as insider compensation notices are filed and approved (dkt. 14: 19-20). It 10 applied from January 2013 up to 4/23/13, but could be extended on written agreement 11 approved by the court. 12 Apparently for technical reasons, the motion and stipulation was refiled on 13 1/30/12 as dkt. 62. The hearing was on 1/29/13 and the order was entered as dkt. 69. 14 The order ran through 4/30/13. 15 Thereafter a second stipulation with PMB was filed [dkt. 263] and granted with an 16 order extending the agreement from 5/1/13 through 12/31/13 [dkt. 265]. 17 On 12/31/13, there was an emergency motion as to PMB, which used the same 18 budget and was granted on 1/2/14, with the order entered on 2/10/14 [dkt. 301, 312, 19 338] 20 The fourth stipulation with PMB was on 10/6/14 [dkt. 502] 21 The stipulation with City National Bank was virtually identical to that with PMB, 22 but did not include the requirement of an insider compensation notice. This stipulation 23 provided for use of cash collateral through 4/30/13. [dkt. 73, 107] The property 24 management fee, including bookkeeping, was as follows: 25 Rossmore - $290 26 30th st, - $0 27 Benton #3 - $199.50 28 1 Benton #4 $205 2 Other money for maintenance. 3 4 The CNB stipulation was continued on 5/9/13 through 7/31/13 [dkt. 150, 154] 5 The CNB stipulation was again continued on 8/13/13 and the order was effective 6 from 8/1/13 through 11/30/13. [dkt. 210] 7 For some reason, on 8/14/13 there was an emergency motion for use of cash 8 collateral [dkt. 204], which was withdrawn on 8/10/13 [dkt. 214] 9 There was also a motion to extend filed on 1/14/15 [dkt. 579], with a hearing 10 continued many times, but no order seems to have been entered. 11 12 No agreement was entered into as to Hewitt, but on 3/25/15 a motion was 13 brought as to CWMBS, the purported lender. The order for $645 per month was entered 14 on 5/6/15. [dkt. 707] 15 16 Although she breached the PMB stipulation by not filing a notice of insider 17 compensation, that is a matter between Ms. McClure and PMB and their silence during 18 multiple extensions of the agreement shows their acceptance of the situation. 19 Although cash collateral is property of the estate, because there is no other 20 written and noticed agreement, the Court finds that the management fees paid to Ms. 21 McClure are set by each property and are in the amounts of the cash collateral agreements with PMB and CNB. As to Hewitt, there was an order, but not until April 22 2015, although Ms. McClure did take a management fee starting several years earlier. 23 There is no evidence that Ms. McClure had a specific property management 24 agreement for the sum of $3,500 per month, But because of these noticed stipulations 25 and orders, the Court does not question any fees paid to Ms. McClure for her role as 26 manager, so long as they were within the agreed amounts. Also it makes sense that 27 28 1 the amount in question would decline as properties were sold. She also indicates that 2 she did not always pay herself if cash was lacking. 3 The chart below lays out the agreed management fees and the amounts that Ms. 4 McClure actually paid herself on a sample basis of the month of April each year. Again, 5 she did not always pay herself because of a shortage of cash. She did not always stick 6 to the exact amount and her “salary” for some properties went up or down from sample 7 month to sample month. But in calculating the amount due, the Court will hold her to 8 the cash collateral agreement for each property. 9 Two properties are uncertain. The order on Hewitt came in 2015 and it was for 10 $645 per month. But up to that time, Ms. McClure had paid herself $412 per month and 11 that is the figure that the Court will use as a reasonable fee. The other is for the 12 Michigan and Indiana properties. I believe that they were owned free and clear and 13 there was no order to pay a management fee. Twice Ms. McClure distributed some 14 money to herself, being a total of $1,180, but there is no order on this that I am aware 15 of. 16 Using the figures in her exhibit J that she received a total of $56,630.50 for 17 property management fees and calculating the fees that the Court will allow based on 18 the cash collateral agreements, the unpaid balance is $67,745 (see the chart below). 19 As to the issue of §1115, there is little law for guidance to the Court. This 20 provision, which was added in 2005 as part of the package of amendments which were 21 titled “Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act“ amends the definition of “property of the estate” to include “earnings from services performed by the 22 debtor after the commencement of the case but before the case is closed, dismissed, or 23 converted to a case under chapter 7, 12, or 13, whichever occurs first.” §1115(a)(2). 24 Personally I have a lot of trouble applying the theory that property of the estate is 25 used to pay a debtor and still remains property of the estate, so the debtor receives 26 nothing for her services. To get around this, cases talk about property that remains 27 after the debtor uses what is necessary for her upkeep (food, housing, etc). 28 1 And there is yet another unresolved issue: Ms. McClure only received personal 2 services income while she was a debtor-in-possession (2012-2016). But the conversion 3 to chapter 7 took place in May 2022. Does this mean that she could use any money 4 that remained in 2016 to support herself until the conversion some six years later or 5 even until the case is dismissed or closed? 6 However there is no showing that Ms. McClure had any extra cash. If necessary 7 the Court could take evidence on this and it may exist in her MORs. If not, Ms. McClure 8 could present tax returns, bank records, or other documents to show the surplus that 9 remained at the time of the conversion. However this will not be necessary. 10 As noted in the Trustee’s supplemental opposition, it is still an open question as 11 to whether post-petition earnings of the debtor during the chapter 11 period remain 12 property of the estate after conversion to chapter 7. Assuming that there were any such 13 monies in existence at that time, I will be ruling that they revert to the Debtor as her 14 property and not to the estate. The majority of courts have held otherwise and while I 15 could weigh-in on the various statutory interpretations of §348(f) in relationship to 16 §1115, some years ago I decided that I am bound by holdings of the Ninth Circuit 17 Bankruptcy Appellate Panel. Life Ins. Co. v. Barakat (In re Barakat), 173 B.R. 672 18 (Bankr. CDCA, 1994), aff. by 99 F.3d 1520 (9th Cir. 1996), cert. denied 520 U.S. 1143 19 (1997), rehearing denied 520 U.S. 1225 (1997). I am not aware of any court of appeals 20 that has determined the binding effect of its BAP – and certainly this has not been ruled 21 on by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which affirmed me on other grounds. Because of this, there is no reason for Ms. McClure to prove what was left at the 22 time of the conversion from her personal services earnings. The only question that 23 might arise at some future time is whether the monies paid to her were proper for the 24 work that she did during the pendency of the chapter 11 while she was debtor-in- 25 possession. 26 But that is not the question in this claim. It appears that Ms. McClure did not 27 actually receive all of the management fee money that she asserts he was entitled to 28 1 because there was not enough cash in the estate for her to pay herself. So the first 2 question is how much she was entitled to and did not receive. Then the next issue, if 3 the court were to follow the majority of cases, is how much of that would be 4 reimbursement for her personal living expenses 5 Lastly, I just want to make it clear that the work that Ms. McClure did as property 6 manager was in the ordinary course of business for this estate. Also, as to notice or the 7 amounts, each MOR sets forth such a fee. These are available to any interested party. 8 No one objected. The OUST reviews these MORS and did object to other issues 9 including the failure to file complete MORs, facial inaccuracies in the MORs, incorrect 10 reporting of income from Hewitt, etc. [for example, see dkt. 524] But nary a word about 11 the management fees that were reported and were clearly paid to herself. 12 /// 13 /// 14 /// 15 /// 16 /// 17 /// 18 /// 19 /// 20 /// 21 /// /// 22 /// 23 /// 24 /// 25 /// 26 /// 27 /// 28 1 2/19/16; dkt. Benton #4 $205 $210 $210 929 2 Corbett (#1, 2, 3) $1,005 $1,005 $1,300 3 Dalmation $245 $245 $254 $252 Gregpry so $268 4 Hanoapiilani $155 $412 5 Harrington $245 $245 $260 $260 Hewitt $645 $412 $390 $150 6 7/27/15; dkt. Riverside $260 $260 771 7 6/15/16; dkt. 8 Rossmore $290 $290 1061 5/14/13; dkt. 9 || 30th Street so 155 MI & IN $1,000 10 |! totaL $1,910 $695 $645 $2,607. -—«$3,299-~Ss« $1,922 11 12 PER MONTH TOTAL (Hewitt at (Hewitt at 13 $412) $412) 44 || TOTAL ALLOWED - JAN. 2013 THRU 15 || juLy 2015 $3,017 $93,512 16 TOTAL ALLOWED - AUG. 2015 THRU 17 || FEB. 2016 $2,757 $19,296 TOTAL ALLOWED - 18 || mar. 2016 THRU 49 || JUNE 2016 $2,352 $9,406 TOTAL ALLOWED - 20 || JULY 2016 $2,062 $2,062 21 |! toTAL ALLOWED $124,275 99 || AMOUNT RECEIVED $56,530 23 || [AMOUNT OF CLAIM FOR PROPERTY 25 || MANAGEMENT $67,745 26 27 28
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1 Asserted Loans to the Estate 2 Ms. McClure asserts that she loaned the fees that she did receive back to the 3 estate so that the case would not be dismissed, that her family loaned her the money for 4 her living expenses, and that she deposited her exempt Social Security funds into the 5 debtor’s general bank account. She claims $87,292 for these items. 6 There is no evidence that any of these was a loan and not a gift. In fact, given 7 that she would be the beneficiary of any overage in the estate at the end of the case, it 8 is logical that she would contribute money to make sure that there was insurance, 9 property taxes were paid, repairs were made, etc. Throughout this case she worked 10 very hard to keep as many properties as possible and only sold or let go of those that 11 she had to. She also wanted to remain a debtor-in-possession and that meant that the 12 estate could not fall into administrative insolvency. So she had a lot to gain with this 13 contribution to the future of the estate. 14 Unlike the property management fees, there is nothing on which to base an 15 estoppel claim when it comes to the Social Security contributions. They were not 16 revealed in the MORs as loans or categorized in that fashion in the disclosure 17 statements. No notice was given that these were loans and not contributions. No court 18 order was sought or granted. 19 Beyond that, even if these were loans and not gift, they do not meet the test to be 20 in the ordinary course of business. There is no indication that a creditor of this estate 21 would expect Ms. McClure to support the case through putting in her own money. There is no history to show that this was her usual practice. And there is no evidence 22 that similar businesses acted in this way. But, as noted above, this is superfluous 23 because there is no indication that these were meant to be loans and not gifts. 24
25 Paralegal, Case Management and Litigation Support Fees 26 Part of the reason that Ms. McClure has suffered during this case was because 27 she decided to keep control and hire counsel only when absolutely necessary and for 28 1 limited purposes. It is clear that Ms. McClure is a highly trained and competent 2 paralegal. Just look at the result of the Long Beach litigation and the quality of papers 3 that she has filed in this case. But it is also clear that she does not have sufficient 4 knowledge or competence in the intricacies of bankruptcy law and procedure. Had she 5 hired and listened to trained bankruptcy counsel, her “loans” would have been 6 documented and approved by the Court, it is likely that a trustee would not have been 7 appointed, and this whole case would be in a different place. But that is hindsight. 8 9 History of bankruptcy counsel: 10 12/21/12 – Greenberg & Bass (Andrew Goodman, James Felton, Yi Sun Kim) – thru 11 about 1/20/15 [dkt. 966], though Ms. McClure states that this was through 8/14 [dkt, 12 2143. p. 4]. Greenberg & Bass filed 10/1/13 disclosure statement [dkt. 251]; filed 13 12/20/13 amended disclosure statement [dkt. 299]. MORs were filed by Greenberg & 14 Bass until 7/23/14, but apparently prepared by McClure. [dkt. 966, p. 6-7] 15 16 11/7/14 - Faye Rasch was special bankruptcy counsel to assist Ms. McClure, who 17 remained pro per – thru 5/6/16 [dkt 517, 1320] 18 19 12/10/15 -Weintraub & Selth, APC was special bankruptcy counsel to assist Ms. 20 McClure, who remained pro per (James Selth, Daniel Weintraub, Elaine Nguyen) – thru 21 about 5/17/16 [dkt. 841, 1813]
22 5/3/16 – McClure filed her disclosure statement that was prepared with the assistance 23 of Weintraub & Selth [dkt. 1020] 24
25 Starting in 2014, Ms. McClure hired Faye Rasch to advise her, but it was Shirley 26 McClure who remained pro per. Similarly, at the end of 2015, she hired Weintraub & 27 Sleth as her special counsel, but once again she remained pro per and in that way she 28 1 was able to control the case. As to her case management support, there was never any 2 agreement by the attorneys or by the court that she would be compensated for the time 3 spent. It was her choice to hire attorneys at a lower rate by supporting their work with 4 her own. Once again, this prevented the appointment of a chapter 11 trustee because it 5 was clear that Ms. McClure needed counsel. The last thing that she wanted was to lose 6 control of the case and this was one way to prevent that. 7 Are independent paralegals professionals for the purposes of §327(a)? There are 8 no cases right on point. Most deal with compensation of a paralegal within a law firm or 9 whether the paralegal needed to be licensed by the state. For example, see In re 10 Semenza, 121 B.R. 56 (Bankr. Montana, 1990). In the present case the law firms and 11 Ms. McClure waived any assertion that the estate should compensate her for paralegal 12 work done in conjunction with those attorneys. 13 It appears that an independent paralegal who is not part of an attorney’s firm and 14 is being paid outside of the fee approved for the attorney is a professional and must be 15 approved by the court. She was not approved by the Court to provide paralegal services 16 as a professional who was entitled to an administrative claim under §§327-§330. 17 Beyond that, as to her work when there was no active attorney employed and 18 working and as noted above on other issues, there is no indication that Ms. McClure 19 intended to be paid from the estate or that the Court intended to pay her. 20 There will be no claim allowed for paralegal or litigation support services provided 21 by Ms. McClure.
22 Expense Reimbursement 23 Claims for expense reimbursement by the Debtor come under §503(b)(1)(A), 24 which states 25 (b) After notice and a hearing, there shall be allowed, administrative 26 expenses, other than claims allowed under section 502(f) of this title, including— 27 28 1 (1) (A) the actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate, 2 including— 3 (i) wages, salaries, and commissions for services rendered after the 4 commencement of the case; and 5 (ii) wages and benefits awarded pursuant to a judicial proceeding or a 6 proceeding of the National Labor Relations Board as back pay attributable to any 7 period of time occurring after commencement of the case under this title, as a 8 result of a violation of Federal or State law by the debtor, without regard to the 9 time of the occurrence of unlawful conduct on which such award is based or to 10 whether any services were rendered, if the court determines that payment of 11 wages and benefits by reason of the operation of this clause will not substantially 12 increase the probability of layoff or termination of current employees, or of 13 nonpayment of domestic support obligations, during the case under this title; 14 15 Section 503(b)(1)(A) gives examples of the types of expenditures that qualify, but 16 does not limit them to these particular items. However, it does require that they 17 are/were actual and necessary to the preservation of the estate. There is also no 18 limitation as to who made the expenditures: the DIP, a trustee, a creditor, the debtor, or 19 an interested party all qualify. 20 21 Debtor-in-Possession Expenses Prior to the appointment of the trustee, most or all of Ms. McClure’s expenditures 22 fell into three categories: litigation against the Litt and Tidus parties; repair, 23 maintenance, leasing, or sales of the real property; and dealing with status reports, 24 filings with the OUST and the court. 25 Prior to August 2016, any money that Ms. McClure spent for transcripts, filing 26 fees, copies, postage, mileage, etc. in this bankruptcy case or in the appeals are 27 allowed administrative expenses unless these were unreasonable. These are the type 28 1 of costs that an estate must pay. They do not fall under §1115 as earnings for the 2 debtor. To the extent that they supported the work of the various counsel, they are 3 necessary and would be reimbursed to those attorneys without question. So there is no 4 reason that Ms. McClure needs to be out-of-pocket. 5 The fact that she was usually on the losing side does not make them 6 unreasonable. Her successful attempts to block and delay the Litt parties from 7 executing on her properties were reasonable undertakings. I have no way of knowing 8 whether the Litt state court case had much value, but apparently Mr. Litt thought that it 9 was worth defending and did everything that he could to block it from going forward. 10 Ultimately the settlement with Litt, which was very substantial, was at least in part 11 because of the ongoing litigation by Ms. McClure. Similarly, the settlement with the 12 Tidus parties was because Ms. McClure proved to this Court that there was value and 13 merit in that state court action. 14 The opposition raises the question of whether the outlay was on behalf of the 15 estate or solely for the benefit of Ms. McClure. Obviously she would be the beneficiary 16 of any overage in the estate. But this does not mean that her work to preserve the 17 properties was solely for her own benefit. Her fights with Litt certainly had an element of 18 personal animus, but they were also necessary to prevent him from executing on the 19 various properties and to try to force him to remove his liens on properties that were to 20 be sold so that the sales could be completed and the cash could be used by the estate. 21 If there are any specific categories for the debtor-in-possession period that the opposition believes do not fall into those classifications, please point them out. 22 Thus, I have no hesitancy to award her the reimbursements of the amounts that 23 she spent while she was a debtor-in-possession. But once the Trustee was appointed, 24 she could no longer act on behalf of the estate unless requested to do so by the Trustee 25 or his agent. Nonetheless, her costs are reimbursable administrative expenses if they 26 meet the requirement of being actual and necessary to the preservation of the estate. 27 These need to be handled in detail to show that they qualify. 28 1 After the Trustee was Appointed 2 It is less clear as to the expenses for items after the Trustee was appointed. As 3 noted above, any cost incurred at the request of the Trustee or his agent is to be 4 reimbursed. For example, if the Farley Firm was working for the Trustee in 2017, Ms. 5 McClure is entitled to an administrative claim for the costs for copying, Bates marking, 6 scanning, etc. come 120,000 pages that she did at the request of the Farley firm. [See 7 dkt. 2143, p. 13] If the Farley Firm was not working for or with the Trustee but the 8 Trustee received these documents and they aided him in analyzing the Tidus case or 9 the Litt case, they would still qualify for an administrative reimbursement claim. 10 Some of the costs were for fighting the prior trustee on the Tidus $100,000 11 settlement. While her initial proposals to buy the Tidus matter by giving the estate a 12 percent of her “win” - if she did win - was not practical from the beginning and could not 13 reasonably benefit the estate as against a cash offer by the Tidus defendants, she 14 prevailed on her opposition to the $100,000 settlement figure. Ms. McClure’s opposition 15 to the Trustee’s settlement motion and his appeal resulted in an additional $200,000 for 16 the estate. Her costs of opposition and appeal qualify as actual and necessary to 17 preserving the estate. 18 But there were other oppositions and appeals that were more for the individual 19 benefit of Ms. McClure. 20 In her motion for this administrative claim, Ms. McClure provides extensive 21 documentation as to each outlay for which she is seeking reimbursement. But Exhibits A, B, C, D, E, and H starting in 2016 need to be categorized to certain motions, etc. 22 Exhibit F items will be allowed in the amount of $7,894.03. Exhibit G items 23 should have been made available to the Trustee, if needed, but did need to be stored as 24 long as properties were being sold or rented. Also these are property of the estate and 25 the Trustee could have sold them, but did not. So, if Ms. McClure can show that she 26 made the Trustee aware of these items, the Exhibit G costs will be allowed in the 27 amount of $40,324.50. 28 1 Summary 2 Area Amount Amount To be Comments 3 allowed denied determined 4 Property $67,745.00 $25,625.00 Management 5 Loans $0.00 $87,292.00 6 Paralegal and Litigation $0.00 $83,022.50 7 Support 8 Expense Reimbursement 9 Ex. A 10 (photocopies $10,091.85 7098.75 allowed thru 2015; tbd and printer starting 2016 11 copies) Ex. B (court 12 filing and $11,046.00 $49,319.50 allowed thru 2015; tbd starting 2016 13 service) Ex. C 14 (PACER and $4,057.09 $6,369.95 allowed thru 2015; tbd starting 2016 legal research) 15 Ex. D $5,490.59 $2,404.61 allowed thru 2015; tbd 16 (postage) starting 2016 17 Ex. E $7,065.92 allowed thru 2015; tbd (transcripts) starting 2016 18 Ex. F (file $7,894.03 allowed thru 2015; tbd storage) starting 2016 19 Ex. G 20 (property $40,324.50 if shows that Trustee equipment knew of these 21 storage 22 Ex. H (other) $19,092.78 specifics needed
23 TOTAL $106,324.56 $195,939.50 $131,676.01 24 As it stands today, the above chart shows what is allowed, what is denied, and 25 what needs further information. The Court is ruling that the determination on Property 26 Management, Loans, and Paralegal and Litigation Support are final rulings. The 27 Expense Reimbursement requests will be continued to June 6, 2023 for further 28 1 || evidence as shown in the table above. The dates are as set forth in the Order 2 || accompanying this Memorandum. 3 At this point in time | do not see any need for an evidentiary hearing. 4 Ms. McClure is also requesting an immediate distribution of part of the allowed 5 || claim. This is not unreasonable in that the district court allowed the Landau Firm to be 6 || paid 20% of its claim [USBC dkt. 2239; USDC 8:22-cv-00177, dkt. 64]. This is 7 || appropriate unless there is a stay. 8 Therefore, unless there is a stay, Mr. Gottlieb is ordered to distribute the amount Q || of $21,264.91 without delay on or after April 25, 2023 unless there is a stay.. 10 11 || 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 a eee Date: March 29, 2023 Geraldine Mund st—<‘i‘iéSO*™*”# 20 United States Bankruptcy Judge 26 27 28