William Needler v. Charles Rendlen III

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2005
Docket04-6083
StatusPublished

This text of William Needler v. Charles Rendlen III (William Needler v. Charles Rendlen III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Needler v. Charles Rendlen III, (bap8 2005).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

________

04-6083NE ________

In re: * * Big Mac Marine, Inc., * * Debtor. * * William L. Needler, * * Appeal from the United States Claimant-Appellant, * Bankruptcy Court for the * District of Nebraska v. * * Charles E. Rendlen, III; * * U.S. Trustee - Appellee * * Pinnacle Bank, * * Creditor-Appellee. *

Submitted: June 1, 2005 Filed: June 20, 2005 ________

Before KRESSEL, Chief Judge, DREHER, and SCHERMER, Bankruptcy Judges. ________

DREHER, Bankruptcy Judge. This is an appeal from an order of the bankruptcy court1 denying a motion to vacate an order which denied Debtor, Big Mac Marine, Inc.’s, application to retain William Needler and Associates, Ltd. and William Needler (Needler) as attorney for Debtor, and further denied Needler's application for attorney’s fees and expenses. While the facts are somewhat complicated, and made more so by Needler's creation of an at times unclear record, the legal issue is straightforward. The bankruptcy court determined that Needler was disqualified from serving as attorney for Debtor because Needler had been approved to represent the debtors in another pending Chapter 11 case in the District and it therefore denied the application for attorney’s fees and expenses. The bankruptcy court was unquestionably correct in so holding and we affirm.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1. Big Mac Marine, Inc. and Its Bankruptcy Case

Debtor was a family business engaged in selling boats and other marine equipment at retail. When it began operations in the early 1990s it was owned by Edward and Shirley Schmidt (the Schmidts). Its office and showroom were located in Ogallala, Nebraska. Pinnacle Bank of Ogallala, Nebraska (the Bank) lent money to Debtor, which the Schmidts personally guaranteed. In 2000, the Schmidts sold the family business to their son, Greg, but they remained responsible on their personal guarantees. The details of the arrangement for sale between the Schmidts and Greg were not fully developed in the record. At some point, however, the Schmidts claimed to have taken back the stock in the company and become its sole owners.

1 The Honorable Timothy J. Mahoney, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Nebraska.

2 Debtor filed a Chapter 11 petition for bankruptcy relief on April 14, 2003. According to the schedules filed in Debtor’s Chapter 11 case, the Schmidts were the largest creditor in the case, holding a noncontingent, undisputed and liquidated secured debt of $596,127.27, secured by Debtor's inventory. The schedules indicated that this debt arose when the Schmidts “paid off” Debtor's loans to the Bank on July 19, 2002. Apparently on this date, and perhaps earlier, the Schmidts had been required to perform on their guarantees to the Bank. As a result of this transaction, they claimed that they became secured creditors of Debtor, but they offered no written documentation to support that contention. In fact, Edward Schmidt testified that there was no documentation to support their claim to a secured status. In spite of this lack of documentation and this admission, the Schmidts persisted in claiming that they held a security interest in most of the assets of the company. The only other secured creditor listed in Schedule D of Debtor's bankruptcy filing was the Bank, which the schedules listed as being owed approximately $370,000 secured by the real estate, a pickup, and certain rental boats.

At the same time that it filed its petition, Debtor filed a proposed Plan of Reorganization in which it proposed to treat the claim of the Schmidts as an allowed secured claim secured by Debtor's inventory which it stated they "owned." The Plan noted that the payments to the Bank made by the Schmidts would be avoided in the Schmidts' Chapter 11 case. The plan also proposed to sell the inventory free and clear of liens and deliver the proceeds to the Schmidts. The Schmidts would be paid over time for any deficiency. In the Plan Debtors also proposed to treat the Bank as a creditor secured only by real estate, a pickup truck and rental boats owned by Debtor. The Plan proposed to pay the claim of the Bank over time in two separate secured classes at 6% and 6½% interest respectively. Unsecured creditors would receive a 10% dividend.

3 2. The Schmidts' Chapter 11 Case

The Schmidts had their own financial problems. On July 31, 2002, about nine months before Debtor filed, the Schmidts had filed their own Chapter 11 joint bankruptcy petition. In that Chapter 11 case, Needler was approved by the bankruptcy court as debtors' counsel to represent the Schmidts in performing their duties as Chapter 11 debtors. The Bank was the major creditor in the Schmidts' Chapter 11 case. In the Schmidts' Chapter 11 case, the Bank asserted that it was owed approximately $1.6 million and was secured. During the course of the Schmidts' Chapter 11 case the Schmidts challenged the Bank's right to claim any security interest in their property.

3. Debtor's Attempted Retention of Needler in This Chapter 11 Case

On April 14, 2003, Debtor filed an Application to retain Needler as counsel for the estate pursuant to section 327 of the Bankruptcy Code. In that Application, Debtor stated that to the best of its knowledge this representation did not create a conflict of interest. With the Application, Needler filed a Sworn Declaration in which he stated that he was disinterested and represented no interest adverse to the estate. He did, however, disclose that he represented the Schmidts in their personal Chapter 11 case and that they were the 100% shareholders of Debtor. He further disclosed that the Schmidts were creditors of Debtor, and that they became such as a result of transfers to the Bank which occurred on March 31, 2001, and July 19, 2002. Needler referenced the fact that the Schmidts would seek to reverse those transactions by filing an adversary proceeding in their own case.

Both the United States Trustee and the Bank objected to the retention of Needler as counsel for Debtor. Both asserted that Needler was not disinterested and that he represented interests adverse to the estate. After a hearing, the bankruptcy court issued an order denying the application to employ Needler as counsel for the Debtor.

4 In its order dated July 10, 2003, the bankruptcy court held that Needler’s representation of the Schmidts in their own Chapter 11 disqualified him from representing Debtor in this case. The bankruptcy court noted that the Schmidts were Debtor's sole shareholders, the Bank was a creditor in both cases, and that, given the circumstances, Needler could not represent both sets of debtors without having conflicting allegiances. The resolution of the Bank’s claims would need to be addressed in both cases and would place Needler in an inevitable conflict position. The bankruptcy court further cited the fact that Debtor had already filed a Plan which questionably preferred the Schmidts over other creditors. The bankruptcy court further said that “[i]f the Schmidt adversary proceeding against Pinnacle Bank is completed and if the Schmidts withdraw any claims they have in the Big Mac Marine case, then it would appear that Mr. Needler would not have a conflict of interest. Until that time, he is prohibited from representing Big Mac Marine, Inc.” Needler appealed the July 10, 2003 order to the District Court which found that it lacked jurisdiction of the appeal because, given the quoted language, the order was not a final one. Big Mac Marine, Inc. v. Jensen, 305 B.R. 309 (D. Neb. 2004). Needler’s further appeal to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals was dismissed when he failed to timely file his brief or further prosecute the appeal.

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