Winship v. Cook (In Re Cook)

223 B.R. 782, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1040, 1998 WL 518362
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 1998
DocketBAP No. WY-97-065, Bankruptcy No. 90-20215-A
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 223 B.R. 782 (Winship v. Cook (In Re Cook)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winship v. Cook (In Re Cook), 223 B.R. 782, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1040, 1998 WL 518362 (bap10 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

PUSATERI, Bankruptcy Judge.

Stephen R. Winship (“Winship”) appeals from an order disqualifying him as counsel for the chapter 7 Trustee and requiring disgorgement of all fees and expenses previously paid out of the bankruptcy estate. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I. Background.

In March 1990, Ray Cook filed a petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in the District of Wyoming. About a week later, his son, Alan Cook, and two limited partnerships in which they were involved, WLCO and Vancor, filed chapter 7 *785 petitions. Gary Barney (“the Trustee”) was appointed chapter 7 trustee for all four cases. After the first meeting of creditors, the Trustee reported that no assets were available for distribution to creditors from Ray’s estate.

Prior to the bankruptcy proceedings, Joseph Darrah and John Walsh (collectively “Darrah”) represented Ray and Alan Cook in a lawsuit against Zion’s First National Bank of Salt Lake City, Utah, on a contingent fee basis that contemplated payment of their fee based on the percentage they succeeded in reducing the Cooks’ loan obligation to the bank. The case was settled, and Darrah eventually brought suit against the Cooks to enforce the contingent fee agreement. The Cooks and the limited partnerships filed for bankruptcy shortly before the Wyoming State Bar Association’s Committee on Resolution of Fee Disputes awarded Darrah fees in the amount of $776,345.15. Darrah was scheduled in all four eases as the largest unsecured creditor, "with a disputed claim in the amount of $800,000.

On behalf of Darrah, Winship filed a complaint seeking denial of Ray Cook’s discharge pursuant to 11 U.S.C.A. § 727, alleging the fraudulent transfer and concealment of assets as well as failure to disclose the transfers. He also filed a complaint seeking denial of Alan Cook’s discharge on the same grounds. On August 7, 1991, Judge Harold L. Mai denied Ray and Alan Cook’s discharges.

On May 24, 1991, the Trustee sought approval to employ Winship in the Vancor, WLCO, and Alan Cook cases — but not Ray Cook’s case — for purposes of bringing a declaratory judgment action to determine the estates’ interests in certain property and to represent the estates in a condemnation action. Attached to the Trustee’s application in each case was Winship’s affidavit disclosing “that I represent the creditors Joseph Darrah and John Walsh in their claim against the estate.” Vancor, WLCO, and Alan Cook objected to Winship’s employment, alleging a conflict of interest. Judge Mai found that there was no actual conflict and that the debtors did not have standing to object under § 327(c), and Winship’s employment was approved.

In November 1991, Ray Cook and his wife, Leoma (“the Debtors”), filed a joint petition under chapter 11 in the District of Nevada. The chapter 11 was transferred to Wyoming and converted to chapter 7. It was ultimately consolidated in September 1992 with Ray Cook’s 1990 ease, apparently for procedural purposes only. Trustee Barney appears to have been appointed to be the trustee for the Debtors’ converted case as he had been for the other four cases. Although the Debtors’ consolidated eases were closely related to the cases involving their son, WLCO, and Van-eor, no one has ever sought to have any of the cases substantively consolidated. To simplify our discussion, however, we will hereafter use “the Debtors” or “the Debtors’ case” to refer both to Ray Cook’s individual case and to his and Leoma Cook’s joint ease. In addition, from the record before us, it is not clear whether any of the parties or the bankruptcy court have made any effort to distinguish — if there are any relevant distinctions to be made — between the assets and liabilities of the Ray Cook estate and those of the Ray and Leoma Cook estate; we will use “the Debtors’ estate” to refer to both collectively.

In August 1993, on the Trustee’s complaint, Judge Mai denied Leoma Cook a discharge.

Seventeen months after the first four cases were filed, on October 22, 1992, the Trustee filed an application to employ Winship in the Debtors’ bankruptcy case “to proceed against preferential transfers and other matters to be recovered for the estate.” Winship’s affidavit stated that he did not hold or represent an interest adverse to the Trustee or estate, “except that I also represent creditors Joseph E. Darrah and John Walsh.” No objections were filed and an order approving employment was entered November 4, 1992.

Judge Mai retired in December 1993, and there being no other bankruptcy judge in Wyoming at the time, Charles E. Matheson, Chief Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Colorado, took over all pending matters, except one adversary proceeding. One of the first matters Judge Matheson heard in the *786 Debtors’ proceeding was a motion by two creditors to disqualify and remove the Trustee and Winship as counsel for the Trustee. Judge Matheson denied the motion, holding that the objection was not timely and did not raise new information. The court also criticized the creditors for “judge shopping,” apparently meaning they seemed to be seeking a new answer to a previously-resolved question simply because a new judge had taken over the case, and stated that if the Trustee was not meeting their timetable for objecting to claims, the creditors had authority to file such objections.

On May 17, 1994, Winship filed his first interim fee application in the amount of $49,-611. The application was filed in the Debtors’ case; Winship has filed no fee applications in the Alan Cook, WLCO, or Vancor cases. Winship’s request for fees included time for services performed during the seventeen months after he was hired in those three cases but before the Trustee hired him in the Debtors’ case. The application stated that the Debtors’, Alan Cook’s, WLCO’s, and Vancor’s cases were “so interrelated as to make it a meaningless exercise to try to distinguish what assets belong to a particular estate” and that, as a matter of “administrative convenience,” the fee application was being made in the Debtors’ ease only. Remarkably, there were no objections to this application or later to his second application, and orders were entered approving both. The bankruptcy court denied Winship’s third application, however, on the ground that some of the fees appeared to be based on time spent for the benefit of the related estates. Significantly, the court pointed out that the orders authorizing Winship’s employment were not coextensive and that while the Trustee had hired him under a general retainer in the Debtors’ case, there were restrictions on his employment in the other cases. The court went on to state that if the estates were as intertwined as Winship represented, questions then arose concerning the propriety of having a single trustee for all of the estates, as well as the propriety of having a single attorney represent the Trustee in all of the cases, citing two published court decisions for Winship’s review. Win-ship filed an amended application that was approved by the court. In total, the Debtors’ estate paid Winship $60,853.65 in fees and $7,292.98 in expenses.

During the next couple of years, two events took place that had a significant impact on the decision that has been appealed. The first event involved the Trustee’s attempt to sell approximately 248 acres of land in Wyoming (the “Yellowcreek Property”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 B.R. 782, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1040, 1998 WL 518362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winship-v-cook-in-re-cook-bap10-1998.