Yacovi v. Rubin & Rudman

411 F. App'x 342
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2011
Docket10-1673
StatusUnpublished

This text of 411 F. App'x 342 (Yacovi v. Rubin & Rudman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yacovi v. Rubin & Rudman, 411 F. App'x 342 (1st Cir. 2011).

Opinion

STAHL, Circuit Judge.

Nir Yacovi, the debtor in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, appeals a decision approving the settlement of legal claims held by his estate. Yacovi also asserts that the bank *344 ruptcy court should have granted his motion to abandon those claims. We affirm.

I. Facts & Background

On October 5, 2005, Yacovi resigned from his position with URS Staffing Corporation and/or United Revenue Service, Inc. (collectively “URS”) to start his own tax preparation business, IBTS, Inc., which was to provide services similar to those offered by his former employer. Shortly thereafter, URS accused Yacovi of violating the employment agreement he had entered into with URS, and Yacovi retained Peter Finn, an attorney at Rubin and Rudman, L.L.P. (collectively “R & R”), to advise him about this contractual issue.

On October S, 2006, an arbitrator concluded that Yacovi had in fact breached the employment agreement and awarded URS $226,000. 1 Although the arbitrator did not find that Yacovi was prohibited from competing with URS, he concluded that Yacovi nonetheless violated the agreement by removing, and not timely returning after his resignation, documents from URS (including lists of URS’s clients and the fees they paid); retaining the fees generated from some tax and financial services he provided while employed at URS; soliciting URS’s clients and prospective clients for his own benefit prior to resigning; and, after leaving URS, using his knowledge of URS’s clients’ identities and URS’s rates (that is, URS confidential information) to solicit business for IBTS. The arbitrator also noted that Yacovi’s account of some facts lacked credibility. Within weeks of the arbitration decision, Yacovi filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy relief, and Harold B. Murphy (“Trustee”) of Hanify & King, P.C. (“H & K”) was appointed as the trustee. Yacovi’s petition listed R & R as holding a claim for legal fees and URS as holding a $226,000 claim for the arbitration award. In early 2007, URS filed a complaint asserting that the arbitration award was non-dischargeable in Yacovi’s bankruptcy because it was the result of fraud as a fiduciary, embezzlement, and/or larceny. On March 18, 2008, the bankruptcy court granted URS’s motion for summary judgment on this issue. The following year, the court granted Yacovi a discharge, 2 relieved the Trustee of his responsibilities, and closed the case.

However, on May 13, 2009, exactly one month after the case was closed, Yacovi filed a motion to reopen the bankruptcy proceedings to list various legal claims against R & R (collectively “malpractice claims”) 3 as additional assets of the estate. Specifically, Yacovi alleged that R & R had advised him that, because the employment agreement lacked a non-compete clause covering his post-employment activity, he could operate IBTS and service URS’s clients. In a complaint he sought to pursue against R & R, Yacovi contended that a lawyer with appropriate experience exercising the requisite standard of care, “would have advised [him] ... that any *345 services provided to clients of [URS] would most definitely result in expensive litigation ... [and] that there was a very real possibility in such litigation that there may be an adverse finding against him.” Yacovi moved for the bankruptcy court to abandon the malpractice claims or, in the alternative, “administer this asset to allow him to seek a recovery of [the arbitration award].”

On June 24, 2009, the bankruptcy court granted Yacovi’s motion to reopen, but denied his motion to abandon without prejudice. Accordingly, the Trustee began investigating the malpractice claims and requested all relevant documents in Yacovi’s possession. The Trustee also successfully applied to the bankruptcy court to have H & K employed as his own counsel to, among other things, advise on the merits of the malpractice claims.

On September 29, 2009, the Trustee moved for approval of a settlement he had reached with R & R. In exchange for the estate releasing all claims against R & R, the settlement required R & R to pay $25,000 and waive any claims it may have had against the estate. In his motion to approve, the Trustee asserted that his investigation of the malpractice claims consisted of the following: discussing the claims and defenses with Yacovi’s counsel and with R & R, reviewing the arbitration opinion (which included a detailed analysis of the employment agreement), reviewing filings in URS’s state court petition to confirm the arbitration award, reviewing Yacovi’s proposed complaint against R & R, and reviewing Yacovi’s letter demanding relief from R & R for the purported malpractice. Based on this work, the Trustee believed that there was a “real risk” that litigating the malpractice claims would be unsuccessful, and therefore concluded that the proposed settlement was in the best interest of the estate. The Trustee explained that the arbitrator had found that the employment agreement did not prohibit Yacovi from competing with URS, and therefore it would be difficult to prove that advising Yacovi about IBTS’s ability to compete with URS constituted negligence or was the cause of the arbitration award. Moreover, the Trustee found “little support for the allegation” that R & R told Yacovi that he could solicit URS’s customers without running afoul of the agreement.

Yacovi opposed the motion to approve, arguing that the Trustee’s investigation was inadequate and consisted primarily of discussions with R & R. Although acknowledging that the Trustee procured the relevant documents, Yacovi’s counsel swore in an affidavit that he was never consulted by the Trustee about the merits of the malpractice claims. Yacovi’s counsel also expressed his willingness to pursue the claims on a contingency basis with a percentage allocated to the estate, which was an offer he had previously proposed in conversations with the Trustee.

At the conclusion of a hearing held on October 14, 2009, the bankruptcy court granted the mofion to approve, explaining its decision with only a few sentences:

It’s always a tough call when you’ve got a disputed piece of litigation that the Trustee thinks is. not worth pursuing and somebody else thinks is worth pursuing. My obligation generally speaking is to rely on the expertise of the Trustee. In this particular matter I have no reason to doubt the amount of due diligence Mr. Murphy performed in evaluating the claim. I am going to grant the motion.

The district court subsequently affirmed. See In re Yacovi, No. 09-11988, 2010 WL 2106171, at *3 (D.Mass. May 24, 2010).

*346 II. Discussion

A. The Bankruptcy Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Approving the Settlement

“Bankruptcy court orders endorsing settlements are reviewed for manifest abuse of discretion.” 4 Hicks, Muse & Co. v. Brandt (In re Healthco Int’l, Inc.),

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