Charles W. Grant, the appointed trustee in this seven-year-old involuntary bankruptcy proceeding, and Ronald Bergwerk, his attorney, appeal from the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s award of $35,725.88 in attorney’s fees to Bergwerk. They also appeal the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s award to the debtor, George Schumann Tire & Battery Co., of interest on $275,088 required to be refunded to the debtor by the trustee.
I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Schumann Tire & Battery Co. is a retail tire business; H. Harold Hart is an officer and principal stockholder in the business. 1 *876 The business had accumulated several judgments from personal injuries and unpaid debts. When creditors attempted to obtain payment of these debts, Hart told them that Schumann Tire had ceased to exist as of June 1982 and that there was no money available. According to Grant, this was because Hart transferred Schumann Tire to Bostick Oil Company in order to become judgment-proof. 2 On March 1, 1983, some of the creditors filed involuntary bankruptcy petitions under chapter 7 of the bankruptcy code. The bankruptcy court (“Bankruptcy I”) ordered relief effective May 2, 1983, and set January 20, 1984 as the last date for creditors to file proof of claims. The creditors filed twenty claims totalling approximately $840,000.
Rather than contesting the involuntary petitions, the debtor filed schedules claiming that it had no assets. Foreseeing the need for legal action, Grant (himself an attorney) hired an attorney, Ronald Berg-werk, on May 20, 1983. 3 Bergwerk began to investigate the debtor’s claim that it had no funds, and concluded that the debtor fraudulently transferred its assets to Hart Enterprises and Bostick Oil. 4 Grant thus brought a five-count claim against the debt- or before Bankruptcy I. Bankruptcy I held a two-day trial. Grant prevailed on one count, and Hart and Hart Enterprises were ordered to pay a $346,000 judgment in favor of the trustee. Bergwerk and Grant further funded the bankruptcy estate by means of an interpleader action with Bos-tick Oil, discussed infra, and garnishment of Hart’s Merrill Lynch assets.
Rather than paying the $346,000 amount into the bankruptcy estate, Hart eventually paid all but three of the creditors directly. The three remaining claims totalled $644,-080.86. One of the three claims was filed by Hart himself for $633,000, based on a judgment against the debtor. On November 27, 1985, however, the bankruptcy court allowed only $93,000 of this claim, at which point the estate became solvent. The trustee paid $11,080 to the remaining two creditors and concluded administration of the estate. Because Grant and Berg-werk had brought over $400,000 into the estate a large amount of money remained undistributed at the estate’s conclusion. On August 4, 1986, the bankruptcy court ordered a refund to the debtor of $275,-088.96, the amount remaining in the estate after the creditors and administrative expenses were paid. For two years Grant failed to transfer this amount to the debt- or. On September 22, 1988, after a second court order, Grant attempted to refund $299,749.22 to the debtor, but the debtor refused the offer.
Besides the fraudulent transfer action, Bergwerk represented Grant in two other proceedings. Grant brought one suit to recover possession of nine vehicles, some of which were titled in the debtor; this proceeding took approximately one hour to resolve, and the bankruptcy court granted relief. The second action was the Bostick Oil interpleader. Bostick entered into the allegedly fraudulent purchase and sale agreement with Hart and Hart Enterprises on March 31, 1983, and made a large down payment at that time. When the creditors filed under chapter 7, twenty monthly payments of $7,987.78 each remained due on the two promissory notes owed by Bostick to Hart. Because of the fraud claim, there was some dispute between Grant and Hart regarding whether the money remaining on the notes was subject to bankruptcy proceedings. Bostick interpleaded the funds into the court registry on October 13, 1983, asking the court to resolve the ownership *877 issue. On April 24, 1984, pursuant to a stipulation reached by Hart, Grant, and Bostick Oil, Grant transferred the funds to an interest-bearing account, and Bostick made all payments to Grant for placement in the account until resolution of the action. On September 19, 1985, Bankruptcy I granted summary judgment in favor of Grant and ordered Bostick to pay the balance of the notes to Grant.
Bergwerk requested $103,200 in attorney’s fees plus expenses on August 5, 1985, and amended his application to request $138,400 plus expenses on December 22,1985. A hearing was held before Bankruptcy I on July 31, 1986. The main issue at this hearing was the fee to be paid to Bergwerk. Expert witnesses • recommended fees ranging up to $160,000. The debtor suggested a fee of $43,200 to $57,-600. Bankruptcy I awarded $35,725.88. This amount represented five percent of the total estate plus a $15,000 bonus. The court used this percentage basis rather than a lodestar rate because it concluded that Bergwerk had spent more hours on the case than were necessary. The debtor appealed the award;
5
Bergwerk filed a cross-appeal. On December 7, 1987, the district court vacated the fee award and remanded for a
de novo
determination of attorney’s fees and an explanation of those fees. Bankruptcy I set a date for a new fee hearing and a hearing on the debtor’s motion for payment of its refund, which Grant had not yet tendered. The first bankruptcy judge recused himself, however,
6
and a second fee hearing was scheduled for July 25,1988. Expert witnesses at the second hearing recommended fees ranging from $17,000 to $171,000. The second bankruptcy court (“Bankruptcy II”) again awarded a fee of $35,725.88,
The debtor filed a motion for rehearing, demanding interest on the amount of the delayed refund. Bankruptcy II awarded $65,116.76 in interest on September 8, 1988, ordering Grant to pay a total refund of $340,205.92. Bergwerk appealed the fee award and Grant appealed the award of interest. The district court conducted a de novo review of the record and affirmed the attorney’s fee award. It did not discuss the interest issue. Grant and Bergwerk appeal from the district court’s ruling. 7
We must determine whether Bankruptcy II abused its discretion in determining the appropriate initial fee award for Bergwerk, whether the district court erred in failing to direct the award of attorney’s fees to Bergwerk for his defense of the debtor’s appeal of the original fee award, and whether the bankruptcy court erred in charging Grant interest on the delayed refund.
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Initial Fee Award
In determining attorney’s fees, a judge must 1) determine the nature and extent of the services rendered; 2) determine the value of those services; and 3) consider the factors laid out in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
488 F.2d
*878
714 (5th Cir.1974)
8
and explain how they affect the award.
9
Matter of First Colonial Corp. of America,
Bergwerk’s main argument is that Bankruptcy II miscalculated his fee award, denying him fees to which he was entitled. 10 He argues that Bankruptcy II used an incorrect lodestar base rate and erroneously failed to use an enhancement multiplier when calculating the award.
(1) Lodestar
Section 330(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code authorizes the bankruptcy court to award “reasonable compensation for actual, necessary services rendered by ... any paraprofessional persons employed by [the] trustee ... based on the nature, the extent, and the value of such services, the time spent on such services and the cost of comparable services
other than in a case under this
title_” (emphasis added). Thus, Congress expressed its intent that there should be no distinction between fees set in bankruptcy cases and those set in non-bankruptcy cases.
Matter of Bar-B-Que Management Associates, Inc.,
In an ordinary attorney’s fee case, the court arrives at a fee by multiplying the attorney’s reasonable hourly rate by the number of hours reasonably expended.
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Bergwerk argues that the $125 per hour rate was unreasonably low. He argues that the court should have based its calculation on the awards given in comparable cases, citing the twelfth
Johnson
factor. He points to other bankruptcy eases where trustees’ attorneys received anywhere from $111,400 for 31.6 hours of work, or thirty percent of the total recovery,
Matter of Bar-B-Que,
It is true that the bankruptcy court refused to consider comparable awards in other cases. Each
Johnson
factor, however, must be considered in light of the other factors, and “a genuine balance must be struck by the bankruptcy judge.”
Matter of U.S. Golf Corp.,
(2) Enhancement
Lodestar rates may be enhanced based on risk of non-recovery, excellent or exceptional results, or delay in receipt of payment.
Norman,
We need not decide this question. Even if enhancement principles do apply to no-asset bankruptcy cases, Bankruptcy II did not err in refusing to enhance Berg-werk’s fee' for risk. A court may enhance the fee if there is a risk of non-recovery and if counsel shows that “such enhancement is necessary to assure the availability of counsel.”
Norman,
Bergwerk argues that his fee should have been enhanced because the results he achieved were extraordinary. “Exceptional results are results that are out of the ordinary, unusual or rare.”
Norman,
Bankruptcy II did not find Bergwerk’s results to be impressive. The majority of the estate was funded when Hart paid off a large number of the creditors himself, when Bostick agreed to pay to the trustee the money it owed Hart from the purchase of assets, and when Bergwerk garnished $217,829 in Hart’s Merrill Lynch holdings on November 13, 1985. According to Grant’s final report, the total amount realized by these and other-transactions was $414,570.67. Of that amount, $93,100.25 went to Hart for his claim against the debtor and $275,088.96 was a refund to the debtor itself. Thus, eighty-eight percent of the money collected went to Hart, either individually or as principal stockholder in the debtor. 15 Because Hart was the source of the funds to begin with, Bankruptcy II concluded that the majority of the funds collected by the trustee and Bergwerk sim *881 ply went back to their source. Only 2.6% of the funds generated by Bergwerk’s work went to unsecured creditors. 16
Further, Bergwerk has produced no evidence that the results he achieved were extraordinary or that his representation was superior. Although Bergwerk represented Grant in three proceedings, the work he actually performed was not excessive or difficult. Only two of the three actions went to trial. In the vehicle possession proceeding, Bergwerk performed one hour of work to obtain possession of vehicles already titled in the debtor. In the fraudulent transfer action, Bergwerk lost on four of the five claims he asserted. 17 In the interpleader action, Bostick conceded that it owed money and agreed to pay the balance to Grant. Bankruptcy II did not err in failing to enhance the fee for extraordinary results.
(3) Factual Conclusions
Bergwerk challenges several of Bankruptcy II’s factual findings; only one of these challenges has merit. 18 Bankruptcy II concluded that when Bankruptcy I ordered Bostick to pay the interpleader funds to Grant on September 19, 1985, the estate acquired enough money to pay the unsecured creditors. Thus Bergwerk’s garnishment of Hart’s Merrill Lynch accounts on November 13, 1985 amounted to Berg-werk’s taking from Hart to pay Hart’s claim. Bergwerk claims that the court’s conclusion that his efforts to garnish Hart’s estate were unnecessary and self-serving is clearly erroneous. Bergwerk claims that in August 1984, the trustee had only $1,069.79 and claims outstanding to-talled $838,188.11.
According to Grant’s own final report, as of August 15, 1984 the trustee had receipts totalling $91,668.89. The bar date for creditors’ claims was seven months past, so all claims had been filed. Only $70,005.84 of the claims filed as of August 15, 1984 were from unsecured creditors other than Hart. The debtor argues that Bergwerk knew there was enough money in the estate to pay everyone but Hart, so that garnishing Hart’s assets was unnecessary.
Bergwerk responds that this conclusion is erroneous because until Hart’s $633,000 claim was disallowed, the estate’s obligation to Hart was no different than its obligations to the unsecured creditors. This contention is true. As long as Hart’s claim was allowed, the trustee had a duty to Hart equal to that owed the other creditors. This erroneous finding, however, does not constitute reversible error. Even without the court’s conclusion that the garnishment was unnecessary, Bergwerk’s collection of a $414,517.67 estate to pay a $104,080 claim does not constitute an extraordinary result, especially when almost ninety percent of the money collected went back to its source. Further, while garnishment may have been prudent on November *882 13, 1985, Hart’s claim was disallowed on November 25, 1985. The garnishment proceeds were not received by the estate until December 11, 1985, two weeks after the court disallowed Hart’s claim and it became clear that garnishment was no longer necessary. Yet Bergwerk made no attempt during that two-week period to halt the garnishment proceedings. He allowed the money to be processed through the estate, turning a $196,741.67 estate into a $414,-570.67 estate. The district court did not err in concluding that this action was unnecessary and self-serving.
B. Fee for the Defense of the Debtor’s Appeal
On remand from the original fee award, Bergwerk requested fees for twenty-nine hours of work expended in defending the debtor’s appeal of his original fee award. Bankruptcy II questioned this claim because it perceived that Bergwerk was not the prevailing party on that appeal. The court came to this conclusion because Berg-werk’s original fee award was vacated on appeal. Bergwerk disagrees. He argues that, although the fee award was vacated on appeal, it was reinstated by Bankruptcy II on remand. Therefore, Bergwerk argues, his defense of the appeal was successful and he should be awarded fees for that defense. 19
As an initial matter, it appears that Berg-werk was awarded fees for his defense of the appeal.
20
There is no evidence that Bankruptcy II failed to award fees for the defense of the appeal, except the court’s observation that it did not consider Berg-werk to have prevailed. Nowhere does the court state that it refused to compensate Bergwerk for the time spent defending the appeal. Further, Bergwerk was not entitled to remuneration under section 330 for defending the appeal.
21
As discussed
supra,
section 330 is “not the ‘usual’ sort [of fee-shifting statute] contemplated by
Delaware Valley II” Matter of Baldwin-United Corp.,
In considering Bergwerk’s claim for fees generated on defense of the appeal and presentation of the cross-appeal, then, the issue is not whether Bergwerk was the prevailing party. Rather, the issue is whether the services rendered were reasonable and necessary to the administration of the estate.
In re Temple Retirement Community, Inc.,
C. Interest on the Delayed Refund
On August 4, 1986, Bankruptcy I ordered Grant to refund the remaining $275,088.96 in the estate to the debtor. By the time of the second fee hearing before Bankruptcy II, Grant had not made the refund. At the second fee hearing, Bankruptcy II asked Grant why he had not made the refund. Grant stated that Berg-werk told him not to make the refund because Bergwerk was appealing his fee award and if Bergwerk won his appeal and was granted a larger fee, there would be less money available for a refund. 22 Bankruptcy II ordered Grant to make the refund and ordered him to pay $65,116.76 interest on the amount from the time of the original refund order. The district court affirmed the award of interest. Grant argues that the interest award was not warranted by statute.
Both Grant and the debtor assume that Bankruptcy II intended the interest as a punitive measure against Grant. They assume that the court intended the interest money to come from Grant’s pocket to punish Grant for his delay in returning the refund. If this is indeed what Bankruptcy II intended, the award of interest was invalid for two reasons. First, there is no law supporting such a punitive award under the present circumstances. Title 11 U.S.C.A. § 726(a)(5) provides for the payment of interest only on claims specified in kind, unsecured claims timely filed, unsecured claims untimely filed, and allowed claims for penalty, forfeiture, and the like. There is no mention of interest on distribution of residue to the debtor.
23
The debtor refers to 28 U.S.C.A. § 1961, which states that “[i]nterest shall be allowed on any money judgment in a civil case recovered in a district court.” This section has been construed to apply to bankruptcy proceedings.
See In re Southern Indus. Banking Corp.,
Second, an award of punitive interest against Grant violates due process principles. Grant has not been made an individual party at any point in these proceedings. Grant was ■ not given the opportunity to defend his actions, other than to state at the fee hearing that he delayed payment on Bergwerk’s advice. While “bankruptcy trustees may be held personally liable for breaches of fiduciary duty,”
In re San Juan Hotel Corp.,
It is possible, however, that the award of interest was not a punitive measure. Grant invested the refund money in Certificates of Deposit (“CDs”). During the four years since the resolution of this case, the CDs have been generating interest. Because the refund belongs to the debtor, the interest generated by the CDs also belongs to the debtor. Bankruptcy II may have intended simply to order the return to the debtor of the refund and to award to the debtor the interest generated by the CDs. Award of the generated interest to the debtor is the only correct disposition of that accrued income. As much of the $65,-116.76 as was generated as interest on the CDs, therefore, rightfully belongs to the debtor, and award of that interest is not invalid.
D. Summary
The actual administration of this bankruptcy estate was concluded in December 1985. In the four years since that time, the activity in the case has consisted of various appeals and cross-appeals of the attorney’s fee awards and litigation regarding the trustee’s refusal to pay the refund. A fairly simple involuntary bankruptcy case, therefore, has dragged on for seven years when it could have been resolved in two and a half. The reason for this appalling waste of time and resources is a breakdown in the chain of responsibility established from the district court through the bankruptcy court to the trustee and his attorney.
The trustee and his representatives are officers of the court. Their fiduciary duty is to administer the estate.
In re J.M. Wells, Inc.,
In the present case, one or all of these safeguards broke down. Bankruptcy I allowed Grant to hire an attorney to protect Grant’s legal interests. That attorney apparently took over the case and proceeded to amass a $414,000 estate, the large majority of which was unnecessary, so that he could later claim attorney’s fees in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The estate was administered four years ago, yet the parties continue to tie up judicial time and resources. All of these abuses should have been stopped long before the dispute reached this Court. Bankruptcy court judges have a judicial responsibility to closely monitor the administration of a bankruptcy estate, and particularly to prevent abuses by trustees and their attorneys. The district court in turn must oversee the bankruptcy court to insure that a misadministration of a bankruptcy estate, such as occurred in this ease, does not happen. The kind of behavior engaged in by Bergwerk and Grant and allowed by both of the bankruptcy courts and the district court will not be allowed to continue; such maladministration not only gives the impression that the administration of a bankruptcy estate is a circus, but it is also too costly for the courts and the taxpayers.
*885 III. CONCLUSION
We hereby AFFIRM the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s fee award to Bergwerk. We DENY Berg-werk’s application for fees generated on the district court appeal and this appeal. We DENY the debtor’s motion for award of attorney’s fees incurred in this appeal. We REMAND to the district court for the appropriate actions necessary to ensure that the trustee pays the $275,088.96 refund to the debtor, along with only the portion of the $65,116.76 award of interest generated as interest on the CDs, and closes out this proceeding.
Notes
. Although Schumann Tire went through bank *876 ruptcy proceedings, presently it is active and solvent.
.Hart transferred the inventory, name, and goodwill of Schumann Tire to another company owned by him, Hart Enterprises. He then sold the Schumann Tire equipment to Bostick Oil Company, and Hart Enterprises sold the inventory, name, and goodwill of Schumann Tire to Bostick Oil Company.
. Section 327(a) of the Bankruptcy Code allows a trustee to employ an attorney based on reasonable terms and conditions.
See In re Port Royal Land & Timber Co.,
. An attempt to settle this issue apparently brought hostilities to the surface. Hart threatened that if Grant continued to force the fraudulent transfer issue, the debtor would sue.
. The record sheds no light on the question of why the debtor would appeal a fee award that was less than the amount that it recommended.
. The debtor made a motion for recusal. The motion alleged that the judge's brother had represented an adverse party some years past and had pressured the judge to enter orders adverse to the debtor’s interests. The motion also alleged that the judge would not be impartial because he had suggested at earlier hearings that Hart was proving to be an obstacle to the trustee’s administration of the estate. The judge recused himself in response to the motion. Grant and Bergwerk claim that the debtor made this motion because it did not want the fee hearing to be conducted before the judge who had witnessed its “vexatious conduct” over the preceding years.
.There were two motions carried with this appeal. Grant and Bergwerk requested leave to file an appendix to the brief. The debtor responded with a motion to strike. The motion to file an appendix was granted at oral argument, and the motion to strike was denied. The debt- or has also filed a motion for an award of attorney’s fees for services rendered on this appeal, claiming that the appeal is frivolous and repetitive. We deny this motion for the reasons explained later in the opinion.
. Fifth Circuit decisions issued before the close of business on October 1, 1981, constitute binding precedent for this Court.
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The twelve factors listed in
Johnson
are as follows: (1) the time and labor required, (2) the novelty and difficulty of the legal questions, (3) the skill required to perform the legal service properly, (4) the preclusion of other employment by the attorney due to acceptance of the case, (5) the customary fee for similar work in the community, (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent, (7) time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances, (8) the amount involved and the results obtained, (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the attorney, (10) the undesirability of the case, (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client, and (12) awards in similar cases.
Johnson,
. Bergwerk raises several other issues which are clearly meritless. He first argues that on remand, Bankruptcy II did not make specific findings under each of the
Johnson
factors. A court’s order on attorney’s fees only need be specific enough to allow meaningful review; the court must "articulate the decisions it made, give principled reasons for those decisions, and show its calculation.”
Norman v. Housing Authority of City of Montgomery,
. Although it has been recognized that the lodestar approach may be problematic in bankruptcy cases where the attorneys may expend hours for which there is no accurate measure of success or failure, the approach remains applicable in the bankruptcy context.
See In re Port Royal Land & Timber Co.,
. Aside from his statutory trustee’s allowance, Grant received only $1,800 in attorney’s fees for his work on the Schumann Tire case, approximately half the amount Bergwerk received.
. (1) With regard to the time and labor required, Bankruptcy II indicted that it was suspicious of the 253.8 hours Bergwerk claimed to have worked, because Bergwerk did not record the hours at the time they were expended. It also indicated that it found some of the work, particularly the garnishment of Hart's Merrill Lynch account, to be unnecessary. (2) Regarding the novelty and difficulty of the questions, Bankruptcy II stated that Bergwerk had been involved in only three proceedings, one of which did not go to trial. The fraud trial lasted only two days, and Bergwerk was successful on only one issue. The turnover proceeding took only one hour to resolve and only nine hours of work on Bergwerk’s part, and the interpleader action took only fourteen hours of work. (3) Regarding the skill required, the previous discussion indicates that Bankruptcy II found that little skill was required of Bergwerk. (4) Berg-werk admitted that the Schumann Tire action did not specifically preclude him from taking other employment. (5) As discussed supra, the court found that Bergwerk's customary fee was $125 per hour. (6) Regarding whether the fee was contingent, the court found that any risk of non-payment evaporated when the Bostick Oil interpleader question was resolved. (7) Berg-werk concedes that time limitations were of no significance. (8) The bankruptcy court found that the result obtained was not outstanding, because most of the money collected went back to the debtor, from whom it came. (9) The court stated that reputation or ability of representation was represented by the reasonable hourly rate. (10) The undesirability of the case is connected with the risk of non-payment, which Bankruptcy II concluded was minimal. (11) Regarding the nature and length of the relationship, Bergwerk represented Grant in only three matters, one of which never went to trial.
. Bergwerk was hired May 18, 1983. The record indicates that the trustee began receiving funds on December 20, 1983.
. Hart owned 75% of the debtor’s stock. Berg-werk himself admits that Hart is the debtor’s principal.
. By comparison, Bergwerk’s fee represents 8.6% of the funds generated.
. Bergwerk correctly points out that a court may not reduce proportionately a lodestar recovery based simply on "a mathematical approach comparing the total number of issues in the case with those actually prevailed on.”
Popham v. City of Kennesaw,
. Bergwerk's other factual challenges are mer-itless. Bergwerk challenges the court's conclusion that Hart was the sole principal of the debtor, attempting to counter the conclusion that any money going to or coming from Schumann Tire actually went to or came from Hart. He claims that in fact Hart owned only seventy-five percent of the Schumann Tire stock. The court did not err in concluding that a seventy-five percent shareholder constituted sole principal of the debtor corporation.
Bergwerk also challenges the court’s finding that he should have known that the debtor held title to several of the contested vehicles before filing the turnover complaint. Bergwerk agrees that he knew this fact, but argues that the proceeding was difficult nonetheless because the debtor and Bostick refused to turn over the vehicles. This contention is trivial at best; the bankruptcy court’s point was that the disposal of the matter took only an hour and required little work on Bergwerk’s part.
. Bergwerk also asks this Court to grant fees for his district court appeal of the Bankruptcy II fee award and his appeal to this Court. For the reasons discussed infra, we deny this application.
. In his fee application before Bankruptcy II, Bergwerk claimed to have worked a total of 253.8 hours on the case; that total included a claim for 29 hours spent working on the appeal and 18.7 hours on the remand. Multiplying 253.8 hours by Bergwerk’s hourly rate of $125 yields a lodestar figure of only $31,725.00, $4,000 less than what Bergwerk Was actually awarded.
.The two civil rights cases which Bergwerk points to in support of his claim,
Riddell v. National Democratic Party,
.Bergwerk argued before this Court that the refund was delayed because the refund order was erroneously sent to Grant and not to Berg-werk. He claims that Grant thought Bergwerk was handling the matter, and therefore did not act on it.
.
In re General Coffee Corp.,
. It is not necessary to prove that the estate was harmed in order to prove a claim of breach
*884
of fiduciary duty.
San Juan Hotel,
