AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before this Court is a Supplement to Application for Compensation of Debtor’s Attorney (“Compensation Supplement”) from Macey Chern & Diab, attorneys for the debtors, Kenneth L. and Rhonda R. Griffin. The Compensation Supplement summarizes the professional services rendered on behalf of the clients in connection with a vehicle redemption in their Chapter 7 bankruptcy case.
For the reasons stated herein, the application is DENIED.
The Court has jurisdiction over this matter, a core proceeding, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(fo)(l)-(2)(A) and § 1334.
Background
Debtors Kenneth L. and Rhonda R. Griffin engaged Macey Chern & Diab (“counsel”) on February 7, 2004 to file and prosecute a Chapter 7 liquidation case. On that same day, the debtors paid a $100 retainer fee and signed an agreement to pay the balance of $1,050.00 in four installments before May 30, 2004. The debtors’ counsel filed the voluntary Chapter 7 petition on May 20, 2004, containing a May 2, 2004 statement of intention indicating the debtors’ intent to redeem a 2000 Toyota Camry.
Vol. Pet.
at Official Form 8. It later brought a motion to redeem the debtors’ vehicle for $5,525, which this Court granted on June 17, 2004.
1
Counsel did
On June 18, 2004, the Court received the “Supplement to Rule 2016(b) Attorney Compensation Statement” (“2016 Supplement”) from counsel, showing a third party, 722 Redemption Financing, Inc., as the source of the funds. On June 30, 2004, the Court received the Compensation Supplement from counsel, detailing the time spent working on the redemption motion and stating a total compensation of $600. The Compensation Supplement indicates that 3 hours total were spent on the unopposed redemption motion; 0.5 hours were spent pre-petition, and 2.5 hours were spent post-petition. This filing also indicated the source of the compensation was 722 Redemption Funding, Inc., which extended a post-petition loan to the debtors to redeem their vehicle from Capital One Auto Finance’s lien as well as to pay counsel the additional money the debtors owed them under the pre-petition contract for the instant Chapter 7 case. The February 7, 2004 retention contract indicates the clients will be charged additional fees for certain additional work, including $600 for redemptions on vehicles. Contract at item 7c.
Conclusions of Law and Analysis
The Court must determine whether counsel can collect these requested fees from either 1) the estate or 2) the debtors. It will also address additional disclosure and professional responsibility concerns.
I. Can counsel collect these requested fees from the estate?
In
Lamie v. U.S. Trustee,
The U.S. Supreme Court held that this attorney could not recover fees for this postconversion work because of the “plain language” of 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(1), which states:
After notice to the parties in interest and the United States Trustee and a hearing, and subject to sections 326, 328, and 329, the court may award to a trustee, an examiner, [sic] a professional person employed under section 327 or 1103—
(A) reasonable compensation for actual, necessary services rendered by the trustee, examiner, professional person, or attorney and by any paraprofessionalperson employed by any such person; and
(B) reimbursement for actual, necessary expenses.
11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(1) (emphasis added). Under the Supreme Court’s ruling, debtors’ attorneys can only be compensated under § 330(a)(1) if the attorneys are employed by the trustee pursuant to § 327 (or by the debtor-in-possession in a Chapter 11).
Congress amended the Bankruptcy Code in 1994, prior to which § 330(a) permitted a court to “award to a trustee, to an examiner, to a professional person employed under section 327 ..., or to the debtor’s attorney” compensation from the estate. After this amendment, the language of § 330(a)(1) permitted a court to “award [compensation] to a trustee, an examiner, a professional person employed under section 327 or 1103.” Apparently, the post-amendment language is missing an “or,” which “infects its grammar.”
Id.,
In the instant case, the debtors filed a Chapter 7 and never held the powers of a trustee. Further, the trustee did not retain or otherwise authorize counsel to perform work related to the redemption motion. Therefore, counsel is not eligible for compensation from the estate under § 330. The Compensation Supplement does contain boilerplate language declaring that the “[a]pplicant has rendered substantial and valuable professional services on behalf of client and the estate.” Redemption allows an individual debtor to remove a lien from tangible personal property intended primarily for personal, family, or household use by paying the lesser of the balance due or the value of the collateral. 11 U.S.C. § 722. Section 722 is clearly intended for the benefit of the individual debtor and not the estate because the debtor can successfully pursue such a motion only if the trustee has abandoned any potential equity in the property or the debtor has exempted the same. Thus, the trustee would have no reason to hire the debtor’s counsel for this motion because redemption is valueless to the estate; the motion only has value to the debtor. 2
II. Can counsel collect these requested fees from the debtors?
Counsel has a pre-petition contract with the debtors for the above-mentioned installment payments and for other fees for additional services. When the debtors voluntarily filed for Chapter 7 on May 20, 2004, the pre-petition contract became a pre-petition claim against the estate. Simultaneously, an automatic stay prevented any creditors’ attempts to “col
In Bethea, the Chapter 7 debtors hired lawyers on retainer to prepare and prosecute their bankruptcy cases. The retainer was to be paid in installments over time, with some payments made pre-petition and some collected post-petition. The debtors ultimately received discharges. Later, the debtors found new counsel to challenge the bankruptcy attorneys’ post-discharge collection of the agreed installment payments. The Seventh Circuit found that the retainer contract created a pre-petition, liquidated debt, that attorneys’ fees are not among the debts excepted from discharge by § 523, and that § 329 does not create an unenumerated exception to the § 727(b) discharge. 3 Id. at 1127. The Seventh Circuit ordered the bankruptcy attorneys to repay the debtors any money collected after the discharge and any money collected while the automatic stay was in effect. Id. at 1129.
The Ninth Circuit had previously advanced the notion that the portion of the retainer reflecting work done during the bankruptcy is immune from discharge, while the portion reflecting pre-filing work would be discharged because a “claim” does not accrue upon agreement but upon performance; therefore, each retainer agreement can be shattered into multiple claims depending on when performance took place.
In re Hines,
Particularly relevant to the present Compensation Supplement is the fact that Judge Easterbrook expressly rejected this position.
Bethea,
Because counsel began billing for the redemption motion on February 8, 2004 (the day after the contract was dated) and the debtors filed for bankruptcy on May 20, 2004, the elements necessary to create a right of payment under the relevant contract law occurred pre-petition. Thus, the claim resulting from the motion to redeem is a pre-petition contract-based claim. If the debtors receive a discharge, the discharge will seamlessly replace the automatic stay. In the meantime, the collection of any sums during bankruptcy is a violation of the automatic stay, and as such, the sums so collected must be refunded.
Bethea,
III. Was counsel’s disclosure of the compensation paid defective?
In the instant case, 722 Redemption Funding, Inc. extended a post-petition loan to the debtors so they could pay their pre-petition legal debts to counsel (for both the bankruptcy petition and the redemption services). Counsel did not notify the Court of the additional revenue from the redemption motion voluntarily. Only after the Court specifically requested this information did counsel provide it.
Section 329 provides in part:
(a) Any attorney representing a debtor in a case under this title, or in connection with such a case, whether or not such attorney applies for compensation under this title, shall file with the court a statement of the compensation paid or agreed to be paid, if such payment or agreement was made after one year before the date of the filing of the petition, for services rendered or to be rendered in contemplation of or in connection with the case by such attorney, and the source of such compensation.
11 U.S.C. § 329 (emphasis added). Section 329 is implemented by Bankruptcy Rule 2016(b), which states as follows:
Every attorney for a debtor, whether or not the attorney applies for compensation, shall file and transmit ... the statement required by § 329 of the Code ... A supplemental statement shall be filed and transmitted to the United States trustee within 15 days after any payment or agreement not previously disclosed.
Fed. R. Bankr.Pro.2016(b);
see also
N.D. Ill. Local Rule of Professional Conduct 83.51.2(f)(3). Section 329 of the Code and Rule 2016(b) are rooted in the fiduciary relationship between courts and attorneys.
In re Downs,
While the appellant in
Park-Helena
was an applicant for employment under Rule 2014, the Ninth Circuit found not only a violation of Rule 2014 but also a violation of Rule 2016, explicitly discussing the duty of disclosure in relation to both rules.
Id.
at 879. Other courts recognize the duty of voluntary and complete compliance with Rule 2016(b) and § 329(a).
In re Redding,
Defective disclosure is not a minor matter,
B.E.S.,
Accordingly, an attorney who fails to comply with the requirements of § 329 forfeits any right to receive compensation for services rendered on behalf of the debtor, id. at 379; In re Chapel Gate Apartments, Ltd.,64 B.R. 569 , 575 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1986), and a court may order an attorney sua sponte to disgorge funds already paid to the attorney, In re Saturley,131 B.R. 509 , 522 (Bankr.D.Me.1991); In re Kendavis Indus. Int’l, Inc.,91 B.R. 742 , 759 (Bankr. N.D.Tex.1988); In the Matter of Chambers,76 B.R. 194 , 195 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.1987); In re Chapel Gate,64 B.R. at 574, 575 .
In re Investment Bankers,
The case at bar involves a tripartite arrangement where a third party made a post-petition loan to the debtors, and the proceeds of that loan were 1) to be paid to counsel for a pre-petition debt created by the initial retainer agreement and 2) to accomplish redemption of the 2000 Toyota Camry. This fact pattern is substantially similar to
In re Miller,
The Court does recognize that in certain situations, under Rule 2016(b) a debtor’s attorney has 15 extra post-petition days to file supplemental disclosure of any “payment or agreement not previously disclosed.” This safe-harbor provision would be applicable if the debtors’ attorney would have had no reason to initially disclose the redemption-fee agreement within the first fifteen days of the bankruptcy case, making the “supplemental statement” necessary only when the debtor subsequently requires an extra post-petition service not seen as warranted at the time of filing the petition. To be sure, under counsel’s retention agreement with the Griffins, the $600 redemption fee is an additional post-petition fee that, like several other fees relating to lien-avoidance and adversary proceedings, may or may not come into fruition. In the case at bar the disclosure should have been made earlier than the day after the Court granted the underlying redemption motion on June 17, 2004 and was forced to “mine” for information about the related fee structure; this post-petition work costing an additional $600 had been contemplated for some time. The debtors’ counsel performed pre-petition redemption-related services during February and April leading up to the May 20, 2004 filing date, when the debtors filed their “statement of intention” to redeem the vehicle. Even going by the May 27 time-itemization entry showing the receipt of the final fax from the post-petition financier rather than by the May 20 petition date, the supplemental disclosure should have been made no later than June 11, 2004.
Failure to meet the disclosure requirements alone is grounds for disgorgement, as discussed
supra.
If counsel was not being paid from the proceeds of this loan, there would be no duty to disclose it under § 329. In the instant case, counsel was paid from such proceeds; therefore, Ma-cey Chern
&
Diab’s supplemental disclosure did not conform to the requirements of Rule 2016 or § 329. This is the second independent ground for disgorgement.
IY. General Considerations
The Court will briefly address several additional issues raised by the fees that 722 Redemption Funding, Inc. loans to Chapter 7 debtors for payment of their bankruptcy attorneys’ fees, including professional responsibility considerations.
If compensation paid to any attorney representing a debtor in a bankruptcy case exceeds the reasonable value of such services, the court may cancel the agreement or order the amount considered excessive to be returned. 11 U.S.C. § 329(b). Counsel ran into this very problem in Miller, a case in which that court questioned the reasonableness of the same type of fees. According to counsel’s filings, Macey Chern & Diab spent a total of three hours on an uncontested, boilerplate motion to redeem. It is not necessary for this Court to determine what would be the reasonable value of services rendered as in Miller, because disgorgement of the $600 is warranted for two other distinct reasons. However, the excessiveness problem again highlights the importance of disclosure. The Court cannot review a debtor’s transaction with attorneys or effect a remedy under § 329 if it is never aware that the transaction existed or is kept in the dark regarding its details.
Also, it is curious that Macey Chern & Diab’s retention contract lists additional flat fees for various post-petition services ranging from $150 to $300, with the exception of its vehicle redemption service, which is a whopping $600 even in the most routine cases. This fee appears to be set or suggested by the entity loaning and earning interest from the $600, 722 Redemption Funding, Inc., without regard to any lodestar evaluation that is consistent with § 329(b). As noted in
In re Miller,
In passing, the
Bethea
decision alludes to the possibility of having the debtor rehire his bankruptcy counsel after the Chapter 7 is filed in order to perform post-petition services.
7
In other words, the fu
The first problem relates to scenarios where an existing pre-petition retention contract already entitles a debtor to both pre-petition and post-petition services, depending on what needs arise in the case. If the traditional retention agreement has already been struck between the Chapter 7 debtor and her attorney, as in this case, restructuring the terms of the retention contract may not be in the debtor’s best interest. The debtor already holds a contractual right to have post-petition services performed, and such client’s best interests in the bankruptcy case would be to enforce the automatic stay (as interpreted in
Be-thea)
and demand that the services to which she is already contractually entitled be performed without a new agreement.
8
A lawyer shall not represent a client if the representation of that client may be materially limited by ... the lawyer’s own interests, unless:
(1) the lawyer reasonably believes the representation will not be adversely affected; and
(2) the client consents after disclosure. Ill. Sup.Ct. Rules, Art. VIII, Rule of Professional Conduct 1.7(b). Even if a debt- or’s attorney did not try to elicit a subsequent post-petition contract supported by past consideration, the debtor’s best interests and her bankruptcy counsel’s best interests will still be at odds. Counsel is supposed to zealously enforce the debtors’ rights, including the protection afforded by the automatic stay of collection activities under pre-petition contracts. Counsel may, however, be furthering his own financial interests by allowing the debtors to encumber themselves with a post-petition loan to pay these pre-petition legal debts which are subject to discharge under
Be-thea.
9
The awkward situation and hidden surprises that
Bethea
has created for many Chapter 7 practitioners will no doubt be factored favorably into a determination of whether the “lawyer reasonably believes the representation will not be adversely affected” by the conflict, and their indispensable presence in very complicated Chapter 7 cases will also tend to support a finding that representation is proper and reasonable in spite of the inherent and regrettable conflict. Nevertheless, even after a favorable conclusion on the first half of the exception, the debtor must still explicitly consent after complete disclosure of the conflict. Thus, a Chapter 7 debtor’s attorney could not enter into a retention contract that leaves even a conditional balance for potential post-petition services without disclosing the conflict of interest to the client and obtaining her consent to the representation. Likewise, the attorney
One potential solution to the problem might be for the debtor and her attorney to enter into a reaffirmation agreement, effectively reinstating the terms of and personal liability created by the original contract. Both the Bankruptcy Court and the Seventh Circuit mentioned this possibility in
Bethea, see In re Bethea,
A second potential solution to the problem posed by
Bethea
would be for the debtor and the bankruptcy attorney to enter into a pre-petition retention contract requiring the attorney to perform either no post-petition services or very limited ones not including redemption work; then these parties could potentially enter into a post-petition contract for post-petition services the attorney has not already agreed to perform, creating a new post-petition claim. The trick here is that the post-petition contract must really be a post-petition contract. That is, the legally op
The remaining professional responsibility concern in this matter relates to counsel’s admitted intention to collect a pre-petition debt as the personal liability of the Chapter 7 debtors in spite of known mandatory authority prohibiting the same. In
Bethea
itself, Macey, Chern, & Diab victoriously represented different Chapter 7 debtors in enforcing the automatic stay and discharge injunctions against their previous bankruptcy counsels’ attempts to collect its prepetition debt post-petition.
Bethea v. Robert J. Adams & Associates,
Conclusion
Macey Chern & Diab’s Supplement to Application for Compensation of Debtor’s Attorney is Denied in full.
If it has already collected the money, Macey Chern & Diab must disgorge the $600 it has collected as a fee for bringing the redemption motion.
Notes
. The estate trustee found the property to be valueless to the estate and abandoned it pursuant to § 554. The Camry was subject to a
. Technically, the trustee could have an interest in litigating the value of the collateral in order to maximize it, thereby minimizing the unsecured portion of the lien and reducing the total unsecured claims. Each unsecured creditor could then potentially get more money. However, the effort involved in litigating the value of this collateral may make a total difference of one or two thousand dollars. In bankruptcy, where claims are usually paid at 0% to 30% of the dollar amount, this could be a pyrrhic victory which may reduce total unsecured claims by a few hundred dollars at most.
.
Bethea
conflicts with a Ninth Circuit opinion to some extent.
See In re Hines,
. As the Eighth Circuit has stated:
[D]ependency on a postpetition event does not prevent a debt from arising prepetition.
"The character of a claim is not transformed from pre-petition to postpetition simply because it is contingent, unliquidat-ed or unmatured when the debtor's petition is filed.” Braniff Airways,814 F.2d at 1036 (quoting Stair v. Hamilton Bank of Morristown (In re Morristown Lincoln-Mercury, Inc.), 42 B.R. 413, 418-19 (Bankr.E.D.Tenn.1984)). A debt can be absolutelyowing prepetition even though that debt would never have come into existence except for postpetition events. See Sherman v. First City Bank of Dallas (In re United Sciences of Am., Inc.), 893 F.2d 720 , 724 (5th Cir.1990).
U.S. Through Agr. Stabilization and Conservation Service v. Gerth,
. Ironically, in
Bethea
Macey, Chern, & Diab represented the Chapter 7 debtors in enforcing the automatic stay and discharge injunctions against their previous bankruptcy counsel.
Bethea v. Robert J. Adams & Associates,
. Rule 2014, not directly applicable here, requires an applicant for employment by the trustee to fully disclose all connections with any parties in interest. The concepts included in discussions of Rule 2014's disclosure requirements should apply by analogy to a discussion of Rule 2016’s disclosure requirements. Rule 2016(b) references § 329, which is concerned with the "source of the compensation." The debtor’s attorney’s requirement to disclose the source of the compensation is at least significantly related to the bankruptcy estate's concerns regarding complete disclosure and conflicts of interest.
. The opinion goes on to assert that the "[Ile-gal fees incurred after filing in such situations receive administrative priority.”
Bethea v. Robert J. Adams & Associates,
The debtor's attorney could file a proof of claim like any other creditor, see 11 U.S.C. § § 501 & 502, but his priority of payment from the estate would not be any higher than any other general unsecured creditor, see § 726(a).
. A related lingering question is whether the Chapter 7 debtor's attorney still has a duty to perform postpetition services to which the debtor is entitled under the pre-petition contract if the debtor does not pay the additional fees for the services and ultimately discharges that obligation. At least two obstacles must be overcome before the attorney could refuse to represent the debtor on the post-petition matter.
The first obstacle arises both under Illinois contract law generally and under the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct specifically. Under contract law, a party is excused from the duty of counter-performance only if the other party has committed a
material
breach of contract; otherwise, the breach is considered minor, a court may award money damages for the breach, and the duty of counter-performance is not excused.
See Finch v. Illinois Community College Bd.,
Thus, the question presented is whether a debtor's failure to pay for the post-petition redemption service is a "material” or "substantial” failure that would excuse his attorney from performing under the retention contract. This poses a difficult factual question in this case, one that the Court will not resolve here, because counsel has already received the vast majority of the fees to which he is entitled, or the $1150 retainer fee paid pre-petition.. From a global standpoint, then, counsel has received about 82% of his total claim, assuming the Court allowed a more reasonable fee of $200-$300 for the redemption services' — a fairly decent recovery for a creditor in a Chapter 7 case. The Court would have to decide on a case-by-case basis what percentage of nonpayment would, as a matter of fact, constitute a “material” or "substantial” failure to pay for legal services.
The second obstacle is the automatic stay itself. Generally, a party to an existing pre-petition contract with a debtor cannot take unilateral, affirmative action to terminate the
. The retention contract explicitly excludes certain post-petition services, such as drafting a redemption motion, from the services covered by a Chapter 7 debtor's initial $1150 fee. Still, the contract creates an enforceable duty to perform this post-petition service in return for the debtor's promise to pay $600 for the same. Thus, the contract should be read as containing a separate term creating a "contingent” claim on the petition date, see 11 U.S.C. § 101 (5)(A), because the contract causes the debtor to be liable for that amount only if she subsequently chooses that legal service. Nonetheless, the contingent claim for the $600 is still within the definition of a "claim” arising before the commencement of the case. Such a "claim” is subject to the restrictions of both the automatic stay, see § 362(a)(1) & (6), and the discharge injunction, see § 727(b) & § 524(a).
