Recently we held that a district court has the power under 11 U.S.C. § 329(b) to establish a presumptive “reasonable value” of legal fees in consumer bankruptcies, and to limit fees to this level unless counsel establishes that services in a particular case justify
*1014
more.
In re Geraci
Geraci contends that the district court has violated the Constitution by singling him out for unfavorable treatment, but the contention is untenable. Each bankruptcy judge’s presumptive fee applies to all consumer bankruptcy cases. Each judge was entitled to draw a line over which the fee will be scrutinized (and under which it will be approved automatically). That the judges and the United States Trustee were spurred toward this approach by a perception that Geraci conducts his practice in an abusive manner, taking advantage of debtors who are unaware that his promises of superior services at a premium rate are hot air (one bankruptcy judge found that “Geraei’s work is not on a par with that of other bankruptcy practitioners, that his motions practice leaves much to be desired, and that his abilities as a trial lawyer are substandard”), does not make the rule problematic. In economic matters all that is constitutionally necessary is a rational basis for the line drawn. See
Vance v. Bradley,
Why Geraci should lavish attention on an equal protection claim is a mystery. The rational-basis standard is designed to separate the domains of legislation and adjudication. Judges must enforce legislation if a rational basis for the statute can be hypothesized; proof is not only unnecessary but also forbidden.
FCC v. Beach Communications, Inc.,
Affirmed.
