This case presents certain questions regarding the force and effect of an attorneys’ contingency fee contract when there is an intervening arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. 1 The bankruptcy court awarded attorneys’ fees to the appellee, Joseph M. Alioto, for services rendered to Pacific Far East Line, Inc. [PFEL]. PFEL was the debtor in possession in the arrangement proceeding. Alioto rendered most of his services prior to the arrangement pursuant to a contingent fee contract. PFEL’s Official Creditors’ Committee [OCC] brings this appeal. 2
The OCC does not here contest the reasonableness of the award, which was $1,500,000. It does contend, however, that the amount awarded to the attorneys for services performed before the arrangement, constituting 95 percent of the fee, should be treated as a general creditor’s claim, thus subject to the pro rata reduction applicable *667 to all other unsecured claims. The appellee contends, on the other hand, that the district court was correct in finding that the attorneys had a lien on the funds generated by the settlement and that their fee was payable directly from the settlement fund in discharge of this lien. We agree with this position and affirm the judgment of the district court. Our ruling on this and related points is more fully explained below.
In 1974, PFEL had a substantial and complex claim against Northrop, Inc., for breach of warranty in connection with a contract for the manufacture and purchase of fiberglass barges. Financial considerations caused PFEL to substitute Alioto for the attorneys who had originally filed the suit. The original attorneys charged on an hourly basis, and PFEL determined it could not afford to prosecute the suit in that manner. Alioto, on the other hand, agreed to handle the case for a contingent fee. A written contingency contract was executed, and Alioto and his firm spent over three years attempting to resolve the case. The matter presented questions of antitrust law, Alioto’s field of expertise, as well as intricate questions of contract law and admiralty jurisdiction.
In February of 1978, while the case was on appeal to this court, Northrop agreed to settle. The factual background and terms of the settlement are recounted in detail in the district court’s published opinion.
In re Pacific Far East Line, Inc.,
Alioto’s original contract provided that he would receive a “contingent fee of 15 percent of the value of anything recovered by settlement . . . . ” PFEL, however, had filed a Chapter XI petition in January, 1978, and the bankruptcy court appointed Alioto special counsel in April the same year, as required by Bankruptcy Rules 215 and 11-22.
3
By this time, Northrup already had indicated its willingness to come to an agreement. Constrained by this Circuit’s rule prohibiting contingent fee contracts for special counsel,
Official Creditors’ Comm, of Fox Markets v. Ely,
On conclusion of the settlement, Alioto submitted his request for a fee of $1,875,-000. The amount was his estimate of the value of 15 percent of the settlement. Pursuant to his office’s standard practice in contingent fee cases, no time records were kept during the three years preceding the settlement. The bankruptcy judge ruled that Alioto’s estimate of the'fee would not be taken at face value and that he would have to make an estimate of the time spent on the case. In response, Alioto submitted an affidavit indicating he had spent over 4,700 hours on the case, approximately 95 percent of which was allocable to the period before PFEL’s Chapter XI petition. The bankruptcy judge held that Alioto’s original contingent fee agreement of 15 percent represented reasonable compensation for Alioto’s services if limited to the actual damages paid'by Northrop and not to the value PFEL obtained from release of liens and other non-monetary considerations. The bankruptcy court awarded Alioto $1,500,-000, payable immediately from the settlement funds. 4 The Chapter XI arrangement has since failed and PFEL has been adjudicated a conventional bankrupt.
*668
The OCC argued below, and continues to argue here, that Alioto’s claim, insofar as it seeks compensation for pre-petition services, is nothing more than an unsecured contract claim.
5
See, e. g., Klein v. Rancho Montana De Oro, Inc.,
In order to weigh these assertions, we start with the proposition that upon the filing of a Chapter XI petition, “[a] new entity is created with its own rights and duties, subject to the supervision of the bankruptcy court.”
Shopmen’s Local Union No. 455 v. Kevin Steel Products, Inc.,
That Alioto was discharged by operation of law does not mean, however, that he takes nothing under the original contract. Under California law, which governs the nature and status of claims against the debtor here,
see
4A Collier’s on Bankruptcy 1170.04, at 60-62 n.31 (14th ed. 1978), an attorney retained under a contingent fee contract, and later discharged by the client without cause, holds a claim against the client for the reasonable value of his services.
Fracasse v. Brent,
If Alioto possessed a claim for the reasonable value of his services, without more, his claim would be unsecured and subject to pro rata reduction with payment after, not before, administrative expenses.
In re Owl Drug Co.,
California does not recognize the common law attorneys’ charging lien,
6
and this court has noted that fact.
Desser, Rau & Hoffman v. Goggin,
The district court found that under the contingent fee contract, Alioto was “entitled to look to the judgment for his compensation” and thus was “entitled to an equitable line [sic].”
The OCC nevertheless asserts that any lien became effective only as of the date of payment, rather than the date of creation. If true, this would eviscerate the lien and render Alioto’s claim nothing more than an expense of administration, for under this theory the settlement was earned and paid during the Chapter XI arrangement. California law, however, is to the contrary. Under California law, the lien takes effect from the date it was created; upon the fund’s production, the lien attaches to the specific asset.
Haupt v. Charlie’s Kosher Market,
The final question presented is whether the courts below erred in setting the amount of the fee. Under the bankruptcy court’s ancillary jurisdiction, it has the power to decide state law claims necessary to the resolution of the bankruptcy proceeding.
Sanders v. Providence Washington Ins. Co.,
With the existence and amount of a valid attorney’s lien thus established, it was proper for the bankruptcy court to immediately award Alioto the portion of the fee which related to pre-petition services.
In re Land Investors, Inc.,
The OCC is correct, however, in its claim that, at the very least, the remaining 5 percent of the award is properly classified as an expense of administration. 9 The services rendered by Alioto during this period were for the benefit of the new debtor in possession and thus were subject to the April, 1978, general retainer agreement. 10
The district court, however, set aside $340,000 of the award pending the outcome of this appeal. See note 4 supra. We reverse the district court’s order awarding this amount to Alioto and order $265,000 disbursed to Alioto, which will constitute payment of the balance of his state law lien. The remaining $75,000, representing the fees for services performed during PFEL’s arrangement, is to be held in the *671 court’s registry pending computation of the value of Alioto’s services rendered during the arrangement under the general economical spirit of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. York Int’l Bldg., Inc. v. Chaney, 527 F.2d 1061 (9th Cir. 1975). After such computation, this fee should be distributed as any other expense of administration.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions.
Notes
. Act of July 1, 1898, ch. 541, §§ 301-399, 30 Stat. 544 (1898), as amended by Act of June 22, 1938, ch. 575, 52 Stat. 883 (1938). Since the operative events occurred before the effective date of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-598, 92 Stat. 2549 (1978) (codified at U U.S.C. §§ 101-1330 (Supp. Ill, 1979)), the provisions of the 1898 Act control, id. § 403, and all further references in this opinion will be to the repealed 1898 Act.
. Although Alioto has not cross-appealed, he has challenged this court’s jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The district court’s memorandum, from which the OCC appealed, was filed on October 16, 1978. That memorandum concluded with the following language:
In affirming the award of the referee, the court cautions that the effect of this decision depends upon the result reached in the pending appeals from the referee’s order approving the Northrop settlement, which appeals have yet to be heard and determined.
Alioto argues that this language indicates a disposition contingent on the other appeals, and thus the memorandum was not a final judgment within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1976). Although the district court affirmed the Northrop settlement on December 12, 1978, and entered an order affirming its published memorandum in the fee dispute six days later, Alioto argues that such subsequent action cannot cure a prematurely filed notice of appeal. We disagree. The order finally affirming the bankruptcy court’s judgment left nothing to be decided in the district court. It finally determined Alioto’s rights in any fund generated by his efforts. The district court’s subsequent action only confirmed the fact that there would be a fund to fight over. In such cases, we have not hesitated to accept a premature appeal.
Anderson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
In addition, Alioto claims that, since the district court’s memorandum did not conform to Fed.R.Civ.P. 58’s requirement that the judgment be set forth on a separate sheet of paper, OCC’s notice of appeal is invalid. In
Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis,
. Bankruptcy Rule 11-22, applicable to Chapter XI arrangements, incorporates Bankruptcy Rule 215(a)’s provision which states that “[n]o attorney ... shall be employed except upon order of the court.”
. At the time of the bankruptcy judge’s order, $340,000 of the settlement had yet to be paid. The court ordered payment of this amount into the district court’s registry, instead of to Alioto. Alioto thus received only $1,160,000. The $340,000 still remains in the district court’s registry pending the disposition of this appeal.
. Alioto argues that, under the original contract, he was not entitled to anything as compensation unless and until he was successful. He argues that he had no claim for pre-petition services since he was not entitled to any compensation during that period.
Cf. In re Coleman,
. At common law, an attorney retained on a contingent fee has a lien in the amount of his fees against any fund generated due to his efforts.
In re E. C. Ernst, Inc.,
. The OCC, in its reply brief, argues for the first time that since both the bankruptcy and district courts did not make explicit findings on the intent issue, we are barred from considering it, and thus we also are barred from finding a lien. Although we are not obliged to consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief,
Levy v. Urbach,
. The bankruptcy judge ended the hearing on Alioto’s fees with this statement:
As I indicated before, I think the contingent fee agreement has not been recognized as such. It has been used as a guideline, but I think it is a reasonable guideline, and it also has the dual purpose, I think, of largely fulfilling the expectations of counsel with reference to what he might receive.
. The OCC contends that since Alioto claims that the fee was wholly “earned” during the Chapter XI proceeding,
see
note 5
supra,
the entire fee is an expense of administration and thus not subject to priority. See, e.
g., In re Columbia Ribbon Co.,
. Given that Alioto’s contract was for compensation of professional services, the bankruptcy court could not have awarded any attorneys’ fees without first approving the award in accordance with Bankruptcy Rules 219 and 11-31. Moreover, Alioto could not have been retained as special counsel without an appropriate court order. Bankruptcy Rules 215 and 11-22. Consequently, any fee relating to the post-arrangement period had to have been awarded pursuant to the April, 1978 general retainer and not from rights originating in the December, 1974 contract. Tne record amply supports that the bankruptcy court did just that. See note 8 supra.
