LeBlanc v. Salem (In Re Mailman Steam Carpet Cleaning Corp.)

         United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit


No. 99-1865

          IN RE MAILMAN STEAM CARPET CLEANING CORP.,

                           Debtor.
                    _____________________

                       GARY R. LEBLANC,

                          Appellant,

                              v.

               RICHARD P. SALEM, TRUSTEE, ETC.,

                          Appellee.


         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge]


                            Before

                     Selya, Circuit Judge,

                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,

                  and Boudin, Circuit Judge.


    Gary R. LeBlanc, pro se ipso, for appellant.
    Richard P. Salem, pro se ipso, for appellee.
                           May 16, 2000


            SELYA, Circuit Judge.     This appeal requires us to

revisit the final resting place of Mailman Steam Carpet Cleaning

Corp. (the debtor).   An earlier opinion of this court adumbrates

the relevant background, see LeBlanc v. Salem (In re Mailman

Steam Carpet Cleaning Corp.), 196 F.3d 1, 2-4 (1st Cir. 1999)

(Mailman I), and an abbreviated version, borrowing heavily from

the original, suffices here.1

            In October 1990, the debtor, represented by Attorney

Gary R. LeBlanc, won a verdict in excess of $450,000 against

Alfred C. Lizotte in an environmental suit.     An appeal ensued.

Betimes, the debtor attached a parcel of commercial real estate

(upon which Al's Service Station, a corporation controlled by

Lizotte, operated a Gulf station) in an effort to secure the

judgment.

            Before collecting any sums from Lizotte, the debtor

slid into bankruptcy.    See 11 U.S.C. §§ 701-766 (1994 & Supp.

1999).   The Lizotte judgment thus became a principal asset of

the bankruptcy estate and LeBlanc, who had been engaged under a


    1We previously warned that the record in this case "lacks
crucial documents" and requires us to use approximate numbers
throughout.   Mailman I, 196 F.3d at 2.    That warning still
applies.

                                -2-
contingent fee arrangement, became a creditor.       On September 18,

1995, the trustee in bankruptcy, Richard P. Salem, notified the

court and creditors of his intention to compromise the judgment

for $100,000.   LeBlanc, qua creditor, objected.

          The bankruptcy court held a hearing during which Salem

introduced an appraisal that estimated the fair market value of

the property, including the fixtures and equipment associated

with Al's Service Station (the Corporation), at $390,000, and

then assigned $175,000 of this total to the "[l]and, buildings

and   installations"   owned   personally   by   Lizotte   (and,   thus,

subject to the attachment).     The appraiser also pointed out that

the real estate was encumbered by a prior first mortgage that

secured nearly $100,000 in debt.       LeBlanc asserted that the real

estate was worth much more than the estimate but offered no

concrete evidentiary support for a different valuation.               No

other creditor objected to the anticipated settlement.

          In the end, the bankruptcy court approved the proposal,

subject to the following condition:

          If the gas station is sold within two years
          from [October 19, 1995], the trustee may
          move for revocation of this approval.
          Depending on the facts of the sale, the
          court will then either confirm or revoke its
          approval.

The court denied LeBlanc's subsequent motion to alter or amend

and ordered Salem to deliver an executed discharge of the lien,

                                 -3-
to   be   held    in    escrow     pending      payment   of   $100,000    to    the

bankruptcy estate.

            Approximately         seven    months     later,    Lizotte    and    the

Corporation sold the real property and the business assets of

the Corporation for an aggregate price of $560,000.                        Lizotte

maintained that the business assets represented most of the

value; thus, he proposed to satisfy the first mortgage, remit

$100,000    to    Salem    to     complete      the   settlement,    and   pay    the

remaining    net       proceeds    to   the     Corporation's      creditors     (the

largest of which apparently was Gulf Oil or its distributor, New

England Petroleum).         Contending that this allocation was a sham

and would fraudulently divert $360,000 from Lizotte's creditors

(including the debtor), LeBlanc moved to compel Salem to seek

revocation of the order conditionally approving the settlement.

The bankruptcy court granted LeBlanc permission under Fed. R.

Bankr. P. 2004 to examine Lizotte, Gulf, and the Corporation,

limited, however, to information concerning the terms of the

sale and to whom the proceeds had gone.2

            The    permitted       discovery      moved   at   a    snail's    pace.

Finally, the depositions concluded and Salem sought leave to



      2
     The court subsequently denied LeBlanc permission to examine
the buyer, Peterborough Oil Co.      LeBlanc gripes about this
ruling in passing, but has neither assigned error to it nor made
any suitably developed argumentation in regard to it.

                                          -4-
abandon the reserved right to seek revocation of the settlement.

LeBlanc — and LeBlanc alone — opposed abandonment.             At a hearing

held on April 15, 1998, LeBlanc recounted his version of the

pertinent facts and the conclusions that he had drawn from his

investigation.        See Mailman I, 196 F.3d at 3-4 (describing

LeBlanc's contentions).        Apparently unimpressed, the bankruptcy

court overruled his objection and authorized Salem to surrender

the right to seek revocation.

            LeBlanc appealed both this order and a collateral order

dealing with the allowance of his claim.3          After some skirmishing

— including a remand for further findings — the district court

upheld both determinations.            See In re Mailman Steam Carpet

Cleaning,    Civ.    No.   99-40083-EFH    (D.     Mass.   June   25,   1999)

(Mailman II).       LeBlanc then prosecuted this appeal.          In it, he

presses two assignments of error.

                           The Abandonment Order

            The   appellant    first    solicits    our    intervention    in

respect to the order approving abandonment of the right to seek

revocation of the settlement.          As the appellant acknowledges,


     3
     Striking on a different front, LeBlanc simultaneously filed
an adversary proceeding against Salem, in which he alleged
negligence and breach of fiduciary duty stemming from Salem's
failure to seek revocation of the settlement. The bankruptcy
court rejected this initiative, granting summary judgment in
Salem's favor. The district court affirmed, and so did we. See
Mailman I, 196 F.3d at 4-9.

                                    -5-
the standard of review is abuse of discretion.             See Prebor v.

Collins (In re I Don't Trust), 143 F.3d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1998).

The abuse of discretion rubric is not hard and fast.                See 1

Steven Alan Childress & Martha S. Davis, Federal Standards of

Review § 4.21, at 4-131 to -139 (3d ed. 1999).            Here, we apply

it against the background understanding that "[c]ompromises are

favored in bankruptcy."       Hicks, Muse & Co. v. Brandt (In re

Healthco Int'l, Inc.), 136 F.3d 45, 50 n.5 (1st Cir. 1998)

(quoting 9 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 9019.01, at 9019-2 (15th ed.

1995)).

            A chapter 7 trustee is entrusted to marshal an estate's

assets and liabilities, and proceed in settling its accounts on

whatever grounds he, in his informed discretion, believes will

net the maximum return for the creditors (on whose behalf he

toils).     When augmentation of an asset involves protracted

investigation    or   potentially         costly   litigation,   with    no

guarantee as to the outcome, the trustee must tread cautiously

— and an inquiring court must accord him wide latitude should he

conclude that the game is not worth the candle.           See, e.g., id.

at 50-52.    After all, "a chapter 7 trustee is required to reach

an   informed   judgment,   after    diligent      investigation,   as   to

whether it would be prudent to eliminate the inherent risks,

delays and expense of prolonged litigation in an uncertain


                                    -6-
cause."   Kowal v. Malkemus (In re Thompson), 965 F.2d 1136, 1145

(1st Cir. 1992).

            These principles are dispositive here.       LeBlanc mounts

a claim of fraud — a claim that, after earnest investigation, he

cannot    substantiate.     In    order   to   probe   the     claim   more

thoroughly, the trustee would have to deplete the estate's

(already slim) assets in exploring what might well prove to be

a dry hole.      Given the known facts, a decision to go no further

seems easily defensible.

            Lizotte is now in bankruptcy, with no visible assets

apart from the real estate which is at issue in this proceeding.

The sale to Peterborough Oil reportedly was contingent on the

payment of roughly $200,000 to Gulf Oil/New England Petroleum,

and a further payment of $60,000 for a covenant not to compete.

The mortgage — a priority lien — had a balance of nearly

$100,000.     Backing these sums out of the sales price left only

$200,000 on the table — some of which obviously would have to be

devoted to closing costs, taxes, attorneys' fees, and the like.

Under    those   circumstances,   accepting     a   $100,000   settlement

rather than either frustrating the sale (by attempting to block

the $200,000 payment) or prolonging the squabble about how to

allocate the sales price between real property and business

assets does not appear unreasonable.           Trustees must take care


                                  -7-
not to throw good money after bad, and, on this somewhat opaque

record, Salem's inclination to embrace the settlement is a

choice which appears deserving of some deference.

         Nor    was    Salem's    position      rubber-stamped.           The

bankruptcy   court    conducted   no    fewer   than   four    hearings   to

scrutinize the appellant's claims.           Upon considering all the

available evidence, the court elected, as its discretion fully

allowed, to accept the trustee's recommendation.              The situation

thus is reminiscent of In re Thompson, in which we wrote:

         [T]he baseline for appellants' opposition to
         the proposed settlement rests in their
         readiness to second-guess the informed
         judgment of the chapter 7 trustee, as well
         as the discretionary determination of the
         bankruptcy court, that continued litigation
         would not result in a net benefit to the
         chapter 7 estate. . . .        The important
         policy    favoring    efficient    bankruptcy
         administration     normally   will    warrant
         judicial recognition that the chapter 7
         trustee, . . . rather than . . . an
         individual creditor, is the more appropriate
         arbiter of the "best interests" of the
         chapter 7 estate.

965 F.2d at 1145 (citations omitted).

         The district court also reviewed the facts.                 In an

abundance of caution, it remanded for further findings and

ultimately affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy court.                 See

Mailman II, slip op. at 3.        The court stated that "the record

simply does not reflect that the land owned by Lizotte and


                                  -8-
secured by the real estate attachment was valued at more than

the $200,000 [originally] estimated by the independent real

estate appraiser."          Id.     It then noted that the appellant had

neither introduced any contrary expert testimony nor proffered

any hard evidence "that Lizotte [had] manipulated the valuation

of his real estate."              Id.    Consequently, the district court

concluded     that    the    bankruptcy           court   had    not    abused       its

discretion.       See id.

            We    appreciate        that,      notwithstanding         the    district

court's imprimatur, we must independently review the bankruptcy

court's determination.            See Palmacci v. Umpierrez, 121 F.3d 781,

785 (1st Cir. 1997).              But that review should not occur in a

vacuum.      In    this     instance,       the    decision     whether        to   seek

revocation of the settlement has been poked, prodded, and probed

at some length.        For present purposes, the acid test of the

bankruptcy court's decision is not whether pressing onward might

have produced more funds for the estate but, rather, whether

accepting    the     settlement         (and    thereby    forgoing          the    risks

inherent    in     intransigence)           fell    within      the    universe        of

reasonable alternatives.            The ascertained facts, as revealed by

the record, convince us that the bankruptcy court did not exceed

the wide boundaries of its discretion in determining that a bird




                                         -9-
in    the     hand      was    worth       more    than       continued    shaking        of    a

potentially barren bush.

                                    The Claim Allowance

                 We turn next to LeBlanc's second assignment of error.

The facts are these.                The debtor originally retained LeBlanc to

handle the environmental suit pursuant to a written retainer

agreement, dated June 20, 1988, that specified a one-third

contingent fee based on the "verdict, jury award or settlement."

LeBlanc succeeded in obtaining a verdict against Lizotte in mid-

1990.        With an appeal in prospect, he prepared a neoteric fee

agreement that provided, in substance, that he would handle the

appeal and receive an aggregate fee equal to the greater of 43%

of any recovery or his overall time charges (based on specified

billing rates).            The debtor signed this agreement in November

1990.

                 When the debtor later filed for bankruptcy and LeBlanc

served       a    proof       of    claim    based       on     the   November     1990    fee

agreement, the agreement proved as much necrotic as neoteric;

the    bankruptcy         court       struck      it     down    as   violative     of    Rule

3:05(5)(e)         of   the        Rules    of    the     Supreme     Judicial     Court       of

Massachusetts (which at the time provided, in pertinent part,

that     a       contingent         fee    shall        not   "exceed     stated    maximum




                                                 -10-
percentages of the amount collected"). 4          The court did not

disallow LeBlanc's claim entirely, however, but allowed it to

the extent of one-third of the amount of the litigation proceeds

ultimately collected.     The district court affirmed these twin

determinations, holding (1) that the bankruptcy court did not

err in finding the November 1990 fee agreement unenforceable,

and (2) that the bankruptcy court's allowance of the claim in an

amount equal to one-third of the actual recovery was "reasonable

and do[es] not constitute an abuse of discretion."        Mailman II,

slip op. at 4.

         Like    the   district   court,   we   review   de   novo   the

bankruptcy court's rulings of law and test its findings of fact

for clear error.   See BayBank-Middlesex v. Raylar Distributors,

Inc., 69 F.3d 1200, 1202 (1st Cir. 1995).            We think it is

significant here that the claim under review is essentially a

claim for an attorney's fee.        The bankruptcy court's role is

preeminent in determining the reasonableness of fees claimed in

bankruptcy proceedings, and the court's determinations in that

wise are reviewed with great deference.          See In re I Don't



    4In the District of Massachusetts, both the federal district
court and the bankruptcy court have incorporated the Supreme
Judicial Court's ethical standards into their own rules. See D.
Mass. R. 83.6(4)(B); Bankr. Mass. R. 9020-3.       At the times
relevant hereto, that incorporation embraced former S.J.C. R.
3:05 (since stricken).

                                  -11-
Trust, 143 F.3d at 3; In re Martin, 817 F.2d 175, 182 (1st Cir.

1987); Rome v. Braunstein (In re Chestnut Hill Mortgage Corp.),

158 B.R. 547, 549 (D. Mass. 1993), aff'd, 19 F.3d 54 (1st Cir.

1994).   With these tenets in mind, we consider the particulars

of the appellant's claim.

          We most assuredly cannot fault the bankruptcy court for

refusing to honor the November 1990 fee agreement.         By leaving

open the possibility of fees in excess of the stated percentage,

that agreement plainly ran afoul of the then-applicable ethical

canon, S.J.C. R. 3:05(5)(e).       The court therefore had the right

— and, arguably, the duty — to refuse to enforce it.       See Berman

v. Linnane, 424 Mass. 867, 871-72 & n.7 (1997).

          This brings us to the reasonableness of the allowance.

Since the November 1990 fee agreement had purported to supplant,

not   merely   supplement,   the     original   fee   agreement,   the

bankruptcy court determined that it would consider not only the

original agreement, but also equitable doctrines.         In the end,

it approved LeBlanc's claim to the extent of one-third of the

amounts actually realized on the judgment against Lizotte.          We

glean from the record that the court thought this sum reasonable

in relation to the services rendered and to the result achieved

and believed that such an award would prevent unjust enrichment

of the bankruptcy estate.      Indeed, the court expressly found


                               -12-
that "one-third of the recovery, plus expenses" constituted a

"typical compensation arrangement for matters such as this" and

was "[f]air" in the circumstances of this case.

             In our view, the allowance of the claim passes the test

of reasonableness with flying colors.         Because we do not wish to

belabor the obvious, we add only a brief comment.

             Having found that the November 1990 fee agreement

violated ethical precepts, the bankruptcy court likely could

have denied LeBlanc compensation altogether.             See, e.g., Rome,

19 F.3d at 58; cf. Culebras Enters. Corp. v. Rivera-Rios, 846

F.2d   94,   97   (1st   Cir.   1988)   (stating,   in   a   non-bankruptcy

context, that "[d]enial of attorneys' fees may be a proper

sanction for violation of an ethical canon").            The fact that the

court elected to take less draconian measures does not mean that

it could attach no significance to the violation — and this is

so even though it seems to have regarded the ethical shortfall

as   resulting    from    a   good-faith   blunder.      In    all   events,

assessing the reasonableness of claims for counsel fees is a

matter "in which the court of first instance enjoys particularly

great leeway," In re I Don't Trust, 143 F.3d at 3, and there is

no sign that the bankruptcy court's allowance of LeBlanc's claim

in a sum less than he had hoped outstripped that leeway.




                                    -13-
             The proof of the pudding is in the tasting. The essence

of LeBlanc's engagement by the debtor centered around the notion

that   his   compensation   would    be    commensurate   to   the   monies

realized by the client.      The bankruptcy court's resolution of

LeBlanc's claim was faithful to this central concept; it found

that LeBlanc's work had produced a recovery and that he was

entitled to compensation proportionate to the size of that

recovery.     So viewed, LeBlanc's complaint reduces to a quarrel

over the percentage that the court deemed appropriate.                That

ends the matter.     Whether or not a higher percentage might have

been sustainable, it cannot seriously be argued that the court's

decision to approve the claim based on a conventional percentage

(33a%) constituted an abuse of discretion.

             We need go no further.       At long last, the lower courts

appear to have laid this tangled and contentious matter to rest.

We discern no error in their administration of these last rites.



Affirmed.




                                    -14-