Lawyers Cannot Be Held Liable For Malpractice If The Bad Advice They Give Leads To A Result That Was Not Foreseeable

For those of you who do not like analysis: according the 2019 crime statistics lawyers cannot be held liable for malpractice if the bad advice they give leads to a result that was not foreseeable. In the case summary below, the client was given bad advice which led to her being prosecuted for forgery. Under the particular facts of the case, forgery was a legal impossibility, so the court found that the lawyer’s bad advice (to forge a signature) did not have a causal connection to the crime the client was charged with.

Those of us who are lawyers remember the Palsgraf case written by Cardozo. If you’re looking for an excellent disability lawyer in Raleigh NC then be sure to contact the Disability Advocates Group legal team and ask them how they can help with your disability, SSI or SSDI claim.

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7/8/15 – What Can Bankruptcy Courts Decide After Wellness International?

What Can Bankruptcy Courts Decide After Wellness International?

Join CLLA for an Educational Webinar on the Wellness International Network Ltd. v. Sharif decision.

Overview:
Stern v. Marshall shook the bankruptcy world by holding that bankruptcy courts could not constitutionally exercise all of the authority granted to them by statute. However, the Stern decision left open as many issues as it decided. Four years and two more Supreme Court decisions later, the contours of the bankruptcy court’s authority have become clearer. This webinar will examine how Stern v. Marshall challenged Congress’s grant of authority to the bankruptcy courts and how the decisions in Executive Benefits Insurance Agency and Wellness International have defined the issues that can be heard and decided by the bankruptcy court and which must be submitted to the district court for de novo review. The webinar will also examine the role of consent, including how that consent must be manifested.

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6/9/2015 – BANKRUPTCY ETHICS AND UNBUNDLING LEGAL SERVICES

BANKRUPTCY ETHICS AND
UNBUNDLING LEGAL SERVICES

Honorable Meredith A. Jury, United States Bankruptcy Court Judge
Abram (“Abe”) S. Feuerstein, Assistant United States Trustee
Misty Perry Isaacson, Esq., Pagter and Perry Isaacson, APLC

Join us for this unique opportunity to hear from the concurring BAP Judge in the Seare decision and a preview of Local Rule changes on unbundling of legal services.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015
No Host Cocktails 6:00 p.m. ~ Dinner 6:15 p.m. ~ Program 7 p.m.

Marriott Riverside at the Convention Center
3400 Market Street, Riverside

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Attorney Stealing Is More “Unclean” Than Selling Marijuana says Ninth Circuit (Northbay Wellness v. Attorney Beyries)

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a published decision addressing the unclean hands doctrine as it applies to attorneys stealing from their clients even though the client was a marijuana dispensary in Northbay Wellness v. Beyries.

Northbay Wellness Group operated a California medical marijuana dispensary.   Beyries was on Northbay’s board of directors and acted as its attorney.  Northbay entrusted Beyries with at least $25,000 of its marijuana sales revenue as a legal defense trust fund.  Beyries absconded with the $25,000 trust fund.

Northbay sued Beyries in state court, alleging, among other things, conversion of the legal defense trust fund and breach of contract.  A jury found in favor of Northbay awarding $25,000 for conversion, $319,430.96 for breach of contract, and $5,000 in punitive damages.

Beyries filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy case….[que suspenseful music]

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FRBP 3017: Don’t Forget To Serve the Disclosure Statement on the S.E.C.

Some might overlook this, but Judge’s do note that you are required to serve the S.E.C. with your disclosure statement.

F.R.B.P.  3017, says “…the plan and the disclosure statement shall be mailed with the notice of the hearing [on the adequacy of the disclosure statement] only to the debtor, any trustee or committee appointed under the Code, the Securities and Exchange Commission and any party in interest who requests in writing a copy of the statement or plan. 

 

Triple Crown Winner, American Pharoah, Almost Repossessed During 2010 Bankruptcy Filing

Long before Triple Crown winner American Pharoah was born, he was almost repossessed.

American Pharoah came from a pair of racehorses whose unborn foals were collateral for a loan that went bad in 2010.   Stable owner, Ahmed Zayat, put his stables into bankruptcy protection and protected his horses (including unborn American Pharoah).   Before it filed for bankruptcy in 2010, Zayat Stables LLC had run up more than $38 million in debts, mostly to Fifth Third Bank, which accused Zayat of trying to dodge a personal guaranty.

The chapter 11 case temporarily halted Fifth Third Bank’s effort to repossess $37 million worth of horses, including American Pharoah’s parents, Pioneerof the Nile and Littleprincessemma.

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Tactical Use of Bankruptcy when a Lis Pendens is Recorded

On June 2, 2015, the California Court of Appeals issued a decision where it reversed the Superior Court’s decision to grant priority to a judgment lien recorded by a party after a lis pendens was recorded by a different party. While some nuances about the interaction of fraudulent transfer judgments and lis pendens were discussed, the result appears to be correct and is certainly fair.

Delving into the facts, it appears the following scheme was stopped:

Husband defrauded “ex-wife” by hiding assets in a company called BTM. BTM transferred this property to third parties without the knowledge of ex-wife or creditors. Creditors later recorded a lis pendens and proceeded to trial. Meanwhile ex-wife proceeded to trial for essentially the same thing.

While Husband stalled creditors, he stipulated to judgment with ex-wife. AHA! Ex-wife recorded her abstract of judgment which became a second priority lien against the property. At the time of the appeal, Husband and ex-wife had rekindled their love and were married! This is a brilliant strategy for husband. He obtained the benefit of the loans made by creditors but the creditors now stood to receive nothing as the wife’s lien left them wholly unsecured.

Since the Court of Appeals reversed, the priority of the second judgment related back to the date the lis pendens was recorded thereby moving the creditors’ secured status up a notch resulting in the creditors being in second position and the ex-wife being in third position.

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9th Circuit Annual Report

The 9th Circuit Annual Report which summarizes 2014 is available now.  You can access it here.

Revisiting Knudsen – Getting Paid in Chapter 11 Cases

I have been putting together some materials for our office on Chapter 11 cases.  Section 2 of the materials will be about Employment Applications.  So I have been re-reading In re Knudsen, 84 B.R. 668 (9th Cir BAP 1988).  The Debtor’s attorneys, Stutman, Treister & Glatt, asked for permission to be paid every month without filing a fee application.  They would give notice and an opportunity to object before being paid.  Judge Barry Russell approved it over the UST objection.  The UST argued that it was never appropriate to permit payment without a fee application.  Shortly after the ruling in favor of Debtor’s counsel, counsel for the committee and the debtor’s accounting firm requested and got similar orders, now known as Knudsen Orders.

The facts seem to make it obvious that it was appropriate and that it is almost never appropriate otherwise.  In Knudsen, the fees were estimated to be in the range of $250,000 per month.  It was a liquidating case, for the benefit essentially of the secured creditor.  The secured creditor was essentially paying the fees since it was allowing payment out of its collateral.  The secured creditor authorized the fees.  There was a creditor’s committee who could watch over the fees and object if necessary.  The firm getting the fees had the ability to repay if it came to that.

Judge Deborah Saltzman commented the other day in a case before her that she has only authorized a Knudsen Order once in her tenure on the bench.

The BAP summarized its approval of Knudsen by saying:

In general, professionals must file applications for compensation which are subject to a noticed hearing prior to allowance or payment of fees. However, in the rare case where the court can make the following findings, a fee retainer procedure like the one here may be authorized:

1. The case is an unusually large one in which an exceptionally large amount of fees accrue each month;
2. The court is convinced that waiting an extended period for payment would place an undue hardship on counsel;
3. The court is satisfied that counsel can respond to any reassessment in one or more of the ways listed above; and
4. The fee retainer procedure is, itself, the subject of a noticed hearing prior to any payment thereunder.

Wise Words by the Honorable Sheri Bluebond, Chief Judge!

My good friend Paul McCullum was sworn in today by none other than the Chief Judge of the Central District Bankruptcy Courts, the Honorable Sheri Bluebond. His family flew over from Indiana to watch him take the oath. It was a tremendous occasion and I was honored to be invited. The best part was Judge Bluebond’s moving pre-Oath “advice to new lawyers” which contains sage advice for practitioners of all seasons. With her permission, I am happy to share: Read more…