Summary
applying the Travelers rule to allow post-petition fees and costs
Summary of this case from Hilgartner v. Yasuko YagiOpinion
Case No. 15-00540
11-24-2020
Jeffrey M. Orenstein, Wolff & Orenstein, LLC, Michael G. Wolff, Goren, Hofberg & Wolff, Rockville, MD, for Debtor.
Jeffrey M. Orenstein, Wolff & Orenstein, LLC, Michael G. Wolff, Goren, Hofberg & Wolff, Rockville, MD, for Debtor.
MEMORANDUM DECISION RE DEBTOR'S MOTION TO MODIFY PLAN AND SECURED CREDITORS’ APPLICATION FOR ALLOWANCE OF POSTPETITION FEES AND EXPENSES
S. Martin Teel, Jr., United States Bankruptcy Judge
Stuart Mills Davenport commenced this case as the debtor by filing a voluntary petition under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.) on October 14, 2015. He owns a property located at 1700 1st Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001 (the "Property"). Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt hold a claim against Davenport pursuant to a Note issued for $80,000.00 that is secured by a Deed of Trust against the Property. This Memorandum Decision addresses Davenport's Motion to Modify Chapter 13 Plan After Confirmation (Dkt. No. 125) and the Application of Secured Creditors Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt, for Allowance and Payment of Interest, Costs, Fees and Other Expenses Due on Secured Note (part of Dkt. No. 137) ("Application for Fees and Expenses ").
The Property is used for the Big Bear Café, but has a residence on the second level. The District of Columbia granted the Property a secondary address of 105 R Street, N.W., on September 19, 2006, for the R Street entrance that led to the residence located on the second level of the Property.
I
SUMMARY
On January 15, 2016, the court confirmed Davenport's amended Chapter 13 plan, which called for Davenport to make payments of $4,400.00 per month to the Chapter 13 trustee, and for the trustee to pay Djourabchi and Welt's allowed secured claim (which had to be fixed as of the date of confirmation), with postconfirmation interest at 6% per annum on the amount of the allowed secured claim. In an order of July 21, 2016, the court fixed the allowed secured claim of Djourabchi and Welt as consisting of:
• the $80,000.00 of principal;
• plus amounts (not determined by the order) that were allowable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) as monetary obligations arising under the Note and the Deed of Trust after the commencement of the case and before confirmation of the plan;
• less a credit of $26,422.90 on hand as of the petition date.
The Note and Deed of Trust governed Davenport's debt obligations up to the point of confirmation. Under the terms of the Note , the $26,422.90 credit could not be applied to the $80,000.00 principal amount of the Note during the period preceding confirmation because the Note had not been paid in full. However, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B), the confirmed plan altered Djourabchi and Welt's rights and thereby permitted application of the $26,422.90 credit to be applied as of the confirmation date in fixing the amount of the allowed secured claim remaining at the conclusion of that date.
The Note provided for interest only payments until the Note was paid in full, with the result that any monthly payment exceeding the amount of interest owed for the month became a credit held in reserve.
On January 17, 2017, Davenport filed a Motion to Modify Chapter 13 Plan After Confirmation (Dkt. No. 125), contending that he had submitted to the Chapter 13 trustee sufficient funds to satisfy the allowed secured claim, and seeking (based on a reduced income) to modify the plan by reducing his remaining monthly plan payments to $1,425.00 per month, an amount sufficient to satisfy the only other allowed claim in the case, a claim of the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"). Djourabchi and Welt opposed the Motion to Modify and filed their Application for Fees and Expenses seeking allowance of fees and expenses for which they had incurred liability postpetition (Dkt. No. 137). They do not seek prepetition fees and expenses.
Under the Deed of Trust , upon being given notice of a payment of reasonable attorney's fees and expenses incurred by Djourabchi and Welt in protecting their secured position, Davenport became liable to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for the amount of that payment. It was only after confirmation of Davenport's Chapter 13 plan that Djourabchi and Welt gave Davenport notice of payments of any of the attorney's fees and expenses at issue, and thus Davenport incurred a reimbursement obligation regarding the fees and expenses only after confirmation of his plan, and therefore the amounts owed pursuant to that reimbursement obligation are not part of the allowed secured claim (fixed as of the confirmation date). Nevertheless, the claims in that regard remain debts secured by the Deed of Trust , and had a potential impact on the debtor's performance under his confirmed plan, such that the court had subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the amounts owed.
The court issued a scheduling order regarding the litigation of the Motion to Modify and the Application for Fees and Expenses . The claim was oversecured. Accordingly, under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b), the allowed secured claim included:
• postpetition interest accruing prior to confirmation at the Note rate of 10.5% per annum on the $80,000.00 of principal; and
• any fees and expenses for which Davenport incurred a reimbursement obligation between the filing date of the petition and the confirmation date.
There were, however, no such reimbursement obligations incurred during the postpetition period prior to the date of confirmation. In a Memorandum Decision and Order re Motions in Limine of September 11, 2017 (Dkt. No. 168) ("In Limine Decision "), the court found that the amount of the allowed secured claim (fixed as the confirmation date) was $55,717.03 (consisting of the $80,000.00 of principal, plus postpetition interest of $2,139.93, less the credit of $26,422.90).
For reasons set forth below, I conclude with respect to the Motion to Modify that under the modified plan more than sufficient funds will be available to complete payment of the allowed secured claim (and the postconfirmation interest thereon) plus the IRS's claim. Accordingly, I will grant Davenport's Motion to Modify .
As to Djourabchi and Welt's Application for Fees and Expenses , I will reject Davenport's attempt to have the court deny all of the claim for reimbursement of payments of attorney's fees and expenses. However, under District of Columbia law, which governs the reasonableness of amounts incurred as a reimbursement liability after the date of confirmation, the fee and expense amounts incurred in the bankruptcy case and for which reimbursement is sought are in large part unreasonable.
For the reasons stated in the In Limine Decision , I will not consider whether Djourabchi and Welt are entitled to reimbursement of attorney's fees and expenses incurred in a pending District Court civil action, a question it is premature to decide.
Finally, I conclude that with respect to Davenport's obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for any payment of reasonable attorney's fees and expenses, Davenport is required to pay interest at the Note rate of 10.5% per annum from the date of notice that the payment had been made.
II
FACTS
The history of this case is extensive, but essential to understanding the issues being considered, especially Davenport's defenses to postconfirmation attorney's fees and expenses. The pertinent facts are set forth below.
A
THE NOTE AND THE DEED OF TRUST
On September 22, 2006, Davenport executed the Note (titled Promissory Note for Business and Commercial Purposes ) and the Deed of Trust in favor of Djourabchi and Welt, who were his neighbors, for a loan of $80,000 secured by the Property. The Property was already subject to an existing first deed of trust in favor of Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC ("Bayview"). The Note was drafted by Djourabchi, an attorney, although his usual legal work did not encompass the drafting of promissory notes. Several provisions of the Note and the Deed of Trust are significant to the questions at hand. The Note provides in part:
1. Secured Interest and Right to Record. Debtor acknowledges that his ownership and financial interest in certain real property situated in the District of Columbia, and having a street address of 1700 1st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20001, is being offered as a security interest for the balance of principal and interest on this Note. ... Such a lien on the Deed shall be released, if and only if all outstanding debts from this instrument, including but not limited to all accrued interest and fees, have been paid in full to the satisfaction of Creditor.
2. Payments of Interest and Fees. All payments are due by 5:00 PM on the first calendar day of each month. Debtor understands and acknowledges that he has requested to make interest-only payments to Creditor, and Creditor has made this Promissory Note in full reliance of the same—therefore, monthly payments shall remain interest-only for life. Interest is calculated on a monthly basis accruing on the first calendar day of each month, at 9:00 AM, and will not be prorated for a daily calculation for any reason. Any consideration for prepayment
shall include interest for the entire calendar month in which the prepayment is scheduled to be made.
Method of Payments. Any and all payments by Debtor, including, but not limited to prepayments of principal, interest, or any other amounts of any kind with respect to this Promissory Note shall be made in immediately available funds by Debtor to Creditor and shall be deposited directly at Citibank ... or in such other means and at such other addresses as Creditor shall direct from time to time, on or before the due date and without any prior demand, i.e., without any type of billing, invoicing or notice. Debtor understands and accepts that it is Debtor's sole and absolute responsibility to ensure that any and all payments are made on time and in Creditor's possession when due. Any payments of amounts due hereunder shall be in such currency of the United States at the time of payment as shall be legal tender for the payment of public or private debts.
3. Maturity Date. The Principal Balance and all Interest and Fees shall be due and payable on September 22, 2016.
4. Prepayment. For Debtor to prepay this Promissory Note in full prior to the Maturity Date, Debtor must deliver to Creditor notice of intent to prepay at least 20 (Twenty) days in advance of Debtor's intended date of prepayment ("Notice of Prepayment"). With successful delivery of Notice of Prepayment to Creditor, Debtor may prepay this Promissory Note in whole, but only in whole, together with any accrued interest. No partial payments shall be accepted. If there is a conflict between the provisions of this Paragraph and any other terms and conditions outlined in this instrument, this Paragraph shall be subordinate to all others. Notice of Prepayment will expire if prepayment is not made on the date stated therein.
5. Default; Remedies.
(a) Any failure by the Debtor to make any payment of principal, interest or any other charge, fee or payment due hereunder when the same becomes due and payable, whether by demand, acceleration, or otherwise, and the continuation of such failure for a period of 4 (four) calendar days shall constitute a default.
(b) Upon the occurrence of a Default, Debtor understands and acknowledges that Creditor, without any notice; shall have the following additional rights and freedoms, separate arid apart from any other rights outlined in this instrument:
(i) Proceed in foreclosure on the secured interest held by Creditor;
(ii) File a notice of default with credit rating agencies of choice;
(iii) Collect a compound penalty of $10 (Ten Dollars) per calendar day, separate and apart from any ongoing amounts due under this instrument.
Creditor shall have the right and freedom to pursue any and all such rights, as well as others allowed by-law, until all outstanding payments are made in full to the satisfaction of the Creditor.
6. Application of Payments. Creditor shall have the sole, exclusive, and unreviewable right to, unilaterally and without notice to or the consent of any person, allocate any and all payments which may be received by or tendered to Creditor made by Debtor or any other person at any time or from time to time and which relate in any way to the sums promised hereunder, including: (i) the payment of any costs and expenses incurred by Creditor to enforce any rights hereunder; (ii) accrued but unpaid interest, and all other charges, fees or payments due hereunder; and (iii) principal.
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9. Waiver.
(a) Debtor, for himself and for his successors, hereby irrevocably: (i) waives diligence, presentment and demand for payment, protest, notice, notice of protest and nonpayment, dishonor and notice of dishonor and any other demands or notices of any and every kind whatsoever, ....
The Deed of Trust also has several key provisions that are important to this case. The Deed of Trust provides in relevant part:
9. Protection of Lender's Interest in the Property and Rights Under this Security Instrument. If (a) Borrower fails to perform the covenants and agreements contained in this Security Instrument, (b) there is a legal proceeding that might significantly affect Lender's interest in the Property and/or rights under this Security Instrument (such as a proceeding in bankruptcy, probate, for condemnation or forfeiture, for enforcement of a lien which may attain priority over this Security Instrument or to enforce laws or regulations), or (c) Borrower has abandoned the Property, then Lender may do and pay for whatever is reasonable or appropriate to protect Lender's interest in the Property and rights under this Security Instrument, including protecting and/or assessing the value of the Property, and securing and/or repairing the Property. Lender's actions can include, but are not limited to: (a) paying any sums secured by a lien which has priority over this Security Instrument; (b) appearing in court; and (c) paying reasonable attorneys’ fees to protect its interest in the Property and/or rights under this Security Instrument, including its secured position in a bankruptcy proceeding. ...
Any amounts disbursed by Lender under this Section 9 shall become additional debt of Borrower secured by this Security Instrument. These amounts shall bear interest at the Note rate from the date of disbursement and shall be payable, with such interest, upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting payment.
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11. Assignment of Miscellaneous Proceeds; Forfeiture. ...
Borrower shall be in default if any action or proceeding, whether civil or criminal, is begun that, in Lender's judgment, could result in forfeiture of the Property or other material impairment of Lender's interest in the Property or rights under this Security Instrument. Borrower can cure such a default and, if acceleration has occurred, reinstate as provided in Section 19, by causing the action or proceeding to be dismissed with a ruling that, in Lender's judgment, precludes forfeiture of the Property or other material impairment of Lender's interest in the Property or rights under this Security Instrument. The proceeds of any award or claim for damages that are attributable to the impairment of Lender's interest in the Property are hereby assigned and shall be paid to Lender.
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14. Loan Charges. Lender may charge Borrower fees for services performed in connection with Borrower's default, for the purpose of protecting Lender's interest in the Property and rights under this Security Instrument, including, but not limited to, attorneys’ fees ....
19. Borrower's Right to Reinstate After Acceleration. If Borrower meets certain conditions, Borrower shall have the right to have enforcement of this Security Instrument discontinued at any time prior to the earliest of: (a) five days before sale of the Property pursuant to any power of sale contained in this Security
Instrument; (b) such other period as Applicable Law might specify for the termination of Borrower's right to reinstate; or (c) entry of a judgment enforcing this Security Instrument. Those conditions are that Borrower: (a) pays Lender all sums which then would be due under this Security Instrument and the Note as if no acceleration had occurred; (b) cures any default of any other covenants or agreements; (c) pays all expenses incurred in enforcing this Security Instrument, including, but not limited to, reasonable attorneys’ fees, property inspection and valuation fees, and other fees incurred for the purpose of protecting Lender's interest in the Property and rights under this Security Instrument; and (d) takes such action as Lender may reasonably require to assure that Lender's interest in the Property and rights under this Security Instrument, and Borrower's obligation to pay the sums secured by this Security Instrument, shall continue unchanged. ... Upon reinstatement by Borrower, this Security Instrument and obligations secured hereby shall remain fully effective as if no acceleration had occurred. ...
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22. Acceleration; Remedies. Lender shall give notice to Borrower prior to acceleration following Borrower's default or breach of any covenant or agreement in this Security Instrument ... The notice shall specify (a) the default; (b) the action required to cure the default (c) a date, not less than 30 days from the date the notice is given to Borrower, by which the default must be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the default on or before the date specified in the notice may result in acceleration of sums secured by this Security Instrument and sale of the Property. The notice shall further inform Borrower of the right to reinstate after acceleration and the right to bring a court action to assert the non-existence of a default or any other defense of borrower to acceleration and sale. If the default is not cured on or before the date specified in the notice, Lender at its option may require immediate payment in full of all sums secured by this Security Instrument without further demand and may invoke the power of sale and any other remedies permitted by applicable Law. Lender shall be entitled to collect all expenses incurred in pursuing the remedies provided in this Section 22, including, but not limited to, reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs of title evidence.
At the time Davenport executed the Note and Deed of Trust , he lived in a residence at 1710 1st Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001 ("1710 Residence"), adjoining the Property (located at 1700 1st Street, N.W.). Davenport moved into a residence on the second floor of the Property sometime in 2012, and lived there until sometime around May 2017, when he moved back into the 1710 Residence.
B
DAVENPORT'S FIRST BANKRUPTCY CASE
Davenport was already in financial difficulty in 2006 when he entered into the loan arrangement with Djourabchi and Welt. Within a year, in 2007, Davenport defaulted on the first mortgage on the Property held by Bayview. Djourabchi and Welt demanded that Davenport pay the full amount of the loan owed them by September 2008, or they would foreclose on the loan or sell the loan to a more aggressive lender. However, Djourabchi told Davenport that if he increased payments from $700 per month to $1,000 per month, Djourabchi and Welt would not foreclosure. Davenport could not fully pay the Note , so he began paying $300 extra each month towards paying the Note , which was acceptable to Djourabchi and Welt, to prevent any foreclosure. Davenport was not represented during this exchange and did not consult legal counsel until sometime in May 2009.
Davenport again went into default on the first mortgage held by Bayview in 2008. Djourabchi sent Davenport an email on August 18, 2009, which read:
Please coordinate a time to meet with me today before 3:30 PM, so that this loan could be paid in full. I need to meet before 4:00 PM in order to make sure that the check is deposited in the proper account. The remainder of this email is reasonable notice, should the debt remain unsatisfied as of today.
I recognize that you were in touch with me yesterday. However, you were not able to meet yesterday. I called you this morning, and you did not take may call. The outstanding debt has not been paid as of this time. Please remember, that as of today, you are in default on this loan. By the terms and conditions of the secondary lien on your property, ANY act of default on ANY debt owed by you constitutes a breach and immediate acceleration of all debts owed. Therefore, my next step is to engage my attorney (Russell Drazin) for the service of executing an acceleration and the possible subsequent foreclosure of the subject property. Additionally, please remember that any retainer and all associated fees having to do with preparing for and hiring an attorney to enforce the terms and conditions of your loan(s) become your responsibility.
The record is unclear what default on "any debt owed by [Davenport]" was the basis for treating the Note as being subject to acceleration. In any event, Drazin never issued a notice of acceleration before Davenport filed his first bankruptcy case which, pursuant to the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), stayed any act to foreclose on the Property.
Davenport filed a voluntary petition in this court commencing his first case under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code (Case No. 09-00772) on September 2, 2009, to address a large amount of unsecured claims as well as a mortgage on the 1710 Residence, which was in arrears, and the two deeds of trust on the Property. Davenport successfully dealt with Bayview and the 1710 Residence mortgagee in that case. Djourabchi and Welt filed a proof of claim in that case alleging a claim for only $80,000 under the Note , but not claiming any prepetition arrearages, thereby violating Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3001(c)(2)(B) (requiring that a secured creditor include with its proof of claim "an itemized statement of the interest, fees, expenses, or other charges" incurred prepetition). Davenport assumed that there were no arrears claimed by Djourabchi and Welt to be owed. Accordingly, with there being no arrears claimed with respect to the Note , Davenport filed a plan, which was subsequently confirmed, that called for Davenport to make direct payments toward Djourabchi and Welt's claim. In 2012, however, Djourabchi and Welt informed Davenport that attorneys’ fees of $3,000.00 were owed. Davenport did not attempt to modify his plan to deal with paying those fees, and he completed his plan in April 2015. Davenport made his final plan payment on January 20, 2015.
Djourabchi and Welt filed a total claim of $94,146.75 that included an unsecured claim of $14,146.75 for amounts owed on an unrelated $10,000 promissory note that came due in 2009.
Under the terms of the Note , Djourabchi and Welt were entitled to a $10 penalty for each day there was a late payment of a monthly payment of interest (with each month treated as a 30-day period, so that for an entire month the penalty was $300). Before the conclusion of Davenport's first bankruptcy case, Djourabchi and Welt advised Davenport that he had incurred late fees. On March 12, 2015, Davenport filed a motion to show cause why Djourabchi and Welt ought not be held in civil contempt for having notified Davenport that he owed penalty amounts for allegedly making late payments. On March 24, 2015, Djourabchi and Welt filed an opposition attaching thereto their computation of penalties that had accrued. At a hearing of May 15, 2015, the court ruled that any notification regarding penalties that had allegedly accrued was not a violation of the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a).
On June 5, 2015, the court entered an order denying the motion to show cause, reflecting its ruling at the hearing of May 15, 2015.
Davenport obtained a discharge on June 26, 2015. On July 15, 2015, he filed a Revised Motion to Determine Final Cure and Payment . Briefing of that Revised Motion was completed on September 8, 2015. On December 31, 2015, the court issued its decision regarding the Revised Motion . See In re Davenport , 544 B.R. 245 (Bankr. D.D.C. 2015). The court ruled that "[t]he debtor's view of Rule 3001(c)(2)(D)(i) as permitting disallowance of a claim based on a violation of Rule 3001(c)(2)(B) [for failure of the proof of claim to list the amount in arrears] is an erroneous view." Id. at 250. The court further held that it did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate the amount of the debt owed because the plan payments had been completed and Davenport had received a discharge, such that there was no longer a plan to administer. The motion was characterized as a motion under Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3002.1, but the court found that the version of Rule 3002.1 then in effect did not apply to the claim because the claim was not provided for under 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5) in Davenport's plan.
The Revised Motion cured certain procedural deficiencies in the initial Motion to Determine Final Cure and Payment filed on July 9, 2015.
As will be seen, before the court decided the Revised Motion , Djourabchi and Welt gave notice on September 15, 2015, of a foreclosure sale set for October 20, 2015, and on October 14, 2015, Davenport commenced this bankruptcy case, Case No. 15-00540.
C
DAVENPORT'S FIRST ATTEMPT TO PAY OFF THE NOTE
Sometime in 2009, the year his first bankruptcy case began, Davenport sent an email to Djourabchi and Welt indicating that it was his intention to pay off the Note by the end of his bankruptcy case. Davenport did not give a date upon which he planned to pay off the Note .
Davenport testified in the trial of the Motion to Modify that as his bankruptcy was coming to an end, he attempted to discover the amount owed on the loan, but was not receiving cooperation by Djourabchi and Welt. He sent an email in 2012 asking Djourabchi and Welt how much was owed under the Note . Then on October 21, 2013, Davenport's attorney, William F. Markley, sent a letter to Djourabchi and Welt's attorney, Joel S. Aronson, asking for a payoff statement within 30 days that would be good through December 31, 2013, and noting: "In reviewing Mr. Davenport's financial matters I noticed Mr. Davenport is paying your client $1,000.00 monthly, even though the applicable Note calls for payments of $700.00 monthly. Is the additional $300.00 per month being applied towards principal?" On November 20, 2013, Aronson responded by e-mail that: "The extra money has been applied to late fees. The balance due is $83,450. Comprised of $80,000 in principal and $3,450 in legal fees." In response to a further letter of November 3, 2014, from Markley, Aronson wrote in a letter of November 17, 2014, that he disagreed with Markley's calculation of the amount owed, and stated: "Mr. Davenport has been in default status since his second payment made in November 2006." As will be seen, that was necessarily based on an erroneous view, contrary to law, that payments of interest were due in advance on the first of each month.
There then ensued on March 12, 2015, Davenport's motion to show cause why Djourabchi and Welt ought not be held in civil contempt, and their opposition calculating the amount owed based on their erroneous view that payments of interest were due in advance on the first of the month. When Davenport's motion was unsuccessful, Davenport calculated on his own what he believed was still owed under the Note .
On May 15, 2015 (the day of the hearing at which the court ruled against Davenport regarding his motion to show cause why Djourabchi and Welt ought not be held in civil contempt), Davenport wrote a check for $60,980 according to his calculation that $60,980 should suffice to satisfy the debt, with a note on the check stating "Loan Paid in Full." On May 27, 2015, Davenport deposited the check into Djourabchi and Welt's bank account where Davenport made payments on the Note . Davenport did not inform Djourabchi and Welt or their attorney that he was making a final payment. Djourabchi and Welt learned of the deposit when they discovered a large sum in their bank account.
On June 16, 2015, Djourabchi and Welt's attorney, Aronson, sent Davenport's attorney, William Markley, a letter providing notice that Djourabchi and Welt were rejecting the payment because the amount was insufficient to pay the full amount of the debt. The letter said in part:
As laid out prior to the recent hearing in federal court, the late fees and outstanding payments that are owed are substantial. My client has also incurred significant legal fees enforcing the terms of the loan, including those in the bankruptcy proceeding.
This was an apparent reference to the filing of March 24, 2015, in Davenport's first bankruptcy case (Case No. 09-00772, Dkt. No. 300) which set forth amounts claimed to be owed in opposing Davenport's to show cause why Djourabchi and Welt ought not be held in civil contempt. (The motion to show cause had been heard and rejected by the court on May 15, 2015.)
This was an apparent reference to the filing of March 24, 2015, in Davenport's first bankruptcy case (Case No. 09-00772, Dkt. No. 300) which set forth amounts claimed to be owed in opposing Davenport's to show cause why Djourabchi and Welt ought not be held in civil contempt. (The motion to show cause had been heard and rejected by the court on May 15, 2015.)
Attached to the letter was a check returning the full $60,980. The letter concluded by stating: "If your client wishes to pay the outstanding fees, costs, and late payments and/or outstanding principle [sic] in advance of maturity, please advise so that I can obtain a total payoff as of a date certain." Then, in July 2015, Davenport (by then, represented by his current counsel, Jeffrey M. Orenstein) filed his initial Motion to Determine Final Cure and Payment and then his Revised Motion to Determine Final Cure and Payment in an effort to obtain a ruling as to what Davenport owed under the Note . However, before the court disposed of the Revised Motion , Djourabchi and Welt noticed up a foreclosure sale and Davenport was forced to file his second bankruptcy as a means of staying the foreclosure sale.
D
DAVENPORT'S SECOND BANKRUPTCY CASE
Djourabchi and Welt maintained that Davenport was still in monetary default after he had completed his plan and obtained a discharge. On September 15, 2015, they issued a notice regarding a foreclosure sale of the Property set for October 20, 2015. On October 14, 2015, Davenport filed a second voluntary petition commencing this chapter 13 bankruptcy case to obtain a stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) of Djourabchi and Welt's foreclosure set for October 20, 2015, and to address paying Djourabchi and Welt's claim pursuant to a Chapter 13 plan.
At the time Davenport filed his second bankruptcy case, Davenport only had one other significant debt besides his debt under the Note . Davenport's business, the Big Bear Café, had a significant tax debt, a large part of which Davenport was personally liable to pay by reason of 26 U.S.C. § 6672 as a responsible officer; however, the tax debt was being addressed by Davenport's business in discussions with the Internal Revenue Service and was not causing Davenport financial difficulty. Davenport's initial Chapter 13 plan called for curing arrears on Djourabchi and Welt's claim and for Davenport to maintain monthly contractual payments. On November 9, 2015, Djourabchi and Welt filed a proof of claim in the amount of $121,813.88, consisting of:
Nevertheless, in the bankruptcy case, the IRS's claim, as a priority claim under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8)(C), was one that Davenport was required under 11 U.S.C. § 1322(a)(2) to pay under any plan unless the IRS agreed to a different treatment.
$80,000.00 - Loan Principal
$12,682.97 - Late fees, etc.
$29,130.91 - Legal Fees, etc.
Djourabchi and Welt further listed the full $121,813.88 as in arrears. On November 13, 2015, Djourabchi and Welt filed a motion to dismiss the case, and on November 30, 2015, they filed an objection to confirmation of the debtor's initial proposed plan. On December 14, 2015, Davenport filed an amended plan calling, as permitted by 11 U.S.C. §§ 1322(c)(2) and 1325(a)(5), for the entire debt owed to Djourabchi and Welt to be paid off in full with postconfirmation interest of 6% per annum. The amended plan read in relevant part:
On December 16, 2015, the Clerk docketed a photocopy of that amended plan, and docketed it as a second amended plan. In reality, there was only one amended plan.
B. 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5) CLAIMS (FINAL PAYMENT UNDER THE PLAN BEING TREATED AS DUE 60 MONTHS FROM PETITION DATE): THE DEBTOR SHALL MAINTAIN POSTPETITION PAYMENTS DIRECTLY WHILE CASE IS PENDING AND THE TRUSTEE WILL CURE ALL PRE-PETITION ARREARS, COSTS, AND FEES OF THE FOLLOWING CLAIMS:
-- WITH FULL 100% PAYMENT:
NONE
-- WITH FULL 100% PAYMENT PLUS 6% POSTCONFIRMATION INTEREST PER ANNUM:
NONE
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D. ALL REMAINING CLAIMS : FULL 100% PAYMENT PLUS 6% POST-CONFIRMATION INTEREST PER ANNUM
THIS INCLUDES THE ALLOWED CLAIM OF DJOURABCHI/WELT Djourabchi and Welt objected to the amended plan, reiterating the grounds asserted in support of dismissal and erroneously asserting that the claim could not be modified as provided by the amended plan. On December 30, 2015, Davenport filed an objection to Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim. (As will be seen, after a two-day trial ending on July 7, 2016, the court decided that objection on July 21, 2016.)
On January 15, 2016, the court held a hearing on Djourabchi and Welt's motion to dismiss and their objection to confirmation of the amended plan. Djourabchi and Welt contended that this case was nothing more than a two-party dispute between Davenport and Djourabchi and Welt and that Davenport claimed to be living on the Property, but was not. Djourabchi and Welt also objected to confirmation of the plan because Davenport was not treating their secured claim, on property he claimed was his principal residence, only under 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5). I denied Djourabchi and Welt's motion to dismiss and overruled their objection to the plan. At the hearing, I ruled:
This is a hearing on confirmation of the debtor's plan. The objections that have been raised to confirmation are overruled. The Debtor is entitled to invoke Section 1322(c)(2), which means that he may invoke Section 1325(a)(5), and the Plan provided for a treatment in accordance with Section 1325(a)(5), namely that the secured claim will be paid off over time in equal monthly payments, with an interest rate designed to get present value.
On January 15, 2016, the court issued an order, confirming the plan, which said in part:
1. Once the objection to the claim of Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt is decided, the payments to them under the plan shall be based on the court's determination of the amount owed them as of the date of entry of this order confirming the debtor's plan.
2. Until the objection to claim is decided, the trustee shall make monthly distributions to Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt equal in amount to (or exceeding) the minimum monthly payment due them under the plan based on the amount owed them as of the date of entry of this order pursuant to their proof of claim (as though no objection to claim had been filed) but such payments in the aggregate shall not exceed the $52,000 amount the debtor concedes is owed on that claim.
What this meant was that after confirmation and in the interim before the court disposed of the objection to claim, the trustee could make payments based on the proof of claim, but ultimately the payments to which Djourabchi and Welt were entitled would be based on what was owed pursuant to the amount of the allowed secured claim as of the confirmation date. No party sought a review of the order or filed a notice of appeal.
The court also denied Djourabchi and Welt's motion to dismiss finding no bad faith: Davenport indeed was living at the Property; Davenport had not been informed until late in the first bankruptcy case regarding alleged arrears claimed by Djourabchi and Welt; and Davenport had filed the second bankruptcy to challenge the alleged arrears (which, as will be seen, did not actually exist) and to address paying the claim in a manner authorized by the provisions of Chapter 13.
On May 24, 2016, the court commenced trial on the claim objection, and the second day of trial was on July 7, 2016. A principal and critical issue was whether the Note required Davenport to pay interest in advance. Djourabchi and Welt's position on that issue was without substantial merit, and totally unreasonable. The court ruled:
The Promissory Note did not alter the ordinary custom, to which Davenport's expert witness testified, that, absent a clear contractual provision to the contrary, interest is paid for a month after the expiration of that month to which the interest relates. As established by Davenport's expert witness, this Promissory
Note did not comply with the commercial custom and practice that prevails when a note calls for payment of interest in advance. Although Djourabchi and Welt attempted to present contrary expert witness testimony, that witness's testimony was unpersuasive even if he could be deemed to have qualified as an expert witness.
When a commercial loan is intended to have the full amount of interest that will accrue for a month paid in advance at the start of the month, the custom and practice is to so state in clear terms in the promissory note. This Promissory Note failed to do that. It makes no provision that interest is to be paid in advance.
As stated in 45 Am. Jr. 2d, [Interest & Usury] Sec. 28 (1999) (citing Owens v. Graetzel , 146 Md. 361, 126 A. 224 (1924) ):
To make interest payable in advance, the intention to do so should be expressed in unambiguous and unmistakable language, and when an ambiguity in a contract calling for interest exists, so that it is not clear whether the interest is payable in advance, the interpretation least favorable to the one drawing up the contract will be adopted.
See also BTD-1997-HHC LLC v. Cathedral Park Partnerships , 760 So. 2d 1036 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2000). The Promissory Note failed to express in unambiguous and unmistakable language that the payment of interest due on the first of each month was to be a payment in advance of interest. Accordingly, absent extrinsic evidence showing otherwise, interest was not to be paid in advance.
Memorandum Decision re Debtor's Objection to the Proof of Claim Filed by Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt of July 21, 2016 (Dkt. No. 109) ("Proof of Claim Decision "). Davenport's expert witness, Runge, correctly treated interest as payable in arrears. Based on that treatment of interest, and the payments that had been made, Runge concluded that Davenport was never in monetary default and made an overpayment of $26,425.87 (and with the correction of a slight error in Runge's calculation, the overpayment was $26,422.90). Djourabchi and Welt called Dimitri Velin, an accountant, as a witness, who attempted to testify that the Note called for interest to be in advance, but as explored later, his testimony was baseless and the court gave no weight to his testimony. The court found that the Note did not require that interest be paid in advance, and agreed with Davenport regarding payments that had been made. The court concluded that, as a consequence, Davenport had never been in arrears, and in fact, had made payments ahead of time and stayed on top of his payments. The court agreed with Runge that Davenport had overpaid on the Note , and except for a miscalculation of $2.97, substantially adopted Runge's testimony.
The court held in favor of Djourabchi and Welt that the Note anticipated all payments made under the Note would be interest payments, and no payments would be made on the principal, unless the principal was paid in full. "[E]xcess payments would be held in reserve as credit to be applied towards obligations that came due in the future." Proof of Claim Decision at 3-4. The consequence was that the credit on hand on the petition date could not be applied until the plan was confirmed.
As noted above, Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim filed on November 9, 2015, asserted that "Legal fees, etc." of $29,130.91 were owed on the petition date. The court denied recovery of attorney's fees and expenses as part of Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim as of the petition date because, inter alia , there was no showing that there was a monetary default justifying charging prepetition legal fees to Davenport and "Djourabchi and Welt failed to provide the detailed types of time records that are required in order to determine reasonable fees that Davenport was obligated to pay." Proof of Claim Decision at 18-19.
The bankruptcy court's task was to fix the amount owed as of the petition date: no motion had been filed by either party to determine the amount of postpetition amounts allowable under § 506(b). Accordingly, the court ordered:
In hindsight, in order to fully fix the amount of the allowed secured claim to be paid under the plan, the court's pretrial order ought to have required the parties, in the trial of the objection to claim, to address not only the amount owed on the petition date but also the amounts allowable under § 506(b) : (1) the amount of postpetition interest accruing before confirmation, and (2) the amount of Davenport's obligations, incurred postpetition and prior to confirmation, to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for payments of attorney's fees and expenses.
that the claim of Djourabchi and Welt is allowed in the amount of $80,000 as of the commencement of this case, with a credit in favor of the debtor of $26,422.90 for interest accruing after the commencement of the case (or for payment of other components of the allowed claim), and the claim of Djourabchi and Welt is otherwise disallowed, except with respect to amounts allowable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) incurred after the commencement of the case.
Order re Debtor's Objection to the Proof of Claim Filed by Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt entered July 21, 2016 (Dkt. No. 110) ("Proof of Claim Order ") at 1-2. In other words, the Order left open the question of "amounts allowable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) after the commencement of the case."
E
THE DISTRICT COURT CASE
On December 15, 2016, after the court entered the Proof of Claim Order , Davenport filed a civil action in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia against Djourabchi and Welt asserting claims of wrongful foreclosure, breach of contract, violation of D.C. interest and usury laws ( D.C. Code §§ 28-3301, et seq. ), and tortious interference with business relationship. The District Court dismissed the action on November 11, 2017, based on res judicata because Davenport had failed to raise these claims in his objection to the proof of claim in the bankruptcy case. Davenport filed a motion to reconsider. The District Court granted the motion to reconsider on June 12, 2018, and vacated the dismissal of the action. That action (Case No. 1:16-cv-02445-ABJ-RMM) is still pending.
F
THE MOTION TO MODIFY
In this second bankruptcy case, Davenport indicated to the trustee that he wanted to completely pay off Djourabchi and Welt's claim through a lump sum payment. The trustee calculated $31,474.50 to be the amount owed under the Note , finding that no section 506(b) motions for attorney's fees had been filed, and gave that number to the debtor. Davenport made a payment to the trustee in January 2017, sufficient to permit a distribution of $31,474.50 to Djourabchi and Welt. The trustee distributed $31,474.50 to Djourabchi and Welt on January 31, 2017.
Davenport filed a Motion to Modify Chapter 13 Plan After Confirmation (Dkt. No. 125) on January 17, 2017, asserting that he had made payments to the trustee that satisfied the allowed secured claim. Djourabchi and Welt objected to the Motion to Modify on the basis that they did not agree that the full debt had been paid. In their February 22, 2017 Supplemental Opposition (Dkt. No. 137) to the Motion to Modify , they asserted for the first time that they were owed postpetition attorney's fees of $51,803.00 and expenses of $9,929.10, through December 31, 2016, as well as fees and expenses related to Davenport's civil action against Djourabchi and Welt in the District Court. They also challenged the Davenport's calculation of postpetition interest. The matter was put on schedule for trial.
Djourabchi and Welt first filed a short opposition (Dkt. No. 131) opposing the Motion to Modify on the basis that "the entire Note balance including applicable post-petition charges has not yet been paid in full," and then later filed the Supplemental Opposition , which included the Application for Fees and Expenses seeking post-petition charges.
In preparation for the trial, Davenport filed two motions in limine. The first motion, titled Motion In Limine Prohibiting Creditors From Claiming Entitlement to Attorney's Fees , requested a court ruling that prohibited Djourabchi and Welt from claiming attorney's fees, contending that Djourabchi and Welt did not have a right to attorney's fees under the Note and that, in any event, the doctrine of res judicata barred such attorney's fees because the court had already denied recovery of Djourabchi and Welt's attorney's fees in its Proof of Claim Decision . The second motion, titled Motion In Limine Regarding Interpretation of Court's Orders and Application of Payments Made on Account of Creditors’ Claim , requested a ruling on the application of the $26,442.90 credit. Djourabchi and Welt opposed the motions in limine.
The court ruled on the motions in limine on September 11, 2017. As to the Motion In Limine Prohibiting Creditors From Claiming Entitlement to Attorney's Fees , the court held that the Note and Deed of Trust did give Djourabchi and Welt a right to attorney's fees associated with the bankruptcy case, and that the Proof of Claim Order did not have res judicata effect with respect to attorney's fees asserted as part of the allowed secured claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(b), which the Proof of Claim Order expressly did not disallow. However, believing that no attorney's fees had been invoiced by the confirmation date, the court determined that Davenport did not have any obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for attorney's fees as of the confirmation date, and that, accordingly, the allowed secured claim (fixed as of the date of confirmation) did not include any attorney's fees. In Limine Decision (Dkt. No. 168) at 26. However, as to the District Court litigation, the court held:
The issue as to whether the creditors are entitled to attorneys’ fees in the District Court case is a little more complicated. The debtor contends that the creditors are not enforcing the agreement, nor are they protecting their interest in the property or rights under the agreement in the District Court case. In the District Court, the debtor is claiming the creditors acted against his rights under the agreement and in the process have committed certain torts and violated certain legal duties. However, in defending against the debtor's allegations, the creditors are in fact defending their rights under the agreement. Should the creditors prevail, they would retain certain rights that are being scrutinized by the court. Therefore, should the creditors prevail in their case, they would have a right to attorneys’ fees applied to their claim as such fees will have been incurred in a legal proceeding that might significantly affect their rights under the Deed.
On the other hand, should the creditors lose, then the agreement clearly did
not grant them such rights, and the creditors violated their duties under the agreement. Further, to allow the creditors to claim attorneys’ fees when they lose such a case would be contrary to public policy and would be denied on that ground. In that case, they should not be permitted to collect attorneys’ fees for defending rights they never had. Accordingly, they must also be the prevailing party. See [Cathedral Ave. Co-op., Inc. v.] Carter , 947 A.2d [1143] at 1159 [(D.C. 2008)] ("[t]he prevailing party may recover fees and costs from the losing party if authorized by statute, by contract, or by the court's exercise of equitable power when the interests of justice so require." (internal quotes deleted)). As the District Court case is still pending, I will set that aspect of this matter aside to be further decided when that case is resolved.
In Limine Decision at 12-13. It is therefore premature to address attorneys’ fees incurred in the District Court.
The In Limine Decision could be read as overstating one thing. Nowhere in the Note or the Deed of Trust are attorney's fees dependent upon Djourabchi and Welt prevailing in a proceeding. In the In Limine Decision, the court was not establishing a rule that placed prevailing in the action as a prerequisite to an award of attorney's fees. However, a ruling in favor of Davenport in the District Court that there was no right to foreclose would establish that Djourabchi and Welt had no interest to protect, and they would not be entitled to attorney's fees.
As to the Motion In Limine Regarding Interpretation of Court's Orders and Application of Payments Made on Account of Creditors’ Claim , Djourabchi and Welt contended in a filing of July 21, 2017, that "(1) that the Plan required equal monthly plan payments to Creditors that would not reduce principal due until the principal was paid in full; and (2) that interest would continue to accrue on the full $80,000.00 in principal due to Creditors until enough payments had been made to Creditors to completely and fully pay all costs, expenses and fees then due, as well as payment of principal in full." The court rejected that argument. The court held that as of the confirmation date, the Note was treated as matured under the plan, which meant that the plan payments would be amortized and be applied to interest, fees and principal , and there was no longer a balloon requirement to pay the principal in one lump sum payment.
The court further held that as of the petition date, Davenport was not in arrears, and interest had been paid. The court calculated the interest accruals between the petition date and the confirmation date, and determined that as of the confirmation date of January 15, 2016, Davenport owed Djourabchi and Welt $55,717.03. Mem. Dec. at 26-27.
The Motion to Modify continued to trial ending on March 1, 2018. At the trial, the court heard testimony from two expert witnesses and from the new standing Chapter 13 trustee regarding the amount that was owed to Djourabchi and Welt. An issue arose as to whether the parties had stipulated with the trustee at the confirmation hearing that during the pendency period between the petition date and the date of confirmation, interest would be calculated at 6% on the original claim amount of $121,813.88, without adjustment of that amount based on the eventual ruling regarding the amounts owed on the petition date. Davenport's expert witness, Andrew J. Runge, assumed that the parties had reached such a stipulation, but there was no such stipulation. First, the parties did not agree that Djourabchi and Welt would eventually be entitled, as part of their allowed secured claim, to interest in the pendency period based on the amounts shown on the proof of claim (instead of based on the amount of principal that the court eventually was to determine was owed on the petition date). Second, there was no stipulation for 6% interest in the pendency period even though the trustee had requested that change to make setting up her computer calculations of interest easier (by making pendency interest and postconfirmation interest accrue at the same rate). Accordingly, the court told the trustee "you're stuck by what the Bankruptcy Code provides," Tr. (Dkt. No. 162) at 11, meaning that the Note interest rate of 10.5% would apply to the accrual of interest until the confirmation date.
Runge appears to have misinterpreted the court's indication in confirming the debtor's plan that:
Until the objection to claim is decided, the trustee shall make monthly distributions to Babak Djourabchi and Monica Welt equal in amount to (or exceeding) the minimum monthly payment due them under the plan based on the amount owed them as of the date of entry of this order pursuant to their proof of claim (as though no objection to claim had been filed) but such payments in the aggregate shall not exceed the $52,000 amount the debtor concedes is owed on that claim.
As noted previously, the amount the court ultimately was to decide was owed as of the petition date would control how much interest accrued during the pendency period after the petition date and the date of confirmation of the plan.
Davenport's attorney, Orenstein, indicated "I certainly have no objection" to using 6% interest per annum for the pendency period, as that would benefit Davenport. Tr. (Dkt. No. 162) at 11. The response of Aronson, Djourabchi and Welt's attorney, to Orenstein's statement was "My -- It does." Id. That was too vague a statement to reflect an agreement to the trustee's using 6% interest for the pendency period. Moreover, the transcript does not entirely comport with the audio recording of the hearing and my recollection: what Aronson actually said was "My client certainly does," meaning his client certainly did have an objection to using 6% per annum interest for the pendency period.
At the pretrial, the parties attempted to enter into a stipulation whereby Davenport would not challenge the reasonableness of the attorney's fees as to the time spent and the hourly rates paid, and there would be no need to put on experts on that point. The parties disagreed as to whether the court should be able to consider the reasonableness of the fees on its own without hearing expert testimony. Djourabchi and Welt accordingly brought forward an expert witness to testify as to the reasonableness of the attorney's fees. Djourabchi and Welt's expert, Lawrence A. Katz, testified that based on the lodestar analysis, the fees were reasonable. However, Katz agreed that fees incurred in pursuing foreclosure would be unreasonable if Djourabchi and Welt did not reasonably believe that Davenport had been in monetary default.
Davenport challenged at the trial whether the rate charged by Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys was the rate agreed upon in their retainer agreements. Monica Welt testified that the rates Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys charged were the rates they agreed upon in the retainer agreements.
After the two-day trial, the court took the matter under advisement.
III
THE REQUESTED MODIFICATION OF THE CONFIRMED CHAPTER 13 PLAN
A confirmed chapter 13 plan may be modified upon request of the debtor, trustee, or a creditor holding an allowed secured claim. 11 U.S.C. § 1329(a). A plan modification may be used to reduce payments under the plan. § 1329(a)(1). A modified plan must comply with §§ 1322(a), 1322(b), 1323(c), and 1325(a). § 1329(b). Under § 1322(a)(1), the plan must "provide for the submission of all or such portion of future earnings or other future income of the debtor to the supervision and control of the trustee as is necessary for the execution of the plan." Additionally, a plan modification may not extend the plan beyond five years after the first payment under the original plan was due. § 1329(c). The party seeking the modification has the burden to show that the modification is permitted under § 1329. In re Anderson , 545 B.R. 174, 176 (Bankr. N.D. Miss. 2015).
Davenport is seeking to reduce payments under the plan because, he contends, the claim held by Djourabchi and Welt has been fully paid. Djourabchi and Welt contend that the claim has not been fully paid because interest has not been paid in full and because they are entitled to attorney's fees and expenses. For reasons explored below, Davenport is entitled to the requested modification of his plan.
A
11 U.S.C. §§ 506(b) AND 1325(a)(5)(B)
Under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b), as relevant here, Djourabchi and Welt, as the holders of an oversecured allowed secured claim, were entitled with respect to the determination of the amount of their allowed secured claim, to "interest on such claim, and any reasonable fees, costs, or charges provided for under the agreement ... under which such claim arose." Section 506(b) plainly applies to any fees for which Davenport incurred a reimbursement liability before confirmation of the plan on January 15, 2016 (which was the plan's effective date). However, § 506(b) governs only interest and fees owed as a debt of Davenport prior to confirmation . See Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Hoopai (In re Hoopai) , 581 F.3d 1090, 1099-1100 (9th Cir. 2009). See also First United Sec. Bank v. Garner (In re Garner) , 663 F.3d 1218, 122-21 (11th Cir. 2011) ; Telfair v. First Union Mortg. Corp. , 216 F.3d 1333, 1339 (11th Cir. 2000) (fees incurred postconfirmation are not governed by § 506(b) ); Key Bank N.A. v. Milham (In re Milham) , 141 F.3d 420, 423 (2d Cir. 1998) (" Section 506(b) ... defines the allowed claim of an oversecured creditor; treatment of that claim after confirmation is governed by Section 1325 ..."). Under § 506(b), an oversecured creditor is entitled to reasonable attorney's fees provided for under the parties’ contract. Welzel v. Advocate Realty Investments, LLC (In re Welzel) , 275 F.3d 1308, 1315 (11th Cir. 2001). This question under § 506(b) of whether fees provided for under the parties’ contract are reasonable is governed by Federal law. Hoopai , 581 F.3d at 1101. Once the allowed secured claim is fixed under § 506(b) as of the date of confirmation, § 1325(a)(5) requires in relevant part the plan must provide that:
Nonbankruptcy law, not § 506(b), would govern the issue of reasonableness of attorney's fees for which Davenport became liable prepetition. See In re McLemore , 426 B.R. 728, 747 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 2010) ; In re McKenna , 362 B.R. 852, 855 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 2006). However, that is an academic question here because the court has already disallowed prepetition attorney's fees and in opposing the Motion to Modify , Djourabchi and Welt have expressly stated that they are not seeking prepetition fees pursuant to the Application for Fees and Expenses .
However, when a debtor's confirmed plan calls for a cure of a default, 11 U.S.C. § 1322(e) provides that the amount necessary to cure the default "shall be determined in accordance with the underlying agreement and applicable nonbankruptcy law" notwithstanding 11 U.S.C. §§ 506(b), 1322(b)(2), and 1325(a)(5). Section 1322(e) does not apply here because "cure under § 1322(e) is conceptually distinct from cramdown." In re Harko , 211 B.R. 116, 122 (B.A.P. 2d Cir. 1997), aff'd sub nom. In re Milham , 141 F.3d 420 (2d Cir. 1998) ; In re Sanders , 521 B.R. 739, 743 (Bankr. D.S.C. 2014) ("Section 1322(e) applies to situations where a debtor's plan intended to cure a default and reinstate the pre-bankruptcy agreement as if the default had never occurred.") (citation omitted)).
(ii) the value, as of the effective date of the plan, of property to be distributed under the plan on account of such claim is not less than the allowed amount of such claim; and
(iii) if—
(I) property to be distributed pursuant to this subsection is in the form of periodic payments, such payments shall be in equal monthly amounts[.]
This necessarily means that the allowed secured claim being paid under a confirmed plan based on § 1325(a)(5)(B) is the allowed secured claim determined as of the effective date of the plan (here, the date of confirmation of the plan), together with postconfirmation interest assuring that the creditor receives the present value of its allowed claim.
B
DAVENPORT'S LIABILITY FOR ATTORNEY'S FEES
Although § 506(b) provides that an allowed secured claim that is oversecured includes reasonable attorney fees under the agreement under which the claim arose, Davenport had no liability in the preconfirmation period for attorney's fees. As to the period between the petition date and the confirmation date, the period to which § 506(b) applies, Davenport incurred no reimbursement liability for attorney's fees paid by Djourabchi and Welt. This follows from section 9 of the Deed of Trust , which provides:
Any amounts disbursed by Lender under this Section 9 shall become additional debt of Borrower secured by this Security Instrument. These amounts shall bear interest at the Note rate from the date of disbursement and shall be payable, with such interest, upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting payment.
No fees became a liability of Davenport in the postpetition period preceding the date of confirmation because Djourabchi and Welt had not given Davenport notice of any fees they had paid in the postpetition period.
The court's In Limine Decision entered on September 11, 2017, noted at page 26 that "[a]s of the confirmation date, no postpetition attorneys’ fees had yet been invoiced to the creditors. (See Dkt. No. 137.)" That statement was incorrect, but the outcome the court arrived at was correct. Ridberg Aronson LLC had issued invoices to Djourabchi and Welt on November 1, 2015; December 1, 2015; and January 4, 2015. Djourabchi and Welt made only one payment of such fees prior to the confirmation date, a disbursement of $5,000 on January 4, 2016. However, prior to confirmation of Davenport's plan on January 15, 2016, Djourabchi and Welt had failed to give Davenport notice that this amount was owed. Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim filed in November 2015 cannot be treated as giving notice of Davenport's obligation to pay $5,000 to Djourabchi and Welt because Djourabchi and Welt had not paid that $5,000 until January 4, 2016. Under paragraph 9 of the Deed of Trust , such amounts were payable by Davenport only upon notice that such a payment had been made with a request for reimbursement.
Accordingly, the result remains the same as recited in the In Limine Decision : as of confirmation of the plan on January 15, 2016, there was no amount of attorney's fees for which Davenport had a reimbursement liability. As of the confirmation date, the obligation was treated by § 1325(a)(5)(B) as fully matured, and the $26,422.90 credit was to be applied to the allowed secured claim, which stood at $80,000.00 plus preconfirmation interest that had accrued postpetition, with no attorney's fee component.
For purposes of Davenport's confirmed plan, providing for payment of Djourabchi and Welt's allowed secured claim with postconfirmation interest of 6% per annum thereon, the allowed secured claim has to be fixed as of the confirmation date and the plan cannot be treated as providing for attorney's fees for which Davenport incurred a reimbursement liability postconfirmation. See In re Eickerman , No. 02-17096-B-13, 2012 WL 8074211, at *15-16 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. Mar. 22, 2012), aff'd sub nom. Eickerman v. La Jolla Grp. , II, No. CV-F-12-618 LJO, 2012 WL 4747236 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 4, 2012), aff'd , 592 F. App'x 614 (9th Cir. 2015). As will be seen, Davenport and the Property remain liable for attorney's fees for which a reimbursement obligation arose postconfirmation, but that has no impact on the Motion to Modify , which concerns whether the allowed secured claim (which does not include postconfirmation fee reimbursement obligations) has been paid.
C
THE PENDENCY INTEREST COMPONENT OF THE ALLOWED SECURED CLAIM
As holders of an oversecured claim, Djourabchi and Welt were entitled under § 506(b) to interest in the pendency period (the period between the petition date and the date of confirmation of the plan) as part of their allowed secured claim. The In Limine Decision calculated pendency interest totaling $2,139.93 using a per diem rate of $23.01 per day based on interest of 10.5% per annum, the interest rate under the parties’ contract. Accordingly, the amount owed as of the confirmation date was $80,000.00 in principal, plus pendency interest of $2,139.93, but after the credit of $26,422.90 was applied, the resulting allowed secured claim was $55,717.03.
As to the rate of interest in the pendency period between the petition date and the confirmation date, § 506(b) does not mandate the use of contract interest, Milham , 141 F.3d at 423, but "[t]here is a rebuttable presumption in favor of granting an oversecured creditor interest at the rate specified in the contract, subject to equitable considerations." In re Gen. Growth Properties, Inc. , 451 B.R. 323, 326 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011). The debtor bears the burden of rebutting that presumption. See In re Southland Corp. , 160 F.3d 1054, 1059–60 (5th Cir. 1998). Davenport's Motion In Limine Regarding Interpretation of Court's Orders and Application of Payments Made on Account of Creditors’ Claim filed on June 30, 2017, requested, among other things, a ruling that postconfirmation interest would be at 6% per annum (which at least one of the experts had erroneously assumed was the rate of pendency interest agreed to at the confirmation hearing). However, that Motion in Limine did not attempt to justify pendency interest being at 6% per annum instead of 10.5% per annum. Davenport has not argued that the court should revisit the issue of the appropriate rate of pendency interest. Accordingly, I will use the presumptively correct rate of 10.5% specified by the parties’ contract.
D
POSTCONFIRMATION INTEREST ON THE ALLOWED SECURED CLAIM
The court held in the In Limine Decision that the plan provides that the debt will be amortized, thereby negating the provisions under the Note barring partial prepayment of principal, and requiring that payments be interest only payments. As provided by the confirmed plan, after confirmation of the plan interest ran at 6% interest per annum on the allowed secured claim (fixed as of the confirmation date) except that the parties stipulated during the trial of the objection to the proof of claim that interest would not accrue from April 27, 2016, through July 7, 2017, the recess period between the first day and the second day of the objection to claim trial.
I calculate interest on the allowed secured claim of $55,717.03 owed on the petition date based on interest of 6% per annum after the confirmation date, taking in to account that 2016 was a leap year with 366 days. The amount owed at the end of January 31, 2017, was $97.70, calculated as follows:
1/15/2016 $55,717.03 Starting balance 1/29/2016 $127.87 Interest at 6% for 14 days (taking into account that 2016 was a leap year with 366 days) 1/29/2016 -$609.07 Payment 1/29/2016 -$2,125.11 Payment 1/29/2016 -$1,391.18 Payment 1/29/2016 $51,719.54 Ending balance 2/29/2016 $262.84 Interest for 31 days 2/29/2016 -$598.44 Payment 2/29/2016 -$2,061.56 Payment 2/29/2016 $49,322.38 Ending balance 3/31/2016 $250.65 Interest for 31 days 3/31/2016 -$588.14 Payment 3/31/2016 -$2,071.86 Payment 3/31/2016 $46,913.03 Ending balance 4/27/2016 $207.65 Interest for 27 days 4/27/2016 $47,120.68 Ending balance 4/29/2016 $0.00 No interest for 2 days 4/29/2016 -$577.78 Payment 4/29/2016 -$2,049.98 Payment 4/29/2016 $44,492.92 Ending balance 5/31/2016 $0.00 No interest for 32 days 5/31/2016 -$567.53 Payment 5/31/2016 -$2,192.47 Payment
5/31/2016 $41,732.92 Ending balance 6/30/2016 $0.00 No interest for 30 days 6/30/2016 -$556.56 Payment 6/30/2016 -$2,103.44 Payment 6/30/2016 $39,072.92 Ending balance 7/7/2016 $0.00 No interest for 7 days 7/7/2016 $39,072.92 Ending balance 7/29/2016 $140.92 Interest for 22 days 7/29/2016 -$194.50 Payment 7/29/2016 -$2,135.15 Payment 7/29/2016 -$42.19 Payment 7/29/2016 $36,842.00 Ending balance 8/31/2016 $199.31 Interest for 33 days 8/31/2016 -$183.82 Payment 8/31/2016 -$1,016.18 Payment 8/31/2016 $35,841.31 Ending balance 10/28/2016 $340.79 Interest for 58 days 10/28/2016 -$357.48 Payment 10/28/2016 -$2,042.52 Payment 10/28/2016 $33,782.10 Ending balance 11/30/2016 $182.76 Interest for 33 days 11/30/2016 -$168.53 Payment 11/30/2016 -$2,231.47 Payment 11/30/2016 $31,564.86 Ending Balance 12/31/2016 $160.41 Interest to 12/31/2016 (end of leap year) 12/31/2016 $31,725.27 Ending balance 1/31/2017 $161.67 Interest for 31 days 1/31/2017 -$314.74 Payment 1/31/2017 -$31,474.50 Payment 1/31/2017 $97.70 Ending balance
Nothing in the testimony of Davenport's expert witness, Runge, or Djourabchi and Welt's expert, Victor Lipnitsky, negates the propriety of this conclusion. Nor does the testimony of the Chapter 13 trustee negate the propriety of this conclusion.
Runge's approach was essentially sound except for his erroneous assumption that there was a stipulation that interest during the pendency period (between the petition date and the confirmation date) was to be calculated based on interest of 6% per annum on the proof of claim amount.
Lipnitsky's initial approaches prepared on May 8, 2017 (Ex. K) were inconsistent with the court's later In Limine Decision concluding that under the plan the debt was to be paid on an amortization basis. A further approach (Ex. X) that Lipnitsky prepared after considering the In Limine Decision included the erroneous assumption that obligations Davenport incurred postconfirmation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for attorney's fees and expenses they had paid were to be added to the allowed secured claim to be paid under the plan. This disregarded the conclusion in the In Limine Decision that "it is clear that until the creditors paid attorneys’ fees, the amounts that the debtor owed and to which payments could be applied did not include any such attorneys’ fees," Dkt. No. 168 at 26 n.5, and disregarded the amount of the allowed secured claim had to be fixed as of the confirmation date.
Lipnitsky did not re-do his calculations until late the night before the start of the trial on February 27, 2018. Lipnitsky did a final calculation (Exhibit Z), attempting to use Runge's calculation method, starting with the court's figure of $55,717.03 and excluding the attorney's fees and expenses. He arrived at a remaining amount of $142.00 as of January 31, 2017. However, he used rounded numbers, and his interest calculations appear to be mathematically erroneous. For example, for the 14-day period ending 01/29/2016, he calculated that interest of $139 accumulated on the staring balance of $55,717.03. That equates to interest of 6.5% per annum ($55,717.03 times 6.5% interest is $3,621.61 per annum, and divided by 366 days that results in $9.90 interest per day, which multiplied by 14 days yields $138.60 or $139 as a rounded figure). Finally, he did not include the payment of $42.19 (made, according to the trustee's Payment History , on July 29, 2016) as being made in July 2016, appearing to treat it as being made instead on July 30, 2017.
The trustee's claim payment history does not show how interest was calculated or how payments were applied. Without this, I cannot determine whether interest was properly calculated and applied in accordance with the court's ruling in the In Limine Decision , nor can I determine whether the trustee took account of the stipulation between the parties that interest would not accrue from April 27, 2016, through July 7, 2016.
Interest accruing after January 31, 2017, and until November 30, 2020 (when the trustee may make her next disbursements under confirmed plans) will total $22.45, thus requiring that any payment by the trustee to Djourabchi and Welt on November 30, 2020, would have to equal $120.15 (the sum of $97.70 and $22.45) in order to fully pay Djourabchi and Welt's claim.
On March 21, 2017, the Chapter 13 trustee filed a response to the Motion to Modify and took the position that the Motion to Modify could be granted "provided that there are no additional administrative fees and costs approved," and noted that there are insufficient funds to pay any allowed administrative claim or any attorney's fees owed to Djourabchi and Welt as part of their allowed secured claim. The IRS amended its proof of claim on October 5, 2017, prior to the trial of the Motion to Modify , reducing that claim by $677.48. There are no pending applications for payment of administrative claims. Accordingly, under the proposed modified plan, an additional $677.48 should be available from which the trustee can pay the $120.15 owed to Djourabchi and Welt as of November 30, 2020. Davenport is entitled to the requested modification of his confirmed plan.
IV
POSTCONFIRMATION LIABILITIES REGARDING ATTORNEYS’ FEES AND EXPENSES
This decision will only consider the attorney's fees associated with the bankruptcy case. Djourabchi and Welt are seeking a determination that they are entitled to attorney's fees for attorney work performed postpetition both preconfirmation and postconfirmation. However, as noted previously, Davenport had no liability for any of the fees until after confirmation of his plan because Djourabchi and Welt had not given him notice of their payment of any such fees. Accordingly, Davenport's obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for any payment of the fees at issue arose postconfirmation.
As the court has already held in the In Limine Decision , the right to reimbursement of payments of attorney's fees incurred in the District Court case are dependent upon whether Djourabchi and Welt are successful in showing that they had a right to foreclose.
The confirmed plan provided for payment of the allowed secured claim, which was the amount owed as of the date of confirmation of Davenport's plan, with postconfirmation interest of 6% per annum. That did not erase Davenport's obligation incurred postconfirmation under nonbankruptcy law to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for payments of postconfirmation fees. First, that the postconfirmation attorney's fees were incurred in the bankruptcy case, and in litigating issues under the Bankruptcy Code, does not bar recovery. See Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am. v. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. , 549 U.S. 443, 449, 127 S.Ct. 1199, 167 L.Ed.2d 178 (2007). Second, Davenport's postconfirmation obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for payments of fees incurred will remain intact unless the obligation was to be discharged upon Davenport's receipt of a discharge. That turns on whether the confirmed plan provided for the obligation. The confirmed plan cannot be construed as providing for that postconfirmation obligation. See In re Eickerman , 2012 WL 8074211, at *11. It follows that Davenport's receipt of a discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a) of debts "provided for" by the confirmed plan will not discharge the reimbursement obligation regarding postconfirmation fees. See In re Bryant , 323 B.R. 635, 645 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2005) ("The discharge of the claim and satisfaction of the lien securing the discharged debt only pertain to the obligation as of the confirmation date." Accordingly, the debtor in Bryant remained liable for postpetition tax and insurance charges owed the mortgagee.).
In addition, the postconfirmation fees remain subject to the Deed of Trust lien. The confirmed plan provided that Djourabchi and Welt were to retain the Deed of Trust lien securing their claim. In turn, the Deed of Trust provided in paragraph 9 for Djourabchi and Welt to be reimbursed for payments of reasonable attorney's fees incurred in the bankruptcy case. Any obligation of Davenport to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for their postconfirmation payment of reasonable fees remains secured by the Deed of Trust lien on the Property.
Some courts suggest that after confirmation, a secured creditor's right to costs and fees are solely through the plan, and if the plan does not provide for fees or costs, then such creditor has no right to further fees. See In re Gluth Bros. Const., Inc. , 426 B.R. 771, 778 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2010) ; In re 900 Corp. , 327 B.R. 585, 603 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2005). However, in both cases the confirmed plan expressly barred enforcement of the postconfirmation fees other than as provided in the plan.
Nothing in the Bankruptcy Code or the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure requires a creditor to pursue allowance of a debtor's nondischargeable postconfirmation obligations that were not provided for by the plan. Any postconfirmation obligation of Davenport to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for payments they made of postpetition fees are not part of the allowed secured claim the trustee was to pay under the terms of the confirmed plan. Nevertheless, when Djourabchi and Welt applied for allowance of postpetition fees, there was subject matter jurisdiction to decide the extent of Davenport's obligation to reimburse for payments of such fees, which could have an impact on the administration of the case. The parties have spent considerable effort addressing the attorney's fees incurred postpetition, and the court retains subject matter jurisdiction to determine the amount of Davenport's postconfirmation obligation to reimburse for payments of fees. I will thus address the question of whether Davenport has any postconfirmation obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for payments of attorney's fees and expenses.
For example, if the court had held that Davenport's modified plan would not suffice to pay the allowed secured claim, Davenport might have pursued a postconfirmation sale of the Property (as occurred in Hoopai ) or refinancing as a way to complete payment of the allowed secured claim. In that event, the amount of the fees would be pertinent. It could also be pertinent to any motion Djourabchi and Welt might pursue for relief from the automatic stay to permit them to collect the fees. Finally, it could provide information to Davenport regarding how much he would need to pay in order to preserve his fresh start. (By way of analogy, consider Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3002.1(e), providing for the bankruptcy court, after a plan is completed, to determine, in some circumstances, the amount of postconfirmation charges that were not being paid under the plan.) There is also the possibility that Davenport could have sought approval of a modified plan calling for paying both amounts owed when the case was filed and postconfirmation fees. I express no view on whether such a modified plan would be appropriate, an issue which does not appear to have a clear-cut answer.
Now that I have granted the Motion to Modify , the Application for Fees and Expenses may not have much impact on the completion of the Chapter 13 case. However, jurisdiction must be determined as of the date of the filing of the Application , not based on where matters stand now. See Chapman v. Currie Motors, Inc. , 65 F.3d 78, 81 (7th Cir. 1995) ("Ordinarily, when a case is within federal jurisdiction when filed, it remains there even if subsequent events eliminate the original basis for federal jurisdiction." (Citations omitted)).
The reasonableness of such fees is governed by State law, and evaluation of reasonableness under § 506(b), which applies to only preconfirmation fees, does not come into play. See Hoopai , 581 F.3d at 1101. Davenport stipulated that he would not challenge the reasonableness of the attorney time it took to perform any task and would not challenge the reasonableness of the rates charged, but reserved the right to challenge the reasonableness of the fees on other grounds.
Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt are not entitled to attorney's fees for several reasons. As will be further explained below, I find that Djourabchi and Welt have a right to reimbursement of some of their attorney's fees associated with the bankruptcy case.
One of those arguments deserves little discussion. Davenport argued that Djourabchi and Welt had not provided their retainer agreements to ensure that Djourabchi and Welt were being charged what they agreed to under such agreements. However, Welt testified at trial that Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys charged them according to the rate in their retainer agreements, and the record reveals that Sam Russell's fees were to be capped at $15,000. I find this satisfactory to establish the fee arrangements.
A
RES JUDICATA
Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt are barred from asserting attorney's fees accrued prior to the conclusion of the trial on Davenport's objection to claim under the doctrine of res judicata. First, the pertinent question for purposes of fixing the allowed secured claim under the confirmed plan was what was owed on the confirmation date. As noted previously, as of the confirmation date, Davenport had no obligation to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for fee payments, thus making the res judicata argument a moot point.
Second, even if an obligation to reimburse for fee payments had arisen before confirmation, the res judicata argument would fail. Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt could have sought to include such an obligation as part of their allowed secured claim. However, there was no deadline for their seeking a determination of the amount of any such obligation. Davenport contends that nevertheless the claims are still barred by res judicata because such claims could have been raised during the litigation of the objection to the proof of claim and were not. However, the proof of claim asserted the amount owed as of the petition date, and the objection to claim was viewed as limited to objecting to the amount the proof of claim asserted was owed on the petition date: the objection to claim included no express request for a determination of postpetition obligations. The Proof of Claim Order fixed the amounts owed as of the petition date and directed that "the claim of Djourabchi and Welt is otherwise disallowed, except with respect to amounts allowable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) incurred after the commencement of the case," thereby treating any claim for reimbursement of postpetition attorney's fees as not having been at issue and leaving the assertion of such a claim for a later time. Davenport did not seek to have the court revise that ruling, and it is the law of the case. Accordingly, the claim for postpetition attorney's fees is not barred by res judicata.
Davenport pointed to the District Court's initial decision, Davenport v. Djourabchi , 316 F. Supp. 3d 58 (D.D.C. 2018), ruling that Davenport's damage claims for wrongful foreclosure could have been raised as part of his objection to Djourabchi and Welt's claim and were thus barred by res judicata. That decision was vacated by Davenport v. Djourabchi , 316 F. Supp.3d 58 (D.D.C. 2018), on the basis that res judicata did not bar Davenport's wrongful foreclosure action because Davenport could only bring damage claims via an adversary proceeding and was prohibited from bringing his state and common law claims for damages as part of the objection to claim. Here, there was no procedural bar to Djourabchi and Welt requesting that their postpetition attorney's fees be adjudicated as part of the adjudication of the objection to their proof of claim. However, the proof of claim only set forth the amounts claimed to be owed as of the petition date, and the court treated the objection to claim as limited to a request to fix the amount owed as of the petition date.
B
RULE 3002.1 NOTICE
Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt may not claim attorney's fees because they failed to provide timely notice as required by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3002.1. I reject this argument because whichever version of Rule 3002.1 is treated as the rule in effect in this bankruptcy case, Rule 3002.1 does not apply to the postpetition attorney's fees incurred.
Rule 3002.1 was added to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure in 2011 "to aid in implementation of § 1322(b)(5), which permits a chapter 13 debtor to cure a default and maintain payments on a home mortgage over the course of the debtor's plan." Advisory Committee Note (2011). The rule required such creditors to provide the debtor notice of payment changes, fees, expenses, and charges so that the debtor had an opportunity to contest them during the chapter 13 bankruptcy. Id. The rule addressed the significant problem where mortgage creditors applied fees and costs from postpetition defaults without providing the debtor notice and would initiate foreclosure, based on those postpetition defaults, upon the debtor's completion of the chapter 13 plan. See In re Tollios , 491 B.R. 886, 888 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2013).
Rule 3002.1 as originally adopted in 2011, and as in effect when the debtor's plan was confirmed, applied under Rule 3002.1(a) to creditors in a chapter 13 case "(1) that are secured by a security interest in the debtor's principal residence, and (2) provided for under § 1322(b)(5) of the Code in the debtor's plan." Here, the debtor's confirmed plan did not provide for the secured claim under § 1322(b)(5), but instead treated the secured claim under 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5) as allowed by 11 U.S.C. § 1322(c)(2). As the court noted in its oral decision granting confirmation, the confirmed plan provides that the allowed secured claim, in the amount owed as of the date of confirmation, will be paid in full with postconfirmation interest at 6% per annum.
The rule required such creditors "to serve on the debtor, debtor's counsel, and the trustee a notice itemizing all fees, expenses, or charges (1) that were incurred in connection with the claim after the bankruptcy case was filed, and (2) that the holder asserts are recoverable against the debtor or the debtor's principal residence." Rule 3002.1(c).
Rule 3002.1(a) was amended effective December 1, 2016 (after the plan had been confirmed) to read:
This rule applies in a chapter 13 case to claims (1) that are secured by a security interest in the debtor's principal residence, and (2) for which the plan provides that either the trustee or the debtor will make contractual installment payments.
As amended, Rule 3002.1 does not apply here because the confirmed plan does not provide "that either the trustee or the debtor will make contractual installment payments." Instead, the confirmed plan provides that the allowed secured claim, fixed as of the date of confirmation, will be paid in full with postconfirmation interest at 6% per annum. This eliminated Djourabchi and Welt's entitlement to contractual installment payments.
The significant changes in Rule 3002.1 were the removal of the reference to § 1322(b)(5) and to cover all instances of a plan providing for payment of "contractual installment payments" (whether by the trustee or by the debtor). The Advisory Committee explained the purpose of the change:
Subdivision (a) is amended to clarify the applicability of the rule. Its provisions apply whenever a chapter 13 plan provides that contractual payments on the debtor's home mortgage will be maintained, whether they will be paid by the trustee or directly by the debtor. The reference to § 1322(b)(5) of the Code is deleted to make clear that the rule applied even if there is no prepetition arrearage to be cured. So long as a creditor has a claim that is secured by a security interest in the debtor's principal residence and the plan provides that contractual payments on the claim will be maintained, the rule applies.
The rule change overruled the line of cases holding that Rule 3002.1 did not apply to mortgage lenders with no prepetition arrears and followed the line of cases, such as In re Tollios , holding the rule applied to plans providing for maintenance of payments under § 1322(b)(5) regardless of whether the plan also addressed prepetition mortgage arrears.
The Note required Davenport to make interest payments of 10.5% per annum, but Davenport's confirmed plan, as authorized by § 1325(a)(5), modified the Note to provide that the allowed secured claim would be paid in full with 6% interest per annum postconfirmation (which was the effective date of the plan), and it was upon confirmation that the trustee was obligated to start making such payments to Djourabchi and Welt. By reason of 11 U.S.C. § 506(b), the allowed secured claim would include interest accruals provided for by the Note at 10.5% per annum until the date of confirmation, plus attorney's fees allowed under § 506(b) that were incurred before the confirmation date. Also, as noted in the In Limine Decision , the court recognized that the plan amortized the payments on the allowed secured claim, and that change eliminated ¶ 2 of the Note , which provides that "monthly payments shall remain interest-only for life."
In short, whether the 2011 version of Rule 3002.1 or the current version of Rule 3002.1 is treated as the rule in effect in this bankruptcy case, Rule 3002.1 does not apply to the postpetition attorney's fees incurred.
C
EQUITABLE ESTOPPEL OR WAIVER
Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt should be estopped from asserting or be deemed to have waived attorney's fees incurred postpetition because, by not filing a § 506(b) motion, or filing an amended proof of claim, Djourabchi and Welt represented that they did not have any attorney's fees to claim. I reject this argument.
First, the argument is inapposite. For reasons already explained, there were no amounts that are recoverable under § 506(b) other than postpetition interest incurred preconfirmation. The fees at issue, for which Davenport became liable postconfirmation, were not part of the allowed secured claim being paid under the plan, and there was thus no need to seek allowance of those fees in order to enjoy any right to payment under the confirmed plan. In addition, there was no obligation to disclose such fees not provided for by the confirmed plan because Rule 3002.1 did not apply.
Second, even if there were any fee reimbursement obligation amounts recoverable under § 506(b), equitable estoppel would not apply because Davenport has been aware that Djourabchi and Welt were asserting a right to postpetition fees. Equitable estoppel does not apply unless there is (1) a definite representation by word or deed; (2) that the party claiming estoppel reasonably relied upon; (3) to his detriment by the change of his position. See Carroll v. Fremont Inv. & Loan , 636 F. Supp. 2d 41, 55 (D.D.C. 2009). Davenport was on notice that Djourabchi and Welt maintained they had a right to postpetition fees incurred in the bankruptcy case. The response to the objection to the claim filed on February 2, 2016, less than a month after confirmation of Davenport's plan, indicated that Djourabchi and Welt were entitled to postpetition fees, citing 11 U.S.C. § 506(b). Dkt. No. 51 at 3. And the Proof of Claim Order of July 21, 2016, carved out "amounts allowable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) incurred after the commencement of the case" as not being adjudicated by that Order , clearly leaving the issue of § 506(b) claims in play. Seven months later, Djourabchi and Welt sought their postpetition fees in their February 22, 2017 Supplemental Opposition to the Motion to Modify . Here, Djourabchi and Welt's failure to file a § 506(b) motion for attorney's fees was not a definite representation that they would not seek the attorney's fees to which they were entitled under the Deed of Trust . Furthermore, Davenport could not reasonably have relied upon the failure to file a § 506(b) motion, even if it was a "representation" that Djourabchi and Welt would not claim attorney's fees. Djourabchi and Welt have sought, and told Davenport on multiple occasions, that they would seek attorney's fees related to the Note and Deed of Trust . Accordingly, Djourabchi and Welt would not be equitably estopped from seeking any attorney's fees allowable under § 506(b), if there had been any.
This case is thus distinguishable from cases in which a creditor fails, prior to completion of a debtor's plan, to assert a claim for postpetition fees (which, if they had been sought and allowed, would have been part of the creditor's allowed secured claim to be paid under the plan). Such a failure can bar the fees by reason of the debtor's discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a) and 11 U.S.C. § 1327(c) (providing that except as otherwise provided in the plan, the property vesting in the debtor is free and clear of any claim provided for by the plan). See In re Eickerman , 2012 WL 8074211, at *14 ("By failing to amend its proof of claim to include pre-confirmation Fees and Expenses, [the mortgagee] waived any right to recover these sums after Eickerman completed his obligations under the Plan and the discharge was entered. By failing to provide Eickerman with an updated statement of the amount owed at confirmation, [the mortgagee] effectively consented to accept less than the amount then owed in full satisfaction of the claim.").
D
IMPACT OF ALLEGED WRONGFUL FORECLOSURE ON REASONABLENESS OF FEES
Davenport asserts that the attempted foreclosure was wrongful, that he filed this case in response to the wrongful foreclosure, and that, accordingly, Djourabchi and Welt ought not be entitled to reimbursement of fees and expenses in the bankruptcy case. Djourabchi and Welt argue that the bankruptcy case was unnecessary because Davenport could have brought a proceeding in the D.C. Superior Court or in the U.S. District Court seeking an injunction or declaratory judgment against them. Whether Djourabchi and Welt's foreclosure effort was wrongful does not affect their right to recover reasonable attorney's fees in the bankruptcy case, but it may affect the measure of damages to which Davenport may be entitled in the pending District Court action. Paragraph 9 of the Deed of Trust provided in relevant part:
If Davenport had prevailed in such a proceeding it is doubtful that Djourabchi and Welt would have been entitled to be reimbursed for their fees and expenses. Accordingly, Davenport might argue that similarly he ought not be required to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for fees and expenses in this case.
If ... there is a legal proceeding that might significantly affect Lender's interest in the Property and/or Lender's rights under this Security Instrument (such as a proceeding in bankruptcy, ...) ... then Lender may do and pay for whatever is reasonable or appropriate to protect Lender's Lender's interest in the Property and rights under this Security Instrument .... Lender's actions can include, but are not limited to: ... (b) appearing in court; and (c) paying reasonable attorneys’ fees to protect its interest in the Property and/or rights under this Security Instrument, including its secured position in a bankruptcy proceeding.
Not only were Djourabchi and Welt's interests and rights at risk in this bankruptcy case, but those rights and interests have been affected. For example, the court has decided in its Proof of Claim Decision that Djourabchi and Welt are no longer entitled to prepetition attorney's fees, and under the confirmed plan the debt owed as of the confirmation date will be amortized with interest of 6% per annum (not 10.5%) (with the requirement that monthly payments will be interest only payments eliminated, and with the requirement of full payment of the $80,000 of principal on September 22, 2016, eliminated). Accordingly, this objection to any recovery of attorney's fees and expenses fails. Once the bankruptcy case ensued, Djourabchi and Welt of necessity were entitled to defend their interests within the bankruptcy case.
I leave for resolution in the District Court civil action a determination whether, if the foreclosure notice was wrongful, Davenport was forced by the wrongful foreclosure notice to file his bankruptcy case (or some other proceeding to address Djourabchi and Welt's inflated claim), and, if so, whether any award of fees to Djourabchi and Welt in the bankruptcy case is a damage suffered by Davenport by reason of the wrongful foreclosure notice that he arguably would not otherwise have incurred.
E
DJOURABCHI AND WELT'S REJECTION OF DAVENPORT'S TENDER
Davenport contends that the attorney's fees are not owed because he tendered more than sufficient funds to fully pay the Note when he deposited a check for $60,980 into Djourabchi and Welt's Citibank account on May 27, 2015, and that Djourabchi and Welt wrongly rejected that payment. I reject this contention.
Davenport advances several theories for why Djourabchi and Welt were obligated to accept his May 27, 2015, payment. First, he argues that the requirement for prepayment under ¶ 4 of the Note did not apply because there was a conflict between ¶ 4 and ¶ 2, regarding the making of payments under the Note , and ¶ 4 is subordinate to ¶ 2 under a subordinate clause. Second, he argues that the Note was accelerated in 2009, and accordingly, the whole amount under the Note was due, removing the requirement of prepayment notice under ¶ 4 of the Note . Third, even if ¶ 4 still required notice for prepayment, Davenport contends that he had given notice in 2009 when he told Djourabchi and Welt that he intended to pay off the Note at the end of his first bankruptcy. Fourth, Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt were obligated to accept Davenport's tender because the amount he tendered exceeded the amount owed. For the reasons stated below, I reject each of these arguments and conclude that Djourabchi and Welt were not required to accept Davenport's tender.
Davenport also made the argument that Djourabchi and Welt did not cooperate with him when he tried to learn how much was still owed on the debt, which, if true, may be a breach of contract. However, the record does not present a clear picture regarding what efforts Davenport made to learn how much was owed on the debt, and whether Djourabchi and Welt responded to those requests, or the substance of any responses Djourabchi and Welt may have provided. Moreover, Davenport's testimony indicates that what Davenport meant by "not cooperating" is that he did not trust Djourabchi and Welt's calculations. Accordingly, I cannot find that Djourabchi and Welt breached the contract in that regard, and it is unnecessary to decide whether such a breach would require a denial of attorney's fees.
1. Alleged Conflict Between Paragraphs 2 and 4 of the Note
Davenport contends that ¶ 4 of the Note does not apply, because it conflicts with ¶ 2 of the Note . Under ¶ 2, "Any and all payments by Debtor, including but not limited to prepayments of principal, interest, or any other amounts of any kind with respect to this Promissory Note shall be made in immediately available funds by debtor to Creditor ... on or before the due date and without prior demand." Paragraph 4 of the Note permits Davenport to prepay the Note if Davenport "deliver[s] to Creditor notice of intent to prepay at least 20 (Twenty) days in advance of [Davenport's] intended date of prepayment." Paragraph 4 also includes a clause stating that "[i]f there is a conflict between the provisions of this Paragraph and any other terms and conditions outlined in this instrument, this Paragraph shall be subordinate to all others." Davenport contends that there is a conflict because ¶ 4 only permits prepayments after notice, but ¶ 2 permits any payment, including prepayments, to be paid on or before the due date. Davenport concludes that ¶ 2 would govern Davenport's payment, which would permit Davenport to make a prepayment without 20-day notice, because, in case of a conflict, ¶ 4 is made subordinate to ¶ 2.
However, there is no inconsistency between paragraph 2 and paragraph 4. Paragraph 4 conditions prepaying principal on Davenport's giving 20 days advance notice of his "intended date of prepayment." If he failed to give such notice, he had no right to prepay principal, and there would be no authorized prepayment to which paragraph 2 could apply. If he gave notice of an intended date of prepayment then a due date would be fixed, and paragraph 2 would arguably permit prepayment to be made "on or before the due date." However, he failed to give notice of his "intended date of prepayment." Paragraph 2 also requires that monthly payments will be "interest-only for life." This court held in the Proof of Claim Decision that the "Note made clear that only payments of interest would be accepted before full payment of the entire debt." The due date for the principal of $80,000, was September 22, 2016. The Note provides for an exception to interest-only payments, by allowing for prepayment, but the due date of a prepayment can only be made by Davenport's providing a 20-day notice, with a due date included in such notice. Davenport did not provide a 20-day notice, and hence the prepayment did not have a due date. Without a due date, Davenport could not make a prepayment under ¶ 2. Therefore, there is no conflict between ¶¶ 2 and 4, and the subordinate clause is of no effect, or help to Davenport.
Besides the fact that the Note prohibited prepayment without proper notice, the District of Columbia adheres to the "perfect tender in time" rule. Trilon Plaza, Inc. v. Comptroller of State of New York , 788 A.2d 146, 151 (D.C. 2001). The perfect tender in time rule "prohibits prepayment of a debt secured by a mortgage unless there is an agreement between the parties (or a statute) specifically permitting such prepayment." Id. "[A] lender cannot be compelled to accept prepayment of a mortgage note even when the full amount of interest for the full term of the mortgage is tendered ...." Westminster Investing Corp. v. Equitable Assur. Soc. of U.S. , 443 F.2d 653, 657 (D.C. Cir. 1970). The maturity date of the note was September 22, 2016, more than a year after Davenport deposited his check, but paragraph 4 of the Note provided an exception to the "perfect tender in time rule" by allowing Davenport to give notice of at least 20 days of his "intended date of prepayment." Paragraph 2 cannot be read as permitting prepayment in violation of the "perfect tender in time" rule.
2. Issue of Whether the Note Had Been Accelerated
Davenport contends that there was no need to provide notice because Djourabchi and Welt had accelerated the Note . As explained below, acceleration had not occurred.
Acceleration is not a remedy provided for under the Note . However, the Deed of Trust permits acceleration under § 18 if Davenport transferred the Property or a beneficial interest or under § 22 "following [Davenport's] breach of any covenant or agreement in this Security Instrument." Under § 11, Davenport "shall be in default if any action or proceeding, whether civil or criminal, is begun that, in Lender's judgment, could result in forfeiture of the Property or other material impairment of Lender's interest in the Property or rights under this Security Instrument." Section 22 requires that:
Lender shall give notice to Borrower prior to acceleration following Borrower's default or breach of any covenant or agreement in this Security Instrument ... The notice shall specify (a) the default; (b) the action required to cure the default (c) a date, not less than 30 days from the date the notice is given to Borrower, by which the default must be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the default on or before the date specified in the notice may result in acceleration of sums secured by this Security Instrument and sale of the Property. The notice shall further inform Borrower of the right to reinstate after acceleration and the right to bring a court action to assert the non-existence of a default or any other defense of borrower to acceleration and sale.
Failure to provide proper notice will result in a failure to accelerate. Ex Parte Turner , 254 So.3d 207, 211–12 (Ala. 2017) (the court held that the acceleration had failed because the notice of intent to accelerate failed to include notice of the right to reinstate and the right to bring suit); Sweeney v. American Home Mortg. Servicing Inc. , No. 4:10-cv-111, 2011 WL 710986, at *4 (S.D. Ga. February 22, 2011) (finding foreclosure failed because notice of intent to accelerate was improper by not giving 30 days notice); In re Sharpe , 425 B.R. 620, 642-43 (Bankr. N.D. Ala. 2010) (finding acceleration had failed because of improper notice of intent to accelerate).
Djourabchi had demanded that Davenport pay the whole debt by September 2008 after his first default to Bayview in 2007, however, there is no evidence of what that notice included, and it was resolved by Davenport's proceeding to pay an additional $300 a month. There is no evidence in the record that Djourabchi or Welt provided the proper notice of acceleration under § 22 of the Deed of Trust . A failure to provide notice of acceleration occurred as well in 2009. On August 18, 2009, Djourabchi sent an email to Davenport stating:
Please Coordinate a time to meet with me today before 3:30 PM, so that this loan could be paid in full. ... Please remember, that as of today, you are in default on this loan. By the terms and conditions of the secondary lien on your property, ANY act of default on ANY debt owed by you constitutes a breach and immediate acceleration of all debts owed. Therefore, my next step is to engage my attorney (Russell Drazin) for the service of executing an acceleration and the possible subsequent foreclosure of the subject property.
[Emphasis added.] The email did not meet the Deed of Trust's explicit requirements regarding acceleration. It told Davenport that he was in default and that this constituted "a breach and immediate acceleration of all debts owed," but it made clear that Djourabchi and Welt were in the process of having Drazin accelerate the debt. Neither the Note nor the Deed of Trust provided for acceleration to occur automatically upon a default occurring. The August 18, 2019 email did not effect an acceleration in accordance with the Deed of Trust : it failed to inform Davenport of his right to cure the default, or of any action he could take to cure the default, or of his right to bring a suit to prove he was not in default, or of a date of at least 30 days in which to cure the default. There is no evidence that prior to the initiation of Davenport's first bankruptcy case Drazin or anyone else ever issued a notice to Davenport complying with § 22 of the Deed of Trust regarding acceleration.
As noted above, the Deed of Trust permitted acceleration only after notice of: (1) the default; (2) any action to cure the default; (3) a date of at least 30 days to cure the default; (4) that failure to cure would result in acceleration; (5) Davenport's right to reinstate after the acceleration; and (6) Davenport's right to bring suit in court to prove he was not in default.
There may have been a proper acceleration at some point after the first bankruptcy was completed because Djourabchi and Welt caused notice to be issued regarding a foreclosure sale of the Property set for October 20, 2015, and foreclosure could occur only after acceleration of the debt. The court has no evidence on this point. However, any such acceleration likely occurred after the tender of $60,980 made on May 27, 2015, and there is no evidence that it occurred beforehand.
This is no evidence that prior to Davenport's tender of $60,980 on May 27, 2015, notice of acceleration in compliance with § 22 of the Deed of Trust was issued but not received by Davenport. Accordingly, there was no acceleration as to which Davenport might have been on constructive notice as in Redman v. Federal Home Mortgage Corp. , 765 So.2d 630 (Ala. 1999). See Dysart , 729 F. App'x at 726–27 ; In re Sharpe , 391 B.R. 117, 147 (Bankr. N.D. Ala. 2008). In short, Djourabchi and Welt did not effect a proper acceleration of the debt prior to Davenport's tendering the $60,980.
As noted in Dysart v. Trustmark Nat'l Bank , 729 F. App'x 722, 726–27 (11th Cir. 2018) :
In Redman , before accelerating the loan on a divorced couple's home, the lender fulfilled its disclosure obligations by sending, through certified mail, a notice of default to the home's address. Id. at 634. In an ejectment and wrongful foreclosure action, the ex-wife claimed that the bank failed to provide proper notice of the default because although she lived at the home she never received the notice. Id. The Alabama Supreme Court, after finding that the bank had fulfilled its disclosure obligations, rejected the ex-wife's argument. Instead, the Court relied on the fact that the ex-wife had actual knowledge of the information that the bank was required to disclose, explaining that she could not "close[ ] [her] eyes to avoid ‘discovery’ of the truth that was reasonably apparent." Id. at 635.
3. Notice of Intent to Pay the Note
Davenport contends that he did provide notice of prepayment as required by ¶ 4 of the Note . Paragraph 4 of the Note permits Davenport to prepay the Note if Davenport "deliver[s] to Creditor notice of intent to prepay at least 20 (twenty) days in advance of [Davenport's] intended date or prepayment." Paragraph 4 further provides that "Notice of Prepayment will expire if prepayment is not made on the date stated therein."
Davenport contends that ¶ 4 does not state what must be in the notice, but the last sentence in ¶ 4, "[n]otice of Prepayment will expire if prepayment is not made on the date stated therein," clearly shows that a date in which the prepayment will be made must be included. Davenport informed Djourabchi and Welt that he intended to pay off the Note sometime toward the end of his bankruptcy case. Davenport did not, however, provide a date on which he planned to make the prepayment. Therefore, Davenport's notice was insufficient under the terms of ¶ 4 of the Note .
Furthermore, the purpose of the notice under ¶ 4 was not met by Davenport's general indication that he intended to pay off the Note at some point in six years. The purpose of the notice provision is to allow Djourabchi and Welt time to calculate all that is owed under the Note and prepare the account for closing. Additionally, it gives them a time to expect the prepayment to ensure that the payment is made in the proper account at the time stated within the notice given by Davenport. A claim of intent to pay off the Note in six years does not allow for such calculation and oversight. It is impossible to know how much would be owed on a Note in a six-year period. Djourabchi and Welt could have calculated the principal and the interest on principal, assuming all payments were made on time, but could not predict what would be any required late fees, attorney's fees, and other fees and expenses allowed under the Note and any interest on such fees and expenses.
Furthermore, a statement of intent to pay the Note at some indefinite point in the future is no notice at all. No one knew exactly when Davenport would finish his plan. It could have been at any point within a five-year period, because a chapter 13 plan may not extend longer than five years, but Davenport could have finished his plan early. It is also unclear if Davenport gave notice that he would pay off the Note before he finished his plan, or shortly thereafter.
4. Even if the Issue of Notice did not bar Prepayment, the Rejection of the Tender was Proper
Davenport deposited into Djourabchi and Welt's bank account on May 27, 2015, a check for $60,980.00, an amount that was more than the court later held was owed under the Note . Davenport contends that the debt should be deemed to have been satisfied except for that $60,980.00 and to have been discharged as to amounts coming due afterwards.
An obvious point is that the deposit did not effect an accord and satisfaction because Djourabchi and Welt rejected the deposit once they discovered it, and there was no acceptance of the deposit with the understanding that the tender was accepted as full payment. See Pierola v. Moschonas , 687 A.2d 942, 947 (D.C. 1997) ; Curtin v. United Airlines, Inc. , 120 F. Supp. 2d 73, 76 (D.D.C. 2000), aff'd , 275 F.3d 88 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
Nor did the deposit effect a discharge of the debt via D.C. Code § 28:3-311 ("Accord and satisfaction by use of instrument"). I need not decide whether Davenport's deposit of the $60,980.00 check directly into Djourabchi and Welt's bank account could be viewed as a payment via an instrument, and whether Djourabchi and Welt could be viewed as having obtained payment of the instrument (by having previously agreed that Davenport could make direct deposits into their account) such that § 28:3-311 could be viewed as applying. Even if § 28:3-311 applied, the debt was not discharged via the instrument because on June 16, 2015, within 90 days after payment of the instrument via its direct deposit, Djourabchi and Welt tendered repayment of the $60,980.00 to Davenport. See D.C. Code § 28:3-311(c)(2) (permitting claim to not be discharged if the claimant "proves that within 90 days after payment of the instrument, the claimant tendered repayment of the amount of the instrument to the person against whom the claim is asserted").
Davenport contends that pursuant to D.C. Code § 28:3-603, and specifically D.C. Code § 28:3-603(b), the debt was terminated by his tender of the $60,980.00. D.C. Code § 28:3-603 provides:
(a) If tender of payment of an obligation to pay an instrument is made to a person entitled to enforce the instrument, the effect of tender is governed by principles of law applicable to tender of payment under a simple contract.
(b) If tender of payment of an obligation to pay an instrument is made to a person entitled to enforce the instrument and the tender is refused, there is discharge, to the extent of the amount of the tender, of the obligation of an indorser or accommodation party having a right of recourse with respect to the obligation to which the tender relates.
(c) If tender of payment of an amount due on an instrument is made to a person entitled to enforce the instrument, the obligation of the obligor to pay interest after the due date on the amount tendered is discharged. If presentment is required with respect to an instrument and the obligor is able and ready to pay on the due date at every place of payment stated in the instrument, the obligor is deemed to have made tender of payment on the due date to the person entitled to enforce the instrument.
By reason of D.C. Code § 28:3-306(a), the common law of the District of Columbia governs what is an effective tender for purposes of the other provisions of § 28:3-306. It is well established that a tender, to be effective, must be unconditional. Davidge v. Simmons , 266 F. 1018, 1019 (App.D.C. Cir. 1920). See also Gause v. C.T. Mgmt., Inc. , 637 A.2d 434, 438 (D.C. 1994). A tender of an amount conditioned on its being treated as fully paying the debt imposes a condition, and is not a proper tender. Davidge , 266 F. at 1019. 1019. Here, Davenport's check deposited into the account indicated that the payment was payment in full of the debt, and under Davidge , that was an impermissible condition. Even if I were free to follow decisions from jurisdictions other than the District of Columbia that take the view that accompanying a tender with a request that the payment be treated as fully satisfying the debt does not make the tender conditional, and I were to agree with that view, that would not alter the outcome. That is because a tender is not effective to discharge a debt "if the creditor in good faith, even though erroneously, claims a greater amount due than is later found to be actually due and owing, where the acceptance of the lesser amount involves an admission that the amount tendered is sufficient." First Nat. Bank v. Britton , 185 Okla. 566, 94 P.2d 896, 898 (1939) (remanding case for a determination of whether the bank, in good faith, believed that a larger amount was due when it refused the tender). See also Reynolds v. Price , 88 S.C. 525, 71 S.E. 51 (1911) ((holding that "if a mortgagee refuses a tender, not arbitrarily or for a wrongful purpose, but in good faith, under the honest belief, based upon reasonable grounds, that more is due him than has been tendered, refusal of the tender will not operate to discharge his lien."). When Djourabchi and Welt discovered the attempted tender, I cannot conclude that they were acting in bad faith in refusing the tender. At that juncture, they were operating under the erroneous but innocent assumption that interest was payable in advance, and that they were entitled to reimbursement of certain fees and expenses they had paid. Davenport has not advanced a persuasive argument to explain how Djourabchi and Welt could be treated as lacking good faith in rejecting the tender. If Djourabchi and Welt had accepted the payment, they would have lost their rights to the amounts they believed that they were entitled to under the Note . Djourabchi and Welt were not required to accept Davenport's calculation of the final amount owed even if Davenport's calculation was close to, and exceeding, the final amount the court allowed.
"The debtor cannot insist that the creditor shall admit that no more is due in respect of the debt for which the tender is made." Davidge , 266 F. at 1019, quoting Henderson v. Cass Cty. , 107 Mo. 50, 18 S.W. 992, 994 (1891). See also Platsis v. Diafokeris , 68 Md.App. 257, 511 A.2d 535, 537–38 (1986) ("Thus, a tender which contains a condition ‘which would prejudice the creditor's right [, i.e. , one] that a payment shall be taken in full discharge’, is conditional." quoting 15 Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts, § 814 (3d ed. 1972)).
See Bank of Am., N.A. v. SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC , 134 Nev. 604, 427 P.3d 113, 118 (2018), as amended on denial of reh'g (Nov. 13, 2018), stating:
In addition to payment in full, valid tender must be unconditional, or with conditions on which the tendering party has a right to insist. 74 Am. Jur. 2d Tender § 22 (2012). "The only legal conditions which may be attached to a valid tender are either a receipt for full payment or a surrender of the obligation." Heath v. L.E. Schwartz & Sons, Inc. , 203 Ga.App. 91, 416 S.E.2d 113, 114-15 (1992) ; See also Stockton Theatres, Inc. v. Palermo , 179 Cal.App.2d 323, 3 Cal.Rptr. 767, 768 (1960) (tender of entire judgment with request for satisfaction of judgment was not conditional); cf. Steward v. Yoder , 86 Ill.App.3d 223, 41 Ill.Dec. 709, 408 N.E.2d 55, 57 (1980) (concluding tender with request for accord and satisfaction was conditional, but not unreasonable).
The evidence for the hearing on the objection to the proof of claim included Djourabchi and Welt's "Ongoing Accounting" showing various expenses and attorney's fees incurred. That exhibit shows that as of June 1, 2015, preceding the rejection of the tender, Djourabchi and Welt had paid $8,692.00 in such expenses and fees. Based on the "Ongoing Accounting," they believed that Davenport had paid none of these fees and expenses. There was never a showing of bad faith in Djourabchi and Welt's belief that Davenport had been in default under § 11 of the Deed of Trust when the first mortgagee, Bayview, instituted a foreclosure proceeding, and Djourabchi and Welt legitimately believed that they had a right to fees incurred in addressing that default. Under § 9 of the Deed of Trust , they were entitled to recover for "paying reasonable attorneys’ fees to protect [their] interest in the Property and/or rights under this Security Instrument, including its secured position in a bankruptcy proceeding." Until this court disallowed those prepetition fees and expenses, Djourabchi and Welt acted in good faith in treating the fees as owed to them. Although the court disallowed such expenses and fees (for lack of time records permitting the court to determine the reasonableness of the fees and expenses), there has been no showing of bad faith regarding Djourabchi and Welt's belief, when they rejected the tender, that the fees and expenses were owing.
In any event, Davenport did not have the right to pay the debt in full prior to maturity without first following the procedures required under the Note for giving notice of the intent to prepay the debt, and in rejecting the tender, Djourabchi and Welt could reasonably believe, in good faith, that there had not been proper notice. In rejecting the tender, Aronson's letter did not invoke Davenport's failure to give advance notice of an intended payment date, but that does not bar Djourabchi and Welt from now pointing to the lack of notice as making rejection of the tender appropriate.
Accordingly, Djourabchi and Welt were not required to accept Davenport's check deposited into their account on May 27, 2015.
F
STANDARDS OF REASONABLENESS OF THE FEES
Even though they were not required to file a statement of postconfirmation obligations under Rule 3002.1, Djourabchi and Welt have sought allowance of any such amounts. As to fees for which Davenport became liable postconfirmation, Djourabchi and Welt set forth in their Application for Fees and Expenses (Dkt. No. 137), that through December 2016, $32,332.00 in fees for Aronson work and $20,471.00 for Russell's work, for a total of $52,803.00 in legal fees, had been incurred and attached invoices for those fees, and that $9,929.10 in expenses had been incurred. There was no obligation to seek such fees and expenses because Rule 3002.1 did not apply. However, the parties have treated the Application for Fees and Expenses as the equivalent of an application under Fed. R. Bankr. P. 2016. Those fees and expenses are now in play.
These amounts failed to take account of a $400 writeoff by Aronson on 02/01/2016 applied to postpetition fees and Russell's agreement with Djourabchi and Welt to cap fees at $15,000.00.
I need not decide whether the fees could only be sought via a Rule 2016 application. See In re Biazo , 314 B.R. 451, 459 (Bankr. D. Kan. 2004).
A secured creditor bears the burden of establishing that the attorneys’ fees it seeks are reasonable. See In re Gwyn , 150 B.R. 150, 154 (Bankr. M.D.N.C. 1993) ; In re Davidson Metals, Inc. , 152 B.R. 917 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1993), aff'd , 65 F.3d 168 (6th Cir. 1995). Davenport contends that Djourabchi and Welt were not entitled to reimbursement of certain attorney's fees because they had not been successful in litigating several of their claims. Davenport points out that he was successful in objecting to Djourabchi and Welt's Proof of Claim, in opposing Djourabchi and Welt's motion to dismiss, and in defeating their objection to confirmation of his amended Chapter 13 plan.
As noted above, the issue of whether attorney's fees incurred under a contract during the postpetition period preceding confirmation are recoverable under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) is a federal question. In re A & P Diversified Tech. Realty, Inc. , 467 F.3d 337, 341 (3d Cir. 2006). However, because 11 U.S.C. § 506(b) applies to only preconfirmation components of an oversecured claim, and Davenport's liability to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for their payment of fees arose postconfirmation, § 506(b) does not come into play. See Hoopai , 581 F.3d at 1101. The reasonableness of the fees for which Djourabchi and Welt seek reimbursement, a reimbursement obligation that arose postconfirmation, is thus governed by nonbankruptcy law (here, District of Columbia law).
1. Reasonableness of Fees Under District of Columbia Law
Some of the approaches of Federal law and District of Columbia law regarding reasonableness of attorneys’ fees appear to be the same. However, Federal law regarding reasonableness of attorneys’ fees is often in the context of a statute awarding reasonable fees, whereas, here, we are dealing with District of Columbia law as applied to a contract, and specifically a contract between a mortgagee and a mortgagor under a Deed of Trust . That makes a difference. Regarding the recovery of reasonable legal fees pursuant to deed of trust provisions, the rule in the District of Columbia was set forth in Manchester Gardens, Inc. v. Great W. Life Assur. Co. , 205 F.2d 872, 877-78 (D.C. Cir. 1953), as follows:
[W]here the merit or necessity of the creditor's claim or defense is successfully challenged, courts may decline to enforce attorney's fee provisions. When contractual provisions for payment by a debtor of his creditor's attorney's fees and costs are invoked, such payment should not be enforced in the full amount of the creditor's legal expenses (even though actually incurred, and reasonable in amount) where his claims or defenses giving rise to such expenses lack substantial merit. In no event should the sum allowed be so large as to amount to an undue penalty for taking one's grievance to the courts. And if the creditor has benefitted by having a doubtful question of law resolved, thus reducing the area of potential future dispute, the debtor should bear only a fair portion of the burden.
[Footnotes omitted.] In footnote 14 to this passage, the Court of Appeals elaborated on the observation concerning not awarding full fees when the mortgagee's claims lack substantial merit:
For example, in Tyler v. Walker , 1898, 101 Tenn. 306, 47 S.W. 424, the debtor, who had agreed that, "if suit is brought on this note, we will pay all attorney's fees and costs of collecting", brought suit to enjoin foreclosure on the ground that the creditor was usuriously seeking to force payment of more than the amount due. The creditor filed a cross-bill asking foreclosure together with attorney's fees and costs. The trial court upheld plaintiff's claim, finding that his "bill was * * * properly filed to enjoin the sale." It thereupon denied the creditor's claim for attorney's fees and costs, even though it did decree a sale for the amount properly owing. The latter ruling was affirmed on appeal. The court held that "such fee is not collectible when suit is needlessly brought, or when it is brought to enforce an unjust demand, or to coerce more than is actually and justly due." It thought defendant's cross-bill was not only brought to coerce more than actually due, but was also unnecessarily brought, "as the trust deed could have been enforced out of court for the amount legally due." See also D. A. Tompkins Co. v. Monticello Cotton Oil Co. , [137 F. 625, 631 (C.C. S.D. Ga. 1905) ] ("Finding the (debtor's) defense in part, at least, meritorious, the court feels obliged to disallow the (creditor's) claim for attorney's fees * * * "); United States v. Reed , [31 A.2d 673, 675 (D.C.Mun.App. 1942) ]; cf. Wright v. Market Bank , Tenn. Ch. App. 1900, 60 S.W. 623 [(1900)] ; Peebles v. Yates , 1906, 88 Miss. 289, 40 So. 996 [(1906)].
The rule of Manchester Gardens has been upheld over the years. See Wisconsin Ave. Assocs., Inc. v. 2720 Wisconsin Ave. Coop. Ass'n, Inc. , 441 A.2d 956, 965 (D.C. 1982) ; Singer v. Shannon & Luchs Co. , 779 F.2d 69, 71 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (stating "it is clear that even when a party is entitled to attorneys' fees under the terms of a contract, it may nonetheless be denied an award if it is unsuccessful on the merits of its claim."); Fleming v. Carroll Pub. Co. , 581 A.2d 1219, 1228 (D.C. 1990).
In arguing that they should be allowed to recover fees in full, Djourabchi and Welt relied on Barron & Newburger, P.C. v. Texas Skyline, Ltd. (In re Woerner) , 783 F.3d 266, 277 (5th Cir. 2015), in which the court held that 11 U.S.C. § 330 "explicitly contemplates compensation for attorneys whose services were reasonable when rendered but which ultimately may fail to produce an actual, material benefit." In re Woerner addressed a question under Federal law, the need under 11 U.S.C. § 330 for estate professionals not to be subjected to 20-20 hindsight as to what was reasonable in pursuing litigation on behalf of the estate, and thus being entitled to receive compensation from their client, the estate, despite having failed to prevail in litigation.
Here, in contrast, the issue is not whether Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys are entitled to collect fees from their clients, Djourabchi and Welt. Instead, the issue is one regarding attorney's fees incurred by a mortgagee in pressing a claim for reimbursement of fees against a mortgagor for far more than was owed, and when permitting a recovery of the fees would penalize the mortgagor who was fully entitled to show that the mortgagee's claim was invalid in large part, with the recovery of fees subject to the standards of Manchester Gardens under District of Columbia law.
Other than attorney's fees, Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim asserted that as of the petition date Davenport owed $80,000 in principal and $12,682.97 in late fees, a total of $92,682.97 . With postpetition interest the allowed secured claim, and Disregarding attorney's fees, the allowed secured claim (including postconfirmation interest) came to $55,717.03 as of confirmation of the plan. (The attorney's fees asserted on the proof of claim were disallowed for lack of time records.)
Even if § 506(b) applied, the lodestar analysis under Copeland , 641 F.2d at 891, is sufficiently flexible that it can take into account the difference between an estate professional's seeking compensation from its client (the bankruptcy estate) and a mortgagee's seeking against a mortgagor fees the mortgagee had incurred, and, in that light, disallow fees when the mortgagee pursues fees that are substantially inflated and in large part lack any substantial merit.
2. Decisions Regarding Reasonableness of Fees Under § 506(b) as Bearing on Reasonableness Under District of Columbia Law
Djourabchi and Welt and their expert witness appear to have assumed that § 506(b) would control the reasonableness of fees and relied on decisions applying Federal law. Consideration of those decisions may be appropriate if District of Columbia law would take the same approaches as set forth in those decisions. Under Federal law, a court's analysis in determining whether a fee is reasonable always begins with the "lodestar." Copeland v. Marshall , 641 F.2d 880, 891 (D.C. Cir. 1980). The lodestar is generated by multiplying the reasonable number of hours expended by a reasonable hourly rate. Id. Once the lodestar is calculated, the court may then adjust the fee after considering the twelve factors laid out in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc. , 488 F.2d 714, 717-19 (5th Cir. 1974). Under District of Columbia law, a lodestar approach is generally used in evaluating a recovery of reasonable fees under a contractual provision calling for a recovery of reasonable fees. See James G. Davis Constr. Corp. v. HRGM Corp. , 147 A.3d 332, 346 (D.C. 2016). There, the Court of Appeals upheld a 15% reduction of attorney's fees based on the overall extent of success, and quoted an earlier decision holding that an approach of that character was appropriately "tied to the overall degree of success ... [rather than] a mere mathematical" calculation and that "where ‘a plaintiff has achieved only partial or limited success,’ the judge may adjust the fee to reflect the level of success, and in that regard should consider ... whether ‘the plaintiff achieve[d] a level of success that makes the hours reasonably expended a satisfactory basis for making a fee award.’ " (Citations omitted.) In calculating the reasonable number of hours in its lodestar calculation, the number of hours actually expended does not necessarily equate to the reasonable number of hours expended. Copeland warns "[i]t does not follow that the amount of time actually expended is the amount of time reasonably expended." 641 F.2d at 891. Copeland further iterates:
Thus, no compensation is due for nonproductive time. For example, where three attorneys are present at a hearing when one would suffice, compensation should be denied for the excess time. Similarly, no compensation should be paid for time spent litigating claims upon which the party seeking the fee did not ultimately prevail.
Id. at 891-92 (emphasis added).
Nevertheless, attorney's fees being sought under the Federal standard of reasonableness under § 506(b) are not per se unreasonable because the actions are unsuccessful. In re Makris , No. 2:9-005911, 2011 WL 499948, at *4 (D.N.J. February 10, 2011). Under § 506(b), courts have found that reasonableness has two facets: "(1) the itemized fees themselves must be reasonable, and (2) the creditor's actions must be reasonable." In re West Elec., Inc. , 158 B.R. 37, 40 (Bankr. D.N.J. 1993). However, the creditor must not impede the debtor's successful bankruptcy by unreasonably "saddling the debtor with attorney's fees and expenses." Ryker v. Current , 338 B.R. 642, 651 (D.N.J. 2006), aff'd sub nom. In re Ryker , 06–1872, 2007 WL 2138590 (3d Cir. July 27, 2007). As noted in In re Gwyn , 150 B.R. 150, 155 (Bankr. M.D.N.C. 1993) :
One purpose of Section 506(b) is to ensure that estate assets are not squandered by oversecured creditors, who, believing that the debtor will be required to foot the bills, fail to exercise restraint in the attorneys’ fees and expenses they incur, perhaps exhibiting excessive caution, overzealous advocacy and hyperactive legal efforts.
(Citations omitted.) In In re Nicfur–Cruz Realty Corp. , 50 B.R. 162, 169 (Bkrtcy. S.D.N.Y. 1985), the court held that "it is inherently unreasonable to ask a debtor to reimburse attorneys’ fees incurred by a creditor that are not cost-justified either by the economics of the situation or necessary to preservation of the creditor's interest in light of the legal issues involved." The court must independently investigate the request to determine its reasonableness and has the responsibility for avoiding waste of estate assets at the hands of the secured creditor who, knowing that the estate must foot the bills, fails to exercise restraint in taking actions in the case that were not reasonably necessary to protect its interest. See In re Riker Industries, Inc. , 122 B.R. 964, 970 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1990).
Here, a substantial equity cushion existed to protect Djourabchi and Welt's security interest. "The size of a creditor's equity cushion is an underlying factor in the reasonableness determination, and must be assessed when considering the above factors. If the equity cushion is large enough that there is no appreciable risk that a creditor will not be paid, courts will tend to view large fee claims as being exorbitant because there is no purpose in engaging in legal maneuvers." In re PCH Assocs. , 122 B.R. 181, 203 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1990) (citations omitted). "[W]here services are not reasonably necessary or where action is taken because of an attorney's excessive caution or overzealous advocacy, courts have the right and the duty, in the exercise of their discretion, to disallow fees and costs under § 506(b)." In re Wonder Corp. of America , 72 B.R. 580, 591 (Bankr. D. Conn. 1987), aff'd , 82 B.R. 186 (D. Conn. 1988). See also In re Kroh Bros. Dev. Co., 105 B.R. 515, 521 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 1989). As stated in In re Dalessio , 74 B.R. 721, 723 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 1987) :
The key determinant is whether the creditor incurred expenses and fees that fall within the scope of the fees provision in the agreement, and took the kinds of actions that similarly situated creditors might reasonably conclude should be taken, or whether such actions and fees were so clearly outside the range as to be deemed unreasonable. The bankruptcy court should inquire whether, considering all relevant factors including duplication, the creditor reasonably believed that the services employed were necessary to protect his interests in the debtor's property.
In other words, a court must determine whether a creditor took actions that other similarly situated creditors would have taken and "whether such actions and fees were outside the range so as to be deemed unreasonable." Ryker v. Current , 338 B.R. at 651 (quoting West Elec. , 158 B.R. at 40 ).
Therefore, contrary to Katz's opinion expressed at one point during the trial, the issue is not whether the creditor's position in litigation passed muster under Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9011 (the analog of Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 ). Although a position might pass muster under Rule 9011, fees could still be denied under § 506(b) if unreasonable under the case law discussed above. See In re Wonder Corp. of Am. , 109 B.R. 18, 27 (Bankr. D. Conn. 1989) ("the standards for imposing sanctions under Rule 9011 ... are different from those in a § 506(b) analysis").
At a minimum, District of Columbia law would disallow attorneys’ fees that are unreasonable under the foregoing principles applicable under § 506(b). Moreover, under District of Columbia law as set forth in HRGM Corp. , a court has discretion under the lodestar analysis to adjust the fees awarded based on the overall degree of success. However, based on Manchester Gardens , a court's discretion under District of Columbia law to disallow fees as unreasonable when a mortgagee has been unsuccessful is much broader.
G
REASONABLENESS OF THE FEES AT ISSUE
1. Fees for General Work Regarding Bankruptcy Case
Part of the fees were for the ordinary type of work that a creditor's counsel would perform in a bankruptcy case. I will allow $3,080.00 for such work. These consist of the following time entries: first five entries: "Tel. Client $200.00;" "Review zoning, draft entry of appearance $160.00;" "Tel. client, email counsel $200.00;" "Tel. client $80.00;" "Research bad faith chapter 13 filing $320.00;" then "11/09/2015 Attend 341 meeting $1,000.00;" and "File POC [Proof of Claim] $80.00;" followed by "11/30/2015 Review objection to confirmation, draft objection $200.00;" "12/14/2015 Review amended plan, responses $120.00;" "12/28/2015 Review amended schedules $80.00;" "12/31/2015 Review order, opinion, objection $160;" "01/12/2016 Tel. client $200.00;" and "01/15/2016 Court appearance [$600.00]." The remaining work is addressed below: the work on the motion to dismiss, the objection to confirmation of the amended plan, and defending against the objection to claim.
The "Review zoning" entry is somewhat puzzling, but may have related to verifying the zoning was consistent with the value of the property, pertinent to whether Djourabchi and Welt were oversecured. With $160.00 charged for the entire time entry, I will treat this time entry as typical initial examination of the case and thus reasonable.
It is only the fees for the objection to Davenport's amended plan that were unreasonable. There were reasonable grounds to object to the initial proposed plan.
The opinion was the memorandum decision in the prior bankruptcy case denying Davenport's motion seeking to have the court determine whether any arrears were owed.
The objection was the objection to the proof of claim filed on December 30, 2015.
The amount billed was $2,640.00 but for reasons explained later, the hearing was prolonged based on the unreasonable motion to dismiss and the unreasonable objection to confirmation.
2. Fees for the Motion to Dismiss
Fees for the pursuit of Djourabchi and Welt's unsuccessful motion to dismiss must be denied under District of Columbia law and would be denied even if the Federal standard of reasonableness under § 506(b) were applied. The motion to dismiss the case sought dismissal on the basis of bad faith. The grounds asserted for finding bad faith were: (1) this case was essentially a two-party dispute; (2) the case came on the heels of Davenport's first bankruptcy case; (3) the case was filed on the eve of foreclosure; (4) the debtor had changed his residence from another property to the Property securing the loan at issue; and (5) Davenport was barred by 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(2) from modifying the lien on the Property because it is on his principal residence and he would not be able to make a cure under 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5) within a reasonable time. A reasonable creditor would not have advanced these meritless arguments and viewed them as necessary to protect its interest (which, here, was substantially oversecured). See Wonder Corp. , 72 B.R. at 592 (opposition to the disclosure statement and plan was a "blatant and totally unproductive obstruction in the administration of this case" and no § 506(b) fees would be allowed for such services). In any event, under Manchester Gardens , fees for pursuing the motion ought not be allowed because the motion lacked "substantial merit."
District of Columbia law, not § 506(b) governs the reasonableness of the fees. Davenport had no obligation to reimburse fees until Djourabchi and Welt paid the fees and gave him notice of the payment, requesting reimbursement. Davenport was not given notice of payment of fees until after confirmation of the plan. Accordingly, his reimbursement obligation is a postconfirmation liability, and § 506(b) does not apply to that obligation.
First, nothing in the Bankruptcy Code bars a mortgagor from filing a Chapter 13 plan even if the mortgagee is the only creditor (which was not the case here). A principal purpose of Chapter 13 is to save the debtor's home from foreclosure.
This is not a Chapter 11 case in which 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(10) imposes a plan-confirmation requirement that if there is an impaired class of creditors, there must be at least one accepting class.
Second, filing this case after Davenport had completed plan payments in the first case was not bad faith. This was not a case of filing a new case on the heels of a bankruptcy case dismissed for failure to make plan payments. In Davenport's first bankruptcy case, Djourabchi and Welt filed a proof of claim for only $80,000, with no unpaid interest, late fees, or attorney's fees, even though the proof of claim form had elicited a statement of outstanding arrears. Had they asserted an arrears claim for such items, Davenport's plan had sufficient funds to cure any such arrears, and he could have amended his plan to provide for a cure of such arrears (if any existed). Davenport's confirmed plan in that case left the claim unaltered (except for the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) ) and provided that Davenport would deal with the claim by making payments directly to Djourabchi and Welt outside of the plan. It was not bad faith to file this case when there was a dispute as to whether any arrears existed and that dispute had not been resolved in the first case.
As will be seen, Davenport was not in arrears.
After having completed plan payments in the first case Davenport had filed an Amended Motion for Determination of Final Cure and Mortgage Payment re: Rule 3002.1 in the first case on July 15, 2015, in an effort to determine how much remained owing on the loan. However, the court had not decided that Amended Motion prior to the commencement of foreclosure proceedings and the commencement of this second bankruptcy case shortly before the date of the scheduled foreclosure sale.
Third, Davenport filed his petition commencing this case on October 14, 2015, six days before the foreclosure date of October 20, 2015. There was no bad faith in commencing this case in order to stay the foreclosure sale from going forward and to address any mortgage arrears that existed.
Fourth, that Davenport represented that he had changed his residence from another property to the Property securing the loan at issue did not come close to smacking of bad faith. Davenport credibly testified that he has resided at the Property since mid-2012. Djourabchi and Welt presented no evidence sufficient to show that Davenport was not residing at the Property. If Davenport was not actually living in the Property, having someone make observations from the street during evening hours ought to have sufficed to verify that. Moreover, Davenport gained and lost nothing by asserting that the Property was his principal residence because he had the right to treat the allowed secured claim on the Property under § 1325(a)(5)(B) whether the Property was his principal residence or not.
This bankruptcy case is not a foreclosure action in which Davenport might have enhanced rights (for example, a right to mediation) based on the Property being his principal residence.
Fifth, by conceding that the Property was his principal residence, Davenport was subject to the general bar of 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(2) from modifying the lien on the Property. However, the loan was due to mature in September 2016, thus making the lien subject to an exception in 11 U.S.C. § 1322(c)(2) to that general bar. Davenport was thus entitled to invoke 11 U.S.C. § 1322(c)(2) to treat the claim under 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B), which allowed him to provide for full payment of the claim over time with a plan-post-effective-date interest rate on the allowed secured claim assuring that Djourabchi and Welt would receive payments equal in value to the allowed amount of their secured claim. At the hearing of January 15, 2016, on the motion to dismiss and on confirmation of Davenport's second amended plan, the court held:
Moreover, Davenport was entitled alternatively to propose a plan providing, as permitted by 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(5), to cure the arrears over a reasonable period of time, and to deal with the balance of the claim via payments made by Davenport directly to Djourabchi and Welt. Davenport had sought a ruling in the prior case regarding the amount owed on the claim but the court had not yet ruled on that motion, and the foreclosure sale was imminent. There was a dispute as to what the arrears were (as evidenced by the objection Davenport filed on December 30, 2015, to Djourabchi and Welt's claim), and a determination in that regard (ultimately concluding that as of the petition date that no arrears were owed) was necessary before it could be said whether Davenport could cure arrears within a reasonable time. That issue would have been a confirmation issue, not an issue to be decided via a motion to dismiss based on an allegation of bad faith.
This is a hearing on confirmation of the debtor's plan. The objections that have been raised to confirmation are overruled. The Debtor is entitled to invoke Section 1322(c)(2), which means that he may invoke Section 1325(a)(5), and the Plan provides for a treatment in accordance with Section 1325(a)(5), namely that the secured claim will be paid off over time in equal monthly payments, with an interest rate designed to get present value.
The court then denied the motion to dismiss, finding no bad faith.
Nevertheless, under the category of Fees for General Work Regarding Bankruptcy Case I have allowed $600 for the hearing on the motion to dismiss and the confirmation of Davenport's plan. The bulk of the hearing of January 15, 2016, addressed the assertions of bad faith raised in both the motion to dismiss and the objection to confirmation. However, it would have been reasonable for Aronson to generally object to confirmation (to put Davenport to his burden of showing that the plan was confirmable) and to appear at the confirmation hearing to monitor the court's rulings. Nevertheless, if Aronson had not raised the contentions of bad faith and other meritless objections to confirmation, the hearing would have taken less than one hour. Accordingly, only $600.00 has been made for attending the hearing.
The fees allocable to the motion to dismiss total $4,120.00 and will be disallowed. This consists of "10/26/2015 Research bad faith chapter 13 filing $320.00;" "10/26/2015 Draft motion to dismiss $240.00;" "10/27/2015 Draft motion to dismiss $880.00;" "10/28/2015 Email client $80;" "11/13/2015 Prepare notice, order $120;" "12/09/15 Review opposition to motion to dismiss $80.00;" "12/17/2015 Prepare for hearing $120.00;" "01/06/16 Prepare for hearing $240.00;" and "01/15/2016 Court appearance [$2,040 of the $2,640 for the hearing on the motion to dismiss and on confirmation of Davenport's second amended plan)] ."
The hearing of January 15, 2016, related also to the objection to confirmation, and under the category of under the category of Fees for General Work Regarding Bankruptcy Case I have already allowed $600.00 for attending that hearing.
3. Fees for the Objection to Confirmation of the Amended Plan
Similarly, the objection to confirmation of Davenport's amended plan invoked 11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(2) as barring the modification of Djourabchi and Welt's claim and repeated the facts underlying the assertion of bad faith made in the motion to dismiss. The objection failed to recognize § 1322(c)(2) as an exception to § 1322(b)(2) and, as discussed above with respect to the motion to dismiss, Djourabchi and Welt had no sound basis for asserting bad faith. I have already allowed the $120 spent reviewing the second amended plan on December 14, 2015, but I will disallow the $120 for preparing the objection to confirmation on December 29, 2015, and I have already disallowed all but $600 for time spent at the hearing on January 15, 2016, which was on both the motion to dismiss and the confirmation of the second amended plan.
4. Fees for Defending the Objection to Djourabchi and Welt's Proof of Claim
I will disallow 90% of the fees for time spent in the first half of 2016 defending against the objection to claim. Djourabchi and Welt asserted a claim for $121,813.88. In my decision, I adopted the approach of Davenport's expert, Runge, and I agreed with Runge that Davenport had overpaid on the loan except for a miscalculation of $2.97. I held that "[a]lthough Djourabchi and Welt attempted to present contrary expert witness testimony, that witness's testimony was unpersuasive even if he could be deemed to have qualified as an expert witness." Proof of Claim Decision at 11. The Proof of Claim Decision found that Davenport had never been in arrears, and in fact, had made payments ahead of time and stayed on top of his payments, and found that the amount owed as of the petition date was $80,000, with a credit of $26,422.90 not yet applied. In Fleming , 581 A.2d at 1228 n.22, the court noted:
The court in Manchester Gardens cited as support the case of Tyler v. Walker , 101 Tenn. 306, 47 S.W. 424 (1898). In Tyler , the court held that where a promissory note provided that "if suit is brought on this note, [debtor] will pay all attorney's fees and costs of collecting," an attorney's fee was nonetheless not collectible "when suit is needlessly brought, or when it is brought to enforce an unjust demand, or to coerce more than is actually and justly due." 101 Tenn. at 308–09, 47 S.W. at 424.
Djourabchi and Welt's proof of claim asserted a claim for $92,682.97 plus attorney's fees whereas the allowed secured claim (before addressing attorney's fees) was fixed as $55,717.03., and Djourabchi and Welt's position rested on arguments the bulk of which were without substantial merit. It was an unjust demand, seeking to coerce far more than was actually and justly due. Accordingly, I find that 90% of the fees incurred in defending against the objection to claim are not owed.
Assertion of the vastly inflated claim, first in noticing up a foreclosure sale which ought not have been pursued because no amount was in default (leading, for example, to including the foreclosure advertisement expense in the proof of claim), and then pursuing the vastly inflated claim in a proof of claim, amounted to a breach of Djourabchi and Welt's implicit obligation of fair dealing. Disallowance of the bulk of the fees for defending the excessive claim is warranted as well on that alternative basis. First Atlantic Bldg. Corp. v. Neubauer Constr. Co. , 352 So.2d 103 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977) ("It would be an anomaly to permit a party who breaches a contract to rely on the same contract to reimburse it for expenses, such as attorney's fees, which arose out of the breach."), cited with favor in Wisconsin Ave. Assocs. , 441 A.2d at 965, and in Singer , 779 F.2d at 71.
In reaching the conclusion that only 10% of fees should be awarded for defending against the objection to claim, I have reviewed anew and taken into account the evidence presented in the trial of the objection to claim. A principal and critical issue was whether the Note required Davenport to pay interest in advance. Only if interest had been payable in advance would Davenport have ever been in arrears and incurred the substantial late fees charged by Djourabchi and Welt. Djourabchi and Welt's position on the issue was without substantial merit, and totally unreasonable. As the court ruled in the Proof of Claim Decision , the "Note did not comply with the commercial custom and practice that prevails when a note calls for payment of interest in advance." Moreover, case law makes clear that to make interest payable in advance, the intention to do so should be expressed in unambiguous and unmistakable language. It stands to reason that a waiver of the general rule that interest is not paid in advance must be in clear and unambiguous terms. " Surely, a waiver of such magnitude must be clear and unambiguous." Eagle Maint. Servs., Inc. v. D.C. Contract Appeals Bd. , 893 A.2d 569, 577 (D.C. 2006). See also Keller v. Keller , 171 A.2d 511, 514 (D.C.Mun.App. 1961) ("If the parties intended [such] a waiver ..., it was an easy matter for them to state such intention"). Djourabchi and Welt presented as a witness an accountant, Dmitri Velin, who merely assumed based on the language of the Note that interest was payable in advance despite the Note containing no provision clearly requiring that interest be paid in advance. His testimony was baseless. He testified that he rested his assumption on the statement in the Note that "[i]nterest is calculated on a monthly basis accruing on the first calendar day of each month, at 9:00 AM, and will not be prorated for a daily calculation for any reason." That assumption was not admissible expert opinion, which the court properly disregarded as addressing a question of law the court was to decide based on the evidentiary record (for which Velin's testimony added nothing of relevance). Unlike Runge, he did not testify regarding whether ordinary custom is that absent a clear contractual provision to the contrary, interest is paid for a month after the expiration of that month to which the interest relates.
Moreover, Djourabchi and Welt's position disregarded case law indicating that to make interest payable in advance, the intention to do so should be expressed in unambiguous and unmistakable language. The Note contained no unambiguous and unmistakable language providing for interest to be paid in advance. Davenport ought not have been subjected to the argument that interest was to be paid in advance. The silence of the Note as to whether interest was to be paid in advance or in arrears did not create ambiguity. Even if the Note had been ambiguous on that score, that would not satisfy the requirement that the Note contain unambiguous and unmistakable language providing for interest to be paid in advance.
Even if an ambiguity existed and even if an ambiguity could have permitted resort to extrinsic evidence, the extrinsic evidence upon which Djourabchi and Welt relied failed to show that Davenport clearly and unambiguously waived his right to pay interest in arrears. Specifically, they relied on Davenport's having made a payment of $207 on the date of the execution of the Note , and his having made payments of $1,000 a month for many months (instead of only $700 per month) thus suggesting that he recognized he was in arrears and was required to pay the penalty of $300 when he had failed to make a payment in the month of the $700 in interest due for the month. Both items failed to support interest being paid in advance:
• Runge testified without contradiction that it is not atypical to pay in advance the interest accruing between the date of the execution of a promissory note and until the first of the succeeding month (when interest would otherwise be due). In addition, as noted in the Proof of Claim Decision at 13-14, case law confirms that an initial payment of interest in advance is not atypical.
• The reliance on the string of payments of $1,000 per month proved nothing as Davenport agreed to pay that amount each month in exchange for Djourabchi and Welt agreeing not to pursue foreclosure based on Davenport being in arrears on the first mortgage owed to Bayview. Moreover, even if Davenport could be viewed as acquiescing in Djourabchi's view that he was in arrears, that does not bar Davenport from showing that he was not in arrears.
That extrinsic evidence did not establish clearly and unambiguously that Davenport agreed to pay interest in advance. See Lacek v. Washington Hosp. Ctr. Corp. , 978 A.2d 1194, 1200 (D.C. 2009) (conduct of defendant failed to show that it "clearly and unambiguously waived its right" to pre-filing notice). Furthermore, the proof of claim rested in part on a failure to give Davenport credit for several payments he had made. This is evidenced by the payments not being included on the Opposition to the Motion to Determine Final Cure Amount (filed on July 27, 2015, in Case No. 09-00772 as Dkt. No. 320), and in their responses to discovery in this case, all as explained in Davenport's testimony regarding his painstaking verification of payments he had made but that Djourabchi and Welt failed to acknowledge (Ex. No. 31). Davenport ought not have been required to pull teeth to have Djourabchi and Welt acknowledge various payments he had made. Djourabchi compounded this offense by attempting to testify at trial that Davenport's listings of two $700 payments on Davenport's Exhibit 31 as having been made in January 2007 and April 2007 were duplicative listings because Exhibit 31 indicated that each payment had the same check number. Djourabchi's own accounting clearly verified that two payments of $700 had been made in January 2007 and April 2007. Djourabchi's testimony that one of the two $700 payments had not been made was an instance of a lack of fair dealing.
That Opposition is Ex. No. 21 in the objection to proof of claim trial. The exhibits for that trial are found at Dkt. No. 103 in this case.
I recognize that Djourabchi and Welt's failure to include the amount of prepetition defaults in their proof of claim in the 2009 case does not provide a cause of action against them. See In re Joubert , 411 F.3d 452, 456 (3d Cir. 2005).
It was obvious that Davenport's listing the same check number for both payments was an error.
Finally, in his answers to interrogatories (Ex. 25), Djourabchi conceded that a payment of $1,500 had been made on the Note in January 2007, but at trial he testified that the payment of $1,500 had been for wood joists and flooring taken out of Djourabchi and Welt's row house by Davenport who was serving as Djourabchi and Welt's general contractor in renovating the row house. Davenport testified that he agreed to perform the labor of removing the joists and flooring without charging anything in exchange for receiving the joists and flooring. I found that Davenport the more credible witness and concluded that he made the $1,500 payment as a payment on the Note .
Djourabchi stated at paragraphs 13, 21, and 23 that "on January 11, 2007, Debtor made a lump sum payment of approximately $1,500 to Creditor's account to incorporate all forms of outstanding fees due on the Note as a result of our communications regarding the accumulating late fees from the very first payment."
Under Manchester Gardens , a creditor ought not be awarded fees for attempting to protect a proof of claim for inflated amounts that did not exist as a valid claim, and for which bulk of the creditors’ evidence and arguments failed to show that the inflated amounts had any substantial merit. I will allow 10% of the fees because Djourabchi and Welt were entitled to examine Runge's approach to make sure it was correct and were entitled to verify the payments Davenport was claiming to have made.
In arguing that they should be allowed to recover fees for defending against the objection to claim, Djourabchi and Welt relied on In re Woerner , 783 F.3d at 277, as entitling them to compensation because 11 U.S.C. § 330 (dealing with compensation of estate professionals) "explicitly contemplates compensation for attorneys whose services were reasonable when rendered but which ultimately may fail to produce an actual, material benefit." However, as discussed previously, In re Woerner does not apply here. Here, Davenport was justified in taking the position that the proof of claim was vastly inflated. The bulk of the fees incurred by Djourabchi and Welt in defending the proof of claim was for work in advancing arguments that the court rejected as unreasonable and without substantial merit, with the recovery of fees subject to the standards of Manchester Gardens under District of Columbia law. The testimony of Djourabchi and Welt's accountant witness, Velin, was baseless and thus of no value, and attorney's fees for work in regard to Velin ought not be awarded under Manchester Gardens . And the fees paid to Velin ought not be recoverable. Nor under Manchester Gardens should Davenport be charged fees for attorney work on Note payments that were not genuinely in dispute. In other words, the bulk of the work ought not be compensated, and 10% of the fees is a fair amount to treat as reasonable.
Even if § 506(b) applied, the result would be the same. The fees I am disallowing are for work that a reasonable creditor would not have pursued. As previously explained, the lodestar analysis under Copeland , 641 F.2d at 891, is sufficiently flexible that it can take into account the difference between an estate professional seeking compensation from its client and a mortgagee's seeking against a mortgagor fees the mortgagee had incurred in failing to prevail on a vastly inflated claim. In that light, the standards of § 506(b) and the Johnson factors, 488 F.2d at 717-19, would warrant finding the reasonable fees are only 10% of the total fees incurred.
The fees for Aronson's work on the objection to claim, after a $400.00 writeoff, totaled $23,160.00 but the entry for $200 on March 3, 2020, included no description of the work, resulting in only $22,960 of fees with adequate description. Russell's fees totaled $17,540.50, but his fees were capped by agreement with Djourabchi and Welt at $15,000.00. The total of fees for work on the objection to claim is thus $37,960. I will allow $3,796.00 of the fees and disallow the remaining $34,164.00.
The invoices for Ridberg Aronson LLC attached as Exhibit E to Djourabchi and Welt's exhibit list (Dkt. No. 194) and received into evidence were copies of an earlier filing, Dkt. No. 137-5 but were incomplete (missing pages 4 and 5 of 24). However, I have taken judicial notice of Dkt. No. 137-5 and the two missing pages.
5. Expenses Incurred Prior to 2017
As to expenses incurred in 2015 and 2016, I will not award a recovery of the expense incurred by Joel Aronson of $1,352.40 for the foreclosure ad because the foreclosure was pursued based on a vastly inflated claim as to what was owed, such that foreclosure ought not have been pursued. I will allow the $100.00 fee Aronson paid for filing a motion for Russell to appear pro hac vice. As to Russell, I will disallow the $1,000.00 expert fee for Velin's baseless work, but allow the remaining $255.42 of expenses. In addition to expenses paid by their attorneys, Djourabchi and Welt are seeking $9,929.10 in expenses they paid in the litigation of the objection to their claim. These include $3,975.39 in expenses for their travel to depositions or court, court reporter charges (for depositions and for transcripts), and a FedEx charge. These also include $5,953.71 in expenses relating to Velin (his retainer and fee, airfares, and hotel expenses). Because Velin's testimony was baseless, I will not allow that $5,953.71. I will allow the remaining $3,975.39 in expenses. Thus, regarding fees and expenses incurred in defending against the objection to claim, I allow fees of $3,796.00 for the work of Aronson and Russell, allow expenses of $355.42 paid by Aronson and Russell, and allow expenses of $3,975.39 paid by Djourabchi and Welt directly for a total allowance of $8,126.81. I will disallow the remaining fees of $34,164.00 and the remaining expenses of $8,306.11, for a total disallowance of $42,470.11. In sum, I allow $8,126.81 in fees and expenses and disallow $42,470.11 in fees and expenses incurred with respect to litigating the objection to claim.
Aronson incurred $1,352.40 for the foreclosure ad and a $100.00 fee for filing a pro hac vice motion for Russell to appear. Russell incurred the $1,000.00 fee for Velin and $255.42 in miscellaneous expenses, and Davenport has not challenged the reasonableness of the $255.42 in miscellaneous expenses.
Russell's list of expenses he paid, like Djourabchi and Welt's list of expenses they paid, includes a payment of $1,000.00 to Velin as a retainer. I am disallowing the $1,000.00 in both instances.
6. Fees and Expenses for Work Opposing the Motion to Modify (as Opposed to Work on the Application for Fees and Expenses )
After the amount of the claim as of the petition date was decided by this court in July 2016, Davenport took steps to assure that he paid the full amount of the allowed secured claim, that is, the amount of the claim owed on the confirmation date plus postconfirmation interest of 6% per annum. He made a large payment to the Chapter 13 trustee in January 2017 to largely accomplish that and then filed the instant Motion to Modify . At that point, the law firm of McNamee, Hosea, Jernigan, Kim, Greenan & Lynch, P.A. ("McNamee Hosea") began representing Djourabchi and Welt.
Djourabchi and Welt's Supplemental Opposition both opposed the Motion to Modify and included the Application for Fees and Expenses . I address first the work opposing the Motion to Modify .
Many of the positions Djourabchi and Welt took in the Supplemental Opposition and continued to take in opposing the Motion to Modify have been rejected in large part. In February 2017, Djourabchi and Welt represented that the court indicated that under the confirmed plan the credit of $26,422.90 "could be applied either to principal or prepaid interest." Supplemental Opposition (Dkt. No. 137) at 3 (emphasis added). The court never made such a statement, and because the confirmed plan was based on 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B), it resulted in a balloon amount as of the confirmation date, to be amortized over time, with the credit available to be applied immediately on the confirmation date to reduce the balance of the allowed secured claim.
The Supplemental Opposition then went on to state: "With interest of 10.5% accruing on the principal balance of $80,000, interest accrued during the period on the case would be $8,400.00 for the first year plus an additional 80 days [of interest] totaling $1,841.10 [and] would equal $10,241.10 in interest or $6,164.00 more than was paid by the Trustee." However, the plan was confirmed only three months and a day after the petition was filed. It was obvious that once the plan was confirmed, the plan provided for interest on the allowed secured claim to be fixed and owed at only 6% per annum, and that the allowed secured claim was to be reduced as of the confirmation date by the credit of $26,422.90.
Then, in March 2017, Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys compounded these erroneous arguments by having Djourabchi and Welt's new accounting expert, Victor Lipnitsky, assume, in preparing his initial report, that trustee payments were to be applied only to interest until sufficient payments were received to satisfy the entire allowed secured claim. That was contrary to the fact that by reason of 11 U.S.C. §§ 1322(c)(2) and 1325(a)(5), the confirmed plan treats the Note as matured, with the whole allowed secured claim owed on the confirmation date was to be paid on an amortized basis beginning on the confirmation date, such that any trustee payment had to be applied to the balance of the allowed secured claim after application of the payment to interest that had accrued at 6% per annum on the allowed secured claim before the date of the trustee's payment. Lipnitsky's initial report of May 17, 2017 (Exhibit K) was based on assumptions he was asked to make by Djourabchi and Welt's counsel, which included an assumption that payments made by the Chapter 13 trustee beginning January 29, 2016, would be used to pay only interest until the claim was paid in full, with payments in excess of accrued interest to be treated as prepaid interest. Then, after the court issued its In Limine Decision , Lipnitsky prepared a revised report (Exhibit X) that erroneously treated Davenport's postconfirmation obligations to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for fees and expenses they had paid as part of the allowed secured claim being paid under the plan (disregarding the fact that the allowed secured claim is fixed based on the amount owed as of the confirmation date, and that, as noted in the In Limine Decision , Davenport had no responsibility as of the confirmation date to reimburse Djourabchi and Welt for fees that had not yet been paid), and including interest of 6% per annum on such fees and expenses as they were invoiced. Then, finally, late on the night before the trial, he prepared another calculation (Exhibit Z) that correctly excluded fees and expenses as part of the allowed secured claim, although the calculation contained certain minor errors (discussed in footnote 21, supra ).
Lipnitsky was asked to consider two scenarios and was asked to assume in Scenario A that the principal amount was $80,000 and remained $80,000 until the entire debt was paid. However, as this court has ruled, as of the confirmation date, the credit on hand of $26,422.90 had to be applied to the $80,000, reducing the allowed secured claim as of the confirmation date to $55,717.03. His Scenario B assumed that the allowed secured claim stood at $53,577.10 as of January 1, 2016, but with payments from the trustee to be applied only to interest until sufficient funds were on hand to pay the entire allowed secured claim and accrued postconfirmation interest.
On June 30, 2017, Davenport filed his Motion in Limine Regarding Interpretation of Court's Orders and Application of Payments Made on Account of Creditors’ Claim , noting the erroneous assumptions that Lipnitsky had been asked to make regarding trustee's payments not being applied to principal until the entire debt was paid. On July 14, 2017, Djourabchi and Welt filed a Response to Motions in Limine . The third part of that initial opposition was titled "The Note Provides that Debtor's Prepayments Are Not to Be Applied to Principal" and failed to acknowledge that Lipnitsky's assumptions were in error in assuming that the credit of $26,422.90, would not be applied to the allowed secured claim as of the confirmation date and that payments from the trustee, after satisfying outstanding interest at 6% per annum, would be applied to the balance of the allowed secured claim. However, Djourabchi and Welt were correct that the $26,422.90 credit was not to be applied as of the petition date instead of the confirmation date.
On July 21, 2017, Djourabchi and Welt filed a Supplement to Response to Motions in Limine , which in its entirety argued that after the plan was confirmed, calling for payment of the allowed secured claim in equal monthly payments, the payments could not be applied to principal until the entire debt was paid. Plainly, as I had ruled at the confirmation hearing, 11 U.S.C. § 1322(c)(2) permitted the claim to be modified pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1325(a)(5)(B), a modification that resulted in an allowed secured claim that was to be amortized over time in equal monthly payments with an interest rate of 6% on the allowed secured claim assuring present value. Djourabchi and Welt's argument to the contrary was without substantial merit, and a case of overzealousness, an argument that a similarly situated creditor could not reasonably conclude should be taken. The fees for pursuing that argument ought not be recoverable under Manchester Gardens (and even under the standards of § 506(b) if I were to apply those standards).
Most of the fees incurred in opposing the Motion to Modify (to be distinguished from fees incurred in pursuing the Application for Fees and Expenses ) ought not be awarded. The Motion to Modify is being granted, with Davenport prevailing on the bulk of his approach as to what remained owed under the confirmed plan, and with the bulk of Djourabchi and Welt's positions in that regard lacking substantial merit and being arguments that a reasonable creditor would not have pursued. Some of the issues regarding the Motion to Modify required resolution, but under Manchester Gardens , 205 F.2d at 878, Davenport ought not suffer a recovery of fees in regard to the Motion to Modify that are "so large as to amount to an undue penalty for taking one's grievance to the courts." And even if there were any doubtful questions of law to be resolved, which I think there were not, Davenport "should bear only a fair portion of the burden" that Djourabchi and Welt incurred in having attorneys represent them on the Motion to Modify . Manchester Gardens , 205 F.2d at 878. Djourabchi and Welt are entitled to a modest amount of fees and expenses in two regards. First, they verified the calculations Runge performed and corrected one of his erroneous assumptions, which led to a mistake of $325.70, the difference between the overpayment of $228.00 calculated by Runge, and the $97.70 shortfall as of January 31, 2017, that I have calculated. In contrast, the court rejected the approaches that Djourabchi and Welt's expert, Lipnitsky, had taken (prior to his making revisions late on the night before the trial). As discussed previously, that $325.70 variance is clearly insufficient to alter the propriety of granting the Motion to Modify . Djourabchi and Welt's success of $325.70, which did not suffice to warrant denying the Motion to Modify , hardly warrants an award of any significant part of their fees. Second, Djourabchi and Welt are entitled to a modest amount of fees for opposing Davenport's suggestion that the $26,422.90 credit should be applied as of the petition date. Based on their paltry level of overall success in opposing modification of the plan, I will allow 20% of their fees opposing the Motion to Modify .
Illustratively, time entries for May 1, 2017, through May 8, 2017, of $20, $550, $200, $150, $200, $227.50, and $100 appear to have been for working with Lipnitsky and reviewing his calculations under the erroneous assumptions supplied by Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys. That $1,447.50 of fees (attributable to erroneous assumptions that ought not have been advanced) ought not be charged to Davenport.
What makes things difficult is that it is hard to split up the time spent on opposing the Motion to Modify (determining the amount owed as of confirmation, and whether it had been paid in full) and the time spent on the pursuit of fees and expenses incurred. Djourabchi and Welt placed in evidence various invoice statements issued by McNamee Hosea, the law firm representing them in all of the litigation commencing in early 2017 regarding the Motion to Modify and the Application for Fees and Expenses . Sometimes it is fairly easy to categorize work between the two categories. For example:
• Work with Djourabchi and Welt's expert, Lipnitsky, clearly relates to the Motion to Modify.
• Work on the Supplement to Response to Motions in Limine filed on July 21, 2017, which entirely raised an argument that the plan did not call for amortizing payments, clearly relates to the Motion to Modify .
However, other work is largely not easy to categorize. Bearing in mind that Djourabchi and Welt bore the burden of proof, I estimate that as to the work reflected on McNamee Hosea invoices (which do not include work at the trial), 25% was devoted to the Motion to Modify (including time dealing with addressing the two experts in that regard, Runge and Lipnitsky, and working with the Chapter 13 trustee as to her calculations), and 75% was devoted to the issue of establishing an entitlement to attorney's fees and expenses (including work addressing Davenport's challenges based on res judicata, tender, Rule 3002.1, and equitable estoppel). The McNamee Hosea fees for invoices in evidence through the statement for February 13, 2018, aggregate $26,215.87. Djourabchi and Welt have not yet sought fees for periods after February 13, 2018. Of the $26,215.87 invoiced through February 13, 2018, 25% or $6,553.97 is estimated to be for work devoted to the Motion to Modify . Of that, the 20% to be allowed is $1,310.79.
The Statement and Notice of Post-Petition Fees and Expenses Incurred filed on the Claims Register on November 13, 2017, listed (but did not attach) two invoices that were not received as evidence as part of Exhibits M and N: the statement for 8/31/2017 allegedly showing expenses of $24.32 and the statement of 09/30/2017 allegedly showing fees of $422.50 and expenses of $5.60. Without the invoices being in evidence, those amounts cannot be allowed. The aggregate $26,215.87 fee figure and the aggregate $374.44 expense figure, which are based on invoices in evidence, do not include the amounts listed on the statements dated as of 08/31/2017 and 09/30/2017.
Expenses billed by McNamee Hosea through February 13, 2018, total $374.44, and 25% will be allocated to the work on the Motion to Modify , which comes to $93.61, and 100% of those expenses will be allowed. The expenses do not relate to any fee to be charged by Lipnitsky (whose work, except late on the night before the trial, was based on erroneous assumptions supplied by Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys, and his fee likely would suffer a lower percentage).
7. Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses for Work Seeking Fees
The Application for Fees and Expenses sought recovery of the full amount of fees charged by Aronson and by Russell, claiming that $52,803.00 in fees and $9,929.10 in expenses were incurred, and also noted that fees of McNamee Hosea would be incurred in seeking to recover fees. As noted above, the bulk of the $52,803.00 of fees for work of Aronson and of Russell ought not be recovered. As to fees charged by McNamee Hosea for working on the Motion to Modify , only 20% are being allowed as reimbursable by Davenport. That leaves the fees incurred in pursuing the recovery of fees.
In determining what were the reasonable fees for pursuing the Application for Fees and Expenses , I take into account, on the one hand, that I disallowed the bulk of the fees charged by Aronson's and Russell's law firms as unreasonable and I have disallowed all but 20% of the fees for opposing the Motion to Modify . In other words, Davenport had a substantial overall success in opposing the pursuit of those fees. On the other hand, however, Djourabchi and Welt succeeded in defending against Davenport's unsuccessful arguments that fees were barred in toto . Accordingly, in the exercise of my discretion under HRGM Corp. , 147 A.3d at 346, and Manchester Gardens , 205 F.2d at 877-78, in awarding reimbursement for fees paid in pursuing reimbursement of prior fees incurred, I will treat 50% of Djourabchi and Welt's payment of fees incurred in pursuing the Application for Fees and Expenses as subject to a reimbursement obligation on the part of Davenport (owed by Davenport upon his being given notice of the fees having been paid).
For example, they successfully defended against the Motion In Limine Prohibiting Creditors From Claiming Entitlement to Attorney's Fees (seeking to bar attorneys fees in toto ). Their attorneys performed $2,608.00 of work relating to their July 14, 2017, filing in opposition to that Motion in Limine .
The fees billed by McNamee Hosea through February 13, 2018, total $26,215.87. Twenty-five percent of those fees are being treated as allocable to work on the Motion to Modify . The remaining 75% equals $19,661.90. Of that, 50% is $9,830.95.
McNamee Hosea billed expenses of $374.44. I have already treated 25% ($93.61) as allocable to the Motion to Modify and will allow those expenses. I will treat the remaining $280.83 as allocable to the Application for Fees and Expenses , and allow that $280.83.
These expenses are mostly for PACER charges, copying, and FedEx charges. The expert fees of Lipnitsky and Katz have not been billed and may not be recoverable in full. For example, Lipnitsky, through no fault of his own, largely performed work based on erroneous assumptions supplied by Djourabchi and Welt's attorneys, and that may warrant a reduction of the amount of fees paid him and for which reimbursement may be sought.
Separate and apart from expenses, Djourabchi and Welt seek to recover interest of $57.51 on a past balance charged by MacNamee Hosea on July 31, 2017. It would be unreasonable for Djourabchi and Welt to recover interest from Davenport for their own negligence in paying their own bills.
V
WHEN FEES BECAME REIMBURSABLE
Fees and expenses became reimbursable by Davenport only once Djourabchi and Welt paid the fees and expenses and gave Davenport notice. Section 15 of the Deed of Trust governed notice, and generally required that notices to Davenport be sent to the Property address. However, once the bankruptcy case was filed, with Orenstein representing Davenport, McNamee Hosea's communications with Davenport ought to have been through Orenstein.
Djourabchi and Welt's Application for Fees and Expenses , which included Aronson's and Russell's invoices for fees and expenses and included a list of expenses paid directly by Djourabchi and Welt, and showed payments of such fees and expenses that they had made. Davenport did not object that if the paid fees and expenses were reasonable, he had not been given proper notice of their payment. I will treat the Application as notice in compliance with the Deed of Trust of those payments and as requesting reimbursement. Similarly, I will treat other invoices submitted as trial exhibits as giving notice of fees and expenses paid pursuant to those invoices and as requesting reimbursement.
To elaborate, the only exhibits in evidence reflecting notice are, first, the invoices issued to Djourabchi and Welt for Aronson's firm and Russell's firm and disclosed by way of their being attached to the Application for Fees and Expenses (Dkt. No. 137) filed on February 22, 2017, seeking the recovery of fees and expenses paid to those two firms and, second, the invoices issued to Djourabchi and Welt by McNamee Hosea that were received into evidence. The first part of the McNamee Hosea statements received into evidence (ending with the statement as of December 31, 2017) was disclosed by way of Djourabchi and Welt's pretrial statement filed on February 1, 2018, which listed as an Exhibit M "Invoices for services by McNamee, Hosea, Jernigan, Kim, Greenan & Lynch, P.A. through January 2018 (January invoice to be provided when generated)." February 1, 2018, was the deadline for exchanging listed exhibits. A fair assumption is that as of February 1, 2018, the first part of the McNamee Hosea statements eventually received into evidence, those ending with the statement as of December 31, 2018, had been provided to Davenport's counsel. The final McNamee Hosea statement received into evidence was the statement dated February 13, 2018, and a fair assumption is that this was provided to Davenport's counsel on or before the pretrial conference on February 22, 2018. Accordingly, I will treat Davenport as having been given notice of the first set of McNamee Hosea statements on February 1, 2018, and notice of the final McNamee Hosea statement on February 22, 2018. For purposes of interest accruals on fees and expenses paid, it is necessary to make an allocation of allowed fees and expenses between the first invoices and the last invoice. I allocate $9,891.61 to the first invoices and $1,624.57 to the final invoice of February 13, 2018.
At trial, Exhibit M included the McNamee Hosea statement as of February 28, 2017. Exhibit N included the rest of the McNamee Hosea statements. It is apparent that the February 28, 2017 statement should have been part of Exhibit N but inadvertently was included as part of Exhibit M.
The McNamee Hosea statement as of February 13, 2018, was for $3,822.50 in fees and no expenses. Of that $3,822.50 in fees, 25% is treated as relating to the Motion to Modify with 20% being allowed, i.e. , $191.13, and the remaining 75% is treated as related to the Application for Fees and Expenses with 50% being allowed, i.e. , $1,433.44. So of the $11,516.18 total of recoverable fees and expenses, $1,624.57 (the sum of $191.13 and $1,433.44) is treated as the recoverable amount attributable to the statement as of February 13, 2018. The $9,891.61 balance of the $11,516.18 is treated as attributable to the prior invoices.
To recapitulate, as to attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred before February 13, 2018, the following are amounts for which Davenport has a reimbursement responsibility based on being given notice of their payment:
General work of Aronson | $3,080.00 |
Aronson and Russell's work on objection to claim | $3,796.00 |
Aronson's payment of pro hac vice fee | $100.00 |
Russell's expenses | $255.42 |
Expenses Djourabchi and Welt paid directly | $3,975.39 |
Work of McNamee Hosea on Motion to Modify | $1,310.79 |
Expenses of McNamee Hosea | $374.44 |
Work of McNamee Hosea on Application for Fees and Expenses | $9,830.95 |
Djourabchi and Welt are not entitled to reimbursement for any of the other fees for work performed prior to February 13, 2018, or for expenses paid prior to February 13, 2018, the date of the last McNamee Hosea invoice in evidence. This Memorandum Decision does not address fees for work performed after February 13, 2018, or expenses paid after that date.
Djourabchi and Welt made the following payments of allowed fees and expenses and gave notice to Davenport of the payments of allowed fees as follows:
[Editor's Note : The preceding image contains the references for footnotes , , , ] Accordingly, Davenport incurred a reimbursement obligation of $11,206.81 as of February 22, 2017; a reimbursement obligation of $9,891.61 as of February 1, 2018; and a reimbursement obligation of $1,624.57 as of February 22, 2018.
This is the sum of the $3,080.00 for general work performed by Aronson; $3,796.00 for the work Aronson and Russell performed regarding the objection to claim; and $355.42 of expenses.
Prior to February 22, 2017, a total of $10,000 had been paid to Aronson's law firm and $10,824.50 had been paid to Russell's law firm.
See footnote 70, supra , regarding allocating allowed fees and expenses between the last invoice and the prior invoices.
Payments of fees through December 31, 2017, totaled $22,904.49 ($22,962.00 of total payments of which $57.51 was applied to interest charged on a past due balance).
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VI
INTEREST ACCRUAL ON ATTORNEY'S FEES AND EXPENSES
What interest has accrued on the attorney's fees and expenses? Section 9 of the Deed of Trust provides:
Any amounts disbursed by Lender under this Section 9 shall become additional debt of Borrower secured by this Security Instrument. These amounts shall bear interest at the Note rate from the date of disbursement and shall be payable, with such interest, upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting payment.
Accordingly, under the Deed of Trust interest will be calculated from the date of disbursement, but with notice to Davenport being a condition precedent to his being liable for reimbursing Djourabchi and Welt, such that (as explored in more detail below) he ought not be responsible for interest until he was given notice.
Interest accrues on the disbursements "at the Note rate." The confirmation of the plan did not alter that interest on postconfirmation obligations, and, accordingly, interest continues to accrue at the Note rate of 10.5% per annum. Although section 9 of the Deed of Trust says that interest runs from the date of disbursement, Djourabchi and Welt were required by section 9 to give notice to Davenport requesting payment of the expenses. Interest should only run upon Davenport's being given notice. If, for example, Djourabchi and Welt delayed for ten months to give Davenport notice of a disbursement, they ought not be entitled to collect interest at 10.5% per annum for the ten months after disbursement and preceding Davenport being given notice.
This follows because in every contract there exists an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and a party ought not engage in "interfering with the other party's performance." Hais v. Smith , 547 A.2d 986, 987–88 (D.C. 1988). This implied covenant excludes a variety of types of conduct characterized as involving "bad faith" because they violate standards of decency, fairness or reasonableness. Allworth v. Howard Univ. , 890 A.2d 194, 201–02 (D.C. 2006). There is an implied covenant in each contract that the parties will "extend reasonable cooperation" in clearing the way for performance. Horlick v. Wright , 104 A.2d 825, 827 (D.C.Mun.App. 1954). See also Aronoff v. Lenkin Co. , 618 A.2d 669, 682 (D.C. 1992). In other words, a party to a contract may be excused from full performance when the other party has failed to perform the essential condition precedent. See Minmar Builders, Inc. v. Beltway Excavators, Inc ., 246 A.2d 784, 788 (D.C.App. 1968).
Here, Djourabchi and Welt's giving the required notice requesting reimbursement of an expense was a condition precedent to Davenport's obligation to make a reimbursement payment of the expense and interest thereon. Davenport's full performance as to paying interest ought not apply when notice was a condition precedent to his being obligated to reimburse for the expense. Delay in giving notice would hinder Davenport in his reimbursing Djourabchi and Welt for the disbursement and in avoiding any substantial interest on the amount he was obligated to disburse. It would be unreasonable for Djourabchi and Welt to charge interest from the date of disbursement instead of the date of notice to Davenport. Djourabchi and Welt had not amended their proof of claim to list fees paid (versus fees incurred but not yet paid ), or filed a request for allowance of fees until, on February 22, 2017, they filed their Application for Fees and Expenses (Dkt. No. 137), which included the application for fees paid for Aronson's and Russell's work (plus fees that might be paid to McNamee Hosea). Accordingly, interest is only due from the dates set forth in the table above of February 22, 2017 (for allowed amounts of $7,231.42 and $3,975.39); February 1, 2018 (for an allowed amount of $10,082.74); and February 13, 2018 (for $1,433.44).
VII
FEES AND EXPENSES INVOICED AFTER FEBRUARY 13, 2018, AND FEES AND EXPENSES INCURRED IN THE DISTRICT COURT LITIGATION
In two regards, the court has not determined the extent of Davenport's obligation to reimburse for fees and expenses incurred by Djourabchi and Welt. First, the trial of the Motion to Modify addressed only the fees and expenses incurred by Djourabchi and Welt as of February 13, 2020, the date of the last McNamee Hosea invoice prior to the commencement of trial on February 27, 2020. Second, the court has found it premature to decide whether Djourabchi and Welt will be entitled to be reimbursed for payment of attorney's fees and expenses incurred in the District Court litigation. Accordingly, this decision does not decide the question of the extent of any reimbursement obligation with respect to those two sets of fees and expenses.
With the confirmed plan presumably being concluded, there is no reason for this court to retain jurisdiction over that question of Davenport's potential obligation to reimburse for any fees and expenses incurred after February 13, 2018, or incurred with respect to the District Court litigation. The court will abstain from addressing that question. Obviously the abstention as to that question does not constitute an adjudication of the question. This Memorandum Decision does not decide that question but it may arguably have collateral estoppel effect (an issue not addressed herein) and may have precedential value.
VIII
CONCLUSION
Appropriate orders follow.