RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.
The threshold issue here, and perhaps the only issue, is when does a retainer become the attorney's money instead of the client's. This matter comes before the Court on the Chapter 7
Based on the following analysis, the Court finds and concludes that the pre-petition retainers paid to JSS and Wright were paid from pre-petition property of the Debtor, and to the extent that such property had not been applied pre-petition for services rendered pre-petition, the retainers became property of the bankruptcy estate once the voluntary petition was filed. Both JSS and Wright remained employed as professionals of the post-petition Chapter 7 Debtor, but neither was ever employed by the Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate. The retainers retained their character
Pre-petition, Debtor, David Glimcher, employed the professional services of JSS to represent and advise him, and to possibly act as Debtor's counsel if a bankruptcy petition might eventually need to be filed. In connection with this representation, Glimcher signed a retention letter and paid a pre-petition retainer of $40,000.00.
Prior to the bankruptcy petition being filed, JSS received an additional $119,000.00. On May 25, 2011, JSS received a wire transfer from Wiz Holdings, LLC
Wright Tax Solutions apparently received $89,000 in cash (actual dollar bills) from David Glimcher on May 20, 2011.
Trustee filed a Motion to Compel Turnover seeking return of the pre-petition retainers paid by the Debtor to JSS and to Wright Tax Solutions.
JSS filed a response to the motion, and argues that the retainer it received was not property of the bankruptcy estate because what JSS received was an "advance payment retainer." Further, JSS argues that even if the retainer were property of the bankruptcy estate, it should nevertheless be entitled to offset its fees against the retainer because JSS performed services at the Trustee's request that benefitted the bankruptcy estate. JSS argues that the pre-petition retainers received by JSS were from three different sources and the funds were all commingled in JSS's client trust account. The retainers were commingled and the funds are not susceptible to tracing; as such, the Trustee cannot identify if the "balance" remaining constitutes funds from the Debtor or the non-Debtor entities.
Wright Tax Solutions did not file a response to the motion and did not appear at the hearing held on April 23, 2012. At that hearing, Ms. Johnsen specifically stated that she did not officially represent Wright at that time, but Ms. Johnsen stated
First, there are basically two types of retainers: retainers that are earned upon receipt, and retainers that are held to secure payment of future legal fees. Of the retainers that are earned upon receipt, there is the classic non-refundable retainer and there is the advance payment, which is sometimes called a "flat fee retainer." Provided the overall fee is reasonable, it is ethically permissible under the Arizona Rules of Professional Conduct
The retainer that is held by the attorney to secure payment of future legal fees, sometimes called a "security retainer," is different from an earned-upon-receipt retainer because the money remains property of the client, even if it is held by the attorney.
Jennings Strouss contends that its retainer was an "advance payment retainer," a rather ambiguous and uninformative label because all retainers are advance payments of some kind. The Jennings Strouss' position is clarified by the declaration of attorney Carolyn Johnsen, who declared under penalty of perjury that "It was my intention that the Retainer would be an advance payment retainer for fees and that the Debtor would not retain an interest in it." If the Debtor was to have no interest in the retainer immediately on its payment, this would necessarily imply the retainer was fully earned upon receipt and immediately became the law firm's money.
But the firm's position is belied by the terms of the retainer agreement itself, which does not describe an earned-upon-receipt retainer. To the contrary, the retainer states: "Our fees will be based primarily on the [hourly] billing rate for each attorney and legal assistant devoting time to this matter." That unmistakably implies that the fees were neither determined nor earned immediately upon payment of the retainer, but to the contrary would be determined and earned only as the hours are worked. This is confirmed by the provision that additional retainers could be required in the event more hours needed to be worked: "In the event it becomes necessary to proceed with a bankruptcy filing, it will be necessary to provide an additional $110,000. We will have the right to request additional advances from time to time based on our estimates of future work to be undertaken."
The retainer agreement also makes clear that the funds remained the client's trust funds until the hours were worked, the fees were billed and the retainer applied to such invoices:
Those provisions are dispositive and determinative that the retainer remained the client's money until future work was performed and billed, and the retainer applied. Moreover, there would be serious ethical problems with Ms. Johnsen's position that the retainer was earned upon receipt and the client retained no interest in the funds.
First, Arizona Ethics Opinion 99-02
Second, if the retainer were earned upon receipt, then both Arizona Ethical Rule 1.5(b) and Arizona Ethics Opinion 99-02 require that the basis or rate of that fee must be communicated in writing to the client. Nothing in the Glimcher retainer agreement explains how Jennings Strouss could have been deemed to have earned a flat-fee in the amount of the retainer even before the work was done. It does not, for example, explain that the retainer is nonrefundable because the representation would require the firm to decline other work due to conflicts or time commitments.
Third, the retainer agreement expressly provided that the funds would be placed in the Jennings Strouss client trust account, as in fact they were. This would be an ethical violation if the funds in fact belonged to Jennings Strouss, because that would mean that the firm's own money was being commingled with clients' trust funds. This is made clear by both Arizona Ethical Rule 1.15(a)
As Arizona Ethics Opinion 99-02 provides, "[T]he client's agreement with the lawyer determines whether prepaid funds are earned on receipt—and therefore the property of the lawyer—as opposed to an advance against future fees that must be held in trust." Here, the client's agreement with the lawyer unmistakably determined that the prepaid funds were not earned on receipt, and were therefore an advance against future fees that remained the client's property.
As suggested above, this threshold determination that the retainer was a security retainer rather than an earned upon receipt fee is also effectively the dispositive determination, at least when that conclusion is considered in the context of governing Supreme Court precedents such as Whiting Pools
This case is on all fours with the holding and analysis in Blackburn:
Most of Jennings Strouss' response consists of arguments and facts to the effect that Jennings Strouss rendered substantial services post-petition, that the services benefitted the estate and were often specifically requested by the Trustee, and that its fees for these services were reasonable, especially in light of the complexity of the estate. While the Trustee does not dispute the reasonableness of the fees for the work performed, he responds that he never employed Jennings Strouss, and that requests for the Debtor to provide information were made to Debtor's counsel only because that was ethically required when the request came from Trustee's counsel, Mr. Dake.
Lamie does not recognize an uncodified quantum meruit exception. Nor does it recognize a so-called "retainer exception" that is applicable to security retainers. The language of the Lamie opinion that is the alleged source of the "retainer exception"—"Section 330(a)(1) does not prevent a debtor from engaging counsel before a Chapter 7 conversion and paying reasonable compensation in advance to ensure that the filing is in order."—clearly refers to an earned-upon-receipt flat fee payment, rather than a security retainer. This was the clear analysis and holding in Blackburn and the numerous authorities cited therein.
For these reasons, the Trustee's motion for turnover must be granted. Because the Wright retainer was no different in form from the Jennings Strouss retainer and no different argument or defense was raised on its behalf, the Trustee's motion must be granted as to both Jennings Strouss and Wright. Trustee's counsel is
Rule 42 is then divided into individually numbered ethical rules, with accompanying comments to the rules. These rules are hereafter cited as "Arizona Ethical Rule," "Ethical Rule," or "ER."