BRIAN M. COGAN, District Judge.
Schafer and Weiner, PLLC ("S&W"), former counsel to Platinum and Bart Schwartz, the initial court-appointed receiver in this matter, moves for reimbursement of attorneys' fees and expenses. The receiver opposes the motion and cross-moves for disgorgement of fees previously paid to S&W. The SEC joins the receiver's opposition and cross-motion.
For the reasons below, S&W's motion is denied, and the Court will defer judgment on the receiver's cross-motion.
S&W describes itself as a "boutique bankruptcy and commercial litigation firm comprised of eleven attorneys in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan." Its attorneys have "extensive experience representing debtors and creditors alike in Chapter 11 proceedings across many sectors and industries, and have assisted clients in a wide variety of secured transactions."
Platinum originally retained S&W in August 2015 — prior to the receivership — in connection with a $16,000,000 loan that Platinum advanced to Arabella Exploration, Inc. ("AEI").
AEI defaulted on the Arabella loan after making two payments. Shortly after AEI's default, a related company, Arabella Petroleum Company, LLC ("APC"), filed for Chapter 11 relief. APC's bankruptcy trustee commenced an adversary proceeding against Platinum and other Arabella entities alleging that transfers of those oil and gas interests from APC to AEX and AO were fraudulent and Platinum knew or should have known that based on its due diligence performed in connection with the Arabella loan. Platinum retained S&W to represent its interests in connection with the default and the adversary proceeding.
Over the course of this representation, Platinum began to face liquidity problems, and S&W was concerned that Platinum would not be able to pay its accrued legal fees. In light of this concern, Platinum signed a guaranty in July 2016 in which it "absolutely and unconditionally guarantee[d] full and punctual payment and satisfaction of the Professionals' fees and expenses related to any work performed by the Professionals in connection with" the Arabella loan.
In November 2016, Founders Oil and Gas III, LLC claimed that AEX owed millions of dollars in connection with the oil and gas interests securing the guarantees to the Arabella loan, and threatened to foreclose on those liens. S&W believed this claim could eliminate Platinum's security interests in those assets. S&W suggested that Platinum give AEX $400,000 so it could file for bankruptcy and prevent Founders (and the APC trustee) from taking action against the oil and gas interests. Platinum declined, but advised AEX and S&W that it could find an independent third party to buy a participation in the proceeds of the Arabella loan and provide that money to AEX to fund the bankruptcies.
AEX identified a third-party participant in December 2016 — Craig Bush of 30294, LLC. AEX and the participant negotiated a purchase price (without S&W's help). S&W, AEX, and the participant then drafted a participation agreement, which incorporated the previously negotiated purchase price. Under the terms of the participation agreement, the participant purchased 45% of Platinum's interest in the proceeds of the Arabella loan in exchange for a cash payment of $500,000. Platinum agreed that this $500,000 would be "used exclusively to fund professional fees," and authorized the funds to be disbursed into a trust account held by S&W.
The former receiver was appointed on December 19, 2016, when the SEC commenced the instant action. S&W encouraged the former receiver to enter into the participation agreement to protect the value of the Arabella assets. Bob Rittereiser at Guidepost (the former receiver's consulting firm) signed the participation agreement on behalf of the former receiver on December 28, 2016, but S&W was instructed to hold the signature in escrow while an unrelated question of approval was answered. S&W was permitted to release the signature on January 5, 2017.
On the same day the participation agreement went into effect, APC sent AEX notice of its purported tag-along rights in the oil and gas interests securing the guarantees on the Arabella loan, which would allow APC to take a pro rata share of any sale of those interests. In March 2017, S&W participated in a two-day thirty-person mediation during which APC's claims to the tag-along rights were resolved by a settlement agreement that this Court approved. S&W argues that this settlement avoided years of costly litigation, because APC was the record owner of the tag-along rights, and any interests AEX had in them were received through unrecorded transfers from APC.
Ultimately, S&W claims that it "represented the Initial Receiver's interests in the bankruptcies of [AEX and AO] and exerted heavy influence and leverage on behalf of the Initial Receiver to ensure that Platinum's first priority interest in the [oil and gas interests] was preserved and to remove all obstacles to a sale of [those interests]." As a result, these oil and gas interests "will yield several million dollars for the Receivership Entities."
On May 29, 2017, the former receiver and the SEC together informed the Court that they disagreed on the direction of the receivership, including with respect to S&W. Specifically, the SEC was concerned about the potential conflicted nature of the participation agreement,
Nevertheless, S&W submitted a fee application for the period of December 19, 2016 to June 13, 2017, which both the receiver and the SEC oppose.
Generally, "[a] receiver appointed by a court "who reasonably and diligently discharges his duties is entitled to be fairly compensated for services rendered and expenses incurred."
A court can consider several different factors in determining a reasonable fee. These factors include (1) "the complexity of problems faced," (2) "the benefits to the receivership estate," (3) the quality of the work performed," and (4) "the time records presented."
Finally — and noteworthy in this instance — "in a securities receivership, `[o]pposition or acquiescence by the SEC to the fee application will be given great weight.'"
The former receiver was authorized to retain professionals to assist him in carrying out his duties as receiver. Before he could retain anyone, however, he first had to obtain an order from this Court authorizing the engagement. The former receiver never obtained approval to hire S&W. The receiver and the SEC argue that this should bar S&W from receiving any compensation at all.
S&W provides an alternative reading of the order appointing the receiver in an effort to avoid this point.
S&W is a sophisticated actor. Moreover, it is experienced in the field of receivership and bankruptcy practice. S&W should not claim that its convoluted interpretation is "obvious" from the clear and unambiguous language of the receiver order. S&W understood — as the emails it attaches in support of its fee application demonstrate
S&W also argues that the former receiver "had not yet engaged a single professional under the First Receiver Order at the time the SEC demanded, months into the receivership . . . that the Initial Receiver terminate S&W's services" — meaning that the Court should not view its lack of retention as anomalous. A quick look at the docket shows that S&W is wrong again. On January 31, 2017, the former receiver applied to retain as professionals Guidepost Solutions LLC and Cooley LLP, and those applications were approved on February 17, 2017. On March 22, 2017, the former receiver sought to retain PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as a limited professional, and the next day sought to retain Houlihan Lokey Financial Advisors, Inc. as a valuation and investment banking advisory firm. This is simply another frivolous argument made in S&W's final attempt at payment.
Ultimately, prior court approval was a prerequisite to becoming a retained professional entitled to reasonable compensation. This could not possibly have been news to S&W. By way of parallel to bankruptcy practice, the Second Circuit has articulated a per se rule that "forbids allowing compensation to any professional for services rendered prior to the attorney's retention by an order of the bankruptcy court."
There are two reasons for this per se rule — first, "it discourages volunteer services," and second, "it enables the court to review attorneys' potentially disqualifying conflicts or relationships `unaffected by the emotional pressure which inevitably arises in their favor after the services have been rendered.'"
There is no meaningful distinction between a bankruptcy and this receivership that would compel a different result in this case. The authority for the per se rule in bankruptcy practice is statutory,
S&W took this representation at its own risk; it could have said no and walked away, or it could have demanded that the former receiver file a retention application before it performed any additional work on behalf of the receivership estate. The chaos at the time of the commencement of the receivership is no excuse, as that is often the case in the commencement of significant insolvency proceedings.
The receiver and the SEC also seek disgorgement of pre-receivership fees that S&W has previously received. This motion is premised on claims that S&W had an impermissible conflict of interest, and that S&W provided the former receiver with incorrect legal advice, both in connection with the participation agreement discussed above. However, I conclude that these would be best determined in another context.
The receiver indicated in her opposition that she "intends to file a declaratory judgment action in the short term seeking a declaration that the Purported Participation Agreement is void ab initio because, among other things, it required approval of this Court, and because, it gave rise to a conflict of interest between S&W and its client, the Receiver."
S&W, on the other hand, argues that the receiver is estopped from litigating this issue because the Arabella bankruptcy court has already heard and determined it in the context of a claims transfer notice filed in the bankruptcy case. S&W is wrong. The Arabella bankruptcy court did not reach the merits of the issues inherent in the receiver's cross-motion for disgorgement of fees — specifically, whether the payment to S&W constitutes an ordinary course transaction (rather than entering into a participation agreement generally), and whether S&W operated with an impermissible conflict of interest when it advised the former receiver to enter into the participation agreement under the circumstances of a receivership. Instead, the bankruptcy court determined (1) that the receiver waived any claim that the bankruptcy action was stayed by the order entered in this case, (2) that the former receiver had the authority to enter into the participation agreement pursuant to his powers as outlined in the receiver order (that is, he had the authority to sell all or any part of Platinum's interest in the Arabella loan), and (3) that the participation agreement did not amount to an assignment of claims to the participant. In other words, the bankruptcy court found that it had jurisdiction to determine who held the claim at issue — Platinum or the third-party participant. It specifically declined to address any issues of impropriety connected with the participation agreement. Moreover, the bankruptcy court acknowledged that this Court remains free to disregard its decision as violative of the terms of the receiver order.
Either way, any argument that S&W is not entitled to the pre-receivership fees that it has already received must be made in connection with full briefing and, if necessary, an evidentiary hearing on the merits of these issues. The Court will thus defer any ruling on the receiver's cross-motion for disgorgement of fees until the receiver seeks a declaratory judgment in connection with the participation agreement.
S&W's [326] motion for attorneys' fees and expenses is DENIED.