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Bankruptcy Lawyers Bill Illegally, Says New Study

Zach Lowe

The American Lawyer

May 07, 2009

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In the past few weeks, we've all marveled at the huge amounts Jones Day, Schulte Roth & Zabel and Weil, Gotshal & Manges have billed in the country's two most-watched Chapter 11 cases (Chrysler for Jones and Schulte, Lehman Brothers for Weil). But we have to admit we haven't stopped to ponder: Are those fees illegal?

According to a new study co-authored by UCLA bankruptcy law professor Lynn LoPucki (hat tip: the Wall Street Journal's Law Blog), the answer might be yes. LoPucki and his co-author, fellow UCLA prof Joseph Doherty, essentially argue that bankruptcy judges allow lawyers to bill their debtor clients for months at a time before submitting those billing statements to the judge for approval, according to Bloomberg. That goes against the federal bankruptcy code, the study argues, and it has allowed legal fees to increase faster than inflation rates. Judges in theory have the option of objecting to those bills and demanding law firms pay back some of the money, but "payments are harder to reverse than to prevent," the study says.

Nancy Rapoport, a law professor at UNLV, told Bloomberg that judges approve the fees without thorough scrutiny "because they are overwhelmed, especially in the big cases." She told Bloomberg she agrees with LoPucki "that the foxes are guarding the henhouse, because lawyers don't want to challenge other lawyers' fees."

One of the titans of the bankruptcy bar did not let the study stand unchallenged. Martin Bienenstock of Dewey & LeBoeuf told Bloomberg that LoPucki "is wrong conceptually and legally," and that "the legislative intent of the Bankruptcy Code's fee provisions is that bankruptcy lawyers should be compensated" promptly. He explained that in many bankruptcy courts, lawyers submit monthly invoices to the debtor, which then pays the invoice amount as long as the U.S. trustee does not object to it, according to Bloomberg. The judges review the payments every three or four months, Bienenstock says. The system is set up to "avoid judges spending time on fee hearings every month."

READERS: Who's right? LoPucki or Bienenstock?

This article first appeared on The Am Law Daily blog on AmericanLawyer.com.

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