John Mashburn v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Oklahoma ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                        FILED
    U.S. Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    of the Tenth Circuit
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION ∗
    January 30, 2020
    Blaine F. Bates
    UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL                                Clerk
    OF THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    _________________________________
    IN RE RAPHAEL GLAPION,                                 BAP No. WO-19-030
    Debtor.
    __________________________________
    RAPHAEL GLAPION,                                       Bankr. No. 18-14920
    Chapter 7
    Appellant,
    v.
    OPINION
    JOHN D. MASHBURN, Chapter 7
    Trustee,
    Appellee.
    _________________________________
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    for the Western District of Oklahoma
    _________________________________
    Submitted on the briefs. **
    _________________________________
    Before NUGENT, Chief Judge, MICHAEL, and MOSIER, Bankruptcy Judges.
    _________________________________
    ∗
    This unpublished opinion may be cited for its persuasive value, but is not
    precedential, except under the doctrines of law of the case, claim preclusion, and issue
    preclusion. 10th Cir. BAP L.R. 8026-6.
    **
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, the Court has determined
    unanimously to honor the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral
    argument. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8019(b). The case is therefore submitted without oral
    argument.
    MOSIER, Bankruptcy Judge.
    _________________________________
    The issue in this case is whether the Bankruptcy Court erred when it concluded
    that legal fees in a contingent fee case are earned over the duration of the case. The
    Debtor appeals that conclusion, arguing that legal fees in a contingent fee case are earned
    upon receipt. We find no error in the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion of law and therefore
    affirm.
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Raphael Glapion (Debtor) is an attorney who represented certain plaintiffs in a
    civil law suit on a contingent fee basis. 1 That case settled in September 2018, and in
    November 2018, pursuant to the contingent fee arrangement with the plaintiffs, the
    Debtor’s law firm received the contingent fee (Contingent Fee), which was placed in the
    Debtor’s Interest on Lawyers Trust Account (IOLTA). 2 On November 28, 2018, after the
    Contingent Fee was received, the Debtor filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition in the
    Western District of Oklahoma. Although the Debtor did not disclose the IOLTA in his
    original schedules, John Mashburn, the chapter 7 trustee in the Debtor’s case (Trustee),
    filed a motion for turnover of the funds in the IOLTA (Turnover Motion). 3
    1
    The Debtor represented the plaintiffs in Callahan v. United Airlines, Inc., CIV-
    2016-0680-M in the Western District of Oklahoma. Appellant’s App. at 24.
    2
    For some reason the Debtor’s brief states the contingent fee amount is $47,318.66.
    Appellant’s Br. 4. However, Amended Schedules B and C list the fee as $48,362.46.
    Appellee’s App. at 40, 46.
    3
    Trustee’s Motion to Turnover Property of the Estate, in Appellant’s App. at 16.
    2
    In response to the Turnover Motion the Debtor filed amended schedules, stating
    that he held $48,362.46 in his law firm’s IOLTA, “representing wages or earnings for
    professional services earned during the last ninetey [sic] (90) days prior to filing
    bankruptcy.” 4 The Debtor also claimed $36,271.85 of the IOLTA exempt pursuant to title
    31, section 1(A)(18) of the Oklahoma Statutes, which permits the exemption of seventy-
    five percent of earnings for professional services earned during the prior ninety days.5
    The Trustee filed an objection to the Debtor’s claimed exemption (Objection to
    Exemption), arguing that the funds were not “wages or earnings” under § 1(A)(18) and
    were not “earned” during the ninety days prior to the petition date. 6
    On May 8, 2019 the Bankruptcy Court held an initial hearing (Initial Hearing) on
    the Turnover Motion, Objection to Exemption, and the Debtor’s responses thereto. 7 The
    Bankruptcy Court “orally ruled that contingency fees are generally earned over the life of
    the underl[y]ing contingency fee contract case as the services are rendered rather than
    when they are received.” 8 The Bankruptcy Court continued the hearing to July 17, 2019
    to allow the Debtor to present evidence as to the portion of the fees earned within the
    4
    Amended Schedule A/B at 3, in Appellee’s App. at 65.
    5
    Amended Schedule C at 2, in Appellee’s App. at 67; see also Okla. Stat. tit. 31,
    § 1(A)(18) (2018).
    6
    Trustee’s Objection to Debtor’s Claimed Exemption, in Appellee’s App. at 56
    7
    Debtor’s Objection to Trustee’s Motion to Turnover Property of the Estate, in
    Appellee’s App. at 50; Debtor’s Response to Trustee’s Ojbection [sic] to Debtor’s
    Claimed Exemption, in Appellant’s App. at 19.
    8
    In re Glapion, No. 18-14920-SAH, 
    2019 WL 3294083
    , at *1 (Bankr. W.D. Okla.
    July 19, 2019) (unpublished) (citing In re Carlson, 
    211 B.R. 275
    , 279 (Bankr. N.D. Ill.
    1997)).
    3
    ninety days prior to the petition date. After the July 17, 2019 hearing, the Bankruptcy
    Court entered an order sustaining the Objection to Exemption in part and granting the
    Turnover Motion (Order). 9
    The Bankruptcy Court found that the Debtor had spent a total of 47.5 hours
    working on the litigation and of those 47.5 hours, only 21 hours of work had occurred
    during the ninety days prior to the petition date. Accordingly, the Bankruptcy Court
    found that the Debtor had earned $21,381.30 during the ninety-day exemption period and
    concluded that, under applicable Oklahoma exemption law, seventy-five percent of that
    amount, or $16,035.98, was exempt. The remaining twenty-five percent, along with the
    portion of the Contingent Fee earned prior to the exemption period, which together
    totaled $32,326.48, were held non-exempt. The Debtor filed a timely notice of appeal of
    the Order. 10
    9
    
    Id. at *4.
    10
    The Trustee asserted that the appeal was untimely, thereby depriving the BAP of
    jurisdiction, and filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on that basis. BAP ECF No. 12. He
    contended that the Bankruptcy Court had rejected the Debtor’s initial notice of appeal
    due to a defect with the signature on the document and the Debtor’s amended notice of
    appeal, which cured the signature problem, was filed after the appeal deadline. A BAP
    motions panel denied the motion to dismiss, concluding that the appeal became effective
    upon the filing of the original notice of appeal because “a pro se litigant’s failure to sign a
    notice of appeal is a curable, non-jurisdictional defect.” Order Denying Motion to
    Dismiss at 2, BAP ECF No. 27 (first citing United States v. Jaramillo, 743 F. App’x 165,
    167 (10th Cir. 2018); and then citing United States v. Phung, 683 F. App’x 661, 661
    (10th Cir. 2017)).
    4
    II.    JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    An order sustaining an objection to a debtor’s claim of exemption is a final order
    for purposes of appellate review. 11 The Debtor appeals a conclusion of law the
    Bankruptcy Court made on the record at the Initial Hearing on the Objection to
    Exemption and Motion for Turnover. “[I]t is a general rule that all earlier interlocutory
    orders merge into final orders and judgments . . . .” 12 This Court reviews a bankruptcy
    court’s interpretation of a state’s exemption statute de novo. 13
    III.   DISCUSSION
    The Debtor does not contest any of the Bankruptcy Court’s factual findings. The
    Debtor’s only argument is that the Bankruptcy Court erred when it concluded that
    contingent fees are earned over the life of the underlying contingent fee contract and not
    when they are received. The Bankruptcy Court stated its conclusions of law on the record
    at the Initial Hearing, but the Debtor failed to provide this Court with a transcript of that
    hearing, a failure we need not remedy. 14 This failure is not fatal to the Debtor’s appeal,
    however, because we review the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusions of law de novo.
    11
    Redmond v. Kester (In re Kester), 
    339 B.R. 749
    , 751 (10th Cir. BAP 2006)
    (quoting Carlson v. Diaz (In re Carlson), 
    303 B.R. 478
    , 480 (10th Cir. BAP 2004)).
    12
    McBride v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 
    281 F.3d 1099
    , 1104 (10th Cir. 2002) (citing
    16A Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Fed. Practice &
    Procedure § 3949.4 at 72 (3d ed. 1999 & Supp. 2001)).
    13
    In re 
    Carlson, 303 B.R. at 481
    (citing Sloan v. Zions First Nat’l Bank (In re
    Castletons, Inc.), 
    990 F.2d 551
    , 557 (10th Cir. 1993)).
    14
    10th Cir. BAP L.R. 8009-3 (“This Court need not remedy any failure by a party to
    designate an adequate record. When the party asserting an issue fails to provide a record
    sufficient for considering that issue, this Court may decline to consider it.”).
    5
    A. The Applicable Law
    The Bankruptcy Code allows debtors to exempt property from the bankruptcy
    estate, but 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(2) permits states to opt out of the federal exemptions and
    substitute their own. Oklahoma has elected to do so and has codified its own exempt
    property rules. 15 When a state has opted out of the federal exemption laws, “bankruptcy
    courts must resort to state law for interpretation of state exemption rights . . . .” 16
    Moreover, because “there is no federal law of property, it is necessary to look to state law
    to determine the nature, extent, and effect of the debtor’s interest” in property. 17
    Oklahoma permits the exemption of “[s]eventy-five percent (75%) of all current
    wages or earnings for personal or professional services earned during the last ninety
    (90) days, except as provided in Title 12 of the Oklahoma Statutes in garnishment
    proceedings for collection of child support.” 18 Wages or earnings earned prior to that
    ninety-day period are not exempt under this statutory provision. 19
    15
    See Okla. Stat. tit. 31, § 1(B) (2019) (“No natural person residing in this state may
    exempt from the property of the estate in any bankruptcy proceeding the property
    specified in subsection (d) of Section 522 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Public
    Law 95-598, 11 U.S.C.A. 101 et seq., except as may otherwise be expressly permitted
    under this title or other statutes of this state.”).
    16
    Zubrod v. Duncan (In re Duncan), 
    329 F.3d 1195
    , 1198 (10th Cir. 2002) (quoting
    In re Barnhart, 
    47 B.R. 277
    , 279 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 1985)).
    17
    
    Id. (quoting In
    re Anselmi, 
    52 B.R. 479
    , 484 (Bankr. D. Wyo. 1985)).
    18
    Okla. Stat. tit. 31, § 1(A)(18) (2019) (emphasis added).
    19
    Oklahoma law does provide additional exemptions that may, in appropriate
    circumstances, exempt further wages or earnings. For example, debtors may claim a
    hardship exemption for “that portion of any earnings from personal services necessary for
    the maintenance of a family or other dependents supported wholly or partially by the
    labor of the debtor.” Okla. Stat. tit 31, § 1.1(A) (2019); see also Hillcrest Med. Ctr. v.
    6
    B. Application of the Law
    It is undisputed that the Contingent Fee is property of the Debtor’s bankruptcy
    estate. The issue in this case is what portion of the Contingent Fee is exempt under
    Oklahoma law, which in turn depends on when the Contingent Fee, or a portion thereof,
    was earned. The Debtor contends that the entire Contingent Fee was earned within ninety
    days of his bankruptcy petition because “Oklahoma courts clearly recognize that an
    attorney’s right to recover on a contingency fee contract does not arise until recovery in
    the underlying case.” 20 Although not expressly stated, the Debtor’s contention is that
    contingent fees are not earned until they are received. Stated more simply, the Debtor
    equates “earned” with “received.”
    The outcome of this case rests entirely on interpretation of Oklahoma law. “When
    the federal courts are called upon to interpret state law, the federal court must look to the
    rulings of the highest state court, and, if no such rulings exist, must endeavor to predict
    how that high court would rule.” 21 If there is no ruling on the issue from the highest state
    Monroy, 
    38 P.3d 931
    , 934-35 (Okla. Civ. App. 2001) (reviewing a partial history of the
    hardship exemption). Such additional exemptions are not at issue in this appeal, however.
    20
    Appellant’s Brief in Chief at 5.
    21
    Johnson v. Riddle, 
    305 F.3d 1107
    , 1118 (10th Cir. 2002) (first citing Comm’r v.
    Bosch’s Estate, 
    387 U.S. 456
    , 464-66 (1967); then citing Stuart v. Colo. Interstate Gas
    Co., 
    271 F.3d 1221
    , 1228 (10th Cir. 2001); and then citing Commerce Bank, N.A. v.
    Chrysler Realty Corp., 
    244 F.3d 777
    , 780 (10th Cir. 2001)); see also Waldrop v. Discover
    Bank (In re Waldrop), Adv. No. 16-1015-JDL, 
    2017 WL 1183937
    , at *12 n.12 (Bankr.
    W.D. Okla. Mar. 29, 2017) (“The meaning of a state exemption is controlled by
    applicable state law, and the bankruptcy court is bound by the state’s construction of a
    state statute.” (citing Goldman v. Salisbury (In re Goldman), 
    70 F.3d 1028
    , 1029 (9th Cir.
    1995))).
    7
    court, “federal authorities must apply what they find to be the state law after giving
    ‘proper regard’ to relevant rulings of other courts of the State.” 22
    Outside of the contingent fee context, Oklahoma law appears to draw a distinction
    between the concepts of when one earns a wage and when one receives it. In Oil Well
    Supply Co. v. Galbreath, 23 the Oklahoma Supreme Court faced the question of whether a
    judgment debtor who had already received at least three-fourths of his earnings during
    the ninety days preceding a garnishment was entitled to exempt seventy-five percent of a
    sum sought by a judgment creditor that the parties stipulated did not equal or exceed one-
    fourth of his wages during the ninety-day period. The Galbreath court posed the question
    in this way:
    Was the debtor precluded from claiming any exemptions under the statute
    before referred to because of the fact that during the ninety days preceding
    the levy of the garnishment process he had already received from his wages
    or earnings for personal or professional service more than 75 per cent. of the
    total amount earned? 24
    By noting that the debtor had received a percentage of “the total amount earned,” the
    Galbreath court recognized that earned wages and received wages are not equivalent; the
    latter is a subset of the former, since one may earn a wage without having yet received it.
    The court made this point again in its holding, where it stated that a debtor is entitled to a
    seventy-five percent exemption “of any current wages or earnings due him for personal
    22
    
    Johnson, 305 F.3d at 1119
    (quoting Comm’r v. Bosch’s Estate, 
    387 U.S. 456
    , 465
    (1967)).
    23
    Oil Well Supply Co. v. Galbreath, 
    52 P.2d 780
    (Okla. 1935).
    24
    
    Id. at 781.
                                                  8
    or professional services if earned within the last ninety days prior to the levy of any
    garnishment, irrespective of what other amounts than that attached he may have earned or
    received during that period.” 25
    While earned and received appear to be two different concepts in the typical wage-
    earner’s case, the issue here is whether that holds true with respect to contingent fees.
    Oklahoma courts have addressed various questions concerning the exemption provision
    under discussion, its predecessors, and related statutes, 26 but we have not found one that
    deals with the question of when a contingent fee is earned for purposes of Oklahoma’s
    exemption statutes. In predicting how the Oklahoma Supreme Court would rule on this
    issue, we are mindful that Oklahoma law directs courts to liberally construe the state’s
    exemption statutes and, as a general rule, to give the debtor the benefit of the doubt. 27
    25
    
    Id. at 782.
    26
    See, e.g., Warner v. Willard, 
    242 P. 550
    , 552 (Okla. 1925) (“[W]here the exempt
    wages are withheld from the employee against his demand and over his protest, the
    exempt character of the wages is not destroyed, even though the exemption period of 90
    days has elapsed . . . .”); Clapp v. Smith, 
    216 P. 120
    , 122 (Okla. 1923) (holding that a
    cotton farmer was not a wage-earner and therefore could not avail himself of the
    exemption for wages and earnings earned within the last ninety days); Barteldes Seed Co.
    v. Gunn, 
    159 P. 502
    , 503 (Okla. 1916) (allowing a judgment debtor an exemption in
    money owed to him under a contract to haul construction materials as “earnings for his
    personal services”); Youst v. Willis, 
    49 P. 56
    , 57 (Okla. 1897) (denying a hotel proprietor
    an exemption in monies owed by boarders and guests as “current wages and earnings for
    personal or professional services earned within the last ninety days” because such monies
    are not “in any sense the personal or professional earnings of the owner or proprietor”).
    27
    Muskogee Reg’l Med. Auth. v. Perkins, 
    888 P.2d 1033
    , 1035 (Okla. Civ. App.
    1994) (citing Nelson v. Fightmaster, 
    44 P. 213
    (Okla. 1896)).
    9
    The Debtor relies on Musser v. Musser 28 for the proposition that a contingent fee
    is not earned until received. Musser was not an exemption case, but one involving a
    divorce proceeding where the parties contested whether future fees from the husband’s
    work on 400 workers’ compensation cases, taken on a contingent fee basis, were part of
    the marital estate that should be divided between the spouses. The court concluded that
    those cases were not part of the marital estate because the husband had not received and
    was “not certain to receive anything under the contingency fee contracts.” 29 Musser
    reached that conclusion by reasoning that until the contingency is satisfied, i.e., the client
    prevails by settlement or judgment and recovers money, any contingent fee merely
    constitutes potential future income. 30
    Musser did not hold, however, that an attorney does not earn a contingent fee until
    he receives it for purposes of title 31, section 1(A)(18) of the Oklahoma Statutes; Musser
    did not even address that statute. But the court did make some observations that are
    helpful in determining how the Oklahoma Supreme Court would decide that issue.
    Musser noted that Oklahoma case law “holds that [an] attorney would be entitled to some
    payment upon successful resolution of [a contingent fee] case even though that attorney
    was no longer employed by the client at the time of resolution.”31 The court went on to
    review two of its prior precedents, which concluded that “when an attorney is discharged
    28
    
    909 P.2d 37
    (Okla. 1995).
    29
    
    Id. at 40.
    30
    
    Id. at 39-40.
    31
    
    Id. at 40.
                                                     10
    before the case results in a money judgment or settlement, the attorney does not recover
    under the contingency fee agreement, but rather, the attorney receives the reasonable
    value of his services,” 32 and that “the estate of a deceased attorney is entitled to receive
    the reasonable value of the services rendered by the attorney under a contingency fee
    contract for legal work performed by the attorney even though he died prior to settlement
    of the case by replacement counsel.” 33 Other Oklahoma case law has allowed attorneys
    who have been discharged from a contingent fee case or passed away prior to a case’s
    completion to collect a portion of a contingent fee based on the amount of work
    performed. 34 In sum, Oklahoma case law has consistently recognized that a lawyer has an
    “interest” in contingent fee cases before the occurrence of the contingency.
    The ability of a discharged attorney or the estate of a deceased attorney to recover
    the reasonable value of the attorney’s services from a successfully-obtained contingent
    32
    
    Id. (discussing First
    Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co. of Tulsa v. Bassett, 
    83 P.2d 837
    (Okla.
    1938)).
    33
    
    Id. (citing City
    of Barnsdall v. Curnutt, 
    174 P.2d 596
    (Okla. 1945)).
    34
    See Landsing Diversified Properties-II v. First Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co. of Tulsa (In
    re W. Real Estate Fund, Inc.), 
    922 F.2d 592
    , 596-97 (10th Cir. 1990) (“[W]e do not think
    Oklahoma has embraced or will embrace [the] view that a client whose attorney has
    already secured a favorable settlement offer can unilaterally reduce counsel’s bargained
    for contingency fee to a (much smaller) hourly ‘quantum meruit’ recovery simply by
    breaching their fee agreement before settling the litigation counsel had been employed
    on.”); Self & Assocs. v. Jackson, 
    269 P.3d 30
    , 33 (Okla. Civ. App. 2011) (explaining
    Oklahoma courts have long recognized that an attorney working on a contingent fee basis
    who is discharged from a case without cause is entitled to compensation for services
    rendered up until discharge); Martin v. Buckman, 
    883 P.2d 185
    , 194 (Okla. Civ. App.
    1994) (holding that where an attorney is discharged without cause, the discharged lawyer
    is entitled to receive a portion of the ultimate contingent fee in the case, regardless of
    appointment of subsequent counsel).
    11
    fee suggests that an attorney earns a portion of that fee when he performs services. He
    may not ultimately recover anything unless the contingency is satisfied, but we believe,
    after liberally construing the statute, that the weight of Oklahoma law supports the
    Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion that contingent fees “are generally earned over the life of
    the underl[y]ing contingency fee contract as the services are rendered.” 35 Of course, the
    calculation of how much of the fee is attributable to an attorney’s services can only occur
    if the contingency has been satisfied, but there is no dispute that that has occurred in this
    case: The Debtor received the Contingency Fee prior to filing bankruptcy. As a result, it
    was not error for the Bankruptcy Court to allocate, as a legal matter, the Contingency Fee
    between the hours the Debtor worked within and without the ninety-day exemption
    period. We also find no error in the Bankruptcy Court’s factual findings regarding the
    amounts so allocated because the Debtor did not challenge them on appeal.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    Under Oklahoma law, a lawyer has an interest in contingent fee cases before the
    occurrence of the contingency. Oklahoma case law has allowed attorneys who have been
    discharged from a contingent fee case or passed away prior to a case’s completion, to
    collect a portion of a contingent fee, based on the amount of work performed. We find no
    error in the Bankruptcy Court’s legal conclusion that contingent fees are generally earned
    35
    In re Glapion, No. 18-14920-SAH, 
    2019 WL 3294083
    , at *1 (Bankr. W.D. Okla.
    July 19, 2019) (citing In re Carlson, 
    211 B.R. 275
    , 279 (N.D. Ill. 1997)).
    12
    over the life of the underlying contingent fee contract case as the services are rendered
    rather than when they are received and therefore, we affirm.
    13