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In re Leonard Jed Co.

United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland
Jul 7, 1989
103 B.R. 706 (Bankr. D. Md. 1989)

Opinion

Bankruptcy No. 84-BX-1813.

July 7, 1989.

David S. Musgrave, Semmes, Bowen Semmes, Baltimore, Md., for debtor, Leonard Jed Co.

Harvey M. Lebowitz, Frank, Bernstein, Conaway Goldman, Baltimore, Md., for counsel to the Creditors' Committee.


MEMORANDUM OPINION SUSTAINING DEBTOR'S OBJECTION TO ALLOWANCE OF THIRD APPLICATION FOR INTERIM COMPENSATION TO CREDITORS' COMMITTEE COUNSEL


By this opinion, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland at Baltimore sustains the Chapter 11 debtor's objection to interim fees claimed by creditors' committee counsel where (1) the case was not economically staffed; (2) counsel claimed fees for services which did not benefit the estate; (3) time records did not adequately describe the nature of many services rendered; and (4) creditors' committee counsel was not entitled to a premium fee claimed for increasing by 5% the distribution to unsecured creditors under a confirmed plan over the amount which the debtor originally proposed to pay.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On December 6, 1984, The Leonard Jed Company ["Jed Co."] filed the instant voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. The debtor is a distributor of industrial hardware, tools, nuts and bolts. Mr. Leonard Jed has been president of the debtor for more than 20 years. Second Amended Disclosure Statement [P. 214].

2. On January 8, 1985, this Court appointed the law firm of Frank, Bernstein, Conaway Goldman ["Frank, Bernstein"] as counsel to the official committee of unsecured creditors [P. 22]. Harvey M. Lebowitz is senior partner and the head of the firm's bankruptcy department.

3. Throughout the history of this case, the relationship between the debtor and counsel to the official unsecured creditors' committee has been antagonistic.

4. On July 23, 1985, Frank, Bernstein filed its first application for interim compensation [P. 108] on the same date as an objection [P. 109] on behalf of the committee of unsecured creditors to the debtor's disclosure statement. Thereafter, on August 19, 1985, the debtor filed an objection [P. 112] to the fee application. In its objection to fees, the debtor complained that creditors' committee counsel had not been cooperative with the debtor, had hampered the reorganization effort, was not committed to a successful reorganization, and exhibited a "hostile, overbearing and uncompromising attitude toward The Leonard Jed Company." Objection, ¶ 14 [P. 112]. "Indeed," the debtor disclosed, "counsel to the creditors' committee has repeatedly threatened to file a motion to convert this case to Chapter 7." Id. ¶ 12. On March 4, 1986, the law firm of Semmes, Bowen Semmes ["Semmes"], counsel to the debtor filed an application [P. 137] for interim allowance of compensation. Thereafter, on March 27, 1986, the creditors' committee filed an objection [P. 140] to the Semmes application. On August 20, 1986, before the date of the scheduled hearing on these matters, the committee filed a withdrawal of its objection [P. 150] and an amended fee application [P. 151] on behalf of Frank, Bernstein. On August 21, 1986, the debtor's counsel filed an amended application for compensation [P. 152] and a withdrawal [P. 153] of the debtor's objection to the fee application of Frank, Bernstein.

5. By Orders [PP. 158 and 159] dated September 22, 1986, the Court approved fees to counsel for the debtor-in-possession in the amount of $92,450.25 ($117,450.25 less a retainer of $25,000) and to creditors' committee counsel in the amount of $34,955.00, the latter amount for services rendered during the period ending June 30, 1986.

Despite the title of the fee application presently before the Court as the "Third Application," the Court notes that creditors' committee counsel has had only one interim fee application approved, namely the Amended Application [P. 151] which was approved by Order [P. 159] dated September 22, 1986.

6. On December 31, 1986, the debtor filed an application [P. 165] to employ Ellin Tucker as accountants. The application was approved by Order [P. 166] of this Court dated January 8, 1987. The same date, the official unsecured creditors' committee filed an objection [P. 167] to the Ellin Tucker application. On January 14, 1987, the committee filed a motion for reconsideration [P. 169] of the Order approving the employment of Ellin Tucker and a request for hearing. On March 13, 1987, the committee filed an objection [P. 188] to the debtor's amended disclosure statement. On March 24, 1987, the Court signed an Order [P. 191] approving a stipulation of the parties by which the committee withdrew its objection to the appointment of Ellin Tucker, as accountants to the debtor. On July 18, 1987, the Court entered a Consent Order [P. 215] on objections to the debtor's amended disclosure statement.

7. On June 23, 1987, the creditors' committee filed a motion [P. 211] for contempt and sanctions against Leonard Jed and the Jed Co. On July 20, 1987, the committee filed a motion [P. 221] for the appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee. On July 27, 1987, the creditors' committee filed an objection [P. 238] to the debtor's proposed Chapter 11 plan and a motion to postpone [P. 237] the hearing on confirmation. The postponement was vigorously opposed by the debtor. Therefore, the Court scheduled a chambers conference between the parties in an attempt to resolve the postponement issue. During the meeting held in chambers on July 28, 1987, the Court declined to postpone the confirmation hearing and initiated negotiations between the committee and the debtor on the issue of confirmation. The Court ascertained that the committee wanted a 20% distribution to general unsecured creditors rather than the 15% which the debtor-in-possession had proposed. At a second meeting in chambers on July 31, 1987, the debtor agreed to the creditors' committee demand.

The reason for the postponement request was the long-anticipated vacation of Mr. Lebowitz and his family. Normally, professional courtesy is extended to such a request by opposing counsel. That this was not done indicates the degree of animosity present here.

8. During the ensuing month, counsel for the debtor and the committee settled their differences relative to confirmation of the Chapter 11 plan, appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee and the motion for contempt. On August 14, 1987, the committee filed praecipes [PP. 250, 251] withdrawing its motion for appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee and for postponement of the confirmation hearing. On August 24, 1987, at the conclusion of the confirmation hearing, this Court stated that confirmation would be granted to the debtor's Chapter 11 plan. On that occasion, Jay Shuster appeared on behalf of the committee and filed a withdrawal [P. 260] of the committee's objection to confirmation.

9. At the hearing, Leonard Jed personally guaranteed the payment of all approved administrative expenses of the Jed Co. Transcript, p. 47 [P. 268].

10. On August 28, 1987, this Court entered an Order [P. 265] confirming the debtor's plan of reorganization.

11. On November 18, 1988, Frank, Bernstein, Conaway Goldman filed the instant application [P. 318] for interim allowance of compensation for services rendered and reimbursement of expenses incurred as counsel to the official committee of unsecured creditors for the period from July 1, 1986 through October 31, 1988. By the instant application, counsel seeks fees in the amount of $62,999.50 and reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses in the amount of $3,380.76. The services performed by counsel to the creditors' committee for which compensation is sought are summarized in the instant application as follows:

The application does not indicate the number of hours which counsel devoted to the completion of the various categories of services it claims to have performed, which has made more difficult the analysis of the reasonableness of the fee. Likewise, the application does not indicate the dates the various services were performed.

a. Counsel for the Committee reviewed and analyzed numerous proposed compromises and settlement of claims by and against the Debtor, frequently negotiating changes in the terms of such agreements;

The application speaks only in general terms regarding the number of various tasks performed, as opposed to a specific number.

The application speaks only in general terms regarding the number of various tasks performed, as opposed to a specific number.

b. Counsel for the Committee reviewed the Debtor's proposed Amended Disclosure Statement, drafted objections thereto, and negotiated amendments which resulted in the Debtor's Second Amended Disclosure Statement, which the Court approved;

c. Counsel for the Committee objected to the Debtor's Amend [sic] Plan of Reorganization and engaged in intense litigation and negotiations with the Debtor during a two-and-a-half month period resulting in the amendment of the Debtor's Amended Plan of Reorganization and the filing of the Debtor's Second Amended Plan of Reorganization, which improved treatment of general unsecured creditors. In connection with this litigation, Counsel for the Committee prepared and filed notices of depositions and requests for production of documents to the Debtor and its former and current accountants, in preparation for the confirmation hearing on the Second Amended Plan of Reorganization;

d. Counsel for the Committee drafted the Motion for Contempt against the Debtor's president, Leonard Jed, for his failure to authorize release of funds for payment of professional fees of Debtor's counsel, Counsel for the Committee, and the Debtor's business consultant, in violation of the Court's order;

e. Counsel for the Committee drafted the Motion for Trustee because of the apparent mismanagement of the Debtor, as reflected in significant write-downs of its inventory and receivables after the commencement of this case, the Debtor's substantial post-petition losses, and the conduct of the Debtor's president;

f. Counsel for the Committee reviewed and analyzed daily reports, monthly operating reports, and aging receivable reports prepared by the Debtor;

g. Counsel for the Committee investigated the dismissal of the Debtor's accounting firm in the middle of the case, and objected to the appointment of new accountants because of the lack of an explanation for the dismissal, and the additional expense to be incurred by the estate as the new accountants familiarized themselves with the Debtor's records. As a result of this investigation and objection, counsel for the Committee learned that the dismissal of the Debtor's accountants was related to the accountants' refusal to certify the Debtor's inventory; counsel for the Committee negotiated with the Debtors' new accountants to save the estate the additional cost of the new accountants familiarizing themselves with the Debtor's records;

h. Counsel for the Committee engaged in several meetings and numerous conversations with members of the Creditors' Committee and their counsel concerning the status of this case, and the terms of the Debtor's plan of reorganization and various amendments thereto;

i. Counsel objected to the application for final allowance of compensation of the Debtor's former accountants because of its failure to provide information essential to the making of an informed judgment. As a result of the objection, an amended application was filed providing the essential information; and

Both the debtor and the committee filed objections to the accountant's fee application. The committee's objection was more detailed than the debtor's and included complaints about the accounting firm's failure to allocate more routine work to its junior members, the lack of specificity of the application, and the accountant's failure to submit detailed time records in support of the application.

Both the debtor and the committee filed objections to the accountant's fee application. The committee's objection was more detailed than the debtor's and included complaints about the accounting firm's failure to allocate more routine work to its junior members, the lack of specificity of the application, and the accountant's failure to submit detailed time records in support of the application.

j. Counsel for the Committee monitored and continues to monitor the case to determine the status of distributions to unsecured creditors, and to track the Debtor's financial performance.

Third Application, ¶ 7 [P. 318].

12. On December 8, 1988, the debtor filed the instant objection [P. 322] to Frank, Bernstein's application. The essential grounds for the objection are set forth in paragraphs 7, 11, 14 and 15:

[7.] The third application is objectionable because counsel to the creditors' committee has not performed services which have benefited the Debtor's estate, the services rendered by counsel to the committee have not been reasonable and necessary, and counsel to the committee has failed to allocate the more routine services rendered to the committee to more junior level attorneys.

[11.] The third application states that counsel for the committee has devoted 542.80 hours in rendering services to the Committee through October 31, 1988. Without counsel's time records, it is impossible to determine what hours were spent performing what services. However, it is clear that counsel for the committee spent too much time on a case in which the Debtor's resources were and still are exceedingly limited.

[14.] The third application is objectionable because it provides only very broad summaries of work done and hours logged.

[15.] The claimed disbursements of $3,380.76 are objectionable because they include meals expense of $89.00, secretarial overtime of $259.09 and Lexis or Westlaw computer research charges of $232.72. Neither secretarial overtime, computer research charges, nor meals expense are proper items for reimbursement.

13. At a hearing on March 30, 1989, this Court heard arguments of counsel on the application and objection. No witnesses testified. Items of documentary evidence were introduced, including the time records of Frank, Bernstein reflecting the expenditure of hours in the instant case from July 1, 1986 through October 31, 1988.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

1. The award of compensation to professional persons who perform services to a bankruptcy estate is a "core proceeding" arising under Title 11 of the United States Code which bankruptcy judges may hear and determine. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1), (b)(2)(A), (B) and (O) (Supp. V 1987).

2. Approval of interim compensation to creditors' committee counsel is governed by Sections 328(a), (c), 330(a) and 331 of the Bankruptcy Code.

§ 328. Limitation on compensation of professional persons.

(a) The trustee, or a committee appointed under section 1102 of this title, with the court's approval, may employ or authorize the employment of a professional person under section 327 or 1103 of this title, as the case may be, on any reasonable terms and conditions of employment, including on a retainer, on an hourly basis, or on a contingent fee basis, notwithstanding such terms and conditions, the court may allow compensation different from the compensation provided under such terms and conditions under the conclusion of such employment, if such terms and conditions prove to have been improvident in light of developments not capable of being anticipated at the time of the fixing of such terms and conditions.

* * * * * *
(c) Except as provided in section 327(c), 327(e), or 1107(b) of this title, the court may deny allowance of compensation for services and reimbursement of expenses of a professional person employed under section 327 or 1103 of this title if, at any time during such professional person's employment under section 327 or 1103 of this title, such professional person is not a disinterested person, or represents or holds an interest adverse to the interest of the estate with respect to the matter on which such professional person is employed.

* * * * * *
§ 330. Compensation of officers.
(a) After notice to any parties in interest and to the United States trustee and a hearing, and subject to sections 326, 328, and 329 of this title, the court may award to a trustee, to an examiner, to a professional person employed under section 327 or 1103 of this title, or to the debtor's attorney

(1) reasonable compensation for actual, necessary, services rendered by such trustee, examiner, professional person, or attorney, as the case may be, and by any paraprofessional persons employed by such trustee, professional person, or attorney, as the case may be, based on the nature, the extent, and the value of such services, the time spent on such services, and the cost of comparable services other than in a case under this title; and

(2) reimbursement for actual, necessary expenses.
* * * * * *
§ 331. Interim compensation.
A trustee, an examiner, a debtor's attorney, or any professional person employed under section 327 or 1103 of this title may apply to the court not more than once every 120 days after an order for relief in a case under this title, or more often if the court permits, for such compensation for services rendered before the date of such an application or reimbursement for expenses incurred before such date as is provided under section 330 of this title. After notice and a hearing, the court may allow and disburse to such applicant such compensation or reimbursement.

11 U.S.C. § 328(a), (c), 330(a), and 331 (Supp. V 1987).

3. The determination of what is reasonable compensation for actual, necessary services and what are actual, necessary expenses for purposes of reimbursement is within the sound discretion of the bankruptcy court. In re AOV Industries, Inc., 43 B.R. 468 (D.D.C. 1984).

4. The burden of proof that services were actual and necessary and that the compensation requested is reasonable always rests upon an applicant who seeks the payment of professional fees from a bankruptcy estate, regardless of whether an objection has been filed. See In re Metro Transportation Co., 78 B.R. 416, 420 (Bankr.E.D.Pa. 1987); In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. 293 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1987).

5. "In determining whether a particular expense is chargeable to the debtor's estate, the court must distinguish between `overhead' expenses, which are not reimbursable, and `out-of-pocket' expenses, which are. In re Thacker, 48 B.R. 161, 164 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1985). Overhead expenses are those day-to-day operating costs which are incurred regardless of whom the law firm represents. Id. . . . Out of pocket expenses are those expenses which can clearly be traced to a particular client. . . ." In re Island Helicopter Corp., 53 B.R. 71 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y. 1985) (holding that out of pocket expenses reimbursable to creditors' committee counsel include photocopy charges, but not costs of meals, secretarial overtime and cab fare where the necessity for them was not established). Counsel's justification for charging the estate $80 for meals and $259.09 for secretarial overtime is that this is Frank, Bernstein's routine practice and also that "the Debtor's counsel apparently follows similar practices." Memorandum, ¶ E, [P. 328]. The Court's response is that merely because these practices are routine does not convert overhead expenses to out of pocket expenses.

However, counsel argues that because the Court allowed Semmes to recover overtime expenses, "the previous allowance is the law of the case." Id. This assertion is unsupported by any authority and is not correct. The issue was never raised, but in any event, the Court has authority to "reexamine and adjust" interim allowances of administrative expenses during the course of a case. See 2 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 331.03 (15th ed. 1988), citing § 503.

Reimbursement for meals and secretarial overtime will be disallowed where the applicant has shown no compelling need to provide them in the first place. The Court will allow reimbursement for photocopying and computer research attributable to work done for this particular client, but not for postage, telephone or messenger services which are costs of doing business. See In re Metro Transportation Co., supra; Cf. In the Matter of D'Lites of America, Inc., 92 B.R. 554 (Bankr.N.D.Ga. 1988).

6. "Lodestar" principles guide the Federal courts in this circuit in considering applications for compensation by attorneys. See Barber v. Kimbrell's, Inc., 577 F.2d 216 (4th Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 934, 99 S.Ct. 329, 58 L.Ed.2d 330 (1978), applying criteria originally set forth in the leading case of Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc., 488 F.2d 714 (5th Cir. 1974). The Johnson criteria are:

1. The time and labor required.

2. The novelty and difficulty of the questions.

3. The skill requisite to perform the legal services properly.

4. The preclusion of other employment by the attorney due to the acceptance of the case.

5. The customary fee.

6. Whether the fee is fixed or contingent.

7. Time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances.

8. The amount involved and the results obtained.

9. The experience, reputation and ability of the attorneys.

10. The "undesirability" of the case.

11. The nature and length of the professional relationship with the client.

12. Awards in similar cases.

Id. at 717-19.

In the case of Anderson v. Morris, 658 F.2d 246 (4th Cir. 1981), the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals further explained the application of lodestar principles by endorsing two later Fifth Circuit cases decided after Johnson which held that courts reviewing fee applications should

. . . ascertain the nature and extent of the services supplied by the attorney from a statement showing the number of hours worked and an explanation of how these hours were spent. The court should next determine the customary hourly rate of compensation. These are essentially Johnson factors 1 and 5. The court should then multiply the number of hours reasonably expended by the customary hourly rate to determine an initial amount for the fee award. Finally, the court should adjust the fee on the basis of the other factors, briefly explaining how they affected the award. In re First Colonial Corp. of America, 544 F.2d 1291, 1298-1300 (5th Cir. 1977). See also Copper Liquor, Inc. v. Adolph Coors Co., 624 F.2d 575, 581-84 (5th Cir. 1980).

Id. at 249.

In Harman v. Levin, 772 F.2d 1150 (4th Cir. 1985), the court held that the 12 Johnson factors are applicable to the determination of proper awards of counsel fees in bankruptcy cases.

7. Time and labor required. The Court's analysis begins with a review of counsel's fee application and time records to attempt to discern whether the amount of time claimed to have been expended is reasonable in light of what counsel did. The application contains only broad summaries of services performed and does not detail the quantity of time devoted to each category. Counsel's failure to submit its time records until the hearing on the application deprived the debtor of the opportunity to review them in advance and to either withdraw its objections or to raise further objections. It deprived the Court of the opportunity to properly study the records and to question counsel at the hearing with respect to deficiencies in the records which the Court perceives. The failure to call witnesses to testify as to the "actual" and "necessary" character of various services performed deprives the Court of the information required to fill in many of the gaps found to exist in the application and the time records. Indeed, the Court finds that the applicant has failed to carry its burden of proof that the time it spent on this case was reasonable, for a variety of reasons, which are addressed as follows.

(a) Deficiencies in the application. As implicitly indicated earlier, the fee application lacked specificity regarding how much time was spent performing various categories or services. The application indicates only the total number of hours claimed and makes no reference to specific time charges contained in the time records. The instant application covers a period of 28 months inclusive (July 1, 1986 through October 31, 1988) and yet its description of services rendered covers fewer than three double-spaced typewritten pages.

(b) Deficiencies in the time records. In order to determine whether counsel's time charges are reasonable, the Court must be able to figure out what the individual attorneys did and whether the services they performed were actual, necessary and beneficial to the estate, and therefore compensable. Various deficiencies in the time records in this case prevent the Court from determining reasonableness. [The time records and the Court's analysis of them are contained in the Appendix.]

(1) Insufficient descriptions. Eighty entries in the time records are found to describe so insufficiently the services performed that the Court is unable to determine whether the time spent performing them justifies the granting of compensation for their performance. Examples of this include such designations, as "TEL W/OTHER T — LEONARD SACHS," which the Court assumes indicates that a telephone conversation was conducted with the named person; "RESEARCH" without any further information; and "ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. Fees," which does not begin to convey to the Court precisely what counsel did. In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. 293, 303 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1987); In re Wildman, 72 B.R. 700, 710 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1987); In re Four Star Terminals, Inc., 42 B.R. 419, 435 (Bankr.D.Alaska 1984).

(2) Lumping. This term refers to the grouping of different tasks within one block of time on a time record. It is a practice universally disapproved by bankruptcy courts for two reasons. One, it permits an applicant to claim compensation for rather minor tasks which, if reported individually, would not be compensable. Two, it prevents the Court from determining whether individual tasks were expeditiously performed within a reasonable period of time because it is impossible to separate into components the services which have been lumped together. The Court has found approximately sixty occurrences of "lumping" in this fee application and, with a few exceptions, will disallow all of them. In re Seneca Oil Co., 65 B.R. 902, 909 (Bankr.W.D.Okla. 1986); In re Woerner, 67 B.R. 685, 687 (Bankr.E.D.Pa. 1986); In re Wildman, 72 B.R. at 709; In re Bible Deliverance Evangelistic Church, 39 B.R. 768, 777 (Bankr.E.D.Pa. 1984); In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. at 302; In re Metro Transportation Co., 78 B.R. at 418.

(3) Duplication of effort (double-billing). The Court notes a number of instances reflected in the time records where more than one attorney has billed for the same service. Examples include office conferences of two or more attorneys where all of the participants charged their full hourly rates; meetings with others where more than one attorney from the firm was in attendance and both submitted bills for the same meeting without demonstrating the need for both of them to have been there. Time spent by partners and associates in conferences and meetings is compensable, but not by more than one participant. In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. at 307; In re Metro Transportation Co., 78 B.R. at 417-18; Cf. In re Yankee Seafood Corp., 53 B.R. 285, 286 (Bankr.R.I. 1985) and cases cited.

(4) Failure to exercise billing judgment. Not everything which creditors' committee counsel does in a bankruptcy case is chargeable to the estate, either because it confers a negligible benefit upon the estate or because it is excessive. Normally, counsel who represents a private client exercises what the courts refer to as "billing judgment" by "writing off" charges for certain things.

"The United States Supreme Court in Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 103 S.Ct. 1933, 76 L.Ed.2d 40 (1983), a nonbankruptcy matter, stated that attorneys applying to a court for statutory attorney's fees

should make a good faith effort to exclude from a fee request hours that are excessive, redundant or otherwise unnecessary; just as a lawyer in private practice ethically is obligated to exclude such hours from his fee submission. `In the private sector, "billing judgment" is an important component in fee setting. It is no less important here.'

Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434, 103 S.Ct. at 1939-40 quoting Copeland v. Marshall, 205 U.S. App.D.C. 309, 401, 641 F.2d 880, 891 (1980) (en banc) . . ." Quoted in In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. at 303.

The time records submitted in support of Frank, Bernstein's fee application do not evidence the exercise of any billing judgment in that nothing appears to have been written off. In the absence of such evidence, the Court will exercise its own billing judgment by writing off various efforts which ought not to have been charged to the estate as being either totally non-productive or of negligible benefit. In re Wildman, 72 B.R. at 711; In re Woerner, 67 B.R. at 688.

(5) Non-productive document review. Counsel charged the estate for reading documents prepared by others, including motions and notices for approval of compromises of disputed claims prepared by debtor's counsel; other motions prepared by other counsel; the debtor's daily and monthly financial reports; and review of files. The Court has generally disallowed all compensation for this activity, except where it appeared that counsel actually fashioned a formal response which required the performance of substantive work. Otherwise, the Court is unable to find a benefit to the estate from merely reviewing what others have done, (including counsel to the debtor, the approval of whose compensation as an administrative claim against the estate would be duplicative). Creditors' committee counsel claims entitlement to fees for its review of the settlement of claims by the debtor because it says that it renegotiated many of these on terms more favorable to the estate. However, neither the application nor the time records identify which claims were so compromised and in the absence of such specificity, the Court will deny compensation for the mere review of settlements worked out by the debtor where no further substantive effort by committee counsel is evident from the record. In re Pettibone, 74 B.R. at 303; In re Wildman, 72 B.R. at 710.

(c) Some services not shown to be beneficial to the estate. Counsel claims that the debtor's financial condition and lack of cooperation required "intense litigation," which in turn required "extensive commitment of time." Application, ¶ 6 [P. 318]. However, the Court finds that more emphasis on negotiation and less time spent litigating would have produced a result as good as that which was obtained with greater economy of time and resources, because it was negotiation which permitted the debtor's plan to be confirmed and thereby brought about the chance for a successful reorganization. Much of the litigation was fruitless and ended up being voluntarily withdrawn when negotiation brought about compromise, settlement and ultimately confirmation. Examples of such litigation include the motions for contempt and for the appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee and all the discovery requests which attended them.

The motion for the appointment of a trustee which counsel to the creditors' committee filed is not compensable because it cannot be shown to have conferred a benefit upon the estate. Rather it was an unnecessary diversion that burdened the estate. The motion appears to have been a strategic tactic designed to put pressure on the debtor in order to achieve more favorable treatment for the unsecureds under the plan. The Court reaches this conclusion because (1) the filing of the motion occurred on the eve of the confirmation hearing, even though much of the information upon which the motion was based was within the committee's knowledge at a point early in the case (at least a year earlier); (2) the committee withdrew the motion as soon as the debtor capitulated to its demands for an increased payout to general unsecured creditors; and (3) the motion was a transparent attempt to fashion a cause of action under Section 1104 from facts which on their face appear to be neutral. However, the Court need not address the issue of whether the motion was filed in good faith, because compensation for its preparation must be denied on an alternative ground. In order to find that the filing of the motion was the cause of the debtor's increased distribution to unsecureds, the Court would have to indulge in "pure conjecture and speculation." Cf. In re Terex, 70 B.R. 996, 1002 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1987) (creditors' committee's counsel's "belief that the $8 million payment to unsecured creditors under the plan is the result of its solitary efforts and willingness to engage GM in litigation is based upon pure conjecture and speculation").

Proper representation of the creditors' committee in this case did not require the time and labor which counsel expended. Based upon the Court's review of counsel's time records, it is determined that the number of hours reasonably required for counsel to properly represent the creditors' committee is 117.5, apportioned among the Frank, Bernstein attorneys as follows:

Number of Hours Number ofAttorney Reasonably Required Hours Claimed

Harvey M. Lebowitz 47.8 163.8 Jay A. Shulman 8.8 38.1 Joseph A. Guzinski 46.6 166.6 Paula K. Merkle 14.3 35.1 Josef E. Rosenblatt + 0 + 5.4

Subtotal 117.5 409.0 Paralegals +133.8 +133.8

TOTAL 251.3 542.8

8. The next step in computing the lodestar is a decision regarding a reasonable rate to be properly charged for the actual and necessary services rendered by counsel. In re Wildman, 72 B.R. at 712. In order to make this decision, the Court must first determine counsel's customary fee for the services performed.

9. The customary fee. The Court notes that the applicant has claimed that it customarily charges the same average hourly rates which it charged in this case for services rendered by the following individuals:

NAME POSITION AVERAGE HOURLY RATES

Harvey M. Lebowitz Partner $186.35 Jay A. Shulman Partner 128.12 Joseph A. Guzinski Associate 94.23 Paula K. Merkle Associate 101.34 Josef E. Rosenblatt Associate 110.00 Kathleen G. McCruden Paralegal 57.81 Karen J. Fry Paralegal 45.00 Patricia L. Adams Paralegal 40.00

Application, § 8 [P. 318]

10. The lodestar, or basic fee, in the instant case (exclusive of paralegal fees) is $15,875.27, which is computed by multiplying the reasonable number of hours of each attorney times the customary hourly fee of each, as follows:

REASONABLE CUSTOMARYATTORNEY HOURS × RATE

Harvey M. Lebowitz 47.8 × $186.35 = $ 8,907.53 Jay A. Shulman 8.8 × $128.12 = $ 1,127.46 Joseph A. Guzinski 46.6 × 94.23 = 4,391.12 Paula K. Merkle 14.3 × 101.34 = 1,449.16 Josef E. Rosenblatt 0 × 110.00 0

TOTAL $15,875.27

Allowing for paralegal fees in the full amount claimed of $7,677.50, the lodestar totals $23,552.77.

11. Novelty and difficulty of the questions. The case presented no novel legal issues to creditors' committee counsel. Despite its assertion that "this case has presented a number of difficult problems," the Court finds nothing to distinguish this case from any number of fairly routine Chapter 11 reorganization cases. The debtor's substantial write-down of inventory and prepetition receivables does not make this a difficult case. Every Chapter 11 creditors' committee has the responsibility of constantly monitoring a debtor-in-possession. Such monitoring presupposes some services which are routine and non-legal in nature.

12. Skill requisite to perform the legal services properly. Frank, Bernstein is a highly-esteemed law firm with an excellent bankruptcy department. It produces work of a consistently high quality and its attorneys who appear before this Court are capable, prepared and highly respected. Nevertheless, the instant case did not require the highest degree of skill in the performance of legal services to the creditors' committee.

Counsel to the creditors' committee did not staff this case economically where services expended by the firms's highest-paid partner accounted for nearly one-half of the requested fee amount ($30,523.50 out of $62,999.50). The Court has minutely examined the time records submitted in support of the fee application and notes that they contain 180 separate entries for Harvey Lebowitz; 83 for Joseph A. Guzinski (associate); 75 for Paula Krahn Merkle (associate); 30 for Jay A. Shulman (partner); and 4 for Josef E. Rosenblatt (associate). The records confirm the debtor's allegation that the law firm failed to properly assign routine duties to its more junior attorneys in order to reduce the cost of representation. Mr. Lebowitz's average hourly rate was $186.35 for services rendered in this application. The actual rate ranged from $160 per hour in July, 1986, to $175 per hour in September, to $200 per hour as of July 1, 1987, and peaked at $210 per hour in March, 1988. The rates are not unreasonable in and of themselves for an attorney of Mr. Lebowitz's reputation and experience. The problem comes when one examines the nature of the work for which he is charging the rates.

The records disclose that telephone calls, analysis of "daily reports," drafting of fee applications and notices of settlements are all matters to which Mr. Lebowitz personally attended. Such matters should have been delegated to subordinates. They do not require for their performance the level of expertise possessed by Mr. Lebowitz. These tasks should not be compensated at the full hourly rates charged by the chief partner of Frank, Bernstein's bankruptcy department, which rates are at the upper range of fees charged in this jurisdiction. See In re Pettibone Corp., 74 B.R. at 303 ("a senior partner who spends time reviewing documents or doing research a beginning associate could do will be paid at the rate of a beginning associate").

The nature, purpose and substance of the telephone calls is not disclosed, which is a short-coming of the time records. In re First Software Corp., 79 B.R. 108 (Bankr.D.Mass. 1987); In re Pettibone Corp., supra. This criticism does not apply to one entry which is dated "7-02-87" entitled "attempt to contact Herb Better" for which Mr. Lebowitz charged $40. The Court cannot imagine this service being compensable under any circumstances. Time Records, Lebowitz entry 100, Frank, Bernstein Exhibit No. 1.

However, because there were a number of tasks performed by Mr. Lebowitz which benefited the estate and which required his extensive abilities, those services have been allowed at the full rate. Such services as face-to-face meetings with debtor's counsel would seem to have required his presence. On the other hand, for the numerous routine services which he performed including the review of the work product of other attorneys (including counsel to the debtor), the Court has exercised its discretion by either disallowing compensation entirely or by significantly reducing the rate at which Mr. Lebowitz charged his time.

Likewise, while the preparation of fee applications is compensable, the rate of compensation ought to be much lower than that chargeable for complex legal work. In the Matter of Rego Crescent Corp., 37 B.R. 1000 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y. 1984) (rate of $50 per hour allowed).

Bankruptcy Judge Richard L. Bohannon, speaking in the case of In re Seneca Oil Co., 65 B.R. 902 (Bankr.W.D.Okla. 1986), espoused the position that courts should not second-guess the delegation of duties to various attorneys in a law firm, subject however to a significant proviso:

. . . Where a court chooses to delineate between ministerial and legal tasks it necessarily directs the manner in which attorneys manage their firms. Such delineation would encumber daily management decisions concerning the activities attorneys will pursue. It also requires attorneys to assign personnel to tasks based on some imposed job description rather than the efficacies and urgencies of the situation. This is beyond the court's duty to assure reasonable fees. We feel it is best to leave managerial decisions to the law firms. Therefore, decisions concerning which tasks an attorney performs and involving the allocation of personnel toward the efficient and effective completion of tasks will be left to the discretion of the professional unless the allocation is egregious. In re Jensen-Farley Pictures, 47 B.R. 557 (Bankr.D.Utah 1985). Attorneys should adhere to standards which will efficiently use their high level of training, effectively resolve a problem, and obtain the best results for their clients at a reasonable fee. [Emphasis supplied.]

The cited case of Jensen-Farley, supra, held, among other things, that routine services, including telephone conversations, correspondence and attendance at meetings should be compensated at the same high rate as other strictly legal services; that the staffing of a case by counsel ought not be second-guessed by the court; and that reimbursement for meals, word processing, messenger service, legal computer costs and even taxi fare and parking ought not be denied reimbursement as overhead. However, the problem with these pronouncements by the Jensen-Farley court is that they are all obiter dicta, because there was no controversy which required a decision on these issues. The real issue in Jensen-Farley was whether pre-petition legal expenses incurred by an unofficial creditors' committee in an unsuccessful workout attempt ought to be compensated by the bankruptcy estate. The opinion held that such legal services were not compensable where the estate received no benefit from them. Not one penny in fees or expenses was approved as a result of the Jensen-Farley opinion.

The cited case of Jensen-Farley, supra, held, among other things, that routine services, including telephone conversations, correspondence and attendance at meetings should be compensated at the same high rate as other strictly legal services; that the staffing of a case by counsel ought not be second-guessed by the court; and that reimbursement for meals, word processing, messenger service, legal computer costs and even taxi fare and parking ought not be denied reimbursement as overhead. However, the problem with these pronouncements by the Jensen-Farley court is that they are all obiter dicta, because there was no controversy which required a decision on these issues. The real issue in Jensen-Farley was whether pre-petition legal expenses incurred by an unofficial creditors' committee in an unsuccessful workout attempt ought to be compensated by the bankruptcy estate. The opinion held that such legal services were not compensable where the estate received no benefit from them. Not one penny in fees or expenses was approved as a result of the Jensen-Farley opinion.

Id. at 911.

13. Preclusion of other employment. Counsel was not precluded from other employment by taking on the job of representing the creditors' committee in this case, especially where the Court has found that a rather minor amount of time was reasonably required to perform the necessary services attendant to that representation. The Court notes from its own docket that these same members of the bankruptcy department of Frank, Bernstein regularly appeared in numerous other matters and assumed major roles in many other cases, among which was the memorable Eastmet case.

14. Whether the fee is fixed or contingent. Counsel says that "in taking this case, Counsel expected that it would be paid in full for services rendered in accordance with Counsel's usual hourly rates. Counsel did not expect to undertake this case on a contingent fee basis." Id., ¶ 12. However, the Order by which the application of the creditors' committee to employ Frank, Bernstein was approved clearly stated that "the compensation of Frank, Bernstein, Conaway Goldman shall be subject to the approval of this Court." Order of January 8, 1985 [P. 22]. In this sense, the fee is contingent upon its approval by the Court and whether funds exist from which the fee can be paid. The fee is not fixed because there is no agreement which has been disclosed to pay a certain amount to the law firm. Counsel's expectations that it will be paid does not affect whether its claimed fees are fixed or contingent. The fee in the instant case is contingent because of the substantial risk of nonpayment. The Court will take this risk factor into consideration by raising the amount of the lodestar.

15. Time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances. Except for a flurry of activity shortly before the debtor's Chapter 11 plan achieved confirmation, there does not appear to have been any urgency for counsel to perform on behalf of the creditors' committee. There were no time constraints imposed by the committee as far as the Court can divine.

16. Amount involved and results obtained. According to the debtor's Schedule A-3 ("Creditors having Unsecured Claims Without Priority"), The Jed Co. owed unsecured debts in the aggregate amount of $4,135,868.41. Statement of Financial Affairs and Schedules [P. 37]. Under the terms of the debtor's Second Amended Plan of Reorganization [P. 242], Class IV unsecured creditors are to receive a 20% distribution within four years from date of confirmation. Therefore, assuming unsecured debt in the full amount stated, the total amount distributable to unsecured creditors under the plan is $827,173.68. Counsel to the creditors' committee claims the credit for achieving a 5% increase in the amount unsecured creditors will receive ($206,793.42) under the plan and for shortening the time for distribution from five years to four years and claims to be entitled to a bonus for its efforts. However, it was the Court which brought the parties together and initiated a settlement of differences, including the debtor's agreement to pay more. The parties on their own initiative should have come to the bargaining table, without the necessity of involving the Court. Cf. In the Matter of Baldwin-United Corp., 79 B.R. 321 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1987) (enhanced fee award to creditors' committee counsel held justified in exceptionally complex case where counsel's superior skill and judgment avoided needless court contests and led to a consensual plan of reorganization).

Bankruptcy Judge Harold F. White expressed perfectly the thoughts of this Court regarding the request for premium fees in the instant case when he wrote in In re Terex, supra:

. . . The court does not find that this case is an appropriate one for the award of a bonus, and has serious doubt as to whether an occasion will soon arise when the award of a bonus is necessary to award a "reasonable' fee. Attorneys in private practice do not bill their clients for a lump sum bonus based upon good results achieved. Presumably, that is what they are hired to accomplish. The closest analogy which can be made is the award of a contingency fee for successful litigation or settlement. But the risk is zero payment, and that risk was not present here.

70 B.R. at 1003.

Nevertheless, counsel's participation in negotiation with the debtor did achieve a favorable result for the unsecured creditors and those efforts ought to be rewarded. For this reason, time spent in negotiation as disclosed in the time records has been compensated at the highest rates charged. The Court emphasizes, however, that this is not a bonus but merely recognition of one of the factors to be taken into consideration.

17. Undesirability of the case in the legal community. Representation of the unsecured creditors' committee in this case would be a most welcome undertaking to most members of the bankruptcy bar.

18. Nature and length of the professional relationship with the client. This client is a statutorily-created committee under the Bankruptcy Code which counsel was engaged to represent by court order some four and one-half years ago. Order of January 8, 1985 [P. 22].

19. Awards in similar cases. The amount claimed by Frank, Bernstein as interim fees in the instant application ($62,999.50) is much greater than the interim fees paid to creditors' committee counsel in similar cases. It is also nearly twice as large as the other interim fee award ($34,955.00) which it received for services rendered during the first 18 months of this case. Order of September 22, 1986 [P. 159]. (The Court is aware of the fact that the instant application covers a period of 28 months. Nevertheless, counsel performed most of its compensable services before confirmation of the plan, during the first 14 months of the 28-month period.) However, the lodestar amount of $23,552.77 appears to be less than what the Court would allow to creditors' committee counsel in a similar case of this size. Therefore, an upward adjustment of the lodestar is warranted on this ground.

20. Adjusting the lodestar. From the foregoing analysis, it must be clear by now that the award of compensation under a lodestar analysis is far from scientific. The Court in the careful exercise of its discretion has determined the lodestar in this case to be significantly below the interim fee which counsel has requested, for the various reasons stated. However, the Court must determine the actual fee to be awarded in light of the 12 Johnson factors. Some of those made no appreciable difference (novelty of questions, requisite skill, preclusion) because the Court had already implicitly considered them in determining the lodestar.

However, consideration of the risk of nonpayment and awards in similar cases requires that the lodestar be increased. The amount of the upward adjustment based upon the risk factor is $5,888.19, or 25% of the lodestar. This brings the award up to $29,440.96. Taking into consideration the size of awards in similar cases, the Court will add an additional $5,000 for a fee award in the total amount of $34,440.96.

This award is based also upon the Court's own notions of fundamental fairness and its recognition of the unique facts in the instant case. To say that this Court is intimately familiar with the parties, their attorneys and what went on in this case is an understatement. The undersigned judge has lived with this case from the day it was filed, has presided over every chambers conference and trial and has executed every order which appears in the voluminous case file. The philosophy of the Court regarding the allowance of counsel fees is to fairly compensate bankruptcy attorneys at the highest rate possible within reasonable limits but also to remind counsel that some services are too routine or of negligible benefit to the estate to be compensated at all; to discourage duplication of services by refusing to compensate duplicate services on the ground that they are inherently unnecessary; to recognize the value of negotiation and compromise by compensating such services at the same rate as time spent in litigation; to encourage proper delegation of more routine duties to lower echelon attorneys; and to require, to the greatest degree possible, the precise and accurate recording of time spent working on a case. The Court has no punitive purpose in the exercise of its discretion in this or in any other case.

ORDER ACCORDINGLY.

ORDER SUSTAINING DEBTOR'S OBJECTION TO ALLOWANCE OF THIRD APPLICATION FOR INTERIM COMPENSATION TO CREDITORS' COMMITTEE COUNSEL

Based upon the foregoing Opinion entered simultaneously herewith, it is

ORDERED that the debtor's objection to allowance of the third application for interim compensation to creditors' committee counsel is hereby SUSTAINED; and it is further

ORDERED that interim compensation is hereby allowed to Frank, Bernstein, Conaway Goldman in the amount of $34,440.96 as a fee for services rendered, and $2,578.88 as reimbursement of expenses incurred during the period from June 30, 1986 through October 31, 1988.

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ 1 07/16/86 MOTION Motion For Approval of Settlement re: Clow corp. 2 07/17/86 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order approving comp. re: Clow Corp. 3 07/23/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE C-PKM 4 07/24/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review Discl.St. Am. P1 and C-PAM 5 07/25/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND C-PKM/review revise D. S. plan; T-David Musgrave 6 07/31/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE Prep. of appl. for fee 7 08/01/86 NOTICES Notice of Settlement (Arrow Lock Co.) 8 08/12/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review of Plan/Discl St. Appl. for fee 9 08/12/86 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE Review revise appl. for fee, FSCG 10 08/16/86 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review revise Discl St. plan; C-PKM; T-Dave Musgrave 11 08/20/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Withdrawal of objection; order approving sett with Arrow Deck 12 08/21/86 CONF MTG w/OTHERS NEGOTIATE C-David Musgrave 13 08/26/86 TEL w/OTHER T-Leonard Sachs 14 08/26/86 MOTION Motion for Appr. of Settl mt.(Pacific Mutual Door Co.) 15 09/15/86 CORRESP OTHER STUDY/ANALYZE L-fr.Robert Federline/atty, for cred;Int.Fin. Report 16 09/23/86 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. Fees 17 09/25/86 TEL w/OTHER T-D. Musgrave re:payment of fees 18 10/03/86 MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OF PARALEGAL CONF-INTRA- OFFICE Memo fr.PKM re: advances by payments to L.Jed;D-PKM 19 10/06/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review revise L-to Musg rave re:post petition loans payments to Jed 20 10/09/86 TEL w/OTHER CORRESP OTHER T-Musgrave; L-Musgrave 21 11/04/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Review Plan Discl. st. 22 11/05/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE C-PKM, review of Plan 23 11/07/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND STUDY/ANALYZE Review Discl.St. 24 11/14/86 TEL w/OTHER CORRESP OTHER T-David Musgrave; L-to cr ed. con m; L-to David Musgrave 25 11/17/86 CORRESP OTHER L- Te D. Musgrave 26 11/18/86 CORRESP CLIENT Letter to creditors committee 27 11/19/86 MOTION Motions for Appr. of Comp. of Claims (Cusinano Keyser Const.) 28 11/25/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports 29 11/26/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports 30 12/01/86 TEL w/OTHER T-Musgrave 31 12/03/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 32 12/03/86 CORRESP CLIENT L from Paula to Rosenste in (Brighton- Best) 33 12/11/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports 34 12/12/86 Meeting — Albright, JAS Jad 35 12/19/86 CORRESP OTHER Daily reports; C-KGM 36 12/29/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 1 0.3 48.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 2 0.2 32.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 3 0.5 80.00 0 OFFICE CONFERENCE — DUPLICATIVE 4 1.3 208.00 0 CONFERENCE/DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 5 1.5 240.00 0 CONFERENCE/DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 6 1.2 192.00 60.00 $50/HR. RATE FEE APPLIC. PREPARATION 7 0.2 32.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 8 2.5 400.00 125.00 SHOULD DISALLOW FOR LUMPING, BUT WILL ALLOW $50/HR FOR FEE APPLICATION 9 0.6 96.00 30.00 FEE APPLICATION PREPARATION 10 2.5 400.00 0 LUMPING 11 0.2 32.00 0 LUMPING 12 1.3 208.00 208.00 NEGOTIATION 13 0.3 48.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 14 0.2 32.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 15 0.6 105.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 16 0.2 35.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 17 0.2 35.00 35.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 18 0.5 87.50 43.75 1/2 RATE FOR INTER-OFFICE MEMO 19 0.3 52.50 52.50 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 20 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 21 1.3 227.50 227.50 ALLOWED BECAUSE OBJECTION WAS FILED 22 0.4 70.00 0 CONFERENCE — DUPLICATIVE 23 0.7 122.50 122.50 ALLOWED-OBJECTION FILED TO DISC. STATEMENT 24 1.0 175.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/LUMPING 25 0.2 35.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 26 0.2 35.00 35.00 ATTORNEY COMMUNICATION W/CLIENT 27 0.3 52.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 28 0.5 87.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 29 0.3 52.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 30 0.3 52.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 31 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 32 0.2 35.00 0 DUPLICATIVE 33 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 34 3.0 525.00 525.00 NEGOTIATION 35 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 36 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ 37 01/07/87 Review revise obj. to empl. of new accountants 38 01/16/87 TEL w/OTHER T-David Musgrave-Disc. of prop. comp. w/Lee/disc. of eng. of subs. acc. firm. 39 01/19/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Bennett Goldstein 40 01/30/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. Stlmt.-Wilke case 41 02/02/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. stlmt. of claim ag. Milke 42 02/16/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT TEL w/CLIENT ORDER APPR. SETLMT. W/CUSIMANO; ORDER APPR. SETLMT. W/KEYSER T-G. WINSOR (BLANK DECKER); DEV. ACCT. REPTS; T-M. PAUL; C-KGM 43 02/16/87 TEL w/OTHER TEL w/CLIENT T-Larry Coppel; T-Cave Rice, T-K. Zauner; T-T. McCormack; T-B. Phelan 44 02/17/87 TEL w/CLIENT T-Jonn Fleisher (Wm. Hand Tools) 45 02/17/87 TEL w/OTHER TEL w/CLIENT T-George Bachrach, T-Perry Rosens tein (Brighton Best Socket) 46 02/18/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Larry Coppel 47 02/24/87 REVIEW FILE Review file 48 02/24/87 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE CREDITORS COMMITTEE Prep. for cred. com. mtg. /com. mtg; T-Dave Musgrave 49 02/27/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/ADVERSARY Review Pr. of Cl. for Admin. Exp., T-David Musgrave 50 03/04/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Reminder; C-JAS 51 03/04/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND TEL w/ADVERSARY Rview papers; T-Dave Albright, T-Dave Musgrave 52 03/05/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE C-JAS; C-JAG 53 03/16/87 NOTICES CORRESP OTHER Not. of Appl. for fees, Exec. Sounding Board; L-fr. JAG to Judge Schneider w.d obj. to Appt. of New Accts.; L-JAG to Musgrave 54 03/31/87 MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OR PARALEGAL STUDY/ANALYZE Memo fr. JAG; Notice of Mot. for Auth. to Incur Unsec. As Admin. Expense 55 04/01/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Copy of Daily Report; Interim Fin. Report to Jan. 56 04/03/87 NOTICES CORRESP OTHER Notice of Appl. of Kaufman, Davis, Daily Reports 57 04/20/87 NOTICES CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Notice of hearings; T-Dave Musgrave; C-JAG 58 04/21/87 TEL w/OTHER T-David Albrighe (2); Review Obj. to Appl. for All. filed by Hoffm an Davis, et al; review revise Obj. filed by Comm.; C-JAG 59 04/23/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY T-Cave Albright 60 04/28/87 TEL w/OTHER Attempt to reach Albright; T-Dave Albright 61 05/04/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 62 05/07/87 CORRESP OTHER CORRESP CLIENT Letter fr. Albright; L-to Committee 63 05/07/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Dave Musgrave; Claim ag. Liberty Fasteners; postpon. of hearing 64 05/07/87 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE T-Musgrave; C-JAS (Lee case) 65 05/12/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 66 05/12/87 TEL w/CLIENT T-Owight Stone (Steelcraft); L-fr. D. Musgrave; ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION 37 0.5 87.50 87.50 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 38 1.0 175.00 175.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION — NEGOTIATION 39 0.4 70.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 40 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 41 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 42 2.0 350.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 43 0.9 157.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 44 0.3 52.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 45 0.4 70.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 46 0.3 52.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 47 1.5 262.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 48 4.0 700.00 700.00 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 49 0.7 122.50 122.50 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 50 0.2 35.00 0 OFFICE CONFERENCE — DUPLICATIVE 51 0.8 140.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/LUMPING 52 0.4 70.00 0 OFFICE CONFERENCE/DUPLICATIVE 53 1.6 280.00 0 LUMPING 54 0.4 70.00 0 LUMPING 55 0.3 52.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 56 0.4 70.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 57 0.6 105.00 0 LUMPING 58 2.9 507.50 0 LUMPING 59 0.6 105.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 60 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 61 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 62 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 63 0.7 122.50 0 LUMPING 64 0.6 105.00 0 LUMPING 65 0.4 70.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 66 0.5 87.50 0 LUMPING

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. DATE NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ Karen Zauner (Pioneer 67 05/13/87 TEL w/CLIENT T-Tim McCormack (Scovill); review stlmt prop. Div.Bldg. Systms Arthur Ogren; T-Coppel (Colegrove); P. Rosenstein (Brighton-Best) 68 05/15/87 TEL w/CLIENT T-G. Windsor (BD) 69 05/14/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Review Mct. to Cont. Hearing in Obj. to accts. fee 70 05/14/87 TEL w/OTHER STUDY/ANALYZE T-D. Musgrave re: setlmt. of Ogren Div. Bldg. System; cred.comm. meeting on 5/28/87 71 05/15/87 TEL w/OTHER T-D. Rice; (Ridge Tool), T-G. Walsh (Von Duprin) 72 05/15/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Brian Phalen (Am Weld), T-D. Albright 73 05/20/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Herb Better (2) re: Cb j. to Reobelmann fee 74 05/21/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CONF MTG w OTHERS Review file: re obj. to appl. of Reubelmann; C-Herb Better 75 05/21/87 TEL w/OTHER T-David Musgrave 76 05/26/87 REVIEW FILE STUDY/ANALYZE Review file; T-David Musgrave, C -KGM (review int.rep.) 77 05/28/87 REVIEW FILE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review file; C-JAG; review prop. comp (discr. case) James McClure 78 05/28/87 CREDITORS COMMITTEE Cred. Comm. mtg. 79 06/01/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Herb Better (2) 80 06/02/87 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPART COURT HEARING Prep. for hearing; hearing on Obj. to D.S.; C-JAG; T-H. Better 81 06/02/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Duncan Kier (2) 82 06/03/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY T-Herb Better 83 06/08/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY T-Herb Better 84 06/09/87 TEL w/OTHER T-David Musgrave 85 06/11/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Herb Better 86 06/12/87 CORRESP ADVERSARY L-fr. Musgrave; L-to Musgrave; T-Herb Better 87 06/14/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE L-to David Albright re: failure to pay atty's fees 88 06/15/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Revise and review letter to Albright 89 06/16/87 TEL w/CLIENT T-Perry Rosenstein (Brighton Best) 90 06/16/87 CONF MTG w/ADVERSARY Meeting w/Musgrave 91 06/17/87 CORRESP OTHER L-fr. Musgrave 92 06/18/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMENU Begin review of Motion for Contempt 93 06/19/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review and revise Mot. for Contempt 94 06/19/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CORRESP ADVERSARY Review and revise Mot. for Cont.; C-JAG; L-Musgrave 95 06/22/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Musgrave; L-fr. Albright; T-B. Phalen; L-B. Phalen 96 06/23/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review and revise Motion for Contempt 97 06/24/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY STUDY/ANALYZE T-David Musgrave; Resig. of Scovil fr. CC; review Consent Order 98 06/29/87 CORRESP OTHER L-from Musgrave re: 2nd Amended D.S. Consent Order 99 06/30/87 CORRESP OTHER ltr from Albright to court re trial dates ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 67 1.5 262.50 0 LUMPING 68 0.2 35.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 69 0.3 52.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 70 1.0 175.00 175.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 71 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 72 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 73 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 74 3.0 525.00 525.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION — NEGOTIATION 75 0.4 70.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 76 1.5 262.50 0 LUMPING 77 0.6 105.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 78 4.5 787.50 787.50 MEETING W/CLIENT 79 0.4 70.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 80 6.0 1,050.00 0 LUMPING 81 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 82 0.4 70.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 83 0.6 05.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 84 0.8 40.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 85 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 86 1.0 175.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 87 2.0 350.00 100.00 RATE REDUCED FOR DICTATING LETTER 88 0.7 122.50 0 RATE REDUCED FOR DICTATING LETTER 89 0.3 52.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 90 0.5 87.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 91 0.3 52.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 92 0.4 70.00 70.00 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 93 0.5 87.50 87.50 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 94 1.3 227.50 0 LUMPING 95 1.0 175.00 0 LUMPING 96 1.0 175.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 97 1.2 210.00 0 LUMPING 98 0.3 52.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 99 0.2 35.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ 100 07/02/87 attempt to contact Herb Better 101 07/08/87 ANSWER memo in opposition to Motion for Contempt; conf w/j. Guzinski 102 07/10/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Peview Consent Order re: disclosure statement 103 07/13/87 REVISE/REURAFT/AMEND Review and revise Mot. for App. of Trustee 104 07/14/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review and revise Mot. for App. of Trustee; C-JAG 105 07/15/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review and revise Mot. for App. of Trustee 106 07/16/87 NOTICES REVISE/REURAFT/AMEND Notice of Stlmt. of Div.; review revise reply re: contempt 107 07/16/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CONE-INTRA-OFFICE Review and revise Mot. for Trustee; C-JAG; C-KGM;review Discl. St. Bal. Sheet; T-D. Musgrave re: Contempt Mot;Stlmt of Lee claim 108 07/20/87 CURRESP OTHER ltr from Musgrave to court re fees for Executive Sounding Board 109 07/20/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND review and revise motion for trustee and reply to contempt; tel-Duncan Keir 110 07/21/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY STUDY/ANALYZE tel-David Musgrave; conf w/j. Guzinski; tel-Margaret Snapp; tel-Herb Better; tel-Naomi Popkins; review ltr from Musgrave and notice of settlement re R.E. Lee and Erete 111 07/22/87 NOTICES STUDY/ANALYZE Notice of approval of Disclosure Statement and notice of hearing on confirmation; draft letters to creditors; financial reports for April and May. 112 07/22/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY tel-David Musgrave 113 07/22/87 CORRESP CLIENT REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND LTR. TO CREDITORS COMMITTEE; DRAFT OF LTR TO UNSECURED CREDITORS RE REJECTION OF PLAN; REVIEW AND REVISE MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT; CONF w/J. SHULMAN, K. MCCRUDEN, J. GUZINSKI 114 07/23/87 TEL w/OTHER Tel-Herp Better 115 07/23/87 TEL w/OTHER SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE Daily report; tel w/ Bill Howard (Ridge Tool); Brian Phelan (American Welding) 116 07/23/87 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE Preparaton for confirmation hering; T-h m. Colgrove; Tel-John Keel conf w/ K. McCruden re list of creditors; conf. with J. Guzinski new discovery; conf/ with J. S hulman re research. 117 07/24/87 TEL w/OTHER office; T-Sandy Harris Phelan's office; Dwight Stone; T-Melvin Paul(2); T. Walsh's 118 07/24/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY TEL w/OTHER T-David Musgrave; T-Steve Derly ; T-Burbank (Walsh) 119 07/27/87 STUDY/ANALYZE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Review Discovery papers; Review Motions 120 07/27/87 TEL w/OTHER REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND T-Duncan Keir; T-Steve Der by; T-Bill Howard(2); T-Dave Musgrave; T-Geralo Walsh; Review revise trs. to cred; C-KGM; T-Naomi Hopkins T-Bill Winen(2) 121 07/28/87 SEAKCH/PLAN/PREPARE Prep. for conf. w/Judge Schneidar; rese ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 100 0.2 40.00 0 NO BENEFIT TO ESTATE 101 0.4 80.00 0 LUMPING 102 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 103 2.6 520.00 0 NO BENEFIT TO ESTATE 104 2.0 400.00 0 NO BENEFIT TO ESTATE 105 1.9 380.00 0 NO BENEFIT TO ESTATE 106 1.0 200.00 0 LUMPING 107 2.6 520.00 0 LUMPING 108 0.3 60.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 109 1.4 280.00 0 NO BENEFIT TO ESTATE 110 2.0 400.00 0 LUMPING 111 1.0 200.00 0 LUMPING 112 0.5 100.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 113 3.0 600.00 0 LUMPING 114 0.3 60.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 115 2.0 400.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 116 2.5 500.00 0 DUPLICATIVE CONF/LUMPING 117 3.5 700.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 118 1.0 200.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 119 1.6 320.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 120 3.5 700.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 121 4.5 800.00 900.00 SETTLEMENT NEGOTIATIONS

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ arch; mtg. w/Judge schneider 122 07/28/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY TEL w/OTHER T-David Albright (2); T-Naomi Hopkins; T-D.Keir re: cont.hrg;C-JAG 123 07/30/87 CURRESP CLIENT TEL w/CLIENT Polling of Comm.; T-C. Albright (3);Spoke to all members of Comm. 124 07/30/87 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE TEL w/OTHER Prep. for hearing; T-Naomi Hopkins; L-fr. Windsor 125 07/30/87 SEARCH/PLAN/PREPARE Prep. for hearing;conv. w/Comm. members other gen. cred. 126 07/31/87 COURT HEARING SETTLEMENT Hearing on Motion for Contempt; Chambers conference 127 07/31/87 CORRESP OTHER Daily Report 128 07/31/87 SETTLEMENT REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Neg. re: Cred. Comm. obj., review revise papers 129 08/03/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Helen Impelizzieri (R.E. Dietz Company) 130 08/03/87 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE T-Naomi Hopkins; Filing 131 08/08/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Determining Add'l Disclosure Not Required 132 08/10/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order approving settlement of claim 133 08/11/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE TEL w/OTHER C-JAG; T-David Musgrave 134 08/12/37 MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OR PARALEGAL Memo to IEW; C-JAG JAS 135 08/13/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Lines re: w/d of postpon.; w/d of Mot. for Cont.;w/d of Mot. for Trustee; w/d cf Obj. to Conf. 136 08/31/87 CURRESP OTHER STUDY/ANALYZE Letters fr. JAG to Albright, Kostishak, Graham, sitter, Ellin Tucker 137 08/31/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. Settlement of R.E. Lee claim 138 09/02/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review Order of Conf; C-JAS 139 09/02/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Review memo fr. JAG re: Bla ke Stime; C-JAG 140 09/14/87 CURRESP OTHER L-from JAG to David Musgrave re: receivables aging report 141 10/17/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Review Notice of Settlement-Blake 142 11/02/87 NOTICES Motion for Appr. of Settlement of Claims-Blake Construction 143 11/12/87 CURRESP OTHER Daily Report 144 11/13/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order approving settlement-Blake 145 11/18/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Herb Better 146 11/19/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Review Deptor's Report of Escrow Agent 147 11/24/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Review revised Appl. for Fees filed by Reubblemen Not. of Depo. 148 11/25/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Herb Better 149 11/30/87 CURRESP OTHER Daily Reports 150 12/01/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 151 12/01/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND withdr. of Obj. to Appl. of Acc./review revise 152 12/02/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND TEL w/OTHER Review revise w/o of Obj to Reubellman fee; T-r. Better; Not. of Dep ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 122 1.3 260.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 123 3.0 600.00 600.00 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 124 1.0 600.00 0 LUMPING 125 3.0 600.00 600.00 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 126 3.0 600.00 600.00 CHAMBERS SETTLEMENT CONFERENCE 127 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 128 3.0 600.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 129 0.2 40.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 130 0.5 100.00 0 LUMPING 131 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 132 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 133 1.0 200.00 0 LUMPING 134 0.8 160.00 0 LUMPING 135 2.0 400.00 200.00 NO SKILL REQUIRED 136 0.7 140.00 70.00 NO SKILL REQUIRED 137 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 138 0.5 100.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 139 0.6 120.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 140 0.2 40.00 40.00 SUPERVISION OF JR. ASSOCIATE 141 0.3 60.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 142 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 143 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 144 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 145 0.6 120.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 146 0.3 60.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 147 1.5 300.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 148 0.6 120.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 149 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 150 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 151 0.6 120.00 0 NO SKILL REQUIRED 152 0.8 180.00 0 LUMPING/NO SKILL REQUIRED

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: HARVEY M. LEBOWITZ 153 12/03/87 TEL w/OTHER TEL w/ADVERSARY T-Herb Better; T-Dave Musgrave; review w/d of Obj. 154 12/04/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/OTHER Review Appl. to Engage Spac. Coun sel; T-David Musgrave 155 12/14/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/OTHER Review prop. order app. Special Counsel; T-D. Musgrave; memo to file; T-Herb Better 156 12/14/87 TEL w/OTHER T-D. Musgrave; T-D. Musgrave and R. Kremen 157 12/15/87 STUDY/ANALYZE COURT HEARING Peview files papers for hearing's app. of spec. counsel; att.hrg. 158 12/17/87 TEL w/OTHER T-Duncan Keir 159 12/28/87 ORDER/JUDGMENT Amended Order for App. of Special Counsel 160 12/31/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 161 01/05/88 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order approving Reubelmann fee 162 01/06/88 TEL w/OTHER T-Duncan Keir 163 01/16/88 STUDY/ANALYZE Review appl. to settle claim of James C. McClure (Discrim. case) 164 01/15/88 TEL w/OTHER reach Musgrave 165 01/14/88 TEL w/ADVERSARY T-David Musgrave 166 01/15/88 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports 167 01/25/88 CORRESP OTHER Daily Report 168 01/28/88 CORRESP OTHER Daily Reports(2) 169 01/29/88 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order approving fee of special counsel 170 02/16/88 REVIEW FILE STUDY/ANALYZE Review Trans. of Hearing re: Obj. to fee of Reubelman; Motion for Payment 171 02/29/88 INVESTIGATION Motion for Expedited hearing-Reubellman, filing 172 03/04/88 CURRESP OTHER Daily Report; filing 173 03/10/88 CURRESP OTHER Daily Reports 174 03/14/88 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily Reports 175 03/15/88 MOTION Review Motion to Compromise Claim 176 03/16/88 CORRESP OTHER Daily Reports 177 04/14/88 NOTICES MOTION Notice of prop. settlement (Foulger-Pratt); Mot. for Appr. of Slmt. 178 04/29/88 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Appr. Settlement-McClure 179 05/10/88 ORDER/JUDGMENT Order Approving Settlement-Foulger-Pratt 180 05/12/88 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 153 0.9 180.00 0 LUMPING 154 0.9 180.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 155 1.2 240.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW/LUMPING 156 0.7 140.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 157 2.0 400.00 200.00 1/2 FEE FOR ATTENDING HEARING 158 0.4 80.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 159 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 160 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 161 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 162 0.5 100.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 163 0.5 100.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 164 0.6 120.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 165 0.4 80.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 166 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 167 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 168 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 169 0.2 40.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 170 1.5 300.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 171 0.4 80.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 172 0.3 63.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 173 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 174 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 175 0.5 105.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 176 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 177 0.3 63.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 178 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 179 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 180 0.2 42.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW TOTAL $30,523.50 $7,504.25

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: JAY A. SHULMAN 1 12/12/36 CONF MTO w/OTHERS MO-W/HML/L.Jea/J.Albright 2 02/13/67 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Notes on mtg. w/Albright Pet Collins re present value prop. pymt 3 02/24/87 CONF MTO w/OTHERS CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Prep. mtg, CONF-INTRA- OFFICE HML/KGM; mtg of Comm.; Winsor, HML, KGM 4 02/20/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Harskell note 8 purchase 5 03/04/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Motion for credit CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HM L, TEL w/OTHER Musgrave w/HML 6 03/05/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Amended disc. stmt., mot. 8 notice; HML notes disclosure statmt. 7 03/06/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Amended disclosure stmt. Heskell corp papers, memo on accts, HML 8 03/11/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/OTHER Disclosure statement; Musgrave, JAG, objections to dis. stmt. 9 03/12/87 ReVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND OBJECTION/APPLICATION Objections to disclosure statement 10 03/13/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Review objections 11 03/19/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Memo from JAG, CONF-INTRA- OFFICE JAG, HML 12 03/20/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE JAG; re notice/Covington loan 13 05/07/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML 14 06/02/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML re hearing, MNR, Haskell note 15 07/22/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML, JAG, KGM re obj. to plan/trustee motion 16 07/23/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE RESEARCH HML, KGM, JAG, Jed re obj to confarmation 17 07/24/87 RESEARCH CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML, JAG, motion to postpone, shorten, request for docs, ballot, 18 07/25/87 STUDY/ANALYZE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Discovery motions/docs. 19 07/27/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML 20 07/28/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Obj. to ballot/Guzinski, HML 21 07/30/87 RESEARCH CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Discharge of officers, HML, JAG docs. for hearing 22 07/31/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE HML, revisions to plan 23 08/11/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Instru. for confirmation 24 08/18/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML re substantive consolidation 25 08/17/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE STUDY/ANALYZE JEG; Reubelman obj. 26 08/20/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE TEL w/OTHER KGM, Guzinski; Better 27 08/21/87 TEL w/FIRM ATTY CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Prep. for confirm. hearing /HML/KGM re tally/ STUDY/ANALYZE draft tally 28 08/24/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE CONFIRMATION Prep. for confirm. hearing; attend; Albright/Musgrave, HML 29 08/25/87 TEL w/FIRM ATTY HML 30 12/04/87 TEL w/OTHER Kremen re Ruebellman ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 1 1.5 172.50 0 DUPLICATIVE — WHY 2 PARTNERS? 2 0.8 92.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 3 4.2 483.00 0 LUMPING 4 0.6 69.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 5 0.7 80.50 0 LUMPING 6 1.2 138.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 7 1.2 138.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 8 1.1 126.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 9 0.6 69.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 10 0.3 34.50 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 11 0.2 23.00 0 DUPLICATIVE 12 0.1 11.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 13 0.3 36.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/DUPLICATIVE 14 0.5 60.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/DUPLICATIVE 15 0.8 108.00 0 NOT BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 16 1.0 135.00 0 NOT BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 17 2.6 351.00 0 NOT BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 18 4.8 648.00 0 NOT BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 19 0.3 40.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 20 0.3 40.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 21 1.4 189.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 22 1.8 243.00 0 DUPLICATIVE — WHY 2 PARTNERS? 23 0.5 67.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 24 0.6 81.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 25 0.5 67.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 26 1.1 148.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 27 3.0 405.00 405.00 WORK NECESSARY FOR CONFIRMATION 28 5.8 783.00 783.00 WORK NECESSARY FOR CONFIRMATION 29 0.2 27.00 0 DUPLICATIVE 30 0.1 13.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 38.1 TOTAL $4,881.00 $1,188.00

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: JOSEPH A. GUZINSKI 1 01/05/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE STUDY/ANALYZE HML re: objection to acct. appl'n; monthly reports; dictate/draft 2 01/05/87 RESEARCH re: appointment of professionals 3 01/07/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND objection 4 01/07/87 RESEARCH re: DOT certification 5 01/07/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE to Court re: objection to accountant's application 6 01/07/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND 7 01/12/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Motion for Reconsiderati on 8 01/12/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Motion for Reconsideration 9 01/12/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE letter to court re acct' s application 10 01/12/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Motion for Reconsideratio n 11 01/12/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND letter to court re: acct 's application 12 01/12/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for reconsideration 13 01/13/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for reconsideration 14 01/13/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for reconsideration 15 01/14/87 OBJECTION/APPLICATION to application for account tants 16 01/14/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE memorandum re: telephone call w/Mr. Jordan 17 01/15/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 18 02/17/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE memo to HML re: objection 19 02/18/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE memorandum re: accountant's application 20 03/09/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY re: compensation of consultant 21 03/10/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/ADVERSARY Memo in Opp. to Motion for Reconsideration; new accts./ stipulation letter to court re: stipulation 22 03/11/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE JAS re: disclosure state. 23 03/12/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND objection to disclosure state. 24 03/16/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY re: Covington loan 25 03/17/87 STUDY/ANALYZE Accountant's Appl. for Compensation 26 03/24/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY re: Fuebelmen fee petition 27 04/16/87 STUDY/ANALYZE application for accountant s' compensation 28 04/20/87 STUDY/ANALYZE RESEARCH accountant's fee petition; standard for comp. DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE obj. to fee petition; comp. of accts. 29 04/21/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND objection to accts. comp.; motion 30 05/04/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML and Dave Musgrave re: Ruebelmann fee 31 05/28/87 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF MT w/CLIENT Second Disclosure State.; cred. comm. 32 06/01/87 STUDY/ANALYZE prepare for hra.; disc. state. 33 06/02/87 STUDY/ANALYZE financial statements for hearing; prep. 8 attend hrg. ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 1 2.0 170.00 0 LUMPING 2 0.5 42.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 3 0.1 8.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 4 0.1 8.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 5 0.1 8.50 8.50 DE MINIMUS 6 0.3 25.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 7 2.8 238.00 238.00 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 8 0.6 51.00 51.00 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 9 0.4 34.00 34.00 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 10 0.2 17.00 17.00 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 11 0.3 25.50 25.50 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 12 0.3 25.50 25.50 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 13 0.1 8.50 8.50 DE MINIMUS 14 0.2 17.00 17.00 REASONABLE FOR SUBSTANTIVE WORK 15 0.1 8.50 8.50 DE MINIMUS 16 0.2 17.00 17.00 SCHEDULING MATTERS 17 0.1 8.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 18 0.3 25.50 25.50 REQUIRED FOR SUPERVISION OF JR. ASSOCIATE 19 0.3 25.50 25.50 REQUIRED FOR SUPERVISION OF JR. ASSOCIATE 20 0.1 8.50 8.50 DE MINIMUS 21 1.8 153.00 153.00 WORK RELATING TO RECON 22 0.1 8.50 8.50 DE MINIMUS 23 0.9 76.50 76.50 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 24 0.2 17.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 25 0.4 34.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 26 0.1 8.50 8.50 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 27 0.5 47.50 47.50 NECESSARY FOR PREPARATION OF OBJECTION 28 5.8 551.00 551.00 NECESSARY FOR PREPARATION OF OBJECTION 29 4.3 408.50 408.50 NECESSARY FOR PREPARATION OF OBJECTION 30 0.3 28.50 28.50 NO DUPLICATION 31 4.2 399.00 0 DUPLICATIVE — SEE LEBOWITZ NO. 78 32 2.3 218.50 218.50 NECESSARY FOR HEARING 33 3.4 323.00 323.00 NECESSARY FOR HEAPING

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: JOSEPH A. GUZINSKI 34 06/02/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE re: motion to appoint trustee 35 06/05/87 RESEARCH re: appt. of trustee 36 06/12/87 RESEARCH re: appt. of trustee 37 06/14/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE motion for trustee 38 06/15/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Motion for Trustee 39 06/16/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE motion for trustee; Motion for Contempt 40 06/16/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE CONE-INTRA-OFFICE Motion for Trustee; re: Motion for Contempt (HML) 41 06/17/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT motion for cont empt; 6/29 hrg (Mr. Musgrave) 42 06/18/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for contempt; letter to Musgrave re: discl. state. 43 06/19/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND w/HML re Motion for Contempt; letter to Musgrave 44 06/22/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Motion for Contempt 45 06/23/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for contempt; 46 06/24/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Motion for Trustee; financial; REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for trustee 47 06/27/87 RESEARCH re: appt. of trustee 48 06/28/87 RESEARCH REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND re: appointment of trustee; 49 07/05/87 RESEARCH DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE appt. of Ch. 11 trustee; memo in support of appt. of trustee 50 07/06/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE motion for protective order 51 07/07/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND letter to Herb better; motion for trustee 52 07/08/87 STUDY/ANALYZE response to motion for contempt 53 07/13/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND motion for trustee 54 07/14/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Motion for Trustee; 55 07/15/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Motion for Contempt; Motion for Trustee; 56 07/16/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Motion for Trustee; reply memo for contempt motion 57 07/20/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND reply memorandum; motion for trustee 58 07/21/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE RESEARCH motion for default; affidavits, CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 59 07/22/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND TEL w/OTHER Motion for Default; re: conf. hrg. (Earl Jordan); letter to Cred. Comm. re: plan; prep. for hrg. on conf. (HML, KGM, JAS) CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 60 07/23/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND RESEARCH Motion for Contempt; service of subpoena; DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE discovery pleadings and objection to plan; CONE-INTRA-OFFICE discovery for motion for trustee; letter to creditors; polling of Committee on plan 61 07/24/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE motion for postponement, motion to re reduce time and numerous discovery pleadings ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 34 1.0 95.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 35 3.5 332.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 36 0.5 47.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 37 1.0 95.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 38 0.5 47.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 39 1.2 114.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 40 1.1 104.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 41 2.1 109.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 42 0.6 57.00 0 LUMPING 43 1.5 142.50 0 LUMPING 44 2.8 266.00 0 LUMPING 45 4.1 389.50 0 LUMPING 46 3.9 370.50 0 LUMPING/NOT BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 47 2.5 237.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 48 2.0 190.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 49 4.0 380.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 50 1.9 180.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 51 5.7 541.50 0 LUMPING 52 0.2 19.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 53 5.0 475.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 54 5.5 522.50 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 55 4.0 380.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 56 2.6 247.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 57 1.0 95.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 58 4.5 427.50 0 LUMPING/NOT BENEFICIAL 59 4.3 408.50 0 LUMPING 60 8.5 836.00 0 LUMPING 61 9.5 902.50 0 LUMPING/NOT BENEFICIAL

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: JOSEPH A. GUZINSKI 62 07/25/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE discovery pleadings 63 07/27/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND letter re: plan to creditors; prepare for scheduling conf. 64 07/28/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND re: ballot requirements; attend scheduling conf. w/J. Schneider 65 07/29/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND response to demand letter; letter to creditors; corporate law issua s in motion for contempt; RESEARCH contempt issue 66 07/31/87 RESEARCH CONF MTG w ADVERSARY re: contempt issues; before hearing re: settlement; re: procedure for modifying plan of reorganization 67 08/11/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY re: conf. hearing (Musgrave); prepare file for confirmation hrg. 68 08/12/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE pleadings per settlement agree, letter (discovery) 69 08/14/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE pleadings re: settle. agree., letters re: discovery 70 08/15/87 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND discovery letters 71 08/17/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE STUDY/ANALYZE RE: RUEBELMANN CBJ. TO CONF IRMATION (JAS); PROPOSED SETTLEMENT w/BAKER CONSTR. COMPANY 72 08/20/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE TEL w/ADVERSARY re: Duebelmann objection and confirmation of plan; tally of ballots on plan; TEL w/C THER objection by Ruebelman to confirmation (better) 73 08/21/87 Prepare for confirmation hearing 74 08/24/87 attend hearing 75 08/24/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE pleadings for confirmation hearing 76 08/24/87 prepare for hearing 77 08/29/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Momo upgrading Bluhm settlement 78 09/09/87 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE re: Blake settlement proposal 79 09/09/87 STUDY/ANALYZE TEL w/ADVERSARY A/k report of 4/2/87; Blake settlement (David Musgrave) 80 09/11/87 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE letter re: Blake settlement and accounts receivable 81 09/21/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY re: accts. receivable report (Musgrave) 82 10/09/87 TEL w/ADVERSARY cred. comm. fees 83 09/07/88 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Appl. for final allowance of fees ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 62 11.0 1,045.00 0 DID NOT BENEFIT ESTATE 63 4.5 427.50 427.00 SUBSTANTIVE WORK 64 3.3 313.50 313.50 SETTLEMENT EFFORTS 65 9.1 864.50 0 LUMPING/NOT BENEFICIAL 66 3.1 294.50 0 LUMPING/NOT BENEFICIAL 67 0.6 57.00 57.00 PRECONFIRMATION PREPARATION 68 2.0 190.00 190.00 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 69 1.5 142.50 142.50 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 70 0.5 47.50 47.50 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 71 0.7 66.50 0 LUMPING 72 1.6 152.00 0 LUMPING 73 1.0 95.00 95.00 PRECONFIRMATION PREPARATION 74 2.0 190.00 190.00 BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 75 0.7 66.50 66.50 SETTLEMENT IMPLEMENTED 76 1.5 142.50 142.50 BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 77 0.4 38.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 78 0.3 28.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 79 0.4 38.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 80 0.3 28.50 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 81 0.2 19.00 19.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 82 0.2 19.00 19.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 83 3.0 315.00 157.50 PREPARATION OF FEE PETITION AT LOWER RATE TOTAL $15,731,00 $4,175.00

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: PAULA KRAHN MERKLE 1 07/01/86 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE corres. from DM re Arrow Leon, HML 2 07/10/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE D. Musgrave, HML re Arrow Lock settlement 3 07/10/86 TEL w/OTHER DSM re amended plan, disc. st., conf. HML 4 07/17/86 CONF MTG w ADVERSARY CONF-INTRA-OFFICE DSM re amended Plan, discl., IT, HML 5 07/21/86 STUDY/ANALYZE printout re: fee app 6 07/22/86 STUDY/ANALYZE printout for fee app 7 07/23/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Keyser, amended plan 8 07/24/86 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML re amended disclosure statement 9 07/25/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE TEL w/OTHER HML, D. Musgrave 10 07/25/86 REVIEW FILE DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE Application for Interim Allowance 11 07/26/86 TEL w/OTHER STUDY/ANALYZE DSM re amended discl. statement 12 07/28/86 TEL w/OTHER 13 07/29/86 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE DSM reamended discl, statement, fee app'n 14 07/29/86 PROOFREAD REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Amended FBCG fee app'n, conf. HML 15 07/30/86 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE DSM reammended disci. statement, fee app'n 16 07/30/86 PROOFREAD REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Amended FRCG fee app., conf. HML 17 07/31/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Amended Plan, Disc. State 18 07/31/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND App'n for Attys Feas 19 08/04/86 STUDY/ANALYZE projections 20 08/06/86 REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND STUDY/ANALYZE fee app'n, drs. fee app., amended disc. st. 21 08/09/86 PROOFREAD REVISE/REDRAFT/AMEND Amend FBCG Fee App'n, re view drs. fae app. 22 08/09/86 STUDY/ANALYZE Drs. amended plan, discl. st. 23 08/11/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE DSM, HML re disclosure stat., plan, fee apps 24 08/12/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 25 08/12/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE PROOFREAD FBCG fee app, conf. HML re discl. st., DSM 26 08/19/86 TEL w/CTHEP REVIEW FILE DSM re Amendments to disclosure st., proc. re fee apps. 27 08/19/86 DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE CORRESP OTHER Withdrawal of Cbj'n, corres. Ct. ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 1 0.2 20.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 2 0.3 30.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 3 0.2 20.00 20.00 ADEQUATE DESC. OF COMM. W/ D COUNSEL 4 2.0 200.00 200.00 ADEQUATE DESC. OF COMM. W/ D COUNSEL 5 0.2 20.00 20.00 PREPARE FEE APPLICATION 6 0.4 40.00 40.00 PREPARE FEE APPLICATION 7 0.3 30.00 30.00 HML PARTICIPATION IN SAME CONF. NOT COMP. 8 0.6 60.00 60.00 HML PARTICIPATION IN SAME CONF. NOT COMP. 9 3.0 300.00 0 DUPLICATIVE 10 2.2 220.00 220.00 PREPARE FEE APPLICATION 11 0.7 70.00 70.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 12 0.1 10.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 13 0.2 20.00 20.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 14 1.1 110.00 55.00 PROOFREADING 15 0.2 20.00 20.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 16 1.1 110.00 55.00 PROOFREADING 17 0.3 30.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 18 0.4 40.00 40.00 PREPARE FEE APPLICATION 19 0.2 20.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 20 1.1 110.00 0 LUMPING 21 0.7 70.00 0 LUMPING 22 0.5 50.00 0 NON PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 23 0.5 50.00 50.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 24 0.2 20.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 25 1.2 120.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/LUMPING 26 0.5 50.00 50.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 27 0.3 30.00 30.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: PAULA KRAHN MERKLE 28 08/20/86 PROOFREAD TEL w/OTHER corres., withdrawal fee a pp., DSM 29 08/21/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 30 08/22/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE CORRESP OTHER HML re amended plan, DSM re mailing of notices 31 08/22/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE DICTATE/DRAFT/PREPARE withdrawal of wilke objection 32 08/25/86 PROOFREAD CORRESP OTHER wilke-withdrawal of objection, conf. HML 33 08/26/86 TEL w/OTHER Earl Jordan re wilke, hrg., 8/28 on fees 34 08/26/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Dave Musgrave, HML re fee apps, accts. fees 35 09/09/86 STUDY/ANALYZE corres. from Dempsey re s tatus of case/claim 36 09/10/86 STUDY/ANALYZE daily reports 37 09/10/86 STUDY/ANALYZE CORRESP OTHER Federline (creditor) inquiry 38 09/10/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OR PARAL COAL HML re cr. inguiry, conf. re status, July fin. report 39 09/17/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML re int. fin. reports 40 10/02/86 RESEARCH MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OR PARALEGAL advances by Jed. — § 364, HML 41 10/03/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE CORRESP OTHER HML re memo on Jed admin. claim, corres. to DSM 42 10/07/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE HML re 364 issue 43 10/30/86 Cusimano settlement 44 11/12/86 STUDY/ANALYZE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE plan and disclosure statement, HML 45 11/14/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE DSM, HML re plan, disc. st., proposed settlement 46 11/14/86 REVIEW FILF CORRESP OTHER DSM, creditors' comm., conf. HML 47 11/18/86 MEMORANDUM TO PARTNER, ASSOCIATE OR PARALEGAL 48 11/24/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE Perry Rubenstein-creditor — re disc. st. 49 12/02/86 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE 50 12/03/86 TEL w/OTHER CONF-INTRA-OFFICE D. Musgrave, HML re appt. for plan 51 12/04/86 CORRESP OTHER TEL w/OTHER Perry Rosenstein, DSM re disc. st., review file 52 03/30/88 TEL w/OTHER creditor 53 03/31/88 TEL w/OTHER Musgrave, Mayer (creditor), re status 54 04/06/88 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE STUDY/ANALYZE Oak, Folger, McClure settle ments, tel w/DSM, conf. HML ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 28 0.2 20.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 29 0.2 20.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 30 0.3 30.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/LUMPING 31 0.2 20.00 20.00 SUBSTANTIVE WORK/BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 32 0.2 20.00 20.00 SUBSTANTIVE WORK/BENEFICIAL TO ESTATE 33 0.2 20.00 20.00 SCHEDULING HEARING 34 0.4 40.00 40.00 NEGOTIATIONS 35 0.2 20.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 36 0.2 20.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 37 0.2 20.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 38 0.3 30.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 39 0.2 20.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 40 2.1 210.00 210.00 ADEQUATE DESCRIPTION 41 0.4 40.00 0 LUMPING 42 0.1 10.00 20.00 REASONABLE FOR SERVICE 43 0.1 10.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 44 1.1 110.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 45 1.1 110.00 110.00 SEE LEBOWITZ NO. 24 46 0.8 80.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 47 0.1 10.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 48 0.4 40.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 49 0.1 10.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 50 0.2 20.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 51 0.4 40.00 0 LUMPING 52 0.1 11.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 53 0.3 33.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 54 0.6 66.00 0 LUMPING

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NO. NAME OF ATTORNEY: PAULA KRAHN MERKLE 55 04/07/88 STUDY/ANALYZE daily reports, Oak settlement 56 04/08/88 TEL w/OTHER creditor re status — paymetns (Furst Furst) 57 04/11/88 STUDY/ANALYZE corres.-Omark (cr) 58 04/12/88 STUDY/ANALYZE daily reports (3/14/-20/88) 59 04/13/88 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE DSM re: status of payments, Oak 60 04/14/88 TEL w/OTHER creditors re: 2/25 dist'n, D. Musgrave re Oak 61 06/27/88 STUDY/ANALYZE Daily reports 62 07/05/88 REVIEW FILE CONF-INTRA-OFFICE JAS, app'n for fees, status of case, tal w/DSM re monte verde obj. 63 07/08/88 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE Furst Furst re distribution 64 07/12/88 REVIEW FILE TEL w/OTHER unsecured crs.-no distribution 65 07/15/88 TEL w/OTHER REVIEW FILE Furst Furst 66 07/15/88 TEL w/CLIENT TEL w/OTHER DSM re missing cks, Furst Furst 67 07/25/88 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE FML re attys fee app. 68 07/29/88 TEL w/OTHER Brian Marks — First First 69 08/04/88 TEL w/OTHER creditor 70 08/16/88 REVIEW FILE TEL w/OTHER review plan, tel w/ D. Musgrae, Sandy Coons, Comark, Inc., corres. DSM 71 08/24/88 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE STUDY/ANALYZE fee app., escrow funds 72 08/31/88 REVIEW FILE escrow funds 73 09/02/88 CONF-INTRA-OFFICE REVIEW FILE JAG re fee app., escrow acct. 74 09/09/88 TEL w/OTHER STUDY/ANALYZE re fee app., daily reports 75 09/14/88 STUDY/ANALYZE dialy reports to MNIFC ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 55 0.3 33.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 56 0.2 22.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 57 0.1 11.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 58 0.1 11.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 59 0.3 33.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 60 0.2 22.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 61 0.2 22.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 62 0.9 99.00 0 LUMPING 63 0.3 33.00 0 LUMPING 64 0.2 22.00 0 LUMPING 65 0.2 22.00 0 LUMPING 66 0.2 22.00 0 LUMPING 67 0.1 11.00 11.00 PREPARATION OF FEE APPLICATION 68 0.1 11.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 69 0.2 22.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 70 0.5 55.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION/LUMPING 71 0.2 22.00 22.00 PREPARATION OF FEE PETITION 72 0.4 44.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 73 0.4 50.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 74 0.4 50.00 0 LUMPING 75 0.2 25.00 0 LUMPING TOTAL $3,592.00 $1,443.00

APPENDIX — DISALLOWANCE/REDUCTION IN TIME CHARGES OF FRANK, BERNSTEIN IN THE LEONARD JED CO. CHAPTER 11 ITEM NO. DATE SERVICES DESCRIBED IN TIME RECORDS NAME OF ATTORNEY: JOSEF E. ROSENBLATT 1 01/12/67 REVIEW FILE review of monthly stateme nt of affairs 2 02/12/67 RESEARCH 3 07/24/67 RESEARCH 4 07/27/67 RESEARCH CONE-INTRA-OFFICE ITEM HOURS AMOUNT AMOUNT REASON FOR ALLOWANCE, DISALLOWANCE OR REDUCTION NO. CLAIMED CHARGED ALLOWED 1 0.2 22.00 0 NON-PRODUCTIVE DOCUMENT REVIEW 2 1.5 165.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 3 2.5 275.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION 4 1.2 132.00 0 INSUFFICIENT DESCRIPTION TOTAL $594.00 $ — 0 —

APPENDIX — DISALLOWED EXPENSES Telephone $ 129.32 Messenger 192.25 Secretarial Overtime 241.09 Meals 89.00 Postage 150.22 TOTAL $ 801.88


Summaries of

In re Leonard Jed Co.

United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland
Jul 7, 1989
103 B.R. 706 (Bankr. D. Md. 1989)
Case details for

In re Leonard Jed Co.

Case Details

Full title:In re The LEONARD JED COMPANY, Debtor

Court:United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland

Date published: Jul 7, 1989

Citations

103 B.R. 706 (Bankr. D. Md. 1989)

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