Compensation of Standing Trustees Under the Bankruptcy Reform Act ( 1982 )


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  •                   Compensation of Standing Trustees Under
    the Bankruptcy Reform Act
    The com pensation schem e m ade applicable to court-appointed chapter 13 standing trustees by the
    Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 is designed to encourage m axim um econom ic efficiency in
    adm inistering plans, and it would be contrary to congressional intent to perm it a subsequent year’s
    surplus to be applied to a prior y e a r’s deficit so as to increase the trustee’s com pensation-far that
    prior year. However, a subsequent surplus may be applied to offset out-of-pocket losses suffered by
    the trustee in a prior year so as to perm it the trustee to break even for that year.
    February 26, 1982
    MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE DIRECTOR,
    EXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR UNITED STATES TRUSTEES
    Your predecessor requested the opinion of this Office on two questions relating
    to the accounts of those chapter 13 standing trustees who are under the admin­
    istration of the United States Trustees. These are: (1) whether such standing
    trustees may, in a particular year, establish or add to a reserve fund to cover
    anticipated expenses of subsequent years; and, (2) whether such standing trust­
    ees may carry operating deficits from one year forward to the next, to be repaid
    from subsequent surpluses. The answers to these questions are dependent upon
    the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 586(e) (Supp. II 1978).
    Section 586(e) provides:
    (e)(1) The Attorney General, after consultation with a Unit­
    ed States trustee that has appointed an individual under subsection
    (b) of this section to serve as standing trustee in cases under
    chapter 13 of title I I , shall fix—
    (A) a maximum annual compensation for such individ­
    ual, not to exceed the lowest annual rate of basic pay in effect
    for grade G S-16 of the General Schedule prescribed under
    section 5332 of title 5; and
    (B) a percentage fee, not to exceed ten percent, based
    on such maximum annual compensation and the actual,
    necessary expenses incurred by such individual as standing
    trustee.
    (2)       Such individual shall collect such percentage fee from all
    payments under plans in the cases under chapter 13 of title 11 for
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    which such individual serves as standing trustee. Such individual
    shall pay to the United States trustee, and the United States trustee
    shall pay to the Treasury—
    (A) any amount by which the actual compensation of
    such individual exceeds five percent upon all payments
    under plans in cases under chapter 13 of title 11 for which
    such individual serves as standing trustee; and
    (B) any amount by which the percentage for all such
    cases exceeds—
    (i) such individual actual compensation for such
    cases, as adjusted under subparagraph (A) of this para­
    graph; plus
    (ii) the actual, necessary expenses incurred by such
    individual as standing trustee in such cases.
    Section 586(e) was added to Title 28 by the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978,
    Pub. L. No. 95-598 92 Stat. 2663. A companion section of that Act added 11
    U.S.C. § 1302(e) which, with the exception noted below, contains identical
    provisions applicable to the compensation and reimbursement for fees and
    expenses of court-appointed standing trustees under chapter 13.
    It is clear that the plain language of 28 U.S.C. § 586(e) does not deal expressly
    with the issues raised by your predecessor’s questions and we have found no
    relevant cases interpreting that section or 11 U.S.C. § 1302(e). Nor does the
    legislative history of those sections, in terms, fully resolve the questions posed.
    In the main, the legislative history simply emphasizes what is apparent from the
    face of the sections: that Congress intended to establish a system for chapter 13
    cases in which a set percentage fee would be collected by standing trustees from
    all payments made under all plans administered by them to cover their compensa­
    tion and expenses; that their compensation would be limited, both in absolute
    terms and as a percentage of payments made under plans; and that any excess of
    fees collected over otherwise allowed compensation and expenses would be paid
    to the Treasury. See H.R. Rep. No. 595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 105-07, 440
    (1977).' However, the House Report does contain one illuminating statement of
    intent, viz: “ The fee system is designed to encourage the standing trustees to
    keep costs low at the risk of reduced compensation.” 
    Id. at 107.
       While the limitations, both absolute and percentage, placed by § 586(e) on the
    compensation of standing trustees were not innovations of the Bankruptcy
    Reform A ct,2 the concept that this compensation and their expenses should be
    defrayed from a set percentage fee was. Under the applicable section of Title 11
    1 S ection 586(e) and 11 U S C . § 1302(e) w ere derived from the H ouse version o f the B ankruptcy Reform A ct o f
    1978. T h e S enate rep o rt is therefore unillum inating
    2 See 11 U S .C . § 1059(3) (1976) (providing, in addition to reim bu rsem en t for actual and necessary costs and
    ex p e n ses, fo r the paym ent o f com m issions to c h a p ter X III trustee o f “ not m ore than 5 p er centum to be com puted
    upon an d payable out o f the paym ents actually m ade by o r for a d eb to r under the plan.” ) and H R. D oc. N o. 184,
    88th C o n g ., 1st S e s s., R eport o f th e Proceedings of the Judicial C onference of the U nited States, Sept 1 7 -1 8 ,1 9 6 3
    at 87 (approving the recom m endation that th e annual com pensation o f trustees in ch ap ter XTT1 cases not exceed the
    m axim um com pensation o f a full-tim e referee).
    168
    prior to the 1978 Act, the commissions paid chapter XIII trustees, including
    standing trustees, and their actual and necessary costs and expenses were distinct
    priority payment items, payable from monies paid in by or for the debtor. See 11
    U.S.C. § 1059(2) and (3) (1976); see also Bankruptcy Rule 13-209. Similarly,
    under the Bankruptcy Reform Act, compensation and reimbursement for actual,
    necessary expenses for chapter 13 trustees, other than standing trustees, remain
    payable, as distinct items, from monies otherwise available for payment to
    creditors under the plan, i.e., from all monies paid in by or for the debtor. See 11
    U.S.C. §§ 330(a), 503(b)(2), 507(a)(1) and 1326(a)(1) (Supp. II 1978). In light
    of the statement of intent in the House Report and the difference in treatment
    between chapter 13 standing trustees under the Bankruptcy Reform Act and other
    chapter 13 trustees under that Act as well as chapter XIII trustees under the
    predecessor act, it would seem that Congress clearly intended that, ultimately, the
    amount of a standing trustee’s compensation, payable as it is only from the same
    finite source available to defray expenses, would depend, at least in part, on his
    economic efficiency. That is, that it would depend on his ability to hold his
    expenses to a minimum.
    This intended result suggests a partial answer to one of the questions which
    you have asked. It would be contrary to congressional intent to permit a
    subsequent surplus3 to be applied to prior year’s deficit in a manner that would
    effectively increase a standing trustee’s compensation for that prior year.4 This
    means that a subsequent surplus may not be applied to raise a standing trustee’s
    net income from a prior year’s percentage fees above the level of zero. In other
    words, a subsequent surplus may not be applied to “ reinstate” any part of the
    compensation to which a standing trustee was entitled for the prior year under 28
    U.S.C. § 586(e) but did not receive because his actual, necessary expenses
    incurred (and paid either from the percentage fee or out of pocket) effectively
    reduced his actual compensation from the percentage fee below the permissible
    level. A question remains, however, whether under 28 U.S.C. § 586(e) a
    subsequent surplus may be applied to offset out-of-pocket losses suffered when
    actual, necessary expenses in a prior year have exceeded the total dollar amount
    collected in percentage fees; that is, whether a subsequent surplus may be used to
    offset negative compensation to raise it to the break-even point.
    Two arguments can be advanced why such application of a subsequent surplus
    may be impermissible under 28 U.S.C. § 586(e). The first is that such a setoff
    would be contrary, in a general way, to the principle of economic efficiency stated
    above. The second is that it may be in derogation of the requirement of the statute
    that surpluses be paid over to the Treasury.
    The argument concerning economic efficiency is easily met. Whereas the
    legislative history of § 586(e) clearly indicates a congressional intent that the
    annual compensation of a standing trustee be dependent, in part, upon his ability
    3 By surplus we m ean the excess o f the percentage fee set under 28 U .S C § 528(e)(1)(B ) and collected u n d er
    § 5 2 8(e)(2) in a given y ea r over the m axim um perm issible com pensation of the standing trustee for that year and his
    actu al, necessary expenses incurred during that year
    4 U nder § 586(e)(1)(A ) & (B), com pensation for standing trustees m ust be com puted on an annual basis
    169
    to keep expenses low during the year, there is no evidence that Congress either
    contemplated or intended that a standing trustee be required to pay actual and
    necessary expenses out of his own pocket, from monies not attributable to fees
    collected in chapter 13 cases. It simply does not follow that because Congress
    believed that a more efficient standing trustee should receive greater annual
    compensation than a less efficient one, it also intended that all standing trustees
    be held to a standard of efficiency which would require them to accept negative
    compensation (incurred by their payment of expenses defined as both “ actual"
    and “ necessary” ) if that result may be avoided without a clear violation of an
    essential element of § 586(e). In short, we find no evidence on which to base the
    conclusion that some abstract “ spirit” of § 586(e) precludes the application of a
    subsequent surplus to offset prior negative compensation.
    The second argument raises issues not of spirit but of text— whether such setoff
    would violate an essential element of § 586(e). Section 586(e)(2) requires that a
    surplus— that portion of the percentage fee which exceeds the total of a standing
    trustee’s maximum annual compensation (taking into account both the absolute
    and percentage caps) and his actual, necessary expenses—be paid by the stand­
    ing trustee to the United States Trustee for payment over to the Treasury. This
    provision is intended to apply in those situations in which “ the standing trustee
    served in more cases with greater payments to creditors than anticipated at the
    beginning of the year when the budget was prepared and the fee fixed.” House
    Report at 106. The intended effect is to make available to the Treasury, to
    partially defray the costs of the United States Trustee system, monies which, if
    retained by the standing trustees, would exceed their actual and necessary
    expenses and the compensation to which they are limited. 
    Id. at 107.
    The
    provision ensures that standing trustees will not be unjustly enriched while
    participating in a system which is partially subsidized by the United States.
    Unlike its corresponding provision related to disposition of surpluses by standing
    trustees not under the administration of United States Trustees, it does not
    specifically require that excess fees be paid to the Treasury annually or on any
    other fixed schedule. Compare 11 U.S.C. § 1302(e)(2).5
    We see nothing in the language of § 586(e)(2) or in the congressional intent
    behind it which requires that provision to be read as mandating that a surplus of a
    standing trustee in a particular calendar (or fiscal) year be turned over imme­
    diately and in full to the United States Trustee for payment to the Treasury without
    consideration of his prior out-of-pocket losses. We do not believe that application
    of a current surplus to pay for prior, unrecovered actual and necessary expenses
    would violate the plain language of § 586(e)(2), would cause the over­
    compensation of standing trustees which Congress intended to prevent, or would
    deprive the United States of monies which Congress intended it to have— i.e.,
    monies which would otherwise be a windfall to the standing trustees.
    5 T h e le gislative histo ry gives n o clue as to w hy 11 U .S .C . § 1302(e)(2) provides that excess fees co llected by
    c o u rt-ad m in istered standing trustees be paid to th e Treasury an n u ally w hile § 586(e)(2) is silent on the sch ed u le for
    p aym ent
    170
    We have little to add in answer to the question whether, in a particular year, a
    standing trustee may establish or add to a reserve fund to cover anticipated
    expenses of subsequent years. We think that our conclusion that § 586(e)(2) does
    not require, as an absolute rule, that the full amount of a given year’s surplus be
    turned over for payment into the Treasury in that same year, without regard to
    what has gone before, applies equally to what can reasonably be expected to
    occur in the future. So long as the establishment of a reserve fund is a reasonable
    business practice for a standing trustee and that fund is used to pay actual and
    necessary expenses (as opposed to supplementing compensation) of the trustee,
    we see nothing in § 586(e) to prohibit it.
    L a r r y L . S im m s
    Deputy Assistant Attorney General
    Office cf Legal Counsel
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Document Info

Filed Date: 2/26/1982

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017