Professional May Not Be a “Professional Person” for Purposes of Sect...

01/03/14

By: Alexandra Hastings

St. John’s Law Student

American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review Staff

 

Finding that a public relations firm did not qualify as a bankruptcy “professional” within the meaning of section 327(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Kentucky, in In re Seven Counties Services, Inc.,[i] authorized a debtor to retain the firm under section 1108 to assist with the general operation of its post-petition business.  In Seven Counties Services, the debtor sought to retain a public relations firm, which had been working with the debtor prior to the bankruptcy case, to participate in “lobbying, third party advocacy and support of [the d]ebtor’s efforts in restructuring its retirement plans and media relations.”[ii]  The court found that although the firm’s representatives were “professional persons” within the context of section 327(a), the firm was “not performing any tasks of the [d]ebtor enumerated in 11 U.S.C. § 1107,” nor was it “involved in formulating the [d]ebtor’s plan of reorganization or the administration of the estate.”[iii]  Moreover, the firm’s work for the debtor did not “involve any part in negotiating the plan, adjusting debtor/creditor relationships, disposing or acquiring assets or performing any duty required of the [d]ebtor under the Code.”[iv]  Thus, the firm did not qualify as a bankruptcy “professional” for purposes of section 327.[v]

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