(My Favorite Homemade Blog Photo: Justice Gorsuch’s Trans Am from In re Haberman with Judge Garland Looking On)
February 12, 2024 will mark Plan Proponent’s 9th Anniversary. Back in the early days, I’d be holed-up in Jessica’s parents’ basement in Potomac on New Year’s Eve preparing a Year in Review Top 10 List. Of course, that was back when I posted more than ten posts per year. While the post total is now 132 posts, my productivity has dropped off over the years and, thus, I’m embarrassed to admit that I haven’t done a year-end Top 10 list since January 2020.
Quality over quantity, right? Anyway, to force myself to do something even “bigger” for the 10th Anniversary and to save the Justice Sandra Day O’Connor tribute post for later in January, here are my Top 10 favorite (i.e., most readable, least boring) Plan Proponent blog posts.
Thanks for nine years of support and Happy New Year!
10. ABI Commission Report – Small and Medium-Sized Debtor Enterprises
Remember the 402-page ABI Commission Report from 2014? Well, that Report is what started it all for Plan Proponent with its first ever post on February 12, 2015. Ridiculously, I blogged about every single confirmation-related page of that Report, from February 12, 2015 to August 15, 2015, a total of 23 separate posts!
In hindsight, I like the Small and Medium-Sized Debtor Enterprises (SME) post the best because not only was it the last post in an exhausting, “put it out of its misery!” series, but it also provided a primitive preview of what later became Subchapter V almost 5 years later with the SBRA. Sixty days to file a plan? Yikes!
9. David Cassidy and the Absolute Priority Rule
Speaking of the SBRA, the absolute priority rule (APR) posts haven’t aged well and have lost much of their relevance now that so many individual Chapter 11 cases are Sub V cases where (thank God) the APR no longer applies.
But back in 2014, when I was a wee associate, I literally read every single APR opinion ever written for individual debtors to help my longtime mentor Ward Stone prepare for an APR panel for ABI Southeast 2014. That resulted in our APR Case Chart (lasted updated 02/13/17).
And for Plan Proponent’s second ever post, the late David Cassidy (of Partridge Family fame) provided an excuse to leverage the Chart when he filed his Florida Chapter 11 case on February 11, 2015. I revisited it on the blog’s 2nd anniversary in early 2017 when his plan confirmation litigation started. Unfortunately, Cassidy died later that year.
I like to joke that, for a year or so, I was the leading expert on the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 Baker Botts, L.L.P. v. ASARCO, LLC “fees for fees” bankruptcy opinion wherein the Court held that professionals employed under § 327(a) may not, under § 330(a), recover as compensation fees incurred in defending their fee applications. What that really means is that, for a year or so, I had an unhealthy obsession with Baker Botts, a case that took § 327 professionals by storm but is now rarely mentioned.
But while my instinct is to make fun of myself, the Baker Botts experiment, no matter how irrelevant Baker Botts is today, did provide some minor publishing opportunities and a few run-ins with legal journalists who were seeking soundbites about such an esoteric decision.
7. Book Excerpt: A Southern Lawyer’s Lunch with Harvey Miller
Growing tired of bi-weekly case summaries, I was honored in 2017 when my friend and Atlanta bankruptcy lawyer Doug Ford let me post an excerpt from his self-published book I Do My Own Stunts: Finding My Way as an Attorney. And while the Harvey Miller “clickbait” was irresistible, I really like Doug’s story about meeting Harvey in NYC.
6. Justice Thomas Crashes a Bankruptcy Breakout Session
Chief Judge Austin Carter (Bankr. M.D. Ga.)—who supplemented my bankruptcy training from Ward by teaching me everything I know about day-to-day Chapter 11 practice when he was my Stone & Baxter colleague—was nice enough to invite Jessica and me to the 2016 Eleventh Circuit Judicial Conference in Point Clear Alabama.
Typed-up from my hotel room on the last day of the Conference, this post not only covers all of the inevitable pomp and circumstance of collecting an entire circuit of federal judges in a single hotel, but also portrays a charming and jolly Justice Thomas. As federal judges are prone to enjoy, the Conference invited an Abe Lincoln impersonator to provide entertainment during lunch. He was in character for the entire lunch and Justice Thomas loved it. The post also tells of our personal encounter with none other than one of President Obama’s potential SCOTUS nominees—perhaps the most humble and unassuming judge at the conference.
It’s a fun, almost bankruptcy-free read.
5. Forcing Bankruptcy Relevance on SCOTUS Nominees
The U.S. Supreme Court has such a disdain for bankruptcy that bankruptcy is one of the few areas that the Justices almost always agree about. Thus, when President Obama threw up one last nominee in Judge Garland and President Trump was nominating potential Justices on a seemingly weekly basis (including now Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh), I really enjoyed forcing a bankruptcy angle on these nominees, tongue-in-cheek or otherwise.
- Click here for the Judge Garland post
- Click here for part 1 and here for part 2 of the Justice Gorsuch post
- Click here for the Justice Kavanaugh post
The photoshopped picture above, which I used on Twitter X but was too bashful (until now) to use on the blog, is Burt Reynolds (disguised as Justice Gorsuch), with a wishful Judge Garland looking on, wondering what could have been. And the Trans Am is from In re Haberman, with (now) Justice Gorsuch introducing a bankruptcy opinion like no one else can:
At one level, this is a dispute over loan payments secured by a nearly 30 year old Pontiac Trans Am. At another level, this case tests the limits of a bankruptcy trustee’s statutory power to displace existing lienholders.
4. Baseball Bankruptcies in October Series
But for the depth of work and/or sentimentality that characterize my top three favorites, the Baseball Series will always be my favorite. I love October Baseball and it just so happens that it has featured recently-bankrupt teams (the Chicago Cubs and the L.A. Dodgers) and a “bankruptcy-adjacent” team (the Houston Astros).
And while baseball games are now supposed to be shorter in duration, the pre-2023 World Series games provided plenty of time for in-game blogging:
- Click here for the Chicago Cubs post that started the series
- Click here for the L.A. Dodgers post
- Click here for the Houston Astros post
3. Justice Antonin Scalia’s Bankruptcy Opinions
3. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Bankruptcy Opinions
I can’t choose between these two tributes and, because Justice Scalia and Justice Ginsburg were such unlikely friends from opposite ends of the spectrum, I won’t. I got lucky that such historically-important and larger than life justices also had such a significant bankruptcy footprint. In many ways, these bookend posts define the blog for me.
2. History of Law Firm and Professional Websites
The three-part New Years 2023 series on the history of professional websites (going back to the 90s) was an insane labor of love that took more than two years of off an on work to complete. At one point, I think I was hitting the Wayback Machine site so frequently that I literally shut it down.
But that site revealed an Easter Egg of all Easter Eggs when I uncovered the long lost King & Spalding “2001 Blooper Reel” video that was buried in the archive of its old website.
Anyway, these posts are loaded with nostalgia.
1. Judge W. Homer Drake, Jr. Series
At least in Georgia, we’ve all been riding Judge Drake’s coattails for decades. And it goes beyond Georgia because so many people reached out to me after I posted this series—not about the series or even the cases summarized in the series, but Judge Drake himself, the judge who the American College of Bankruptcy describes as the longest serving bankruptcy judge in history and one of the longest serving federal judges ever.
Sadly, Judge Drake died about a year later. It’s only fitting, then, that I road Judge Drake’s coattails one last time last March when the Southeastern Bankruptcy Law Institute asked me if I’d participate in the SBLI’s luncheon honoring Judge Drake. As many of you know, Judge Drake founded SBLI in Atlanta in 1974. In fact, it will celebrate its 50th year this year.
SBLI thought that Judge Paul Bonapfel was giving the keynote tribute to Judge Drake, with me giving only a short introduction. Thus, I’m sure its planners were understandably surprised and nervous when Judge Bonapfel switched the order a week prior and asked me to do it. On the one hand, I’m easily the least distinguished person to ever tribute Judge Drake in public. On the other hand, that neat opportunity would have been unavailable without this blog and Judge Bonapfel’s generosity.
Bonus: A Tribute to Jerome L. “Jerry” Kaplan
This might not be your favorite, but I’d be remiss not to mention the post that is dearest to my firm and me. And that is my tribute to Jerry Kaplan, who happened to be friends with Judge Drake going way back. Naturally, this tribute turned into a history of Stone & Baxter and its predecessors going back 60 plus years. They just don’t make lawyers like Jerry anymore.
And so there you have it, my favorite posts. If you’d like to know about other times when I occasionally post something other than boring case summaries, then you can subscribe to Plan Proponent via email here.