
44
ceiver is not only asking to be principally rewarded for unsuccessfully de-
fending appeals and an en banc petition, he is asking that they be paid by
Novo Point and Quantec, both innocent parties who successfully and intel-
ligently exercised their rights of appeal.
40
Although a bankruptcy matter, the LLCs proffer guidance in ASARCO,
LLC v. Jordan Hyden Womble Culbreth & Holzer, P.C. (Matter Of ASARCO,
LLC), No. 12-40997 (5th Cir. April 30, 2014). Therein, the court stated:
No side wears the black hat for administrative fee purposes. In the ab-
sence of explicit statutory guidance, requiring professionals to
defend their fee applications as a cost of doing business is con-
sistent with the reality of the bankruptcy process. The perverse
incentives that could arise from paying the bankruptcy profes-
sionals to engage in satellite fee litigation are easy to conceive.
Although the Asarco Court allowed that fees for defense could be permitted
where "an adverse party has acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or
for oppressive reasons," this would not apply herein. In Netsphere I this
Court found that Baron’s conduct (not the LLCs’) contributed to the imposi-
40
Baron filed eleven appeals, ten of which were reversed and remanded Appeal Nos.
10-11202 (1 order), 11-10113 (2 orders), 11-10289 (18 orders), 11-10290 (13 orders), 11-
10390 (16 orders), 12-10003 (2 orders), 12-10489 (7 orders), 12-10657 (4 orders), 12-10804
(6 orders), 12-11082 (5 orders). One was dismissed (Appeal No. 11-10501 was dismissed
as Carington, Coleman, Sloman & Blumenthal, LLP had filed a motion for rehearing
that was still pending when the appeal was taken.). Seventy-four District Court orders
were reversed by this Court and remanded. Baron did not create chaos: he simply ethi-
cally and successfully appealed the District Court’s orders.
Case: 13-10696 Document: 00512704339 Page: 57 Date Filed: 07/18/2014