Thomson Reuters News & Insight
Featured Content from WESTLAW

Legal

  •  
  •  

A sign marking the Dewey headquarters on 6th avenue in New York. REUTERS. Shannon Stapleton

Creditors seek claims against Dewey's former executives

11/13/2012 COMMENTS (0)

By Casey Sullivan 

Nov 13 (Reuters) - In an effort to recover funds lost in the bankruptcy of Dewey & LeBoeuf, a committee of creditors on Monday requested approval from U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn to pursue claims against three former managers of the failed New York law firm.

Ed Weisfelner, a lawyer for Dewey's unsecured creditors committee, asked Judge Glenn for approval to pursue claims against former Dewey Chairman Steven Davis, Chief Financial Officer Joel Sanders and Executive Director Steven DiCarmine for allegedly mismanaging the firm and causing its demise.

 Dewey & LeBoeuf
* Identities of top contributors to Dewey settlement are revealed
* Dewey's bankruptcy: Let the rumble begin
* Citibank disputes it hid Dewey's financial woes
* The Dewey chronicles: The rise and fall of a legal titan
* Then and now: A Dewey timeline
* Graphic: Where did all the Dewey lawyers go?
* Additional Coverage

Dewey & LeBoeuf, which once employed more than 1,000 lawyers in 26 offices worldwide, in May became the largest U.S. law firm to file for bankruptcy. Its demise has been largely attributed to compensation guarantees the firm's leaders made to many partners.

Weisfelner said in court papers that the three former executives "breached their fiduciary duties of care, loyalty and candor by recklessly doling out individual partner contracts that guaranteed compensation without regard to future performance."

Weisfelner said he intends to pursue $50 million in management liability insurance policies that covered the three former executives' actions in their respective roles at Dewey & LeBoeuf.

The policies were written by a handful of insurance companies. They include XL Insurance of Dublin, Ireland, Minnesota-based OneBeacon Insurance Group and Bermuda-based Iron-Starr Excess, according to documents filed in New York bankruptcy court. Representatives for those companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

If approved, the pursuit of claims against the three former executives would mark another attempt to recoup a portion of the more than $700 million that secured and unsecured creditors claim they are owed in the Dewey bankruptcy.

In early October, Judge Glenn approved a $71.5 million settlement between former partners of Dewey & LeBoeuf and the bankrupt law firm's estate, marking the first significant recovery for creditors. Its unclear how that money will be allocated among creditors, since the Chapter 11 reorganization plan hasn't yet been laid out.

Unsecured creditors claim they are owed more than $500 million from Dewey while secured creditors, a group that includes JP Morgan Chase, claim they are owed more than $260 million, according to the Monday filing.

Some of the largest unsecured creditors include Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. for underfunded pensions, Dewey's former landlord Paramount Group and Thomson Reuters for legal research.

Joff Mitchell, the chief restructuring officer for the Dewey estate, declined comment on Monday, as did Weisfelner. Ned Bassen, an attorney for the three former Dewey leaders, did not immediately return a request for comment.

The case is In re Dewey & LeBoeuf, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-12321. For Dewey: Al Togut of Togut Segal & Segal. For Unsecured Creditors Committee: Edward Weisfelner of Brown Rudnick

Follow us on Twitter @ReutersLegal | Like us on Facebook 


Register or log in to comment.

© 2013 Thomson Reuters