Signing a Proof of Claim May Trigger Attorney Disqualification
By: Jessica E. Stukonis
St. John’s Law Student
American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review Staff
An attorney who signed a proof of claim on his client’s behalf narrowly avoided disqualification in In re Duke Investments.[1] In Duke, the court refused to disqualify the attorney from representing his creditor-client in the chapter 11 case because the attorney was not a “necessary witness” despite his role in preparing, signing, and filing a creditor’s proof of claim.[2] The creditor’s attorney compiled the proof of claim based on information received from the creditor’s officers.[3] The court denied the debtor’s motion to disqualify the creditor’s attorney because the debtor failed to demonstrate that the attorney was a necessary witness. The attorney was not a necessary witness because he lacked “exclusive knowledge or understanding of the [proof of claim]. . . . [and the attorney’s] testimony would [not] be the sole source of information pertaining to the [proof of claim]”.[4] Moreover, even if the attorney was a “necessary witness,” he would not be disqualified because the debtor failed to demonstrate that his testimony would “substantially conflict” with Amergy’s testimony,[5] and Amergy consented to the attorney’s continued representation.[6]