Some Wall Street banks and hedge funds asking Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. to chip in for their legal fees aren't entitled to add to the ever-growing fee tab in the biggest Chapter 11 case of all time, a government bankruptcy watchdog is arguing.

U.S. trustee Tracy Hope Davis, who helps enforce federal bankruptcy laws, is asking a judge to knock out, reduce, or closely scrutinize more than $33 million in attorneys' and advisers' fees that Lehman creditors such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and D.E. Shaw & Co. want to put on Lehman's tab.

The banks and hedge funds say they're entitled to be reimbursed for the fees on the grounds that their work made a "substantial contribution" to the biggest Chapter 11 bankruptcy case of all time, during which Lehman has already racked up more than $1 billion in professional fees. A substantial contribution can mean boosting the recovery of all creditors or saving the company money.

But Ms. Davis disputes that some of the work for which the creditors want reimbursement was exceptional enough, or benefited enough stakeholders, to warrant the "substantial contribution" tag.

"Active participation alone is insufficient to give rise to a substantial contribution claim," Ms. Davis wrote in court papers filed Wednesday.

The trustee also says some firms failed to back up their requests with enough evidence and detail, while others aren't legally eligible for payment.

The biggest payment request comes from a group of banks and hedge funds, including Bank of America, D.E. Shaw, Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse Group AG (CS). They want $13.7 million to cover the fees and expenses of their financial adviser, Blackstone Advisory Partners.

According to the creditors, Blackstone's work enabled Lehman to settle disputes with creditors last year, preventing it from becoming bogged down in bankruptcy. This saved Lehman at least $400 million, the creditors said.

Ms. Davis, however, asked the bankruptcy court to deny the entire request on the grounds that bankruptcy laws only allow for the reimbursement of the fees charged by creditors' attorneys and accountants, not those charged by their financial advisers.

It's the same argument she used to ask a judge to knock out $2.7 million in fees requested for AlixPartners and Molinaro Advisors, which advised a creditor group led by hedge fund Paulson & Co.

The Paulson group also sought $10.1 million for its attorneys at White & Case, which it said helped increase senior noteholders' recoveries by $3.1 billion, among other contributions.

Ms. Davis asked the creditors to provide more details so a judge can determine whether the request, which she called "vague," is reasonable or not. She said some of the legal fees don't appear to be eligible for reimbursement, such as those tied to faxing, copying and other "overhead" costs.

Goldman filed a separate request for its own attorneys' fees, which total $3.3 million. Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton lawyers' 5,200-some hours of work on the case allowed Lehman to move closer toward exiting bankruptcy, avoid litigation and save millions of dollars, Goldman said.

However, the U.S. trustee urged Goldman to cut down its request to $2.7 million, which would cover 4,300 hours of work and would exclude charges for such "routine services" as attending hearings and reviewing motions.

Finally, Ms. Davis objected to the $3.7 million in attorneys' fees and expenses sought for Brown Rudnick, which represented such creditors of Lehman's Dutch subsidiary as Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc (RBS), Monarch Alternative Capital and Aurelius Capital Management.

The Dutch creditors said their role in the settlement talks ended up boosting what the Dutch subsidiary recovered from Lehman, which in turn will improve the Dutch creditors' recoveries in the subsidiary's insolvency proceeding.

However, Ms. Davis said the creditor group and Brown Rudnick were "one of many participants" in settlement talks but said the role they played didn't appear to benefit anyone beyond that creditor group, leading her to question whether they in fact made a substantial contribution to the case.

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan will consider the creditors' fee requests and the U.S. trustee's objection at an Aug. 15 hearing.

Meanwhile, Lehman's own attorneys and other professionals have been submitting their final fee requests to the bankruptcy court, whose approval is required before they can be paid. The firm's advisers at Alvarez & Marsal could earn more than $620 million if its final fee request is approved, making it the top earner in the case. Close behind are Lehman's lead lawyers at Weil, Gotshal & Manges, who stand to earn more than $430 million.

Lehman, which sought Chapter 11 protection in September 2008, emerged in March. But significant work remains, like sorting through claims, selling off assets and paying the army of professionals who worked on the case over the past three and a half years.

-Write to Jacqueline Palank at jacqueline.palank@dowjones.com

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