Late-Allowed Vehicle Claims: Striving for a More Just Result
Late-Allowed Vehicle Claims and the Importance of Finality By Linda B. Gore Editor’s Note: Unlike past articles in this column, the authors mostly agree on the viewpoint, but this article outlines the basis for those trustees/courts that take a different position. Most
Bankruptcy Is No Get-Out-of-Jail-Free Card for a Disobedient Debtor
When there has been a division of marital property, does a debtor only hold legal title to property given to the spouse?
When Inherited Property Becomes Property of the Debtor’s Bankruptcy Estate
Being an heir by itself doesn’t bring a decedent’s estate into the heir’s bankruptcy estate.
Debtor May Amend a ‘13’ Plan to Modify the Treatment of a Secured Creditor’s Claim
Chicago Bankruptcy Judge David Cleary followed a decision by then-district Judge David Hamilton and “respectfully” disagreed with decisions by two predecessors on the same bankruptcy bench.
Assessing In re Topp’s Impact on Interest Rates for Secured Creditors
Assessing In re Topp’s Impact on Interest Rates for Secured Creditors By Michael Miller The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit decided Farm Credit Servs. of Am. FLCA v. Topp (In re Topp) on Aug. 3, 2023. 1 The central issue was this: Does the U.S. Supreme
Ninth Circuit: State Law Can’t Require More than What Rule 3001 Requires for Claim Validity
Reversing the BAP, the Ninth Circuit (erroneously) holds that state law cannot demand more documentation for a proof of claim than Bankruptcy Rule 3001 requires for prima facie validity.
Filing Bankruptcy After Renewing a Title Loan Again Found Not to Be Bad Faith
Title lenders continue losing battles to take cars away from debtors, but the lenders have yet to plead and prove their best cases.