Consumer Bankruptcy

Rochelle’s Daily Wire

Expert analysis of the latest court decisions affecting consumer debtors — covering discharge, mortgage servicing, student loans, exemptions, and more.

Cases covered: 1,408 (all-time)
Covering all circuits
Showing 31 - 40 of 70
Sep 10, 2020 Martin Glenn
Palpably angry, Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn of New York imposed $378,000 in contempt sanctions on a student loan servicer for ignoring court orders over five years and attempting to collect a.....
Jun 26, 2020 Cecelia G. Morris
The Internal Revenue Service cannot be held liable for violating the discharge injunction unless the debtor has exhausted administrative remedies, according to Chief Bankruptcy Judge Cecelia Morris of.....
Feb 06, 2020 Eduardo V. Rodriguez
A relatively puny case from south Texas involving a false notice under Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1 is making important law on the rule and the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, or FDCPA, 15 U.S.C.....
Jan 09, 2020 Cecelia G. Morris
Observing that some courts have incorrectly interpreted the Brunner test to impose “punitive standards,” Chief Bankruptcy Judge Cecelia G. Morris of the Southern District of New York allowed a debtor.....
Oct 11, 2019 David R. Jones
The so-called Holder Rule is an important weapon that debtors can use when the originator of consumer paper has not lived up to its contractual obligations. In a chapter 13 case before Bankruptcy.....
Jun 14, 2019 Alvin K. Hellerstein
Religious Contributions Not Considered in Dischargeability of Student Loans The court is not required to take religious contributions into consideration when deciding whether a debtor is entitled to.....
May 02, 2019 Kenneth M. Karas
Freezing a Chapter 7 Debtor’s Bank Account Doesn’t Violate the Automatic Stay Persuaded by a Ninth Circuit opinion, a district judge in New York held that a bank does not violate the automatic stay by.....
Apr 02, 2019 Mark X. Mullin
BAPCPA Limits Remedies Against Debtors Who Don’t Reaffirm or Surrender In the BAPCPA amendments in 2005, Congress may have intended to bar debtors from allowing mortgages to “ride through” bankruptcy.....
Jan 24, 2019 Stuart M. Bernstein
The Emily Litella Principle Governs the Withdrawal of Proofs of Claim The Emily Litella principle will not divest the bankruptcy court of equitable jurisdiction, according to an opinion by Bankruptcy.....
Dec 19, 2018 Martin Glenn
Tuition Payments for Adult Children Squarely Held to Be Constructively Fraudulent On an issue dividing the lower courts, Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn of New York squarely held that educational.....