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 61 - 70 of 147
Aug 24, 2020 Russ Kendig
Someone who depends on charity from her parents to pay rent and medical expenses is entitled to discharge her student loans, according to Bankruptcy Judge Russ Kendig of Canton, Ohio. In other words.....
Aug 21, 2020 Bernard A. Friedman
On a question where the courts are split, a district judge in Detroit upheld Bankruptcy Judge Thomas J. Tucker by ruling that Social Security benefits can be considered in deciding whether a chapter 7.....
Two judges agreed in their opinions on July 30: The CARES Act, enacted on March 27, cannot be invoked to confirm a chapter 13 plan with a seven-year duration if the plan was confirmed after March 27.....
Jul 23, 2020 C. Kathryn Preston
Another Workaround Following the Prohibition of Nunc Pro Tunc Orders Even though the Supreme Court has virtually prohibited the entry of orders nunc pro tunc, a bankruptcy court is not precluded from.....
Jun 03, 2020 Sixth Circuit
The Sixth Circuit became the first appeals court to rule on whether a chapter 13 debtor may deduct contributions to a 401(k) plan from “disposable income” and thereby reduce payments to unsecured.....
May 21, 2020 Phillip J. Shefferly
When the sweeping language of a landmark Supreme Court opinion conflicted with the statute, Chief Bankruptcy Judge Phillip J. Shefferly of Detroit followed the statute. In Harris v. Viegelahn, 575 U.S.....
May 14, 2020 David W. McKeague
The so-called snapshot rule, calling for valuation of a chapter 7 debtor’s property as of the filing date, doesn’t apply when the debtor moves to compel the trustee to abandon under Section 554(b).....
Mar 12, 2020 Phillip J. Shefferly
In August, Congress adopted the so-called HAVEN Act, which allows military veterans to exclude disability benefits from the calculation of “current monthly income.” In practical terms, the new law.....
Mar 03, 2020 Marian F. Harrison
On an issue where the lower courts are split, the Sixth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel held that a pre-petition personal guaranty is a contingent debt that is discharged, even as to post-petition.....
Feb 20, 2020 C. Kathryn Preston
A $300,000 debt for life-saving, emergency medical treatment was not a “consumer” debt because it was not “voluntarily” incurred, according to Bankruptcy Judge C. Kathryn Preston of Columbus, Ohio. A.....