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 261 - 270 of 1408
Jun 21, 2023 Toby J. Heytens
The chapter 13 debtors’ monthly mortgage payment was $1,100 more than the local standard mortgage deduction. Abjuring a split of circuits, the Fourth Circuit held that debtors with above-median income.....
Jun 20, 2023 Robert E. Grossman
There is a body of caselaw where trustees have sued, with more or less success, to recover tuition paid by parents for emancipated children. But when the trustee for a father recently alleged that an.....
Jun 16, 2023 Ketanji Brown Jackson
Over a dissent by Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson held for herself and six other justices that Section 106(a) of the Bankruptcy Code waives sovereign immunity as to tribes of.....
Jun 15, 2023 Milan D. Smith, Jr.
Joining the Tenth Circuit, the Ninth Circuit also has held that chapter 13 trustees are not paid their fees when cases are dismissed before confirmation. The identical issue was argued on February 15.....
Jun 12, 2023 Cathleen D. Parker
In an opinion allowing the stacking of exemptions, Bankruptcy Judge Cathleen D. Parker allowed the debtor to exempt almost $140,000 in wages. In her May 23 opinion, Judge Parker explained why the.....
Jun 09, 2023 Lee Yaekel
If a chapter 7 trustee succeeds with a clever argument in the Fifth Circuit, whole life policies will not be exempt in Texas. The trustee’s argument failed to convince Bankruptcy Judge Craig A.....
Jun 08, 2023 Daniel S. Opperman
Using powers of equity and common sense, Bankruptcy Judge Daniel S. Opperman of Bay City, Mich., didn’t allow a grinch to steal a disabled man’s IRA. A chapter 7 debtor was permanently disabled. Before.....
Jun 07, 2023 Margaret M. Mann
Assume the debtor is liable as the transferee of a fraudulent transfer made by someone else who had actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud. In Bartenwerfer v. Buckley, 143 S. Ct. 665 (Sup. Ct. Feb.....
Jun 06, 2023 n/a
Taking sides on a question where the courts are split, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit puts chapter 13 debtors at risk of losing their homes if the price of real estate has risen.....
Venue ping pong is a proper method for putting a case in the improper district, according to Bankruptcy Judge Nicholas W. Whittenburg. Sitting in Chattanooga, Tenn., Judge Whittenburg’s courthouse is.....