Riding Through Sitting Tight and Repossession
How should a secured lender or lessor react when a borrower or lessee files a chapter 7 bankruptcy but continues to make payments? The creditor whose customer "rides through"—making payments and keeping the collateral or leased personalty, but not reaffirming the debt
Fall House Cleaning Recent Developments in Avoiding Liens on Exempt Homesteads
To enable a fresh start, debtors often seek to avoid judicial liens that impair a claimed homestead exemption. With adjustable-rate mortgages, rising credit costs and increasing delinquencies, there is likely to be more activity in this motion practice. Debtors will be
Should Charity Begin with Bankruptcy
The Religious Liberty and Charitable Donation Protection Act of 1998 ("Religious Liberty Act") was the latest move in the battle between the Supreme Court and Congress over a debtor's right to tithe in bankruptcy. The Act directly targets a trustee's ability to avoid
The Hanging Paragraph and Cramdown 11 U.S.C. 1325(a) and 506 after BAPCPA
In the uninformed rush by Congress to prevent bankruptcy abuse, §1325(a) of the Bankruptcy Code was amended by BAPCPA 1 to include a hanging paragraph at the end of §1325(a)(9). This insertion, which refers back to §1325(a)(5), states the following: For purposes of
Unintended Consequences BAPCPA and the New Disposable Income Test
The passage of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA) has been the subject of most of the articles in the Consumer Corner column of this Journal for the past year. Much of the discussion has focused on the additional burdens imposed
Creditors Beware Tying Reaffirmations to New Credit Can Violate Automatic Stay
Tying approval of a debtor's reaffirmation of mortgage debt to the reaffirmation of other unsecured debt violates the automatic stay, according to a recent decision in the First Circuit. In re Jamo, 262 B.R. 159 (1st Cir. BAP 2001). The remedy for that stay violation