Allowed Claim Can’t Be Used Offensively, Second Circuit Says
Second Circuit barred offensive use of claim preclusion based on ‘fairness’ but hinted that offensive claim preclusion might never be permitted.
In Setting Aside a Tax-Lien Foreclosure, a Hypothetical Gave Standing to the Debtor
If state law prohibits assertion of the homestead exemption in tax foreclosure and the debtor can’t take federal exemptions, does the debtor lack standing to set aside a fraudulent transfer?
No Circuit Split: 4 Circuits Say No ‘13’ Trustee Fees if Dismissal Precedes Confirmation
Although lower courts have disagreed, the Second Circuit joined three other circuits in holding that a standing trustee may not retain the percentage fee when chapter 13 cases are dismissed before confirmation. Consequently, ‘13’ debtors with confirmed plans pay standing trustees’ fees.
Courts Divided on Broad or Narrow Grounds for Transferring Venue Under Section 1412
Some courts don’t transfer venue under 28 U.S.C. § 1412 if the claims are only ‘related to’ the bankruptcy and don’t arise in the bankruptcy case or arise under the Bankruptcy Code.
New York Judge Devises a Flexible Remedy to Deal with Repeated Bad Faith Filings
New York’s Judge Philip Bentley and Prof. Robert Lawless urge Congress to adopt the ABI Commission’s recommendations for dealing with bad faith filings.
A Mortgage Deficiency Judgment Is a Judicial Lien Subject to Avoidance Under § 522(f)
A deficiency judgment resulting from mortgage foreclosure is not ‘a judgment arising out of a mortgage foreclosure’ and can be avoided as a judgment lien.
Sub V Trustee in Chapter 11 Can’t Be Enlisted to Pursue Avoidance Actions
District judge decides that an individual debtor has standing to appeal conversion from Subchapter V of chapter 11 to chapter 7.
Denial of a Debtor’s Motion to Dismiss a Petition Isn’t Appealable, Second Circuit Says
In practical effect, the Second Circuit’s opinion means that a chapter 7 debtor may never appeal denial of a motion to dismiss a petition.
A False Certificate of Payment (Temporarily) Barred a Landlord from Evicting
New York’s Judge David Jones explored the intricacies of Section 322(b)(22)’s bar to using bankruptcy to halt eviction.
Judge Explains Why Tax Liens Are Subordinated to Domestic Support Obligations
Congress decided to deviate from standard priorities by providing in Section 724 that unsecured domestic support obligations come ahead of tax liens.