Like 18th Century England, There’s No Jury Trial Right for Stay Violations
Granfinanciera tells us to study English law from the 18th century in deciding when there’s a right to a jury trial in bankruptcy cases.
Judge Furay Sides with the Minority on Stay Termination After a Repeat Filing
Courts are divided on whether automatic stay termination in Section 362(c)(3) applies to property of the debtor’s estate.
The ‘Domestic Violence’ Stay Exception Applies to Sexual Violence Decades Earlier
Bankruptcy Judge Robert Mark held that the Section 362(b)(2)(A)(v) exception to the automatic stay covers more than imminent or ongoing sexual abuse.
Bankruptcy Judge Upheld: No Arbitration on Claims for Violating the Automatic Stay
Bankruptcy Judge Paul Black was affirmed in district court for holding that arbitration of claims for violating the automatic stay would conflict with the centrality of administration in bankruptcy cases.
Equity Survives in the Ninth Circuit to Prevent Recoupment of Disability Overpayments
Reversing the BAP, the Ninth Circuit held that equitable considerations may stop the government from recovering disability overpayments, when the doctrine of recoupment otherwise would have allowed recovery despite the debtor’s chapter 7 discharge.
Class Actions: The Answer for Stay Violations with Small Damages for Each Debtor
A class action in Chicago will decide whether bankruptcy judges have the tools to rectify a single creditor’s violation of the rights of similarly situated debtors.
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 Disguised Loan Agreement Didn’t Create a ‘Fair Ground of Doubt’ Under Taggart
The Fifth Circuit undertook a legal analysis of a complex loan agreement to decide there was no ‘fair ground of doubt’ under Taggart that the lender was violating the discharge injunction.