BAP Decision Shows How ‘Plain Meaning’ Would Have Given the Wrong Result
Over Dissent, the Fourth Circuit Says No Arbitration for Automatic Stay Violations
Inside ABI April 2026
President’s Column This, my final President’s Column, is all about moments. They come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. One of my favorite expressions from listening to the radio is a “driveway moment.” In the context of car radios, it’s when you’ve already pulled into
Legislative Highlights April 2026
Senators Reintroduce Legislation to Hold Executives Accountable After Big Bank Failures Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), Katie Britt (R-Ala.) and nine additional Senators on March 11 1
Law Changes in Georgia on Calculation of Fees for Standing Trustees
Legislative Highlights February 2026
Congress Passes “Bankruptcy Administration Improvement Act” The House of Representatives passed (voice vote) S. 3424, the “Bankruptcy Administration Improvement Act of 2025,” 1 to double the compensation payable to chapter 7 trustees in no-asset cases, extend the sunset
Fifth Circuit Rules on Judicial Estoppel, an Issue Before the Supreme Court This Term
Ninth Circuit BAP Wrote a Handbook for Vexatious Litigant and Prefiling Injunctions
No Removal Directly to the Bankruptcy Court in Another District
The corporate debtor filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition in South Carolina. Two days later, someone (whom we shall refer to as the plaintiff) filed a lawsuit in federal district court in Georgia against several of the debtor’s insiders and a nondebtor corporate affiliate of the debtor. The debtor was not named as a defendant in the Georgia action.
The debtor and the nondebtor defendants in Georgia filed a notice of removal. As Judge Gasparini said in her December 16 opinion, they “purportedly remov[ed] the matter from the Georgia District Court to this Court [i.e., the bankruptcy court in the District of South Carolina].”