Ninth Circuit Won’t Give Pro Se Litigants Slack About Consent to Final Adjudication
Wellness International may have undercut prior Second Circuit authority giving pro se litigants a loophole for arguing there was no implied consent to final adjudication by an Article I judge.
Sixth Circuit Staunches the Spread of Equitable Mootness to Chapter 7
Two judges on the Sixth Circuit cast doubt on the validity of the doctrine of equitable mootness, even in chapter 11 reorganizations.
Benchnotes August 2023
Benchnotes By Aaron M. Kaufman, Bradley D. Pack and Christina Sanfelippo Bankruptcy Court Limits Bartenwerfer to Partnership or Agency Debts, Finding It Inapplicable to Fraudulent-Transferee Liability Can the recipient of a fraudulent transfer discharge the claim in
As if by Magic, Section 1412 Transforms an Improper Venue into a Proper Venue
A judge sitting in a proper venue may transfer venue to a district that was improper originally.
Denial of Withdrawal of the Reference Isn’t a Final, Appealable Order, Circuit Says
An appeal from an interlocutory order can’t be made final by the district court’s entry of judgment on the first appeal.
Disagreement on Bankruptcy Court’s Jurisdiction to Give ‘Innocent Spouse’ Relief
Bankruptcy Judges Marvin Isgur and Gregory Taddonio disagree on whether the bankruptcy court has subject matter jurisdiction to grant ‘innocent spouse’ relief to a debtor.
‘Person Aggrieved’ for Appellate Standing Test May Have Died, but May Be Resurrected
Sixth Circuit judges wrote 17 pages of dicta to muse on whether the ‘person aggrieved’ test for appellate standing died with the adoption of the Bankruptcy Code but remains good law under the ‘zone-of-interests’ test.
Ninth Circuit BAP Rules on a Question to Be Decided Soon by the Supreme Court
Like the question in MOAC to be decided soon by the Supreme Court, the BAP says that the qualifications for an involuntary petitioner are not jurisdictional and can be waived.