When you file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you prepare a plan to repay your debts as much as you can. At the end of the plan, you will be able to wipe clean many debts that you were not able to pay off. By law, the plan must be 3 years long, unless you make [...]
When you file for bankruptcy, you must inform any potential creditors that you filed, so that they can come forward and ask for what you owe them. If they do not do this within a certain time, they lose all rights to claim anything from you. There are, however, six exceptions to the rule that [...]
Wherever you decide to file for bankruptcy, that location is presumed to be the right one until it is successfully challenged by a creditor or the trustee in your case, whose job it is to administer your estate. However, once challenged, there is a rule for where to file. You can file where you were [...]
When you file for bankruptcy, you have to tell all your creditors that you file. Once you have notified them of the case, they are required to file a proof of claim, which is paperwork establishing to the court that you owe them something. If they fail to file the proof of claim, they may [...]
In re: Smith-Canfield, No. 08-61630-fra13 (Bankr. D. Oregon, May 17, 2011). Your attorney in a bankruptcy proceeding should always behave in a professional way, and keep your interests paramount. If your attorney has interests that conflict with yours, they may be violating rules of professional conduct. In order to avoid such conflicts, your attorney should [...]
What is a Cram down? Cram down is only available in chapter 13 bankruptcy and is a way to reduce the total amount you will pay to obtain a free and clear title to your vehicle. If you purchased your vehicle more than 90 days prior to filing for bankruptcy protection and the fair market [...]
Like waltz tempo, there’s an appeal in threes: Larry, Moe, and Curly Faith, hope, and charity Tinkers, Evers, and Chance In bankruptcy, the trio is unliquidated, contingent, and disputed. They’re the prescribed adjectives for describing claims on the schedules. We all love adjectives, don’t we? Contingent The definition of contingent, in our context, focuses a right dependent on the occurence of some future event. A creditor holding a contingent claim is entitled to have it estimated for purposes of allowance in a bankruptcy case. c) There shall be estimated for purpose of allowance under this section— (1) any contingent or unliquidated claim, the fixing or liquidation of which, as the case may be, would unduly delay the administration of the case; §502(c) In 32 years of practice, including 10+ representing trustees, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a proceeding to estimate a contingent claim. But there it is. Disputed Labeling a claim as disputed gives the trustee a heads up as to the appropriate treatment of the claim should there be a distribution to creditors in that class. But more important, it raises the question of whether scheduling the claim, without noting it as disputed, constitutes an admission of the validity of the claim in the amount scheduled. This seems to be a Procrustean dilemma, depending on your judge’s inclinations. Dispute all claims, as to the calculation of the amount, and you risk a challenge to your good faith. Fail to challenge the amount set out on the creditor’s bill and you may have admitted liability in that amount. Here, it pays to know local inclinations and to anticipate, at the schedule preparation stage, what litigation looms. Unliquidated Unliquidated is the power lifter in this trio, in the Chapter 13 context. Claims that are unliquidated are excluded from the debt calculation for Chapter 13 eligibility. Only an individual with regular income that owes… noncontingent, liquidated, unsecured debts of less than $250,000 and noncontingent, liquidated, secured debts of less than $750,000, or an individual with regular income… may be a debtor under chapter 13 [debt limits outdated] The implications here are powerful: your client could have been the undisputed cause of a horrific negligent tort and still qualify for Chapter 13 relief if the amount of damages remains to be determined. (note that contingent debts are excluded from the calculation as well, but in my experience, that is a far less common fact pattern). Choose your words carefully. You may have to live with them. Image courtesy of mape_s Like This Article? You'll Love These! Did You Forget Bankruptcy’s Magic Words? Notice Key to Bankruptcy Success But She’s Not a Creditor!
If you own a car and make monthly payments on it, that expense can become burdensome down the road. Sometimes people take on loans that are higher than they should, and that loan contributes to a financial sinkhole. If you decide your car payments are just too expensive, and want to surrender it, what are [...]
When I trip over the same issue three times in a week, it’s time to discuss it here. In my office, it came up when I spotted a creditor on Schedule D with a lien on a pleasure boat. Only problem was that no boat was listed on Schedule B; it belonged to the debtor’s corporation. It surfaced on a list serve when the question turned on tax liens on 401(k) accounts. Then, we saw it when our client remained liable for the mortgage on the home that went to his ex wife in the divorce. Can you see what each of these fact patterns has in common? (Come on, pretend this is Sesame Street!) Answer: each lien doesn’t attach to property of the bankruptcy estate. It comes down to this truism: liens are not the same as secured claims. You can’t have a secured claim without a lien of some sort but the fact that there is a lien does not necessarily mean you are looking at a secured claim in a bankruptcy case. Let’s go back to the statute, §506: An allowed claim of a creditor secured by a lien on property in which the estate has an interest… is a secured claim to the extent of the value of such creditor’s interest in the estate’s interest in such property… In the case of the boat, the debtor didn’t own it, thus it didn’t come in to the estate. In the case of the 401(k), it belongs to the debtor but is excluded from the bankruptcy estate by §541 and the holding of Patterson v. Shumate. The Ninth Circuit held in Snyder that a Chapter 13 plan can’t pay off a lien on the ERISA qualified retirement plan that wasn’t property of the estate. In the case of the divorced man, he no longer owned the property by reason of the division of property with his ex. This precept is also useful in thinking about lien stripping: you can only value a lien in a bankruptcy case to the extent it attaches to the debtor’s interest in property. Thus, I believe, you can’t strip a lien on a co owner’s interest in property where the co owner isn’t a debtor in bankruptcy. The co owner’s interest isn’t property of the estate and whatever interest the lienholder has on the co owner’s interest, it isn’t a secured claim in the debtor’s case. Image courtesy of topsy@waygood Like This Article? You'll Love These! Stop Wrestling With Lien Stripping Lien on Phantom Property Upsets Debt Totals How Lien Stripping Differs From Lien Avoidance
Here at Shenwick & Associates, one of the most common things we do for clients is the filing of proofs of claim in bankruptcy cases. We have written extensively before about proofs of claim hereand here, but essentially a proof of claim is a written statement setting forth the creditor's claim against the debtor and filed with the Bankruptcy Court (or, in certain "megacases" with many creditors, the Debtor's claims agent). Recently, a question arose about who could sign a proof of claim. A client wanted to file a proof of claim on his mother's behalf, and had a durable power of attorney for his mother. Was that sufficient? Could we sign it on her behalf, since we had been retained, but did not hold a power of attorney on her behalf? Rule 9010(c) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure provides: "Power of Attorney. The authority of any agent, attorney in fact, or proxy to represent a creditor for any purpose other than the execution and filing of a proof of claim or the acceptance or rejection of a plan shall be evidenced by a power of attorney conforming substantially to the appropriate Official Form. The execution of any such power of attorney shall be acknowledged before one of the officers enumerated in 28 U.S.C. §459, §953, Rule 9012, or a person authorized to administer oaths under the laws of the state where the oath is administered." So it is clear that attorneys may sign proofs of claim without the need for a power of attorney. In re Roberts, 20 B.R. 914, 917, n. 2 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 1982) also supports the proposition that an attorney may sign a proof of claim, citing to Collier on Bankruptcy (one of the leading treatises on bankruptcy law), which says that a "separate power [of attorney] is not necessary for the filing of a proof of claim." However, although attorneys may sign proofs of claim, that doesn't mean that they should. In In re Duke Investments, No. 10-36556, 2011 WL 2462681 (S.D. Tex. June 17, 2011), the Court almost disqualified an attorney who had signed his client's proof of claim. The Court refused to disqualify the attorney from representing his creditor-client in the chapter 11 case because the attorney was not a "necessary witness" to the merits of the claim, but the Court admonished attorneys against signing clients' proofs of claim in the future because of the risk that the attorney may become a necessary fact witness at his client's trial. The Court instead recommended attorneys have their clients sign the proof of claim. Following the Court's advice will allow attorneys to completely protect themselves from being disqualified as a necessary fact witness under similar facts. Attorneys should take notice of the holding in Duke when considering the obligations and duties owed to clients and avoid the potentially harmful but common practice of signing their clients' proofs of claim. For more information about proofs of claim and preserving your rights to payment in bankruptcy, please contact Jim Shenwick.