Fifth Circuit Expands Bartenwerfer to Saddle Alter Egos with Nondischargeable Debts
An alter ego may be of the same ilk as a partnership or agency, so there may be no inconsistency between the Fifth Circuit opinion and the Bartenwerfer concurrence.
State Law Lines Up with Federal Judicial Estoppel When Assets Aren’t Scheduled
Oregon Supreme Court allows substitution of a bankruptcy trustee as the real party in interest because denial would chiefly punish the debtor’s creditors.
Eleventh Circuit Narrowly Reads a State Fee-Shifting Statute
The lawsuit was under federal law, not state law, even though Section 544(b)(1) incorporated state fraudulent transfer law.
Benchnotes September 2023
Benchnotes By Christina Sanfelippo, Aaron M. Kaufman and Bradley D. Pack Court Establishes Framework for Determining Ownership Rights in Social Media Accounts The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida recently considered an issue of first impression
Bartenwerfer Doesn’t Apply if the Debtor Isn’t a Partner or Agent, Bankruptcy Judge Says
Bankruptcy Judge Klinette H. Kindred declined to expand Bartenwerfer by imputing fraud or larceny when the debtor wasn’t a partner or agent.
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
Bartenwerfer Isn’t at Odds with Husky, According to Bankruptcy Judge Margaret Mann
A transferor’s fraudulent intent isn’t imputed to the transferee to make the transferee’s debt nondischargeable for ‘actual fraud.’
‘Preponderance’ Replaced ‘Clear and Convincing’ on Adoption of the Bankruptcy Code
The Seventh Circuit explained how preponderance of the evidence became the standard of proof for turnovers and dischargeability when the Bankruptcy Code replaced the Bankruptcy Act.