Archive for 2014

Self-Calendaring System for Judge Ahart Cases (U.S. Bankruptcy Court — Central District of California — San Fernando Valley Division)

Judge Ahart (U.S. Bankruptcy Court — Central District of California — San Fernando Valley Division) will retire in January of 2015 and Judges Tighe (“MT”) and Kaufman (“VK”) will divide up his cases by number, until the new judge takes the bench.

Please see attached instructions re self-calendaring pleadings for Judge Ahart cases. Beginning on January 1, 2015, NEW instructions for self-calendaring hearings are on page 5.

The Court has informed us that all Judge Ahart (“AA”) cases will remain “AA” in the case number: e.g., 14-bk-12345-AA. Hovever, MT or VK will hear all matters, all pleadings will be addressed to MT or VK, and mailed to MT or VK.

 

Debts Canceled by Bankruptcy Still Mar Consumer Credit Scores

By Jessica Silver-Greenberg

November 12, 2014 9:45 pm November 12, 2014 9:45 pm

Credit Ángel Franco/The New York Times

Bernadette Gatling said she has lost job opportunities because employers viewed her credit report, which included voided debts.

In the netherworld of consumer debt, there are zombies: bills that cannot be killed even by declaring personal bankruptcy. Tens of thousands of Americans who went through bankruptcy are still haunted by debts long after — sometimes as long as a decade after — federal judges have extinguished the bills in court. The problem, state and federal officials suspect, is that some of the nation’s biggest banks ignore bankruptcy court discharges, which render the debts void. Paying no heed to the courts, the banks keep the debts alive on credit reports, essentially forcing borrowers to make payments on bills that they do not legally owe.

Read more…

Valuable Bible Exempt in Illinois says District Court Judge Overruling Bankruptcy Judge

Illinois exemption statute says:”The necessary wearing apparel, bible, school books, and family pictures of the debtor and the debtor’s dependents.”  This bible however was a 1830 relic worth at least $10,000 with some people saying it could be five to ten times that value.  And, says the trustee, the debtor had other bibles and did not use this one.   Her total debt was in the range of $30,000.  The bankruptcy judge ruled that it was not exempt and the district court reversed.  The district court decision is here.

This is really straight statutory construction.  There are lots of dollar limitations among the various exemptions but none on bibles.  The district court writes,

The Court believes a reading of the plain language indicates the Bible is exempt without regard to its value.  First, it is the most reasonable interpretation that “necessary” only modifies “wearing apparel” and does not modify the remaining items in the list.  Wearing apparel is a necessity for basic living.  However, one does not need a bible, school books or family pictures to survive.  As such, the Court finds that the statute, as written, does not require the Court to undertake a “necessary” analysis.

The article at Credit Slips is here.  The Wall Street Journal article is here.

The biggest problems law students have is that they learn a bunch of rules which they can spew back to you nicely but then they jump to a “reasonable” type argument.   Congress makes the laws.  Obviously the Illinois legislature could have exempted bibles “irrespective of the value.”  There would be no debate.  But is that what it did here?  It depends on what the code says.  The district court judge’s analysis here is supported by the plain language of the code.  The trustee’s arguments on the other hand are completely “reasonable.”

Jack Johnson, former Kings Defenseman, files Chapter 11 in Ohio

U.S. Bankruptcy Court
Southern District of Ohio (Columbus)
Bankruptcy Petition #: 2:14-bk-57104


Assigned to: John E. Hoffman Jr.
Chapter 11
Voluntary
Asset
AP Case: No

 

 

Date filed:   10/07/2014
341 meeting:   11/12/2014
Deadline for filing claims:   02/10/2015

 

Debtor In Possession
John Joseph Louis Johnson, III
————-
Dublin, OH 43016-7086
FRANKLIN-OH
SSN / ITIN: xxx-xx-5703
aka John J.L. Johnson, III
represented by Daniel A DeMarco
200 Public Square
Suite 2800
Cleveland, OH 44114-2301
(216) 621-0150
Email: dademarco@hahnlaw.com
Marc J Kessler
Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP
65 E. State Street, Suite 1400
Columbus, OH 43215
614-233-5168
Fax : 614-233-5185
Email: mkessler@hahnlaw.com

LACBA: Introduction to the Law of Personal Property Secured Transactions

Presented by: Commercial Law and Bankruptcy Section

Program Information: Please join us as we focus on a preliminary understanding of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code and discuss issues of attachment, perfection (including the various types of personal property collateral and the means of perfection), and priority issues between contending security interests and other lien claimants.This program is designed for the newer attorney, who may or may not have taken a personal property secured transactions class in law school.

Speakers: James D. Prendergast, The First American Corporation 

Read more…

Home Loan As Compensation is Not Consumer Debt For Purposes of Dismissal (In re Cherrett)

A home loan that an employee accepted as part of a compensation package was not a “consumer debt” for purposes of determining whether his Chapter 7 bankruptcy case was subject to a statutory dismissal provision, said the 9th Circuit BAP in their published opinion on Nov. 7, 2014.

Debtor-husband’s former employer moved to dismiss debtors’ Chapter 7 case as abuse of provisions of that chapter,  butt Judge Scott C. Clarkson denied the motion on ground that the debt  was not “consumer debt,”  as required by the Code.

Supreme Court to Review Lam Motions

The Supreme Court has accepted cert in Bank of America, N.A. v. Caulkett agreeing to review the right of a chapter 7 debtor to strip off an entirely unsecured lien. In Los Angeles we call them “Lam Motions.” I expect oral argument some time in April, 2015 and I expect to be there. Nearly every court in the country has held that the Supreme Court case of Dewsnup requires denial of the strip off in chapter 7. My briefs of the cases follow.

Bank of America, N.A. v. Caulkett, (unpublished) (11th Cir., May, 2014)

Issue: May a chapter 7 strip off a wholly unsecured lien pursuant to sections 506(a) and 506(d)?

Holding: Yes.

The bankruptcy court here “void[ed] a wholly unsecured second priority lien on residential property owned by a Chapter 7 debtor. The issue on appeal is whether a Chapter 7 debtor is allowed to ‘strip off’ a second priority lien on his home, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(a) and (d), when the first priority lien exceeds the value of the property.” The district court affirmed.

The 11th Circuit affirmed in a very short opinion saying only that it is bound by its prior ruling in McNeal v. GMAC Mortg., LLC (In re McNeal), 735 F.3d 1263 (11th Cir. 2012).

McNeal v. GMAC Mortg., LLC (In re McNeal), 735 F.3d 1263 (11th Cir. 2012)

Issue: May a chapter 7 strip off a wholly unsecured lien pursuant to sections 506(a) and 506(d)?

Holding: Yes.

Per curiam

The debtor here filed chapter 7. “In her petition, McNeal reported that her home was subject to two mortgage liens: a first priority lien in the amount of $176,413 held by HSBC and a second priority lien in the amount of $44,444 held by Homecomings Financial, LLC, a subsidiary of GMAC Mortgage, LLC (collectively, “GMAC”). McNeal also reported that her home’s fair market value was $141,416. The parties do not dispute these factual allegations.” “McNeal then sought to ‘strip off’ GMAC’s second priority lien, pursuant to sections 506(a) and 506(d).” The bankruptcy court denied the request and the district court affirmed.

The 11th Circuit reversed also in a very short opinion. “That GMAC’s junior lien is both ‘allowed’ under 11 U.S.C. § 502 and wholly unsecured pursuant to section 506(a) is undisputed. To determine whether such an allowed—but wholly unsecured—claim is voidable, we must then look to section 506(d), which provides that ‘[t]o the extent that a lien secures a claim against a debtor that is not an allowed secured claim, such lien is void.’” The court distinguished Dewsnup saying, “[b]ecause Dewsnup disallowed only a ‘strip down’ of a partially secured mortgage lien and did not address a ‘strip off’ of a wholly unsecured lien, it is not [determinative of] the facts at issue in this appeal.”

Supreme Court Sets Oral Argument in Wellness

The Supreme Court has set oral argument in the Wellness case for Wednesday January 14, 2015.  Wellness is the followup to Bellingham.  The court will resolve the issue, hopefully of whether parties can consent to have the bankruptcy court enter final judgment in a Stern type case.  A Stern type case is one where congress has designated the issue to be core but the Supremes have determined that it is “unconsitutionally core,” in other words a dispute where final judgment can be entered only be an Article III court.

In Wellness the Stern type claim is the issue of whether the debtor is the alter ego of a corporate type entity, thereby making the corporate property, property of the individual’s estate.  The 7th Circuit ruled that only an Article III court can issue a final judgment on that issue and that that cannot be waived.

I will not be able to attend as I will be in trial here in Los Angeles.  I had pretty much decided not to go anyway as I would rather attend the Lam Motion cases which will likely be set for oral argument in April, 2015.

Bankruptcy Fees to Increase Dec. 1st

Appealing a bankruptcy order directly to Court of Appeals (bypassing District Court) will go from $157 to $207. 

Motion to Redact information from previously filed records – new charge $25 per case.

See more here:  http://news.uscourts.gov/new-court-fees-take-effect-dec-1

Los Angeles Federal Bar Assoc. program: TRIBUTE TO CHIEF JUDGE KOZINSKI

To celebrate his tenure as Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, the FBA-LA cordially invites you to join us as we pay tribute to The Honorable Alex Kozinski.

December 2, 2014 – 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.

Location: Richard H. Chambers – U.S. Court of Appeals Building
125 South Grand Avenue Pasadena, California 91105

Complimentary parking is available across the street from the courthouse.

Flyer attached.