All posts in Courts

E-Blast from ECF Support re Interruption in Pay.gov Service [January 21, 2012 and February 4, 2012]

EBLAST TO EXTERNAL USERS:

Pay.gov, the national electronic payment system used by the Court, will be undergoing a system upgrade that will require two interruptions in the capability of CM/ECF to accept payments.  CM/ECF users will not be able to make payments for fee documents on Saturday, January 21, 2012 from 3:00 PM to approximately 5:00 PM and again on February 4, 2012 from 3:00 PM to approximately 5:00 PM.  However, CM/ECF will be available during this period.  Payments for fee-related filings made during this interruption must be settled later in the day, or the CM/ECF user will be blocked from using CM/ECF.

We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.  Should you have any questions, please contact the ECF Help Desk during normal business hours at (213) 894-2365.

Clerks’ Office: Top 20 Cases of Interest Filed in the Last 24 Months

Top 20 Cases of Interest Filed in the Last 24 Months

AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour, Inc.: LA-10-56761-BB, Chapter 11, Filed 10/29/10. Assets between $100,001-$500,000 and Liabilities between $1-$10 million. Hearing to disallow claims set for 1/11/12 at 11:00 a.m.

Bander Law Firm, LLP: LA-10-15066-AA, Chapter 7, Filed 2/12/10. Assets between $1-100 million and Liabilities between $500,001-$1 million. Notice of change of address of chapter 7 trustee filed on 11/28/11.

Crystal Cathedral Ministries, a California non-profit corporation: SA-10-24771-RK, Chapter 11, Filed 10/18/10. Assets and Liabilities $50-$100 million. Motion to set last day to file POC filed 9/20/2011, Order Approving Purchase and Sale Agreement between Karen S. Naylor, as Plan Agent; Crystal Cathedral Ministries and The Roman Catholic Bishop of Orange. Order Confirming Second Amended Plan.

Read more…

What will SCOTUS decide about 1129(a)(2)(A)(iii)? Not always a right to credit bid

In December, SCOTUS agreed to hear a 7th Circuit case, RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, on whether a secured creditor can be denied a right to credit bid its note when a debtor sells its collateral, pre-confirmation, pursuant to a plan.  The issue arises when a court is evaluating whether a plan satisfies the “fair and equitable” requirement for cram down on non-consenting impaired classes of secured claims, under an 1129(b).  1129(b)(2)(A) provides a set of three disjunctive descriptions of how a plan can provide secured claims with fair and equitable treatment, (i), (iii), or (iii).

The first prong involves either transfer of collateral or use by the debtor whereby the secured creditor’s lien remains, and the creditor receives a cash stream with present value of at least the collateral value and payments totaling the claim. Read more…

Public Notice re Holidays 2012

THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT WILL BE CLOSED ON THE FOLLOWING 2012 FEDERAL HOLIDAYS:

Read more…

Judicial Practices Survey — January 6, 2012

A Judicial Practices Survey with detailed information about each of the judges’ specific judicial practices (such as calendaring hearings, tentative rulings, motions practice, format of papers presented to the Court, chapter 11 and 13 procedures, etc.) is now available on the Court’s website and here.

Judges Neal Bason and Sandy Klein on Automatic Stay in Second Case

Dear Colleagues!

For those that keep track, Judge Bason has just announced that he follows In re: Reswick in that in a 2nd case, failure to file a timely motion to extend the stay will result in there being no automatic stay as to the debtor AND as to the bankruptcy estate.

KEITH HIGGINBOTHAM
2012 cdcbaa President

Judge Sandy Klein has the same view.  JH

2011 Honor Roll of Pro Bono Volunteers

Honor Roll from Chief Judge Peter Carroll.

Hi everyone,  Happy New Year!

 I wanted to thank you for generously donating your time volunteering with Public Counsel’s Debtor Assistance Project.  In recognition of your volunteer work, the United States Bankruptcy Court recognized your contribution on the 2011 Honor Roll of Pro Bono volunteers.  The Honor Roll is posted on the bankruptcy court website at www.cacb.uscourts.gov.

I am also attaching a copy of the 2011 Honor Roll of Pro Bono Volunteers for your convenience.   Thank you!   Also, Public Counsel has launched a new video and I wanted to take this opportunity to share it with you.

As you know, Public Counsel continues to provide desperately needed legal assistance to thousands of pro se debtors every year.  This couldn’t have been possible without your support.  I hope you will share this video with anyone who would like more information about Public Counsel.

 Wishing you all the best in 2012!

Best,

Magdalena Reyes Bordeaux
Senior Staff Attorney
Public Counsel
Consumer Law Project & Debtor Assistance Project

From Aki Koyama re: Chapter 13 Commitment Period

From Aki Koyama from Ms. Dockery’s office –

It appears that SCOTUS has denied cert for In re Baud which would have presented the fundamental issue of whether or not the Applicable Commitment Period is purely an independent, temporal measurement squarely before the Justices.  This breathes new life into the appeals set to be heard before the 9th Circuit to reexamine this issue in light of their prior holding in Kagenveama.

Currently, three appeals regarding the Applicable Commitment Period are pending before the 9th Circuit and one new appeal, Reed out of Oregon, is before the 9th Circuit BAP.  Hopefully, we will have an answer to this issue in 2012.  The three cases are In  re Henderson (the Idaho case and the appeal filed by the chapter 13 Trustee); In re Henderson (the same Idaho case but the appeal was filed by a creditor); In re Flores (this is the appeal with Borowitz & Clark and Rod Danielson).

9th Circuit News: New Federal Bankruptcy Judges Appointed in California

“Chief Judge Alex Kozinski of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit announced today the appointment of new judges for three federal bankruptcy courts in California.

Attorney Mark D. Houle, 45, was appointed to serve as a judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California. He will fill a judgeship to be vacated by Bankruptcy Judge Ellen Carroll, who plans to retire on February 16, 2012. He will be sworn into office on February 17, 2012, and will maintain chambers in Riverside.”

Read the news release here.

Judge Ted Albert Tentative on Interest Rates in Chapter 11 Cramdown

“Commercial real estate cases are very different from Chapter 13s involving used trucks.  Till cannot be properly read for the proposition that a debtor gets away with an unreasonable discount just because some courts, as noted in Till, have used a 1-3% adjustment over prime rate.  North Valley Mall, 432 B.R. at 831.  Instead, in the commercial real estate context the court favors the approach used in Pacific First Bank v. Boulders on the River, Inc. (In re Boulders on the River, Inc.), 164 B.R. 99, 105 (9th Cir BAP 1994).  As explained in the North Valley Mall opinion, a cramdown rate can be imputed by reference to market data and then “built up” or “blended.”  One starts by survey comparison to a “market” rate representing what real lenders in the loan markets are doing on similar properties for similar terms.  Usually this represents only say 65% of the value of the collateral, as seldom will new loans be made at 100% of value.  The remaining 35% is then blended from mezzanine rates and hypothetical equity return rates to yield an overall blended rate that more nearly represents compensation for the degrees of risk inherent in the transaction. Debtor’s analysis contains none of these elements, nor, frankly, do creditors’.  But the court is quite certain that 2.25% -2.97% over Index, [which is around 2.5%-3% if .26%, the current one year treasury average, is used as the Index] interest only, for a period of five years, and then reverting to a rate of 4.57% per annum fixed for a thirty year term [as is suggested in the plan] is way too low, probably on the order of 300-350 basis points too low.  It should be noted that even in this environment of historically low (probably artificially low) interest rates, 4.57% without points would be somewhat low even for a conforming loan, much less an extremely leveraged and risky transaction as is proposed here. Cramdown at such a low rate in effect shifts uncompensated risk to the dissenting lenders and results in a “present value” well less than the value of the collateral/secured claim.  This is not permitted under §1129(b)(2)(A).”

Thanks to Dennis McGoldrick for this heads up.