By: Donald L. Swanson Over the years, there have been some really-bad ideas for punishing debtors. Examples from Olden Times Under Draco’s Law, back in Athens of the 600s, death and dismemberment could be a debtor’s fate (not sure which occurred first), with sale into slavery as an alternative. Fast forward to Merry Olde England... Continue Reading →
Updating Bankruptcy Laws To Changing Economic Realities — A Constant Struggle
By: Donald L. Swanson The U.S. economy is constantly changing; and our bankruptcy laws must change with it. The months of March and April, 2020, bring massive disruptions in our economy; and our bankruptcy laws must adjust. Here are a few of the needed changes: Middle class debtors must be allowed to select Chapter 7 relief;... Continue Reading →
Moving Old Chapter 11 Cases Into Subchapter V? Bankruptcy Courts Say, “Yes”
By: Donald L Swanson Five different bankruptcy courts have allowed Subchapter V designations for debtors whose Chapter 11 cases were already existing on the effective date (February 19, 2020) of the Small Business Reorganization Act (“SBRA”). And their opinions are instructive on procedures and legal standards for doing so. These five cases run the gamut of... Continue Reading →
CARES Act & Bankruptcy: Congress Wants the Largest of Small Businesses to Liquidate
By: Donald L Swanson The CARES Act (“Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act” ) is now law—and has been since March 27, 2020. Bankruptcy Amendments in CARES Act Sec. 1113 of the CARES Act deals with “Bankruptcy” and contains the following provisions. Eligibility for Small Business Bankruptcy. Total-debts eligibility for the Small Business Reorganization Act... Continue Reading →
Punishing Honest Debtors: The Travesty of BAPCPA
By: Donald L Swanson One of the travesties of our current bankruptcy laws is the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (aka “BAPCPA”). Here’s why BAPCPA is a travesty: The Bankruptcy Code (enacted in 1978), (i) recognized the existence of honest but unfortunate debtors, and (ii) presumed each individual debtor to be just... Continue Reading →
How An Official Committee Member Breaches Fiduciary Duties–And Pays A Price
By: Donald L Swanson Defendant “seriously breached her fiduciary duties” as a member of the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors. Naylor v. Farrell (In re Farrell), 610 B.R. 317, 323 (Bkrtcy.C.D.Cal. 2019). Facts Here’s what happened: Defendant failed to play by the rules. Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Debtor and and his spouse (the... Continue Reading →
Triage and Prescriptions for Ailing Businesses
Their ability to hunker down and survive is dependent, first and foremost, on the continuing availability of cash.
The Coming Corona Recession: Five Recommendations to Businesses for Getting Help
Economic fallout from the corona virus will leave many formerly-successful businesses in financial stress.
Memo to Federal Judges: Resist Temptation (Rodriguez v. FDIC)
There is “no federal general common law.”
The Solvent Debtor and Post-Petition Interest on Unsecured Claims
The Fifth Circuit follows what it describes as “the monolithic mountain of authority” in holding that the Bankruptcy Code—not the reorganization plan—defines the limits of claims.