The better way (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson Bankruptcy may not be very good at a lot of things. But one thing bankruptcy is good at is this: selling assets. Bankruptcy sales outside the ordinary course of business traditionally perform well at achieving top dollar. Two separate procedures are authorized for sales of... Continue Reading →
A Refresher On Executory Contract Rejection Under § 365 (In re Dandurand)
A time to reflect and refresh (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L. Swanson It is helpful, every now and then, to receive a refresher on basic bankruptcy laws. We have such a refresher—on executory contract rejection under § 365—in this recent opinion: In re Dandurand, Case No. 24-40401, South Dakota Bankruptcy Court (decided May... Continue Reading →
A Plan’s Temporary Injunction Is Permissible, Despite Purdue Pharma (In re Miracle Restaurant)
Temporary (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson Debtor’s Subchapter V Plan provides for: payment in full of all claims at the end of its three-years term, through a new loan to be guaranteed by Debtor’s insiders; and a temporary injunction, during the three-years term of the Plan, against creditors suing those same insiders on... Continue Reading →
Judicial Abuse Of The Bankruptcy Code (In re 2 Monkey Trading)
Abuse? (Photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson Nobody likes bankruptcy. That’s a truism—and it’s true even though bankruptcy serves an essential role in our market-based and credit-based economy, in which the risk of failure is a constant companion for every business endeavor. But when the dislike of bankruptcy finds its way into judicial rulings... Continue Reading →
An IRS Mistake (Violating §§ 362 & 524) Gets Out Of Hand In A Pro Se Lawsuit (Gray v. U.S.)
Things got out of hand here (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson Sometimes, things get out of hand—starting with a small error that expands into something more. A recent example is the case of Gray v. United States, Case No. 24-CV-2621 in the U.S. District Court for Southern New York (Decided May 28, 2025).... Continue Reading →
Barton Doctrine Applied To Protect A Bankruptcy Trustee and Counsel (In re Prehired LLC)
Providing protection? (Photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L. Swanson Every now and then you see something and say, “How in the heck could this happen?!” Here is one of those times: In re Prehired LLC, Case No. 22-11007, Delaware Bankruptcy Court (decided May 30, 2025; Doc. 247). Facts Debtor LLC files a voluntary Subchapter... Continue Reading →
Individuals With Repeat Bankruptcy Filings & Automatic Stay Termination (Morgan & Blankenship)
Repetition (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L. Swanson Individuals who repeatedly file bankruptcy face an automatic stay problem under under 11 U.S.C. § 362(c). Subparts (c)(3)&(4) of § 362 terminate the automatic bankruptcy stay—automatically—for individual repeat-filers. Subpart (c)(3) deals with a first-time repeat-filer like this: “(3) if a single or joint case is filed by... Continue Reading →
Death Penalty For Bankruptcy Crimes At U.S. Constitutional Convention (U.S. v. Duarte)
London Tower -- site of many public hangings (Photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson “Blackstone . . . observed that acts such as . . . robbery, certain thefts, fraudulent bankruptcy, forgery of coin, and forgery of a marriage license were felonies that could warrant death.” This quote is from United States v. Duarte,... Continue Reading →
Racing-To-The-Courthouse: A Basic Right Of Contract (Clark v. White)
Racing (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L. Swanson Several months ago, I stumbled upon an old opinion out of the U.S. Supreme Court suggesting that the right of a creditor to race to the courthouse to collect on its claim against a debtor—and to win (or lose) that race—is a basic right of contract... Continue Reading →
Bankruptcy & Employment Discrimination Claim (Palmer v. Union Pacific)
A locomotive (photo by Marilyn Swanson) By: Donald L Swanson Here’s an interesting employment discrimination case that’s related to a prior bankruptcy: Palmer v. Union Pacific Railroad Co. (In re Palmer), Case No. 24-1212 (8th Cir., decided June 12, 2025).[Fn. 1] Background Debtor starts working for The Railroad in March 1998 as a Switchman/Brakeman, after disclosing... Continue Reading →