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What Happens to Condo or Homeowners Fees in Bankruptcy?

Many New Yorkers live in condos or homeowner communities as opposed to independent, single-unit owner-occupied or rental housing. Keeping a home in New York bankruptcy is a common topic, as is protecting the interests of renters—including those in rent-stabilized units—but not so much is said about condos or homeowner communities. In New York City such …

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More on Bankruptcy Reform’s Legacy: Repeat Filing Continues

I have one more point of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA) of 2005 to analyze: changes to the automatic stay to repeat filings. In the time leading up to its passage, many in Congress (and certainly creditors) believed debtors filed successive, strategic bankruptcies in a manner to avoid paying debts they …

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CFPB Showcases New York Consumers’ Financial Complaints

Each month the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) publishes a monthly report that explores consumers’ financial complaints, and it usually focuses on one region in the country. For January 2016, the agency chose New York State and the New York metro area, which the CFPB defines as the city along with several zip codes in …

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Three Ways of Dealing With Excess Equity in Bankruptcy

It’s not unheard of for debtors filing New York bankruptcy to own property that can’t be fully protected by an exemption. Although the state’s homestead exemption is quite generous compared to the federal exemptions, it might not cover all equity in a property. Alternatively, debtors might be concerned with equity in non-real estate property, or …

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File Taxes Before Filing Bankruptcy

Tax returns are a common fixture in New York bankruptcy, so much so that debtors are well advised to file their taxes before they file bankruptcy. Because U.S. tax season has begun, it’s a message worth explaining sooner rather than later. In all bankruptcy chapters, the Bankruptcy Code requires debtors to provide the trustee with …

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NYT: Scrutinize Your Mail, Immune Debt Collectors Might Be Suing You

The title isn’t exactly what The New York Times‘ Dealbook blog post wrote about in December, but it’s the lesson one should draw from it. Debt collectors can use the courts to sue debtors, but when debtors sue back, collectors can hide behind arbitration clauses to make the suits go away. The Times characterized it …

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Ratings Agencies Pessimistic About Student-Loan Securities

Rating agencies’ opinions of financial assets isn’t much concern to the New York bankruptcy world, but notably in mid-December both Moody’s and Fitch issued press releases documenting their pessimistic outlooks on a very unique type of financial asset: Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP) Asset-Backed Securities (ABS). The FFELP is the defunct federal program in …

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