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Trustee

Filing Bankruptcy When a Trustee Seeks to Avoid a Preference

I while back, I wrote an article outlining the various defenses the Bankruptcy Code affords a party when a trustee in a bankruptcy case seeks to avoid a transfer made to that party. “Avoid,” here, means the trustee can recover the payment to the party for the bankruptcy estate. The goal is to prevent debtors …

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Supreme Court: No Lien-Stripping Junior Mortgages in Chapter 7

The wait is over for homeowners hoping to strip their underwater junior liens in chapter 7 New York bankruptcy. The U.S. Supreme Court consolidated a pair of cases, Bank of America, N.A. v. Caulkett and Bank of America, N.A. v. Toledo-Cardona, because their facts were largely the same, and it held that the answer was …

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Debtors Converting from Chapter 13 to Chapter 7 Get Their Wages Back

If the U.S. Supreme Court was reluctant this year to decide whether a debtor in bankruptcy can sue a creditor for violating the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, it was in a different mood when it heard and decided Harris v. Veigelahn. The case concerned a debtor whose accumulated chapter 13 payments were distributed to …

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When the Trustee Thinks College Tuition Is a Fraudulent Transfer

It might be farcical, but sometimes bankruptcy trustees will file lawsuits against universities in consumer bankruptcy cases. If parents pay for their children’s college tuition with money that could go to creditors, then the trustees might have a case. To combat this possibility, New York’s own Representative Chris Collins offered a bill in Congress that …

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It’s Possible to Receive Notice of an Adversary Proceeding in the Mail

For creditors who need help on the New York bankruptcy defense side or those who have filed a bankruptcy themselves but need to initiate an adversary proceeding against creditors or the trustee, it is in fact possible to effect “service of process” via the U.S. postal system. Usually service of process, the system of giving …

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What Happens to an Income Tax Refund in Chapter 13?

Last year, I discussed what happens to income tax refunds in New York bankruptcy, but that post doesn’t address specific concerns that chapter 13 debtors might have. Now that 2015 is here and people are looking through their tax forms (you are doing that, right?), it’s worthwhile to discuss the topic for a few reasons. …

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What Are the Benefits of a 0 Percent Chapter 13 Repayment Plan?

Nope, that’s not a typo. There is such a thing as a zero-percent chapter 13 plan. Although, it is a misnomer in that the debtor is actually going to make some payments on the plan. (Otherwise it would be absurd.) Consequently, a zero-percent plan isn’t the opposite of the more commonly known 100 percent chapter …

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Rent-Stabilized Apartments Are Protected in New York Bankruptcy

Nearly a year ago, a case raised the question of whether a rent-stabilized apartment is an asset in New York bankruptcy. The short answer is no; rent-stabilization leases are “public assistance benefits” that are exempt assets under New York creditor and debtor law and therefore beyond the reach of a bankruptcy trustee. The case involved …

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Six Situations in Which a Discharge Order Can Be Revoked

Although some people file New York bankruptcy to halt a foreclosure with the automatic stay or strip a lien, in nearly all cases debtors seek a discharge. However, there are six situations in which a bankruptcy court can revoke a discharge order that’s already been entered. They’re listed in Section 727(d) of the Bankruptcy Code: …

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