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Violations of the Automatic Stay Void or Voidable

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Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code provides for an automatic stay that prohibits any actions against a debtor or
property of a debtor's estate. There is a split between the circuits on the consequence of a violation of the automatic
stay. The Third, Fifth, Sixth and Eleventh Circuits have held that violations of the stay render such actions
voidable. On the other hand, the First, Second, Ninth and Tenth Circuits have held violation of the stay to be void
<i>ab initio.</i> Thus far, the U.S. Courts of Appeal for the Fourth Circuit and the Eighth Circuit have avoided the issue.
The practical consequences of whether the stay is void or voidable relate to which party has the burden of
challenging the action in violation of the stay. If a stay violation is void <i>ab initio,</i> a debtor can focus its efforts on
reorganization and not bother with litigating whether a violation can be rectified retroactively.

</p><p>Section 362 provides a debtor breathing room by prohibiting the commencement or continuation of action against
the estate.<small><sup><a href="#1" name="1a">1</a></sup></small> Upon the filing of the debtor's petition, creditors are precluded from taking any actions to obtain
possession of property of the estate or to control property of the estate.<small><sup><a href="#2" name="2a">2</a></sup></small> The stay is one of the most basic
protections a debtor enjoys.<small><sup><a href="#3" name="3a">3</a></sup></small> The stay is intended to grant a debtor breathing room by "stop[ping] all collection
efforts, all harassment and all foreclosure actions." H.R. Rep. No. 95-595 at 340 (1977). The automatic stay is
designed to protect a debtor from all collection efforts while the debtor attempts to regain its financial footing,<small><sup><a href="#4" name="4a">4</a></sup></small> and
is effective immediately upon the filing of the petition without further action and suspends any non-bankruptcy
court's authority to continue judicial proceedings.<small><sup><a href="#5" name="5a">5</a></sup></small> By virtue of the automatic stay, a creditor is provided with a
breathing spell from creditors who cannot collect, harass or pursue foreclosure actions.<small><sup><a href="#6" name="6a">6</a></sup></small>

</p><h4>Violations of the Stay Are Voidable</h4>

<p>The Third Circuit has acknowledged the general rule that violations of the automatic stay are void <i>ab initio.</i><small><sup><a href="#7" name="7a">7</a></sup></small>
However, the Third Circuit has held that there is an exception to the general rule. In <i>Siciliano,</i> the debtor staved off
a foreclosure through filing two chapter 13 petitions.<small><sup><a href="#8" name="8a">8</a></sup></small> The secured creditor completed the foreclosure after the
second petition had been filed. The bankruptcy court held that the sale was void, and the district court affirmed.<small><sup><a href="#9" name="9a">9</a></sup></small>

</p><p>The Third Circuit reversed, holding that the bankruptcy court could have granted an annulment of the stay
retroactively.<small><sup><a href="#10" name="10a">10</a></sup></small> The Third Circuit viewed the inclusion of the word "annulling" in §362 as indicative of a
legislative intent to apply certain kinds of relief retroactively. Accordingly, the Third Circuit concluded that an
exception exists to the void <i>ab initio</i> rule.

</p><p>In the <i>Matter of Coho Resources Inc.,</i><small><sup><a href="#11" name="11a">11</a></sup></small> two insurance companies appealed a district court order allowing the
execution of a state court order. The order had been entered after the primary defendant had filed for bankruptcy. In
spite of these "patent violations of the automatic stay," the Fifth Circuit disregarded the parties' voidness argument,
holding that stay violations are merely voidable and are subject to discretionary cure.<small><sup><a href="#12" name="12a">12</a></sup></small> The Fifth Circuit based its
holding on the bankruptcy court's statutory power to annul the stay. Interestingly, the Fifth Circuit had no problem
with the Mississippi state court, rather than the bankruptcy court, ruling on the applicability of the automatic
stay.<small><sup><a href="#13" name="13a">13</a></sup></small> In light of the complex state law issues related to the validity of the Mississippi judgment, the Fifth Circuit
concluded that such issues are best left to the Mississippi courts.

</p><p>Previously, in <i>Picco v. Global Marine Drilling Co.,</i><small><sup><a href="#14" name="14a">14</a></sup></small> the Fifth Circuit had held similarly that a violation of the
stay is merely voidable. A federal court dismissed plaintiff's action after the defendant filed for bankruptcy.<small><sup><a href="#15" name="15a">15</a></sup></small> The
plaintiff subsequently wanted the dismissal set aside for statute-of-limitations purposes and argued that the district
court's action was void in light of the automatic stay.<small><sup><a href="#16" name="16a">16</a></sup></small> The Fifth Circuit reiterated its previously stated view that
violation of the stay was merely voidable, not void,<small><sup><a href="#17" name="17a">17</a></sup></small> because the bankruptcy court had the power to annul the
stay.<small><sup><a href="#18" name="18a">18</a></sup></small> The Fifth Circuit concluded that by lifting the stay, the bankruptcy court had validated the alleged violative
act and therefore cured any defect.

</p><p>In <i>Easley v. Pettibone Michigan Corp.,</i><small><sup><a href="#19" name="19a">19</a></sup></small> a forklift operator, injured on the job, sued the manufacturer after the
manufacturer had filed for bankruptcy. The plaintiff then sought relief from the stay, which was denied. The debtor
subsequently filed an adversary proceeding seeking a declaration that the plaintiff's action was null and void because
the filing had violated the automatic stay. The bankruptcy court annulled the stay retroactively and allowed the state
court litigation to proceed. Subsequently, the Sixth Circuit agreed to determine whether an action filed in violation
of the automatic stay is void or voidable.

</p><p>The Sixth Circuit noted that a majority of courts have held that stay violations render an action void.<small><sup><a href="#20" name="20a">20</a></sup></small> In its
analysis, the Sixth Circuit defined void and voidable and noted that void means invalid, without legal force and
effect. However, if invalid, an action may not be incurable compared to a void action, which cannot be cured or
validated at a later time.

</p><p>The Sixth Circuit concluded that the stay is voidable, not void.<small><sup><a href="#21" name="21a">21</a></sup></small> In part, the Sixth Circuit believed that, as a
practical matter, even if a stay violation is void, a debtor would still need to take some action. Therefore,
determining a stay violation voidable does not have significant consequences. Also, the Sixth Circuit acknowledged
that other courts have recognized an equitable exception to the automatic stay. This recognition is really an
acknowledgment that stay violations are voidable. However, the Sixth Circuit cautioned that equitable exceptions to
the automatic stay must be applied sparingly and absent limited equitable circumstances, stay violations should be
voided.<small><sup><a href="#22" name="22a">22</a></sup></small>

</p><p>In <i>In re Albany Partners Ltd.,</i><small><sup><a href="#23" name="23a">23</a></sup></small> the secured creditor consummated a foreclosure post-petition and then filed a
motion seeking relief from stay. The bankruptcy court annulled the stay, and the district court affirmed.<small><sup><a href="#24" name="24a">24</a></sup></small> The
Eleventh Circuit affirmed, relying on the "annulment" language in §362(d) of the Bankruptcy Code.<small><sup><a href="#25" name="25a">25</a></sup></small> While
acknowledging the importance of the automatic stay and noting that stay violations are generally void, the Eleventh
Circuit was swayed in part by the bankruptcy court's finding that the petition had not been filed in good faith.<small><sup><a href="#26" name="26a">26</a></sup></small>

Also, the litigant's rights had been previously adjudicated in state court and the debtor had lost. Accordingly, the
Eleventh Circuit concluded that "the bankruptcy court did not err in granting relief in the form of an annulment of
the stay (<i>ab initio</i>)."<small><sup><a href="#27" name="27a">27</a></sup></small>

</p><h4>Violations of the Stay Are Void</h4>

<p>In <i>Soares,</i> a state court entered a default order and authorized entry of a foreclosure judgment one week after the
debtor filed for bankruptcy.<small><sup><a href="#28" name="28a">28</a></sup></small> Subsequently, the bankruptcy court vacated the automatic stay retroactively so that
the state court's actions would not be deemed to have violated the stay. The district court affirmed, but the First
Circuit reversed, holding that the district court's actions were not merely ministerial.<small><sup><a href="#29" name="29a">29</a></sup></small>

</p><p>The First Circuit concluded that the majority of courts consider violations of the stay to be void, recognizing that
equitable considerations might change some outcomes.<small><sup><a href="#30" name="30a">30</a></sup></small> Considering the facts, the First Circuit concluded that the
bankruptcy court should not have validated the foreclosure judgment obtained in violation of the stay.<small><sup><a href="#31" name="31a">31</a></sup></small> <i>See, also,
In re Best Payphones Inc.,</i><small><sup><a href="#32" name="32a">32</a></sup></small> (actions in violation of stay are void and without vitality if taken after stay is in
effect).

</p><p>The Second Circuit agreed that actions taken in violation of the stay are void.<small><sup><a href="#33" name="33a">33</a></sup></small> However, in <i>Rexnord Holdings Inc.
v. Bidermann,</i> the Second Circuit concluded that a $12.9 million judgment entered one day after the debtor filed a
bankruptcy petition was a simple ministerial act that did not constitute a continuation of a judicial proceeding under
§362(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code. The Second Circuit was persuaded that the district court judge had endorsed the
judgment the day before the bankruptcy, and at that point a hearing on the merits was concluded.<small><sup><a href="#34" name="34a">34</a></sup></small> Accordingly,
the clerk's post-petition entry of the judgment, after the stay became effective, did not violate §362(a)(1).<small><sup><a href="#35" name="35a">35</a></sup></small>

</p><p>In <i>In re Schwartz,</i><small><sup><a href="#36" name="36a">36</a></sup></small> the debtors objected that an IRS tax assessment had occurred during the debtors' previous
chapter 11 proceeding and therefore was void. The bankruptcy court agreed, but the Ninth Circuit BAP reversed,
holding that stay violations are voidable, not void.<small><sup><a href="#37" name="37a">37</a></sup></small> There was no dispute that the IRS assessment violated the
automatic stay. In <i>Schwartz,</i> the Ninth Circuit clarified its previous decisions by making clear that stay violations
are void, not voidable. The Ninth Circuit emphasized the vital role the automatic stay plays in a bankruptcy. In
light of the significance of the stay, the Ninth Circuit focused on policy considerations that allow debtors to
reorganize and not have to spend time policing creditor actions. The Ninth Circuit criticized other courts for reading
too much into §362(d) of the Code.<small><sup><a href="#38" name="38a">38</a></sup></small> Considering policy and the purpose of bankruptcy, the Ninth Circuit
concluded that, absent affirmative relief from the bankruptcy court, violations of the stay are void.<small><sup><a href="#39" name="39a">39</a></sup></small>

</p><p>In <i>Ellis v. Consolidated Diesel Elec. Corp.,</i><small><sup><a href="#40" name="40a">40</a></sup></small> the district court granted the defendants' summary judgment motion
in a personal injury case. The Tenth Circuit held that the judgment was entered in violation of the automatic stay.
Accordingly, there was no properly entered final judgment from which the plaintiffs could appeal. The Tenth Circuit
ruled that "it is well established that any action taken in violation of the stay is void and without effect."<small><sup><a href="#41" name="41a">41</a></sup></small> This
apparently is true even though the judgment was entered in the debtor's favor.<small><sup><a href="#42" name="42a">42</a></sup></small> "The operation of the stay should
not depend on whether the district court finds for or against the debtor." The Tenth Circuit concluded that the
violation was void and that, moreover, lifting the stay could only be prospective, not retroactive.<small><sup><a href="#43" name="43a">43</a></sup></small>

</p><h4>Avoiding the Issue</h4>

<p>In <i>Winters v. George Mason Bank,</i><small><sup><a href="#44" name="44a">44</a></sup></small> the Fourth Circuit declined to address the issue of void vs. voidable.<small><sup><a href="#45" name="45a">45</a></sup></small> While
acknowledging the split between the circuits, the Fourth Circuit determined that it was unnecessary to enter the fray
because the movant lacked standing to challenge the action that violated the stay. Lower courts in the Fourth Circuit
have ruled differently on the violation-of-stay issue. In <i>Khozai v. Resolution Trust Corp.,</i><small><sup><a href="#46" name="46a">46</a></sup></small> for example, the
district court held that a stay violation was voidable.</p><p>Without notice of the bankruptcy, the RTC sold the debtor's property at foreclosure.<small><sup><a href="#47" name="47a">47</a></sup></small> To validate the sale, the
RTC sought <i>nunc pro tunc</i> relief from the stay, which the bankruptcy court granted. Reviewing existing circuit
court decisions regarding stay violations, the district court was persuaded by the decisions that allowed <i>nunc pro tunc</i> relief to validate stay violations.<small><sup><a href="#48" name="48a">48</a></sup></small> Agreeing with that logic, the district court affirmed the bankruptcy court's
validation of the foreclosure retroactively.

</p><p>However, several lower courts in the Fourth Circuit have concluded that stay violations are void, not voidable. For
example, in <i>In re Felder,</i><small><sup><a href="#49" name="49a">49</a></sup></small> the debtor alleged that an insurance company violated the stay by canceling his credit
personal property insurance post-petition and by retaining and applying to his outstanding loan $67.32 of an
unearned premium. The bankruptcy court held that actions in violation of the stay are void <i>ab initio.</i><small><sup><a href="#50" name="50a">50</a></sup></small> Because the
cancellation was void, the debtor was still covered under the policy and therefore was not entitled to a refund.

</p><blockquote><blockquote>
<hr>
<big><i><center>
Holding a stay violation merely voidable generally forces a debtor to divert time and resources.
</center></i></big>
<hr>
</blockquote></blockquote>

<p>The U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland has also held automatic stay violations to be void. In
<i>Chesapeake Fiber Packaging Corp. v. Sebro Packaging Corp.,</i><small><sup><a href="#51" name="51a">51</a></sup></small> an assignor's attempted post-petition termination
of a patent assignment was deemed void. The court noted that contract rights constituted property of the debtor's
estate. Accordingly, attempts to terminate the contract during the bankruptcy violated §362 of the Bankruptcy Code
and was void and without effect.

</p><p>A North Carolina bankruptcy court dealt with the stay violation by sidestepping the issue. In <i>In re Ware,</i><small><sup><a href="#52" name="52a">52</a></sup></small> a car
finance company tried to perfect a security interest in violation of the stay. The bankruptcy court concluded that the
plaintiff was entitled to prevail under either line of authority. The security interest and lien in favor of the
automobile finance company, perfected post-petition, was either void <i>ab initio</i> or was voidable and should be
adjudged void because it was perfected in violation of the automatic stay.<small><sup><a href="#53" name="53a">53</a></sup></small>

</p><h4>Impact of Void vs. Voidable</h4>

<p>In <i>Soares,</i><small><sup><a href="#54" name="54a">54</a></sup></small> the First Circuit noted that the semantic difference between void and voidable has practical
consequences, determining the burden of going forward.<small><sup><a href="#55" name="55a">55</a></sup></small> If an action in violation of the stay is void, the burden of
validating the action rests squarely on the offending creditor's shoulders.<small><sup><a href="#56" name="56a">56</a></sup></small> On the other hand, if a stay violation is
deemed to be voidable, the debtor is burdened with challenging the action.<small><sup><a href="#57" name="57a">57</a></sup></small> The First Circuit concluded that the
former paradigm "best harmonizes with the nature of the automatic stay and the important purposes that it serves."

</p><p>Similarly, in <i>Best Payphones,</i> the bankruptcy court noted that even though a stay violation is void, a bankruptcy
court has the power to validate it.<small><sup><a href="#58" name="58a">58</a></sup></small> If an action is void <i>ab initio,</i> the party seeking validation must move to annul
the stay. If deemed voidable, the party seeking to avoid the stay violation, generally the debtor, must seek relief.<small><sup><a href="#59" name="59a">59</a></sup></small>

</p><p>The Ninth Circuit has also commented that a determination of whether stay violations are void or voidable impacts
policy considerations.<small><sup><a href="#60" name="60a">60</a></sup></small> If a violation is void, a debtor is afforded better protection and can focus on reorganization.
If merely voidable, a debtor has to spend considerable time and money policing and litigating creditor actions.

</p><h4>Conclusion</h4>

<p>The debate continues over whether a violation of the automatic stay is void <i>ab initio</i> or merely voidable. It appears
that the former determination may be more consistent with the Code goals of allowing a debtor to focus on
reorganization. Holding a stay violation merely voidable generally forces a debtor to divert time and resources. This
does not appear to be a productive use of the debtor's resources.

</p><hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>

<p><small><sup><a name="1">1</a></sup></small> 11 U.S.C. §362. <a href="#1a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="2">2</a></sup></small> 11 U.S.C. §362(a)(3). <i>See, also, Holmes Transp.,</i> 931 F.2d 984, 987 (1st Cir. 1991) (automatic stay is designed to effect immediate freeze of status quo at outset of chapter 11
proceedings). <a href="#2a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="3">3</a></sup></small> <i>In re Soares,</i> 107 F.3d 975 (1st Cir. 1997). <a href="#3a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="4">4</a></sup></small> <i>In re Schwartz,</i> 954 F.2d 569, 571 (9th Cir. 1992). <a href="#4a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="5">5</a></sup></small> <i>In re Best Payphones Inc.,</i> 279 B.R. 92, 97 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2002). <a href="#5a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="6">6</a></sup></small> <i>Jones v. Cain,</i> 804 A.2d 322, 325 (D.C. 2002). <a href="#6a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="7">7</a></sup></small> <i>In re Siciliano,</i> 13 F.3d 748, 750 (3d Cir. 1994). <i>But, see In re Global Indust. Technologies Inc.,</i> Bankr. No. 02-21624-JKF (Bankr. W.D. Pa.) (unpublished decision dated Jan. 15,
2004) (citing <i>Siciliano</i> for the proposition that stay violations in the Third Circuit are void <i>ab initio</i>). <a href="#7a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="8">8</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 749. <a href="#8a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="9">9</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 750. <a href="#9a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="10">10</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 751. <a href="#10a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="11">11</a></sup></small> 345 F.3d 338, 340 (5th Cir. 2003). <a href="#11a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="12">12</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 344. <a href="#12a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="13">13</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 345. <a href="#13a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="14">14</a></sup></small> 900 F.2d 846, 850 (5th Cir. 1990). <a href="#14a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="15">15</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 848. <a href="#15a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="16">16</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 850. <a href="#16a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="17">17</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> <i>See, also, In re Shortt,</i> 277 B.R. 683, 694 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2002) (stay violation was merely voidable so stay was modified <i>nunc pro tunc</i> to validate tax refund setoff). <a href="#17a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="18">18</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 850-51. <a href="#18a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="19">19</a></sup></small> 990 F.2d 905, 907 (6th Cir. 1993). <a href="#19a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="20">20</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 909. <a href="#20a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="21">21</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 910. <a href="#21a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="22">22</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 911. <i>See, also, In re Thompson,</i> 273 B.R. 143, 145 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 2001) (holding that post-petition entry of judgment was merely voidable). <a href="#22a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="23">23</a></sup></small> 749 F.2d 670, 672 (11th Cir. 1984). <a href="#23a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="24">24</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 671. <a href="#24a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="25">25</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 675. <a href="#25a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="26">26</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> In <i>In re Ford,</i> 296 B.R. 537, 543 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. 2003), the bankruptcy court noted that in the Eleventh Circuit stay violations are generally void but can be validated
through annulment of the stay. <a href="#26a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="27">27</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 676. <a href="#27a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="28">28</a></sup></small> <i>Soares,</i> 107 F.3d at 972. <a href="#28a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="29">29</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 974. <a href="#29a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="30">30</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 976. <a href="#30a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="31">31</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 978. <a href="#31a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="32">32</a></sup></small> 279 B.R. at 97. <a href="#32a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="33">33</a></sup></small> <i>Rexnord Holdings Inc. v. Bidermann,</i> 21 F.3d 522, 527 (2d Cir. 1994). <a href="#33a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="34">34</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 528. <a href="#34a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="35">35</a></sup></small> <i>Id. See, also, Jones v. Cain,</i> 804 A.2d at 324 (D.C. Court of Appeals held that judgment entered in violation of automatic stay was void). <a href="#35a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="36">36</a></sup></small> 954 F.2d at 570. <a href="#36a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="37">37</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 571. <a href="#37a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="38">38</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 573. <a href="#38a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="39">39</a></sup></small> <i>Id. See, also, In re Giddens,</i> 298 B.R. 329, 336 (Bankr. W.D. Ill. 2003) (acts enforcing lien and controlling debtor's property in violation of automatic stay were void <i>ab initio</i>). <a href="#39a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="40">40</a></sup></small> 894 F.2d 371 (10th Cir. 1990). <a href="#40a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="41">41</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 372 (citation omitted). <a href="#41a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="42">42</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 373. <a href="#42a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="43">43</a></sup></small> <i>Id. See, also, In re Spriggs,</i> 219 B.R. 909, 913 (10th Cir. BAP 1998) (affirming bankruptcy court determination that post petition foreclosure was void). <a href="#43a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="44">44</a></sup></small> 94 F.3d 130, 136 (4th Cir. 1996). <a href="#44a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="45">45</a></sup></small> Similarly, the Eighth Circuit has not joined the void vs. voidable debate. <i>See Riley v. United States,</i> 118 F.3d 1220, (8th Cir. 1997) (finding the district court's holding that the
stay violation rendered in IRS assessment void <i>ab initio </i>theoretical and beside the point and declining to address the issue). <a href="#45a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="46">46</a></sup></small> 177 B.R. 524, 526-27 (E.D. La. 1995). <a href="#46a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="47">47</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 525. <a href="#47a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="48">48</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at 527. <a href="#48a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="49">49</a></sup></small> 2000 WL 33710885 *1 (Bankr. D. S.C., July 7, 2000). <a href="#49a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="50">50</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at *7. <a href="#50a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="51">51</a></sup></small> 143 B.R. 360, 372 (D. Md. 1992). <a href="#51a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="52">52</a></sup></small> 2003 WL 22956837, *5 (Bankr. M.D.N.C., Dec. 15, 2003). <a href="#52a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="53">53</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> at *5. <a href="#53a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="54">54</a></sup></small> <i>In re Soares,</i> 107 F.3d at 976. <a href="#54a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="55">55</a></sup></small> <i>But, see In re Ford,</i> 296 B.R. at 543 (distinction between void and voidable is largely semantic). <a href="#55a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="56">56</a></sup></small> <i>Id. See, also, Jones v. Cain,</i> 804 A.3d at 324 (vacating judgment without prejudice noting that creditor could petition court to annul stay retroactively). <a href="#56a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="57">57</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> One author has argued that Congress should amend the Bankruptcy Code to specifically provide that stay violations are void. Tobar, Donna Renee, "The Need for a Uniform
Void <i>Ab Initio</i> Standard for Violations of the Automatic Stay," 24 <i>Whittier Law Review</i> 3 (Fall 2002). <a href="#57a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="58">58</a></sup></small> 279 B.R. at 98. <a href="#58a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="59">59</a></sup></small> <i>Id.</i> (<i>citing Soares</i>). <a href="#59a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><small><sup><a name="60">60</a></sup></small> <i>In re Schwartz,</i> 954 F.2d at 571. <a href="#60a">Return to article</a>

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