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Commercial Chapter 11 Filings Increase 5 Percent in First Half over Last Year, Total Filings Nearly Unchanged

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Total commercial chapter 11 filings during the first six months of the year (Jan. 1-June 30) increased 5 percent to 2,854 from the 2,716 total filings during the same period in 2018. Total commercial filings also increased slightly to 19,531 during the first six months of 2019, a 2 percent increase from the 19,210 total commercial filings during the same period a year ago. Total bankruptcies were nearly unchanged with a 0.04 percent increase, as the 388,463 filings during the first half of 2019 were slightly more than the 388,324 filings during the first six months of 2018. The 368,932 total consumer filings for the first half of 2018 represented a 0.05 percent drop from the consumer filing total of 369,114 for the first half of 2018.

Commercial Chapter 11 Filings Increase 5 Percent in First Half over Last Year, Total Filings Nearly Unchanged

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Alexandria, Va. Total commercial chapter 11 filings during the first six months of the year (Jan. 1-June 30) increased 5 percent to 2,854 from the 2,716 total filings during the same period in 2018. Total commercial filings also increased slightly to 19,531 during the first six months of 2019, a 2 percent increase from the 19,210 total commercial filings during the same period a year ago. Total bankruptcies were nearly unchanged with a 0.04 percent increase, as the 388,463 filings during the first half of 2019 were slightly more than the 388,324 filings during the first six months of 2018. The 368,932 total consumer filings for the first half of 2018 represented a 0.05 percent drop from the consumer filing total of 369,114 for the first half of 2018.

 

“Access to the financial fresh start of bankruptcy is crucial to struggling families and small businesses,” said ABI Executive Director Samuel J. Gerdano. “Elements of ABI’s Chapter 11 Reform Commission and Commission on Consumer Bankruptcy are being considered by Congress to modernize the Bankruptcy Code to remove barriers for financially distressed households and businesses.”

 

The House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law held a hearing on June 25 examining a number of bills and priority issues important to business and consumer bankruptcy practice. One bill considered was the “Small Business Reorganization Act” (S. 1091; H.R. 3311), which incorporates recommendations from ABI's Chapter 11 Commission to remove barriers to bankruptcy for financially struggling small and medium-sized businesses. Robert J. Keach of Bernstein Shur (Portland, Maine), a former ABI President and co-chair of the ABI Commission to Study the Reform of Chapter 11, testified on ABI's behalf.

 

The hearing also examined the “Family Farmer Relief Act of 2019” (H.R. 2336; S. 897), supported by ABI to raise the debt cap to $10 million for family farmers seeking chapter 12 protection, and the “Honoring American Veterans in Extreme Need Act of 2019” (HAVEN Act) (H.R. 2938; S. 679), to exclude VA and DoD disability payments from the monthly income calculation used for bankruptcy means testing. Holly Petraeus of ABI's Veterans Affairs Task Force testified on the legislation, which was incorporated into DoD appropriations legislation and has passed the Senate. 

 

The subcommittee also looked at the issue of student loan debt treatment in bankruptcy, which is the subject of the first set of reform recommendations in the Final Report of the ABI Commission on Consumer Bankruptcy. Commissioners Prof. Dalié Jiménez of the UC Irvine School of Law and Ed Boltz of the Law Offices of John T. Orcutt, P.C. (Durham, N.C.) testified on the issue. Click here to watch a replay of the hearing or to view the prepared witness statements.

 

Total commercial chapter 11 bankruptcies for the month of June 2019 were 425, representing a 38 percent increase from the 309 commercial chapter 11 filings in June 2018, according to data provided by Epiq Systems, Inc. Total commercial bankruptcies slipped to 3,052 filings in June 2019 from the 3,079 registered in June 2018. Total bankruptcy filings in June 2019 fell 4 percent to 61,048 from the 63,753 total filings in June 2018. Noncommercial bankruptcies for June 2019 also decreased 4 percent, to 57,996 from the 60,674 filings in June 2018. 

 

The average nationwide per capita bankruptcy filing rate for the first six calendar months of 2019 (Jan. 1-June 30) decreased slightly to 2.51 (total filings per 1,000 per population) from 2.53 for the first five months. The average total filings per day in June 2019 were 3,052, a 1 percent increase from the 3,036 total daily filings in June 2018. States with the highest per capita filing rate (total filings per 1,000 population) through the first six months of 2019 were:

 

1. Alabama (5.57)

2. Tennessee (5.36)

3. Georgia (4.29)

4. Mississippi (4.22)

5. Illinois (3.78)

 

ABI has partnered with Epiq Systems, Inc. in order to provide the most current bankruptcy filing data for analysts, researchers and members of the news media. Epiq Systems is a leading provider of managed technology for the global legal profession. 

 

For further information about the statistics or additional requests, please contact ABI Public Affairs Manager John Hartgen at 703-894-5935 or jhartgen@abiworld.org.

 

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ABI is the largest multi-disciplinary, nonpartisan organization dedicated to research and education on matters related to insolvency. ABI was founded in 1982 to provide Congress and the public with unbiased analysis of bankruptcy issues. The ABI membership includes nearly 12,000 attorneys, accountants, bankers, judges, professors, lenders, turnaround specialists and other bankruptcy professionals, providing a forum for the exchange of ideas and information. For additional information on ABI, visit www.abi.org. For additional conference information, visit http://www.abi.org/calendar-of-events. 

Epiq Systems is a leading provider of managed technology for the global legal profession. Epiq Systems offers innovative technology solutions for electronic discovery, document review, legal notification, claims administration and controlled disbursement of funds. Epiq System’s clients include leading law firms, corporate legal departments, bankruptcy trustees, government agencies, mortgage processors, financial institutions, and other professional advisors who require innovative technology, responsive service and deep subject-matter expertise. For more information on Epiq Systems, Inc., please visit http://www.epiqsystems.com.

Chicago Can’t Hold Impounded Vehicles After Drivers File for Bankruptcy, Court Says

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals said the city’s aggressive legal strategy, aimed at discouraging motorists with unpaid ticket debt from filing under chapter 13, violated the basic protections of bankruptcy, and the city was doing so mostly to generate revenue, ProPublica reported. Thousands of Chicago motorists may be able to get their cars and trucks out of city impound lots immediately after filing for chapter 13 bankruptcy following a federal appeals court ruling that the city could no longer hold onto the vehicles. “This allows chapter 13 to accomplish its intended purpose, which is to put the property that a debtor needs to go on with the debtor’s life in the hands of the debtor,” said Eugene Wedoff, a retired chief bankruptcy judge for the Northern District of Illinois who argued the appeal on behalf of the debtors. The opinion, which upholds orders issued by judges in four cases in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Chicago, draws on reporting by ProPublica Illinois last year that showed how debt from unpaid parking and automated traffic camera tickets has led thousands of mostly black and low-income drivers to file for chapter 13 bankruptcy.
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HAVEN Act Included in National Defense Authorization Act, Passes Senate

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
ABI's Veterans' Affairs Task Force has learned that the HAVEN Act was included as an amendment to S. 1790, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (NDAA), which passed the Senate last Friday. The HAVEN Act excludes VA and DoD disability payments made to veterans or their dependent survivors from the monthly income calculation used for bankruptcy means test. The NDAA is the military budget bill that is proposed and passed annually. The House has not yet acted on the NDAA, but Rep. Lucy McBath (D-Ga.), the bill’s lead sponsor in the House, has offered the HAVEN Act as an amendment to the House version of the NDAA (H.R. 2500) for consideration. Click here to find the text of the Senate NDAA here (Search for section 6004 and you’ll find the text of the HAVEN Act.).
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