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Delaware Bankruptcy Judge Grants Protective Orders for Diocese Files

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A Delaware bankruptcy judge has granted motions filed by two former priests challenging the release of their personnel files as part of a settlement in the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington's bankruptcy, the Associated Press reported yesterday. Charles Wiggins and Kenneth Martin both sought protective orders to prevent the diocese from releasing their files to members of a creditors' committee for possible subsequent disclosure to the public. Judge Christopher Sontchi on Tuesday issued one-page orders granting the motions, almost six months after hearing arguments behind closed doors and barring reporters from the courtroom. The diocese agreed to a $77 million settlement with some 150 alleged victims of priest sex abuse to end its bankruptcy case. The agreement also required church officials to turn over internal documents detailing how the diocese handled pedophile priests.

UAE Bankruptcy Law Draft May Be Delayed Until End of 2013

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A draft of changes to United Arab Emirates bankruptcy law aimed at simplifying the process and letting failing companies restructure is taking longer than expected and may not be ready until the end of 2013, Reuters reported today. The draft, which has been in the works since 2009, should enable both listed and family-owned companies that get into trouble to restructure and be rescued rather than being forced to go through lengthy bankruptcy or liquidation proceedings. The OPEC member's government hopes the new rules will reassure foreign investors and help bring in more cash from overseas. Dubai's debt crisis in 2009-2010 shone a spotlight on company restructurings but existing federal bankruptcy laws - seen as opaque and complex - remain untested in UAE courts as distressed firms prefer to settle creditor claims privately. The new law, which will allow a bankrupt company to restructure its debts and assets and have a fresh start, is roughly based on French bankruptcy legislation.

Ninth Circuit Holds Bankruptcy Courts Lack Authority to Enter Final Judgment in Fraudulent Conveyance Actions

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | December 4 2012


 


  

December 4, 2012

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

NINTH CIRCUIT HOLDS BANKRUPTCY COURTS LACK AUTHORITY TO ENTER FINAL JUDGMENT IN FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE ACTIONS



In a decision issued today in Executive Benefits Insurance Agency v. Arkison (In re Bellingham Insurance Agency, Inc., Case No. 11-35162), the Ninth Circuit held that bankruptcy courts lack authority to enter final judgment in fraudulent conveyance actions against nonclaimants. Relying upon the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33 (1989) and Stern v. Marshall (131 S. Ct. 2594 (2011), the appellate court noted that the public rights exception to the rule of Article III adjudication does not encompass federal-law fraudulent conveyance claims, even though Congress designated such claims as core proceedings. Instead, bankruptcy courts have the power to hear fraudulent conveyance cases and submit reports and recommendations to the district court. The panel also held that the right to a hearing in an Article III court is waivable, and that the nonclaimant defendant in this case, by not objecting earlier on in the case, consented to the bankruptcy judge's adjudication of the fraudulent conveyance claim. To view a summary of the decision and read the full text of the opinion, visit ABI's VOLO here.

ANALYSIS: FINANCIALLY SICK FIRMS OFTEN GRANT BONUSES IN MONTHS BEFORE BANKRUPTCY FILING



More than 1,600 insiders—executives and others controlling a company—received bonuses, salaries, fees and other compensation totaling more than $1.3 billion in the months before their companies filed for chapter 11, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of more than 80 bankruptcy cases over the past five years. Financially ailing companies such as Hostess Brands often pay bonuses and other compensation to executives and private-equity owners before filing for bankruptcy protection. Hostess's bankruptcy judge said during a Nov. 29 hearing that the payments "will definitely be looked at" as he approved the company's request to start liquidating and laying off more than 18,000 employees. Hostess was exploring a potential bankruptcy filing in July 2011 when its board voted to boost the salary of its chief executive and other high-level officers, according to creditors. Five months later, it filed for chapter 11, its second bankruptcy filing in a decade. Financially ailing companies often pay bonuses and other compensation to executives, directors and private-equity owners in the months before filing for bankruptcy protection. Federal law prevents "retention" bonuses paid to such "insiders" after a bankruptcy case is filed but not before. Read more. (Subscription required.)

OBAMA RECESS APPOINTMENTS FACE FIRST APPEALS COURT TEST



President Barack Obama’s authority to make appointments without U.S. Senate approval is being considered by an appeals court for the first time in a test of so-called pro-forma sessions set up by Republican lawmakers, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday. To prevent Obama from appointing officials after Congress started a holiday break last December, House and Senate Republicans refused to adopt a resolution to formally adjourn. Congressional Republicans opposed to the powers granted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau were seeking to block the president from appointing former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray as the new agency’s first head, having refused a confirmation vote since he was nominated in July. Obama also appointed Cordray on Jan. 4. His appointment is being contested in a Washington, D.C., lawsuit while the validity of the president's naming of three National Labor Relations Board members on Jan. 4 has been raised in at least three other cases. Read more.

COMMENTARY: THE MORTGAGE CHALLENGE



The biggest economic policy error of President Obama's first term was the failure to address foreclosures effectively, according to a New York Times editorial on Sunday. By favoring the voluntary cooperation of banks in reducing monthly payments for hard-pressed borrowers, Obama’s policies did more to shield the banks from losses than to help homeowners and stabilize the market. Recent signs of a housing recovery aside, nearly three million loans are now in or near foreclosure, according to Moody’s Analytics. In addition, some five million borrowers who are current in their payments have high-rate mortgages that they have not refinanced, in part because of excessive bank fees. In all, nearly 12 million borrowers collectively owe $600 billion more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, a loss of wealth and a load of debt that make a strong and steady economic recovery all but impossible. The question now is whether Obama will use his second term to push through effective mortgage reform, according to the editorial. A first test of his resolve will be the swift nomination of a new director for the agency that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage companies that own or back most mortgages. While new leadership at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is a key to more relief, the push for more help also could be strengthened through support of legislation that would expand refinancings and principal reductions. A sound mortgage-relief agenda, according to the editorial, also requires an enforcement plan. Read more.

COMMENTARY: BANKRUPTCY FOR DETROIT LOOMS AS UNIONS AND THE CITY COUNCIL RESIST REFORM



Michigan lawmakers have kept Detroit on life support for the past six months and may need to do so indefinitely barring a miraculous economic recovery, according to a Wall Street Journal editorial today. The city will run out of cash this month unless the state releases $30 million in bond proceeds, which are being held in escrow under a consent agreement that council members reluctantly approved in April. The rescue package ties $137 million in state aid to reforms and lets Mayor Dave Bing redo labor contracts. The city has already drawn $40 million from the state and may soon be cut off since council members last month rejected a contract for a legal firm to advise the mayor, a condition of further aid. Read more. (Subscription required.)

STUDENT-LOAN COLLECTION TARGETED FOR OVERHAUL IN CONGRESS



Congress will consider overhauling debt collection in the $100 billion-a-year U.S. student loan program, replacing it with automatic withdrawals from borrowers' paychecks tied to their income, Bloomberg News reported today. Rep. Tom Petri (R-Wis.) plans to introduce legislation as soon as this week that would require employers to withhold payments from wages in the same way they do taxes. Payments would be capped at 15 percent of borrowers’ income after basic living expenses. The bill follows growing concern about the burden of $1 trillion in outstanding student loans, which now exceed credit- card debt. Under the new system, the government would no longer need to hire private debt-collection companies and charge fees that add as much as 25 percent to borrowers' loan balances, leaving defaulted former students even deeper in the hole. Read more.

In related news, Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the House Education Committee, is looking into student-loan practices by private lenders that he says resemble the runaround homeowners were given by mortgage lenders, CongressDaily reported yesterday. He is asking the Government Accountability Office to examine problems reported by student borrowers and has asked Sallie Mae Inc., Wells Fargo, the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, and Citigroup for information on their practices.

For more on the issue of student loan practices, be sure to listen to ABI’s latest podcast.

LATEST ABI PODCAST FEATURES STUDY ON STUDENT LOAN DISCHARGES AND THE UNDUE HARDSHIP STANDARD



The latest ABI Podcast features ABI Resident Scholar Susan Hauser speaking with Jason Iuliano, the author of "An Empirical Assessment of Student Loan Discharges and the Undue Hardship Standard." Iuliano, a graduate of Harvard Law School and currently a Ph. D. candidate at Princeton University, discusses the methodology of his study and a few of the conclusions that can be drawn from it about student loan discharges and the undue hardship standard in bankruptcy. Click here to listen.

ABI IN-DEPTH

ABI'S INTERACTIVE BANKRUPTCY CODE AND RULES SITE UPDATED TO INCLUDE AMENDMENTS EFFECTIVE DEC. 1



ABI's Bankruptcy Code and Rules site has been updated with all proposed amendments to Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure 1007, 2015, 3001, 7054 and 7056 that took effect Dec. 1. Use the most current Code and Rules by going to http://law.abi.org/.

WEBCASTS NOW AVAILABLE OF CHAPTER 11 COMMISSION EVENTS, CONCERT DEDICATED TO ABI MEMBER STEVEN GOLICK



Looking to learn about ABI’s Chapter 11 Commission’s efforts in 2013? Catch the final 2012 public hearing of the Commission? Listen to a concert by ABI’s Indubitable Equivalents dedicated to Steven Golick? Follow the links below to access the webstreams of these recent events:

• ABI's media teleconference held Dec. 3: "Teleconference to Look at Chapter 11 Commission to Date: What Have We Learned?" Click here.

• Final public hearing of ABI's Commission to Study the Reform of Chapter 11 that took place on Nov. 30 at ABI’s Winter Leadership Conference. Click here.

• Performance of ABI’s Indubitable Equivalents dedicated to ABI member, leader and band mate, Steven Golick, who has recently undergone successful surgery to remove a brain tumor. Watch the concert at www.abiband.com.

NEW ON ABI’S BANKRUPTCY BLOG EXCHANGE: SUPREME COURT SEEKS VIEW OF SOLICITOR GENERAL IN BANKRUPTCY EXEMPTION CASE



The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent blog explores the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday to ask the U.S. solicitor general to provide perspective on whether a bankruptcy court has the power to levy a financial charge against a chapter 7 debtor's residential property, which he has claimed falls under the homestead exemption (Stephen Law v. Alfred Siegel, No. 12-5196, U.S. Sup.).

Be sure to check the site several times each day; any time a contributing blog posts a new story, a link to the story will appear on the top. If you have a blog that deals with bankruptcy, or know of a good blog that should be part of the Bankruptcy Exchange, please contact the ABI Web team.

LATEST BLOOMBERG LAW VIDEO: BILL ON BANKRUPTCY- PATRIOT COAL CASE KICKED FROM MANHATTAN TO ST. LOUIS



The decision sending the Patriot Coal Corp. reorganization to St. Louis will focus debate on the near impossibility of convincing a judge in New York or Delaware to send a bankruptcy somewhere else, as Bloomberg Law's Lee Pacchia and Bloomberg News bankruptcy columnist Bill Rochelle discuss on their new video. Click here to watch.

ABI Quick Poll

A licensee of a trademark has the right to retain the license even when a debtor rejects the underlying contract creating the license. (Sunbeam Products, 7th Cir.)

Click here to vote on this week's Quick Poll. Click here to view the results of previous Quick Polls.

INSOL INTERNATIONAL



INSOL International is a worldwide federation of national associations for accountants and lawyers who specialize in turnaround and insolvency. There are currently 37 member associations worldwide with more than 9,000 professionals participating as members of INSOL International. As a member association of INSOL, ABI's members receive a discounted subscription rate. See ABI's enrollment page for details.

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January

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     January 21, 2013 | Las Vegas, Nev.

- Rocky Mountain Bankruptcy Conference

     January 24-25, 2013 | Denver, Colo.

February

- Caribbean Insolvency Symposium

     February 7-9, 2013 | Miami, Fla.


  



- Kansas City Advanced Consumer Bankruptcy Practice Institute

     February 17-19, 2013 | Kansas City, Mo.

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     February 20-22, 2013 | Las Vegas, Nev.

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- Bankruptcy Battleground West

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Labor Other Issues on Tap for Chapter 11 Reform Commission in 2013

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Members of ABI's Chapter 11 Reform Commission said yesterday pointed to labor and benefits being key issues likely to surface during a host of public hearings beginning early next year, Reuters reported. "We'll be hearing from both labor and management about the way the bankruptcy code treats collective bargaining agreements, pension issues and the like," said Commission Co-Chair Robert Keach Bernstein Shur Sawyer & Nelson on an ABI media teleconference. In the handful of hearings so far, the commission has heard largely from lenders, many of whom have expressed concern that the commission would look to limit the use of secured credit. Commission members have said they are not looking to curb the use of secured credit so much as improve its transparency. The commission will also consider changes to rules that exempt derivatives contracts from certain bankruptcy rules and the effects on bankrupt retailers of a 2005 law that changed rules on treatment of leases in bankruptcy. About six or seven hearings will be held throughout the country next year. Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/03/bankruptcy-commission-idUSL1E…

To listen to the ABI media teleconference, please click here:
http://news.abi.org/educatonal-brief/teleconference-to-look-at-chapter-…

Judge Gives Final Approval to Hostesss Wind-Down Plan

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Bankruptcy Judge Robert D. Drain yesterday gave final approval to Hostess Brands' plans to wind itself down and sell famous brands like Twinkies to help pay creditors, the New York Times DealBook blog reported yesterday. Judge Drain also approved a plan to pay out up to $1.8 million in bonuses to 19 senior executives. He did so over criticism that the payouts were excessive, noting that none of the executives were in running the company when it filed for bankruptcy protection in January for the second time in a decade. Judge Drain's approval formally sets up what increasingly looks like a crowded auction for Hostess's stable of well-known baked goods, from Twinkies to Ho Hos and Ding Dongs to Drake's cakes. Read more: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/11/29/interest-in-hostess-brands-comin…

In related news, nearly 110 potential bidders have contacted the Hostess about bidding for at least part of its business, and 70 had enough interest to sign confidentiality agreements, Reuters reported yesterday. Joshua Scherer of Perella Weinberg, who was hired by Hostess to sell its assets, said that six potential bidders have hired large investment banks to help them. He said the liquidation could raise $1 billion. Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/29/hostess-bankruptcy-liduidatio…

Biomass Company Big Island Enters Chapter 7 Liquidation

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Denham Capital Management-backed biomass company Big Island Carbon LLC, which sought to produce energy from macadamia nutshells in Hawaii, has filed for chapter 7 to liquidate its assets, Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. The company claimed $16.8 million in debt, composed of $11.4 million in secured debt owed to Kona Investment Holdings, a $5 million secured loan from Synergy Bank and $395,000 in unsecured claims. It has $23.5 million in assets, according to court documents, including $22.7 million worth of equipment used to process the shells.

Court to Rule on Sale of Hawker Jets

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A major hurdle facing Hawker Beechcraft in its effort to restructure and emerge from chapter 11 protection is the sale of the company's inventory of the Hawker 4000 series plane, AINonline.com reported yesterday. The hearing date for the company's request for court approval of the sale is now set for December 11, following a decision last week by Bankruptcy Judge Stuart Bernstein to deny the company's request for an expedited hearing and sale. Hawker Beechcraft said that it expects the sale of approximately 20 Hawker 4000s "will be at a substantial discount."

Commentary Judge Sought Balance by Switching Venue in Patriot Case

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When U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman relinquished the reins on Patriot Coal's bankruptcy on Tuesday, transferring the case from her Manhattan courtroom to St. Louis, she sought a just path for all parties in the case, according to a Reuters commentary yesterday. As Chapman recounted in her ruling, Patriot is a St. Louis-based coal mining company with no New York operations. Early this summer, the company incorporated two minor subsidiaries in New York. About a month later, in July, Patriot filed for bankruptcy in Manhattan federal court, citing those two New York subsidiaries. But Patriot's primary union, the United Mine Workers of America, quickly sought a transfer, accusing the company of manufacturing a venue. The union wanted the case moved to West Virginia, where about half of its members live and many of the company's operations are based. The Justice Department, via the U.S. Trustee, also accused Patriot of forum shopping and asked Chapman to transfer the case out of Manhattan, although no alternative court was suggested.

CalPERS Seeks to Sue San Bernardino over Pension Payments

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The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) is seeking to sue bankrupt San Bernardino over missed pension payments, the second potentially precedent-setting fight the fund picked with a California city this year, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. San Bernardino cannot use the Bankruptcy Code to justify its failure to make at least $5 million in payments, CalPERS, the biggest U.S. public-employee pension fund, said in court papers filed yesterday. The motion relies on arguments the fund is also making in the bankruptcy of Stockton, Calif.

Hostess Judge to Ponder Approval of Twinkie-Maker Wind-Down

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Hostess Brands Inc., the bankrupt maker of Twinkies and Wonder Bread, is asking a judge for final approval of its plan to cease operations under current management, while members of the bakers’ union want a chapter 11 trustee to oversee its wind-down, Bloomberg News reported today. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain is scheduled today to consider Hostess’s request to close and its bid to pay as much as $1.75 million in incentive bonuses to 19 senior managers during the wind-down. Judge Drain granted Hostess interim approval at a Nov. 21 hearing after last-minute mediation with its bakers’ union failed to resolve a contract dispute, leaving more than 18,000 jobs at risk. Drain had urged the mediation on Nov. 19 to keep the foundering company afloat.