Insolvency practitioners are routinely asked to adjudicate on claims to retention of title of goods supplied. This task often involves an analysis of whether the goods in question have become fixed to land, irreversibly mixed with other goods or whether they remain as identifiable items.
In the recent case of Re Moormac Developments Limited (in receivership)[1], the High Court gave further clarity to this area of the law.
In a recent decision in a Delaware Chapter 11 case, the court took the unusual step of capping the amount of a secured lender’s loan that could be used in the lender’s credit bid in a Section 363 sale.
Waterside Management Company Limited v Brendan Kelly and Asta Kelly[1]
In a long awaited landmark judgment, The European Court of Justice has today found in favour of ten former Waterford Crystal workers who alleged the Irish State had failed in their obligations to correctly implement European Directive 2008/94EC ('The Directive’) on the protection of employees in the event of the insolvency of their employer.
Yesterday the Minister for Justice, Alan Shatter, and Director of the Insolvency Service of Ireland (“ISI”), Lorcan O’Connor, launched the ISI’s public information campaign, which includes guides to the three new personal insolvency arrangements, its website and an information helpline for queries.
The Ohio General Assembly this week passed Amended Substitute House Bill 380, which requires the full disclosure of all asbestos bankruptcy trust claims made by plaintiffs with asbestos lawsuits in Ohio. The bill is headed to Governor John Kasich’s desk; he is expected to sign the bill.
Jeffrey Marks, a partner in the Vorys Cincinnati office and a member of the commercial and finance group, authored this column about the decision from U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Onkyo Electronics V. Global Technovations. The column originally appeared in the September 17, 2012 edition of Bankruptcy Law360.
Case Study: Onkyo Electronics V. Global Technovations
The Personal Insolvency Bill published today represents a radical overhaul and modernisation of Ireland’s personal insolvency law. The Bill introduces a comprehensive and balanced regime to address personal insolvency as required by Ireland’s IMF country programme. It envisages the creation of an Insolvency Service of Ireland to oversee the legislative regime.
Introduction
New amendments to the Bankruptcy Rules became effective on December 1, 2011. These amendments add new requirements and potentially harsh penalties for failure to comply. An overview of those amendments follows.
Click here to view the table.