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    Recent court decisions provide guidance on protecting private company sellers when their company files for bankruptcy after the sale
    2009-08-13

    Two US federal appeals courts recently held that a provision of the Bankruptcy Code can protect private company sellers in the event that the company they sold later goes bankrupt and a fraudulent transfer claim is brought against them to recover the sale proceeds. The courts found that this protection applies when a financial institution is used to handle the transfer of consideration in the sale.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Choate Hall & Stewart LLP, Share (finance), Bankruptcy, Shareholder, Collateral (finance), Security (finance), Privately held company, Consideration, Leveraged buyout, HSBC, Title 11 of the US Code, Eighth Circuit, Sixth Circuit
    Authors:
    Stephen M. L. Cohen , Douglas R. Gooding
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Choate Hall & Stewart LLP
    Apex Oil: environmental cleanup liability survives bankruptcy
    2009-09-22

    In U.S. v. Apex Oil, a three-judge panel of the Seventh Circuit ruled 3-0 that EPA’s cleanup injunction against the corporate successor to a chemical company was not discharged in Chapter 11 because the injunction does not create a right to payment and, consequently, is not a ‘debt’ under the Bankruptcy Code.

    Filed under:
    USA, Environment & Climate Change, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Bracewell LLP, Environmental remediation, Bankruptcy, Costs in English law, Injunction, Debt, US Environmental Protection Agency, Title 11 of the US Code, Sixth Circuit, Seventh Circuit
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Bracewell LLP
    Sixth Circuit: privately held stock buyout protected as 'settlement payments'
    2009-10-15

    In a decision with potentially broad implications, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently determined that payments made to former shareholders of a privately held company in a leveraged buyout transaction are protected as "settlement payments" pursuant to section 546(e) of the Bankruptcy Code.

    Filed under:
    USA, Corporate Finance/M&A, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Reed Smith LLP, Public company, Bankruptcy, Shareholder, Debtor, Security (finance), Federal Reporter, Privately held company, Debt, Leveraged buyout, Debtor in possession, Title 11 of the US Code, Eighth Circuit, United States bankruptcy court, Sixth Circuit
    Authors:
    Stephen T Bobo
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Reed Smith LLP
    Are bankruptcy sales finally final?
    2011-07-08

    Since it was issued three years ago by the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, the Clear Channel decision (Clear Channel Outdoor, Inc. v. Knupfer (In re PW, LLC), 391 B.R. 25 (9th Cir. B.A.P. 2008)) has been widely criticized as “an aberration in well-settled bankruptcy jurisprudence.” Before Clear Channel, conventional wisdom (and what most people perceived to be the law) supported the notion that a bankruptcy sale order that contained a good faith finding under Section 363(m) could not be disturbed on appeal.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mintz, Bankruptcy, Federal Reporter, Title 11 of the US Code, Eighth Circuit, Ninth Circuit, US District Court for Central District of California, United States bankruptcy court, Sixth Circuit, Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Mintz
    Third Circuit’s withdrawal decision in Marcal Paper – nothing to sneeze at
    2011-07-12

    The Bottom Line:

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP, Employee Retirement Income Security Act 1974 (USA), Debtor, Unsecured debt, Trade union, Consideration, Liability (financial accounting), Defined benefit pension plan, Title 11 of the US Code, United States bankruptcy court, Third Circuit, Sixth Circuit, Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    Authors:
    Rachael Ringer
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP
    $500 million bankruptcy dispute headed to Sixth Circuit
    2011-07-11

    The FDIC has recently appealed a loss it suffered at trial on the question of whether the debtor in bankruptcy (the holding company of a failed bank) made a “commitment” to maintain the capital of its subsidiary bank under Section 365(o) of the Bankruptcy Code.  After a week-long bench trial with an advisory jury, the Northern District of Ohio rejected the FDIC’s claim that a commitment had been made by the holding company to the Office of Thrift Supervision.  The F

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Squire Patton Boggs, Bankruptcy, Debtor, Holding company, Bench trial, Subsidiary, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (USA), Office of Thrift Supervision, Sixth Circuit, US District Court for Northern District of Ohio
    Authors:
    Pierre H. Bergeron
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Squire Patton Boggs
    Bankruptcy court awards debtors actual attorney's fees as sanction against attorney for violating court's discharge injunction
    2011-08-01

    In connection with the administration of the debtors’ bankruptcy case, the trustee in Badovick v. Greenspan (In re Greenspan), No. 10-8019, 2011 Bank. LEXIS 272 (B.A.P. 6th Cir. Feb.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Frost Brown Todd LLP, Bankruptcy, Debtor, Unsecured debt, Injunction, Debt, Summary offence, Contempt of court, Attorney's fee, Bankruptcy discharge, US Code, Trustee, United States bankruptcy court, Sixth Circuit, Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Frost Brown Todd LLP
    Sixth Circuit: Equitable Mootness Does Not Bar an Appeal in a Chapter 7 Case
    2023-09-30

    The court-fashioned doctrine of "equitable mootness" has frequently been applied to bar appeals of bankruptcy court orders under circumstances where reversal or modification of an order could jeopardize, for example, the implementation of a negotiated chapter 11 plan or related agreements and upset the expectations of third parties who have relied on the order.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Jones Day, Supreme Court of the United States, Sixth Circuit
    Authors:
    Charles M. Oellermann , Mark G. Douglas
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Jones Day
    A Split Resolved: The Supreme Court Holds Section 363(m) To Be Non-Jurisdictional - and Maybe Casts a Shadow on the Doctrine of Equitable Mootness
    2023-04-20

    On April 19, 2023, the Supreme Court, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in MOAC Mall Holdings LLC, ruled Bankruptcy Code section 363(m) to be non-jurisdictional, i.e. just a “mere restriction on the effects of a valid exercise” of judicial power “when a party successfully appeals a covered authorization.” Before MOAC, the Third, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Circuits held section 363(m) to be non-jurisdictional, but the Fifth and Second Circuits had diverged.

    Reasoning

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Reed Smith LLP, Bankruptcy, US Congress, Supreme Court of the United States, Second Circuit, Fifth Circuit, Eleventh Circuit, Third Circuit, Sixth Circuit, Seventh Circuit, Tenth Circuit
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Reed Smith LLP
    Sixth Circuit does not (yet) adopt “transparently plain” exception to reliance-on-counsel defense in bankruptcy
    2014-12-10

    In In re Eifler, issued yesterday, the Sixth Circuit passed up an opportunity to join the First and Fifth Circuits in adopting a “transparently plain” exception to the reliance-on-counsel defense by which a bankrupt debtor can demonstrate a lack of fraudulent intent.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Squire Patton Boggs, Sixth Circuit
    Authors:
    Larisa Vaysman
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Squire Patton Boggs

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