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    Supreme Court rules section 363(m) limitations on bankruptcy sale appeals not jurisdictional
    2023-04-20

    On April 19, 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its opinion inMOAC Mall Holdings LLC v. Transform Holdco LLC, 598 U.S. (2023), reversing the Second Circuit decision and determining that the limitations on appeals of bankruptcy sale orders provided in section 363(m) of the Bankruptcy Code are not jurisdictional. Rather section 363(m) merely provides a "caveated constraint" on the appellant’s remedies on such appeals.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Thompson Coburn LLP, US Congress, Supreme Court of the United States
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Thompson Coburn LLP
    Recent SDNY Bankruptcy Court Opinion Lowers Cap on Commercial Real Estate Lease Rejection Damages
    2023-04-18

    In a departure from prior precedent in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), a recent opinion by Judge Michael E. Wiles in In re Cortlandt Liquidating LLC,[1] effectively lowered the Bankruptcy Code section 502(b)(6) cap on rejection damages that a commercial real estate landlord may claim, by holding that the cap should be calculated using the “Time Approach,” rather than the “Rent Approach.”

    Calculation of Lease Rejection Damages

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Real Estate, Morrison & Foerster LLP, US Congress
    Authors:
    Theresa A. Foudy , Mark S. Edelstein
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Morrison & Foerster LLP
    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
    Maybe You are Entitled to a Cure Payment, or Maybe Not?
    2023-04-18

    The Second Circuit recently held that a non-party to an assumed executory contract is not entitled to a cure payment (although it may be so entitled if is a third-party beneficiary of the contract). The result would have seemed obvious to bankruptcy practitioners. So, what in the world made the party pursuing payment take this to the Second Circuit? Well, surprisingly, as the Second Circuit decision shows, the answer is not found in the plain text of the Bankruptcy Code. And while it was argued prior to the Supreme Court’s ruling in Bartenwerfer v. Buckley, No. 21-908, 598 U.S.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Dechert LLP, US Congress
    Authors:
    Shmuel Vasser
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Dechert LLP
    New Opinion Confirms Growing Trend Away from “Zero Tolerance” Cannabis Bankruptcy Relief Policy
    2023-04-06

    As those in the cannabis industry are fully aware, the option of bankruptcy has not been available to cannabis or many cannabis-adjacent businesses to date. The courts have consistently indicated debtors who work in the cannabis industry or derive meaningful income from cannabis activity (directly or indirectly) cannot use bankruptcy, a federal mechanism, so long as marijuana remains illegal under federal law.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Harris Bricken, Cannabis, Cannabis industry, US Congress
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Harris Bricken
    It’s Time for a New Damages Calculation: SDNY Bankruptcy Court Applies the Time Approach to Limit Damages in Lease Terminations
    2023-03-31

    Since 1993, decisions out of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York consistently adopted the aggregate “rent approach” for calculating lease rejection damages in bankruptcy proceedings. But in Bankruptcy Judge Wiles’ recent decision in In re Cortlandt Liquidating LLC, he departed from the “rent approach” in favor of the “time approach,” which is based on the time remaining under the lease rather than factoring in the total or aggregate rent still owed under the lease.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Real Estate, Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP, US Congress
    Authors:
    Eric Waxman , Andrew M. Greenberg
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP
    Supreme Court Holds That Fraud Exception to Debt Discharge can Include Fraud by Someone Other Than the Debtor
    2023-03-29

    We have previously blogged about Bartenwerfer v. Buckley, No. 21-908, a Supreme Court case concerning the scope of the fraud exception to the dischargeability of debts in bankruptcy. Section 523 of the Bankruptcy Code exempts from discharge “any debt . . . for money, property, services, or an extension, renewal, or refinancing of credit, to the extent obtained by . . .

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP, Bankruptcy, Debtor, US Congress, Supreme Court of the United States
    Authors:
    Jonah Wacholder , Daniel A. Lowenthal
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP
    Second Circuit Weighs In on Bankruptcy Code v. Chapter 11 Plan Impairment and the Solvent-Debtor Exception
    2023-03-30

    A handful of recent high-profile court rulings have considered whether a chapter 11 debtor is obligated to pay postpetition, pre-effective date interest ("pendency interest") to unsecured creditors to render their claims "unimpaired" under a chapter 11 plan in accordance with the pre-Bankruptcy Code common law "solvent-debtor" exception requiring a solvent debtor to pay pendency interest to unsecured creditors. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit weighed in on this question in In re LATAM Airlines Grp. S.A., 55 F.4th 377 (2d Cir. 2022).

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Jones Day, US Congress, Supreme Court of the United States
    Authors:
    Dan B. Prieto , Mark G. Douglas
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Jones Day
    546(e)’s Not-So-Safe Harbor: Second Influential Judge Echoes Concerns that Broad Exemption Shelters Pirates
    2023-03-28

    Delaware Judge Brendan Shannon has joined calls for reforming Section 546(e) of the bankruptcy code, echoing concerns that the section’s safe harbor from fraudulent transfer liability has allowed investors to “loot privately held companies to the detriment of their non-insider creditors with effective impunity.”[1]

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Bracewell LLP, Private equity, US Congress
    Authors:
    Robert Grattan
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Bracewell LLP
    Reorganizing Family Businesses in Bankruptcy, and the Problem of Creative Destruction—A Chapter 12 Illustration
    2023-03-23

    “Creative destruction” occurs when something new kills off whatever existed before it.

    IPhone Example

    Just think, for example, of all the creative destruction that the iPhone has wrought! It has destroyed businesses that provided telephones and phone books, cameras and film, audio recordings and players, newspapers and newsstands, and related services.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Koley Jessen PC, US Congress
    Authors:
    Donald L. Swanson
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Koley Jessen PC

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