Chapter 15

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Amendments To Federal Bankruptcy Rules, Official Forms, And Federal Rules Of Evidence Are Now In Effect

Bankruptcy Rule Amendments. As reported in a post last month, this year’s amendments to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure have now taken effect today, December 1, 2011.

Amended Official Bankruptcy Forms. In addition to the national bankruptcy rules, revisions have been made to a number of the official bankruptcy forms. This sentence contains a link to a set of these updated official forms.

Amended Federal Rules Of Evidence. Finally, a restyled edition of the Federal Rules of Evidence also goes into effect today; follow the link in this sentence for the revised evidence rules. Although the substance of the rules of evidence has not changed, revisions in the numbering of some subsections and the style of how the rules are phrased have been implemented.

Amendments To The Federal Bankruptcy Rules, Including Rule 2019, To Take Effect December 1, 2011

Almost every year, changes are made to the set of rules that govern how bankruptcy cases are managed — the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. The changes address issues identified by an Advisory Committee made up of federal judges, bankruptcy attorneys, and others. There are seven amendments to the national bankruptcy rules this year. Some affect bankruptcy cases involving individuals but major revisions have been made to Rule 2019, which governs disclosures by ad hoc committees and groups of creditors or equity security holders in Chapter 11 business bankruptcy cases and in Chapter 9 municipality cases. All of the new amendments will take effect on December 1, 2011, barring unlikely action by Congress.

Read All About It. A copy of the Advisory Committee’s report, together with a redline of the new rule amendments, is available by following the link in this sentence. The report also includes the Advisory Committee’s notes on each new or amended rule.

Significant Revisions to Rule 2019: Controversy Resolved? Over the past several years, Rule 2019, the national bankruptcy rule regarding disclosure by unofficial committees and groups of hedge fund and other investors, has been the subject of much litigation and a number of conflicting court decisions, including opposite views from different bankruptcy judges in Delaware. Follow the link in this sentence for a collection of previous posts on the blog discussing those past decisions and the controversy surrounding old Rule 2019.

In an attempt to put the controversy to rest, the Advisory Committee drafted, and the Supreme Court has approved, a new Rule 2019, which will take effect on December 1, 2011. It requires disclosure in Chapter 11 and Chapter 9 cases by unofficial committees, groups and entities consisting of or representing multiple creditors or equity security holders that are (1) acting in concert to advance common interests, and (2) not composed entirely of affiliates or insiders of each other, and which take a position before the court or solicit votes on confirmation of a plan.

The new rule focuses on the nature and purpose of the committee or group, rather than how it names itself. In contrast, old Rule 2019 covered entities and committees, leading to disputes over whether a self-designated "group" had to make disclosures. Also dropped from the final version of new Rule 2019 was language from the initial proposed rule amendments that would have permitted the court to require disclosure of the amount paid for a disclosable economic interest, another topic of much prior controversy. 

Disclosable Economic Interest. Amended Rule 2019 is built around the defined term "disclosable economic interest," which is defined to mean the following:

Any claim, interest, pledge, lien, option, participation, derivative instrument, or any other right or derivative right granting the holder an economic interest that is affected by the value, acquisition, or disposition of a claim or interest.

Required Disclosures Under Rule 2019. A covered group or committee will be required to file a verified statement disclosing facts and circumstances on the following topics listed in new Rule 2019(c):

  • The group or committee’s formation;
  • Any entity’s employment and the party at whose instance the employment was arranged;
  • Each member’s and entity’s name, address, and nature and amount of their disclosable economic interest;
  • For each member of a group or committee claiming to represent any entity beyond the group’s members, the date of acquisition by quarter and year of each disclosable economic interest, unless acquired more than a year before the bankruptcy petition was filed; and
  • Where applicable, a copy of any instrument authorizing the entity, group, or committee to act on behalf of creditors or equity security holders.

If any material changes have occurred since the group or committee’s last statement, a supplemental statement must be filed whenever the group or committee takes a position before the court or solicits votes on confirmation of a plan.

Consequences of Non-Compliance With Rule 2019. A party in interest or the court on its own motion can determine whether there has been any failure to comply with the new Rule 2019’s requirements. If so, the court may refuse to permit the group or committee from being heard in the case and/or hold invalid any authority, objection, or plan votes made or obtained by the non-complying entity, group or committee, as well as grant any other appropriate relief.

Other Business Bankruptcy Rule Amendments. In addition to Rule 2019, three of the other new amendments directly impact business bankruptcy cases.

  • New Rule 1004.2 applies in Chapter 15 cross-border bankruptcy cases. It requires that any petition for recognition of a foreign proceeding under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code state the center of the debtor’s main interests (aka, "COMI"), as well as each country in which a foreign proceeding involving the debtor is pending. The rule is designed to help identify whether the foreign proceeding is a foreign main or nonmain proceeding.
  • Amended Rule 2003(e) will require the United States Trustee or designee to file a statement specifying the date and time to which any Section 341(a) meeting of creditors has been adjourned. This rule amendment was included to be sure that creditors who did not attend a meeting of creditors could learn when the continued meeting will take place, information that sometimes was known only to those who attended the original meeting.
  • Rule 6003, discussed in this prior blog post on the 2007 rule amendments, has been amended to clarify that although a court cannot, absent immediate and irreparable harm, enter an order during the 21 days after a petition has been filed on certain matters, including employment of professionals, it can enter an order after those first 21 days that grants relief effective as of a date prior to entry of the order, i.e., as of the petition date.

Rule Amendments for Individual Bankruptcy Cases. The balance of the new rule amendments involve cases in which the debtor is an individual.

  • Amended Rule 3001(c), governing proofs of claim, requires in an individual debtor’s case that an itemized statement of interest, fees, expenses or other charges be filed with the proof of claim. If a security interest is claimed in the debtor’s property, a statement must also be included giving the amount required to cure any default. If the property involved is the debtor’s principal residence, the proof of claim must attach, and give the information required by, a new official form addressing this rule change, and also must include information related to any escrow account. Penalties for non-compliance can include barring the claimant from presenting the omitted information in any contested matter or adversary proceeding, and an award of reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses caused by the failure.
  • New Rule 3002.1, related to claims secured by a Chapter 13 debtor’s principal residence, sets forth a number of additional requirements when the claim is provided for under Section 1322(b)(5) of the Bankruptcy Code. The new rule details required information related to post-petition fees, expenses, and charges, as well as procedures for determining those amounts and the final cure amount.
  • Rule 4004(b) has been amended to allow a party in interest, under certain circumstances, to seek an extension of time to file an objection to a debtor’s discharge after the deadline for filing such objections to discharge has already expired.

Updated Official Forms. As mentioned, some of the pending amended rules will require revisions in official bankruptcy forms. You can find the proposed revised forms, which will be formally released on December 1, 2011 (unless Congress surprises us and prevents the amendments from taking effect), by following the link in this sentence.

Conclusion. For business bankruptcy professionals, and companies and investors involved in Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases, the most important change to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure this year is the newly revised Rule 2019. However, several of the other amendments also will impact Chapter 11 cases, and all are worthy of note.

When Worlds Collide: Do Section 365(n) IP Licensee Rights Work In A Chapter 15 Cross-Border Bankruptcy?

Section 365(n) And Licensee Rights. I have discussed in the past how Section 365(n) was added to the Bankruptcy Code to protect licensees of intellectual property in the event the licensor files bankruptcy.

  • Under Section 365(n), if the debtor or trustee rejects a license, a licensee can elect to retain its rights to the licensed intellectual property, including a right to enforce an exclusivity provision. In return, the licensee must continue to make any required royalty payment.
  • The licensee also can retain rights under any agreement supplementary to the license, which should include source code or other forms of technology escrow agreements.
  • Taken together, these provisions protect a licensee from being stripped of its rights to continue to use the licensed intellectual property.
  • To read more about Section 365(n)’s benefits and protections, follow the link in this sentence.

Limits Of Section 365(n). These protections, however, have their limits. One limitation comes from the fact that the Bankruptcy Code’s special definition of "intellectual property" excludes trademarks from the scope of Section 365(n)’s protections. Another major limitation is that since Section 365(n) is a U.S. Bankruptcy Code provision, it only applies in a U.S. bankruptcy case.

What Happens To Section 365(n) In Chapter 15 Cases? One issue that was less clear was what would happen if a foreign licensor were the subject of a case under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Would Section 365(n) apply to protect licensees in a Chapter 15 proceeding?

  • Chapter 15 allows an entity’s foreign representative to obtain U.S. bankruptcy protection for assets and interests in the United States. It was was added to the Bankruptcy Code a few years ago to implement certain cross-border insolvency procedures when corporations had assets and interests in more than one country. To read more on Chapter 15 bankruptcy, follow the link in this sentence. 
  • Section 365(n) and Chapter 15 recently collided in the Chapter 15 case of Qimonda AG, and led to a decision by Judge Robert G. Mayer of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on that very issue. 
  • The Bankruptcy Court’s decision, discussed below, is available by following the link in this sentence.

The Qimonda Chapter 15 Case. In the Qimonda AG Chapter 15 case, the Bankruptcy Court had previously recognized the pending German insolvency proceeding as a "foreign main proceeding" under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. As part of the Chapter 15 proceeding, the Bankruptcy Court had entered a supplemental order providing, among other things, that Section 365 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code would apply to the Chapter 15 case.

U.S. Licensees Invoke Section 365(n). Following the Bankruptcy Court’s supplemental order, certain U.S. licensees asserted Section 365(n) rights in an attempt to retain their rights to intellectual property that Qimonda AG had licensed them.

The Bankruptcy Court’s Decision. After considering the motion and opposition, Judge Mayer issued a decision agreeing with Qimonda AG’s foreign representative and he modified the prior supplemental order to exclude the effect of Section 365(n) by providing that it would apply only if the foreign representative "rejects an executory contract pursuant to Section 365 (rather than simply exercising the rights granted to the Foreign Representative pursuant to the German Insolvency Code)." In reaching this decision, the Bankruptcy Court considered the effect of its recognition of the German insolvency proceeding given the purpose of Chapter 15:

The principal idea behind chapter 15 is that the bankruptcy proceeding be governed in accordance with the bankruptcy laws of the nation in which the main case is pending. In this case, that would be the German Insolvency Code. Ancillary proceedings such as the chapter 15 proceeding pending in this court should supplement, but not supplant, the German proceeding.

That objective is particularly relevant in this case where there are many international patents.  The patents themselves are issued under the laws of various nations. While there may be multiple international patents, the multiple international patents protect the same idea, process or invention in the country that issued the patent. If the patents and patent licenses are dealt with in accordance with the bankruptcy laws of the various nations in which the licensees or licensors may be located or operating, there will be many inconsistent results. In fact, the same idea, process or invention may be dealt with differently depending on which country the particular ancillary proceeding is brought. Rather than having a coherent resolution to Qimonda’s patent portfolio, the portfolio may be shattered into many pieces that can never be reconstructed. In this case, Qimonda licensed its patents to companies that are operating in various nations. It is clear that the patent rights are not being exploited solely, and even possibly principally, in the United States. In fact, they are being utilized throughout the world. If the laws of the various nations in which the patents are being used would be applicable, there will be many different treatments of the patents that have been licensed by Qimonda AG and many different and inconsistent results throughout the world. This is detrimental to a systematic bankruptcy proceeding and detrimental to the resolution of the German bankruptcy proceeding itself. It diminishes the value of these assets. It results in an inefficient insolvency administration. It may well be detrimental to parties who are or wish to license the patents. It is not difficult to envision that if the patent portfolio is splintered without overall administration or control, some parties may be left with incomplete patent protection. Holding an American patent without holding a patent enforceable in the Europe may significantly restrict its use and utility. This is at odds with the Congressionally stated purposes in §1501.

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All the patents should be treated the same. There should not be disparate results simply because of the location of a factory or research facility or corporate office. This would be the result if the supplemental order were left in place. It is clear that the inclusion of §365 in the supplemental order was improvident. It had unintended consequences that significantly and adversely affect the main proceeding in Germany.

Conclusion. The Qimonda AG decision underscores that although Section 365(n) of the Bankruptcy Code offers significant protection to licensees, its benefits frequently stop at the water’s edge. When the licensor is based outside of the United States, Section 365(n) will be of little help, even if the license covers U.S. issued patents and the foreign licensor obtains protection for its U.S. assets and interests under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code. Licensees must continue to keep the limits of Section 365(n) in mind when negotiating licenses of intellectual property from foreign licensors.

Major Amendments To The CCAA, Canada’s Reorganization Law, Are Now In Force

In a post last year entitled "North Of The Border: Reorganization Under Canada’s Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act," I discussed the various types of bankruptcy and insolvency proceedings available under Canadian law. Included in the discussion was the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, known as the CCAA, used by many Canadian companies to reorganize. At that time, although significant amendments had been enacted to the CCAA and other Canadian bankruptcy laws, those amendments had not "come into force," the final act necessary under the Canadian system before the changes in the law would become effective.

That changed on September 18, 2009, when these revisions to the CCAA and to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, or BIA, finally came into force (joining a few other changes that came into force in July 2008). Canadian bankruptcy law has now been modified in a number of important ways, applicable to cases filed going forward.

For more on the new law, and Canadian bankruptcy issues generally, be sure to check out the website of the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy Canada.

Amendments To The Federal Bankruptcy Rules Take Effect December 1, 2008

Nearly every year, changes are made to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure — the ones that govern how bankruptcy cases are managed — to address issues identified by an Advisory Committee made up of federal judges, bankruptcy attorneys, and others. This year’s amendments to the national bankruptcy rules take effect on December 1, 2008. 

Business Bankruptcy Rule Changes. Unlike the more substantive modifications made last year (discussed here), this year’s amendments make a host of relatively smaller, but still important, changes. The most notable ones for business bankruptcy cases involve privacy concerns. New rules have been put in place to protect patients when health care businesses file for bankruptcy while others govern the proposed sale or transfer of personally identifiable information by any type of business. Separate rule changes implement provisions of Chapter 15 (the Bankruptcy Code’s cross-border and international insolvency chapter), address a range of issues in small business Chapter 11 cases, grant courts more flexibility in giving notice to foreign creditors, introduce various consumer bankruptcy procedural changes, and establish a process to allow some bankruptcy court decisions to be appealed directly to the U.S. Court of Appeals.

Interim Bankruptcy Rules Being Replaced. These rules also replace the interim bankruptcy rules that have been in place for the past few years following the enactment of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (known as BAPCPA). Some bankruptcy courts, such as the District of Delaware and the Southern District of New York, have already issued general orders retracting the effectiveness of the interim rules effective as of December 1, 2008.

Rules Of The Road. At a time when the financial crisis is likely to push more and more companies into Chapter 11, bankruptcy attorneys and other insolvency professionals will want to review the rule changes closely to make sure they are following the most current version of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. For debtors, creditors, and other parties, this year’s rule amendments should help make management of Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases more consistent with BAPCPA’s changes and, potentially, a more efficient process.

North Of The Border: Reorganization Under Canada’s Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act

With the enormous amount of business between the United States and Canada these days, it’s little wonder that from time to time U.S. companies find themselves affected by a Canadian insolvency proceeding. A better understanding of Canada’s approach to bankruptcy and insolvency law can be helpful when sizing up how such a filing might affect your rights.

The Lay Of The Land. Canada has two primary federal insolvency acts, the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, known as the BIA, and the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, known as the CCAA. (A third statute, the Winding-up and Restructuring Act, is less frequently invoked.) You can access the text of each of three acts by clicking on the preceding links. These national statutes also operate in conjunction with applicable provincial law.

Canada’s Reorganization Law. When larger Canadian companies need protection from creditors they often seek relief under Canada’s CCAA. The CCAA is the Canadian insolvency law most analogous to Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Company management generally remains in charge as a debtor in possession, although a monitor is appointed and has certain oversight authority. Unlike the much longer U.S. Bankruptcy Code, the CCAA currently has only 22 sections, leaving it to the courts to fill in the gaps. Courts generally do so, including issuance of an early "initial order" that commonly implements a stay similar to the automatic stay of U.S. bankruptcy  law. (Click on the link for an example of an initial order.) Other court orders permit contracts and leases to be disclaimed (rejected), assets to be sold, and a restructuring to be implemented through a plan of arrangement after voting by creditors.

Cross-Border Issues. Canada has not yet adopted the Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency, which the U.S. did in 2005 as Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. At least for now, Canada continues to use its own cross-border procedures under Section 18.6 of the CCAA and cross-border protocols used to coordinate proceedings in different countries. (For more on Chapter 15, you may find this prior post entitled "Chapter 15: The Bankruptcy Code’s New Cross-Border Insolvency Rules," of interest.)

Important Changes May Be Coming. Canada is currently working on adoption of significant revisions to its bankruptcy and insolvency laws. The legislation was originally proposed in 2005 as Bill C-55, and more recently was approved in legislation known as Bill C-12.  If it comes into force, this law would make a number of changes, including one of interest to licensees of intellectual property. The legislation would add to the CCAA a formal provision akin to Section 365(n) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, protecting the rights of licensees to continue to use licensed intellectual property if the underlying license agreement is disclaimed (rejected) in the CCAA proceeding.

Conclusion. Navigating Canadian insolvency law can be complex, especially when proceedings are pending in both the U.S. and Canada. Getting advice from U.S. and Canadian bankruptcy counsel can prove invaluable if your business becomes involved in an insolvency proceeding north of the border.   

The Terrible Twos? A Look At BAPCPA’s Impact On Business Bankruptcy Cases At Its Second Anniversary

Tomorrow, October 17, 2007, marks the second anniversary of the effective date of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, known as BAPCPA.  BAPCPA was enacted primarily to make sweeping changes to the consumer provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. However, BAPCPA also made significant revisions in the business bankruptcy arena.  When it was passed, bankruptcy lawyers, creditors, and potential debtors had many questions about how these changes would play out as new cases made their way through the system. Two years out, we now have answers to some of those questions.

In this post I’ll look at a few of BAPCPA’s more substantial revisions and how courts have addressed them so far. These include new rules governing real estate leases, reclamation, the "20 day goods" administrative claim, key employee retention plans, cross-border bankruptcy cases, and an important preference defense. As we walk down memory lane, I’ll also point you to earlier posts where you can find more details on these issues.

Commercial Real Estate Leases. Under BAPCPA, if the debtor is the tenant under an unexpired commercial lease, it must either assume or reject the lease within 120 days of the filing of bankruptcy. The court can extend this time period without the landlord’s consent for 90 additional days, making a total of 210 days, but any further extensions require the landlord’s prior written consent. If the lease is not assumed (or assumed and assigned) within this period, the lease automatically will be deemed rejected and the debtor will have to move out. 

  • Before BAPCPA, debtors initially had only 60 days to assume or reject leases but there was no statutory limit on extensions of that period. Cumulative extensions of a year or more, over a landlord’s objection, were not uncommon under the pre-BAPCPA version of the Bankruptcy Code. That is no longer possible under BAPCPA.
  • Below market leases can represent a significant asset, particularly for retailers with many store leases, and BAPCPA has forced these debtors to move very quickly to assume and assign leases or to sell designation rights to make the most of the 210 day maximum period. In a number of cases, this 210 day limit has depressed the value of the debtor’s leases and the recovery for its creditors.
  • For more on real estate leases, you may want to read "Commercial Real Estate Leases: How Are They Treated In Bankruptcy?" previously posted on this blog.

Reclamation. When a debtor becomes insolvent or files bankruptcy, some vendors may be able to take advantage of a special, although limited, right to get back or "reclaim" certain of the goods. This reclamation right is part of both the Uniform Commercial Code and the Bankruptcy Code. BAPCPA made some changes in the reclamation area and post-BAPCPA cases have put some meat on the bones of those changes. A new, 45-day bankruptcy reclamation right was added to Section 546(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, expanding the Uniform Commercial Code’s 10-day rule. Under BAPCPA, the goods must have been sold in the "ordinary course" of the vendor’s business and the debtor must have received the goods while insolvent. The reclamation demand must be in writing and made within 45 days of the receipt of the goods by the customer (now the debtor in bankruptcy).  If the 45-day period expires after the bankruptcy case is filed, the vendor must make the reclamation demand within 20 days after the bankruptcy filing.

Two decisions from earlier this year have helped clarify the impact, and highlight the limitations, of BAPCPA’s reclamation changes.

  • In January 2007, Judge Christopher S. Sontchi of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware refused to issue a temporary restraining order in favor of a reclamation claimant in the Advanced Marketing Services case who sought to prevent the sale of goods it was trying to reclaim. The Court cited the superior rights of the secured creditor, which had a lien on the goods. A discussion of the case and a copy of the Court’s decision is available at this earlier post.
  • Then, in April 2007, Judge Burton R. Lifland of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York applied the "prior lien defense" in favor of a secured creditor by valuing all reclamation claims in the Dana Corporation case at zero. You can find a discussion of that case and a copy of the decision at this previous post.

The "20 Day Goods" Administrative Claim. Although the post-BAPCPA decisions have not been favorable to vendors in the reclamation area, recent developments have underscored the value of the new Section 503(b)(9) administrative claim. That new provision, added by BAPCPA, gives vendors an administrative priority claim for "the value of any goods received by the debtor within 20 days before" the date a bankruptcy petition was filed "in which the goods have been sold to the debtor in the ordinary course of such debtor’s business."  For an overview of the new provision, you may find the post entitled "20 Day Goods: New Administrative Claim For Goods Sold Just Before Bankruptcy," of interest.

Key Employee Retention Plans. One of BAPCPA’s most notable changes was the significant restrictions imposed on key employee retention plans, known as KERPs. Prior to BAPCPA, KERPs were a very popular way of making sure that a company could retain its most important officers and employees to guide it through bankruptcy. Citing perceived abuses, however, Congress added language in BAPCPA that requires debtors to satisfy nearly impossible standards before courts would be permitted to approve payment of retention bonuses (or severance payments) as administrative claims to officers and other insiders of a bankrupt company. In short, a debtor would have to show that the individual was essential the the survival of the business and that he or she had a bona fide job offer from another business at the same or greater rate of compensation.

Debtors looking to compensate key officers have moved away from retention plans entirely and instead have turned to incentive plans. 

  • Several courts have approved incentive plans covering insiders but have applied certain factors to judge the reasonableness of the plan, including an assessment of the relationship between the plan and the results to be obtained, the cost of the plan, and whether the plan’s overall scope is fair and reasonable.
  • In May 2007, the Delaware Bankruptcy Court even approved a downward adjustment to an incentive plan’s targets, permitting a bonus to be paid to insiders, when the original plan’s targets turned out to be unrealistic. 
  • For more on this topic, including copies of three significant decisions in the Dana Corporation, Global Home Products, and Nellson Nutraceuticals cases, follow the link to this earlier post on key employee incentive plans.

Chapter 15 On Cross-Border Bankruptcies. BAPCPA added a new chapter to the Bankruptcy Code to adopt an internationally drafted Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency.  Chapter 15 is used principally by representatives of, or creditors in, foreign insolvency proceedings to obtain assistance in the United States, by a debtor or others seeking to obtain assistance in a foreign country regarding a bankruptcy case in the United States, or when both a foreign proceeding and a bankruptcy case in the United States are pending with respect to the same debtor. Follow the link in this sentence for a detailed overview of Chapter 15.

  • In a recent case involving two Bear Stearns hedge funds, the Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York refused to recognize proceedings pending in the Cayman Islands as either a foreign main or foreign nonmain proceeding, denying those entities Chapter 15 protection in the United States.
  • You can find the details on this case (and a copy of the original and amended decisions) here and here.

Preferences. Before it took effect, one of BAPCPA’s most talked about changes was a revision to the "ordinary course of business" defense to preference claims. BAPCPA dropped the requirement that a preference defendant establish that a transfer was both (i) made in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs between the debtor and the defendant and (ii) made according to ordinary business terms.

  • BAPCPA’s main change was to replace the "and" with an "or", meaning that a preference defendant now has to establish only one of the two prongs (instead of both) to prevail on the defense. When it was enacted, many bankruptcy lawyers believed this change would favor preference defendants. 
  • In something of a surprise, however, the first case interpreting the revised statute applied a brand new standard to the "ordinary business terms" provision. Unlike the prior analysis of that prong, the new standard examined the question from the perspective of both the creditor (as had been done pre-BAPCPA) and the debtor (the new BAPCPA twist). As a result, in that decision the preference defendant lost. For more on the decision, in the In re National Gas Distributors, LLC case, check out this post on David Rosendorf’s BAPCPA Blog.
  • There have been surprisingly few cases interpreting this section, so it remains to be seen whether other courts will follow the National Gas Distributors interpretation.

Another Great BAPCPA Resource. In addition to the BAPCPA Blog, which has posts on many decisions from BAPCPA’s first year, don’t miss Steve Jakubowski’s Bankruptcy Litigation Blog, in particular his BAPCPA and BAPCPA Outline topics. Steve has posted on a range of BAPCPA issues, including major consumer decisions and many business bankruptcy decisions.

Acting Like A Two Year Old? As we begin the third year under BAPCPA, the law is beginning to take early steps toward greater clarity in some areas but much remains to be decided. In particular, few appellate decisions have been issued on BAPCPA’s key changes, giving us little guidance on how the Courts of Appeals will interpret the new law.  As always, stay tuned for more developments and feel free to subscribe to the blog by email or by RSS to your feedreader.