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10 years 6 months ago

Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Lawyer - Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcy cases. His office is in Miami at 1221 Brickell Ave., 9th Fl., Miami and may be reached at (305) 891-4055. www.bublicklaw.com 

Chapter 13 bankruptcy is often used to save a person's home from foreclosure. Under chapter 13, you are allowed to stop the mortgage foreclosure case and catch your mortgage up-to-date. The chapter 13 plan usually involves paying off the mortgage arrearage over a 3 to 5 year period in addition to making your regular ongoing monthly mortgage payments.

If your home has decreased in value, sometimes you are able to wipe out or "avoid" your second mortgage. For example, if you owe $300,000 on your first mortgage and $100,000 on your second mortgage and your home has gone down in value to $299,000, there is no equity or value to "secure" the second mortgage. Under these circumstances, the chapter 13 plan (and related section 506 motion) may provide to wipe out or avoid the second mortgage lien. The $100,000 debt owed on the second mortgage will be wholly unsecured and usually only receive a small dividend like the credit cards receive -- typically around five cents on the dollar.

A certified copy of the order avoiding the second mortgage may be recorded in the county public records to document that the second mortgage is void.Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcies. Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has filed over 8,000 chapter 13 and chapter 7 cases.


10 years 3 months ago

Utnehmer v. Crull (In re Utnehmer)  12-1362  (Opinion released last week! 10/10/13)
Developer may erase debt to investors during bankruptcy proceedings because their loan agreement for luxury home project did not make them business partners.
In 2005, a real estate developer purchased a million dollar property in Venice California.  However, it was apparently a junk property.  The developer wanted to tear down the structure and build from scratch, resell it and make a healthy profit.  However, they did not have enough money.

Enter Patrick and Mary Crull.  The Crulls loaned the developer $100,000.  The goal was to rebuild the property in one year.  However, the Great Recession caused a change in plans.  In 2008, the project was completed and sold for $3,725,000. The real estate developer sold the property for about 2.5 million more than what he bought the property.  Unfortunately, the sale proceeds were used the money to pay back other creditors, but did not pay back the Crulls.

The Crulls were mad!  They filed a lawsuit.  The Developers never answered the complaint because they knew that they were going to be forced to file bankruptcy.  The Crulls were easily able to obtain a judgment of $213,645.17 for their $100,000 investment.

The Developers countered the judgment by filing a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. They named the Crulls as debtors and sought to discharge the debt.  The Crulls were forced to file a complaint inside the bankruptcy proceedings and asked the court to rule that the Developers could not discharge the debt to them via this bankruptcy. At the trial, the bankruptcy court found that the loan agreement for bankruptcy created a partnership between the Developer/debtor and the Crulls, and because of that partnership, Developers'/Debtors' debt to them could not be discharged.

The Developers appealed the trial court and won!  The appellate court reversed the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcy Code Section 523(a)(4) provides that if a person filed for bankruptcy under a chapter 7, he cannot get rid of debts he owes, which occurred due to his fraud while acting in a fiduciary capacity. In California, business partners are fiduciaries within the meaning of Section 523(a)(4). Here, however, the loan agreement between the real estate developers and and the Crulls were not good enough to create a partnership relationship.

What is interesting to note is that the loan agreement made reference that the Developers and the Crulls were going to form a partnership in the future.  But because it was a mere idea to form a partnership in the future, it was not enough to form a partnership.  Thus, the appellate court concluded there was nothing in the loan agreement that established any intent to create a partnership at any point.

The court concluded that because there was no partnership agreement between the real estate developers the Crulls, they did not owe a fiduciary duty.  As a result, the debt is discharable.

This opinion by the court was published last week.  The Crulls are probably still kicking themselves for electing to be lenders instead of partners on this Venice beach property.   
Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/huffstutterrobertl/
This article was written by California Attorney, Kenneth Jorgensen.
To find out more, or to contact Ken, please visit his websites at www.fresnolawgroup.com and
www.fresnobankruptcylawgroup.com


10 years 6 months ago

13582824-largeBringing you the most up-to-date news, tips and blogs throughout the web. Here’s your Bankruptcy Update for October 15, 2013 Bridgewater-based Savient Pharmaceuticals files for bankruptcy Bondholders Seek to Force Suntech Into Bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy trustee targets Catholic schools  


10 years 6 months ago

Groeb Farms BankruptcyGroeb Farms, a major honey supplier in the United States since 1981, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Detroit, Michigan.  The filing comes after the supplier was accused of buying Chinese honey illegally.  The supplier supposedly was making illegal honey purchases in order to avoid anti-dumping tariffs imposed in 2001 by U.S. trade regulators. [...]


10 years 5 months ago

Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has over 25 years of experience in filing Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases. His office is centrally located in Miami at 1221 Brickell Avenue, 9th Fl., Miami and may be reached at (305) 891-4055.  www.bublicklaw.com

In the case of Everhome Mtge. Co. v. Rowland, 2008-Ohio-1282 (10th Appellate District, March 20, 2008)(Klatt, J.), the Ohio Court of Appeals reversed the trial court order granting the plaintiff's motion for summary judgment for foreclosure and found that there existed a genuine issue of fact whether the plaintiff is the holder of the note and mortgage.

The court held that under Ohio rules of civil procedure, [e]very action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.". Civ.R.17(A). The real party in interest in a foreclosure action is the current holder of the note and mortgage. Chase Manhattan Mtge. Corp. v. Smith, Hamilton App. No. C-061069, 2007-Ohio-5874, at para. 18. A party that fails to establish itself as the current holder is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. First Union Natl. Bank v. Hufford (2001), 146 Ohio App. 3d 673, 677, 679-680.

The court found that the note and mortgage in this case did not identify the plaintiff as the lender, but set forth a different entity as lender. To prove its status as the current holder of the note and mortgage, the plaintiff relied on the affidavit testimony of an officer which merely stated that the attached documents were true copies of the note and mortgage. The court concluded that this affidavit was insufficient to establish that the plaintiff was the current holder of the note as it failed to specify how or when it became the holder of the note and mortgage. The court stated that without evidence demonstrating how it received an interest in the note and mortgage, the plaintiff cannot establish itself as the holder. According, the court found that there was a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the plaintiff was the real party in interest and reversed the trial court's summary judgment.Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcies. Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has filed over 8,000 chapter 13 and chapter 7 cases.


10 years 6 months ago

man pointing at his watchThere’s only so long that a creditor can sue you for a past due debt. In California, you can’t use bankruptcy to let that time run out.
One of the tactics student loan lawyers and debt collection defense attorneys use fairly regularly is to defend based on the expiration of a statute of limitations.
Sue too late, and you’re out of luck. It’s one of the reasons, I think, that we’re starting to see so many lawsuits for past due private student loan debt – the clock is ticking down, and creditors are jockeying for position.
Given the fact that private student loan debt is so large, my fellow student loan lawyers have been debating whether putting someone into a bankruptcy would give us a leg up over creditors such as National Collegiate Student Loan Trust.
The thinking among our little band of student loan advocates has been that if we could somehow cause the statute of limitations to run out, our clients could wipe out some of their student loan debt at the end of the bankruptcy.
In California, at least, that doesn’t work. Here’s why.
Effects Of Bankruptcy On The Statute Of Limitations
When you file for bankruptcy, an automatic stay goes into effect. With limited exceptions, nobody can sue you while you’re in bankruptcy.
At the same time, Section 108 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code holds that if a lawsuit hasn’t been stated when the bankruptcy case has been filed, and if the statute of limitations for doing so hasn’t expired before the date of the filing of the petition, then such period does not expire until the later of—
(1) the end of such period, including any suspension of such period occurring on or after the commencement of the case; or
(2) 30 days after notice of the termination or expiration of the automatic stay.
Looking at that part of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code alone, it would seem as if the tactic of filing for bankruptcy would make sense as a way to get the statute of limitations to run out.
Let’s say you’ve got a 4-year statute of limitations to collect a debt (remember, the statute of limitations on a promissory note such as for private student loans is 6 years, not 4). You’re 3 years past due, so you file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy figuring that you can sit there until the time limit runs.
See also:

Once you’re out, you’ve got to wait 31 days before you’re home free.
But you’ve forgotten one piece of the puzzle.
Does Bankruptcy Toll The Statute of Limitations?
The issue of a statute of limitation is one of state law, not federal.
Under California law, a creditor has four years to file a lawsuit against you. For promissory notes such as private student loans, the time is extended to six years.
Other states have their own time limits.
Beyond that, many states have laws that stop the statute of limitations from running under certain circumstances.
Bankruptcy Stops The Clock
California Code of Procedure § 356, for example, states the following:

When the commencement of an action is stayed by injunction or statutory prohibition, the time of the continuance of the injunction or prohibition is not part of the time limited for the commencement of the action.

A line of California cases has interpreted CCP § 356 held that the automatic stay in bankruptcy stops the clock on the statute of limitations. Some of those cases are:

The Solution Of Bankruptcy May Create Problems
If you’ve got a debt – student loan or otherwise – and are watching the clock tick down, filing for bankruptcy may end up putting you in a worse situation.
If the debt’s dischargeable, you’ve got nothing to fear. But if you’re dealing with a private student loan debt that won’t be wiped out at the end of the bankruptcy case, you may be unwittingly extending the time for the creditor to sue you.
It’s just another reason why the analysis involved in resolving your bill problems is best left to an attorney who understands all the angles.


10 years 6 months ago

Jordan E. Bublick is a chapter 13 and chapter 7 personal bankruptcy lawyer with an office centrally located in Miami at 1221 Brickell Avenue, 9th Floor. Jordan E. Bublick is a graduate of New York University School of Law (LL.M., 1984), Ohio State University College of Law (J.D., 1983), and Brandeis University (B.A., 1979).

Jordan E. Bublick's website is www.bublicklaw.com.

Jordan E. Bublick's may be contacted at telephone number (305) 891-4055 or by email at [email protected].

Chapter 7 personal bankruptcy is used to discharge your dischargeable debt including credit cards, medical bills, and unsecured loans.

Chapter 13 personal bankruptcy is used to formulate a chapter 13 plan that will reorganize one's secured (such as a mortgage or car loan) and unsecured debt (such as credit cards and personal loans).

Practicing in the Bankruptcy Courts in Miami-Dade County and Broward County. Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcies. Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has filed over 8,000 chapter 13 and chapter 7 cases.


10 years 6 months ago

Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has over 25 years of experience in filing Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases. His office is centrally located in Miami at 1221 Brickell Avenue, 9th Fl., Miami and may be reached at (305) 891-4055.  www.bublicklaw.com

In December, 2007, Congress passed the "Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007" to alleviate tax consequence for some homeowners in foreclosure. The new Act excludes from gross income certain cancelled discharged "qualified principal residence indebtedness."

Existing law provides that discharged debt, whether after a foreclosure or short sale, is generally taxable income realized in the year the debt was forgiven, unless an exception applies. Generally only reductions in principal and not forgiveness of interest results in discharge of indebtedness income ("DOI"). Usually a lender is required to issue a Form 1099-C to report the DOI to the IRS. Taxpayers are required to disclose DOI to the IRS whether the lender issues a 1099-C or not. Taxpayers may be able to exclude the DOI from income if an exceptions to DOI applies.

Two existing exceptions to DOI are the insolvency and bankruptcy exceptions. 26 U.S.C. section 108(d). If the borrower is insolvent, DOI is not taxable. If the debt is discharged in bankruptcy, DOI is also not taxable. Another exception is the "purchase price infirmity doctrine". This allows DOI to be excluded from income where the lender agrees to write down the purchase money debt to the true value of the collateral as the purchase price was inflated in the original transaction due to fraud or misrepresentation. Another exception from DOI is when the liability was contested. Pursuant to Zarin v. Comm'r, 916 F.2d 110 (3d Cir.1990), DOI is not income where there is a legitimate basis for the borrower to claim that the debt was never owed or collectible because illegal.

The new Act adds to the existing exceptions from DOI a category of "qualified principal residence indebtedness." Up to $2 million of indebtedness may be excluded if the reason for the discharge is either a decline in the residence's value or the taxpayer's financial condition. It should be noted that debt excluded by the Act reduces the taxpayer's basis and a "short sale" could result in a taxable "gain" which may be taxable as a capital gains.

In order for this new exception to apply, the debt must be "qualified" which includes only acquisition and not home equity indebtedness. Acquisition indebtedness includes funds borrowed to buy, construct, or improve a home. Debt consolidation loans or cash out loans are generally not acquisition indebtedness. The Act only applies to debt discharged between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2009. Pub.L.No. 110-142 Section 2(d). If acquisition debt is refinance, the refinanced principal amount retains its status as acquisition indebtedness. The excess of the total refinanced loan amount over the refinanced acquisition indebtedness is treated as home equity indebtedness and is not eligible for exclusion from income. Acquisition indebtedness included loans to "substantially improve" the principal residence.

This new exclusion only applies if the debt was discharged due to the borrower's financial condition or a decline in the home's value. A discharged based on the lender's acknowledgment of its wrongdoing or even rescission is not eligible for the qualified principal residence exclusion. Documentationj in any litigation or settlement that one of the required grounds is the basis for the discharge of the debt would be helpful.

The homeowner must apparently elect to take either the qualified principal residental exception or the insolvency exception. The insolvency exception, if elected, is "in lieu of" the qualified principal residence excetion.Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcies. Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has filed over 8,000 chapter 13 and chapter 7 cases.


10 years 6 months ago

I am sad to report that for the second straight year now, millions of Social Security recipients, disabled veterans and federal retirees can expect only a minute increases in their benefits at the start of the year. For many Washington and Oregon consumers hoping to avoid bankruptcy, this news does not bode well. The preliminary data suggest an increase of roughly 1.5 percent, which would be among the smallest since automatic increases were adopted in the mid-seventies.  The increase will be small because consumer prices, as measured by the government, haven’t gone up much in the past year. Anyone living in the Seattle and Portland rental markets could tell you that their costs of living are going up astronomically, but, hey, what do they  know?
The original post is titled Bad News for Social Security Recipients Trying to Avoid Bankruptcy in Oregon and Washington , and it came from Oregon Bankruptcy Lawyer | Portland, Salem, and Vancouver, Wa .


10 years 5 months ago

Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami bankruptcy lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcy cases. He has filed over 8,000 bankruptcy cases. Telephone: (305) 891-4055. www.bublicklaw.com
    Time Table of a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Case
Automatic Stay   Upon the filing of your bankruptcy case, you are immediately protected from most, but not all, collection actions against you and your property. If you previously filed for bankruptcy relief and the case was pending during the year before the filing of a new case, the automatic stay will terminate in certain respects unless a motion is filed with the bankruptcy court and granted within 30 days after the filing of the new case. If you had two or more cases pending within the year prior to filing a third case, there will be no automatic stay except upon court order.
Exceptions to the Automatic Stay
The following are some of the items that are not automatically stayed by the filing of your bankruptcy case: criminal cases, certain actions regarding alimony, maintenance or support, and governmental police or regulatory actions.

 Creditors Meeting  About 6 weeks after your bankruptcy case is filed, you must attend the "creditors' meeting" (34l meeting) at the Federal Building. This is generally just a short meeting with your bankruptcy trustee and any creditors who choose to attend.  In most cases, no creditors bother to attend.  Your Bankruptcy Judge will not attend. You must bring your original social security card, driver’s license,  and proof of payment of your chapter 13 plan payments.  Length of Chapter 13 Plan  Chapter 13 plan are usually for a period of 3 to 5 years. This length of the plan depends of various factors, including your income, the amount of your non-exempt property, and what you are trying to achieve in chapter 13 plan.  Discharge Order After you complete your chapter 13 plan, the trustee will issue a report of your plan completion. Shortly thereafter, your chapter 13 discharge will be entered and your case closed.  
  Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer with over 25 years of experience in filing chapter 13 and chapter 7 bankruptcies. Miami Personal Bankruptcy Lawyer Jordan E. Bublick has filed over 8,000 chapter 13 and chapter 7 cases.


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