Preference Litigation

Introduction

Judge Kevin J. Carey, Chief Judge of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, recently issued a decision in the Pillowtex bankruptcy addressing the ordinary
Continue Reading Recent Decision in Pillowtex Addresses Elements of the Ordinary Course of Business Defense in a Preference Action

The Chapter 7 Trustees in the Pope & Talbot and Specialty Motors bankruptcies recently filed hundreds of complaints in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware
Continue Reading Trustees in the Pope & Talbot and Specialty Motors Bankruptcies File Hundreds of Preference Actions

Introduction

In January, Mortgage Lenders Network commenced over 65 adversary actions against various defendants, seeking the avoidance and recovery of preferential transfers (read one of the preference complaints here).  As reflected in its complaints,  Mortgage Lenders filed a chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the Delaware Bankruptcy Court on February 5, 2007. During the ten years prior to its bankruptcy, Mortgage Lenders grew from a small mortgage company with seven employees, to a residential mortgage provider serving 47 states with over 1,700 employees. 

Given the commencement of Mortgage Lenders’ preference program, this post provides a brief summary of the elements and common defenses to preference claims.

Elements to a Preference Claim

In order to establish that a party received a preferential transfer, the plaintiff must prove that payments were received by a creditor on account of an “antecedent debt.” Further, the preferential payments must be made (i.) while the debtor was “insolvent”, (ii.) made within 90 days before the debtor filed for bankruptcy, and (iii.) the payments provide the creditor with more payments than it would receive if the debtor had liquidated under a chapter 7 liquidation.

Continue Reading Mortgage Lenders Network Files Preference Actions

Beginning on October 28, 2008,  Dura Automotive Systems filed approximately 170 avoidance actions pursuant to section 547(b) of the United States Bankruptcy Code.  Dura Automotive, along with its related entities, filed for bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware on October 30, 2006.  The Debtors filed an initial plan of reorganization in August of 2007, however, a revised joint plan was not confirmed until May of 2008. Continue Reading Dura Automotive Systems Commences Preference Actions