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Critical Vendor Treatment in Bankruptcy
Critical vendor treatment in bankruptcy is a process that allows a debtor to pay a vendor its pre-petition claim based on the idea that the vendor is so important to the debtor’s business, that ending the relationship would make it very difficult if not impossible for the debtor to reorganize.
Does a Bankruptcy Discharge Protect the Debtor’s Alter Ego ?
If a corporation obtained a discharge through a bankruptcy proceeding, can that debt be enforced against the alter egos? Bill Siegel explores a recent opinion where the U.S. Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit faced this question.
Vendor Rights Under Sections 502(b)(9) and 546(c) of the Bankruptcy Code
Bankruptcy and Creditor's Rights attorney Bill Siegel explains Bankruptcy Code provisions that apply to vendor's rights and creditor's rights regarding distressed debtors.
Groundbreaking U.S. Corporate Transparency Act and What Business Owners Should Know
The Corporate Transparency Act requires most small corporations, companies and limited partnerships to register "beneficial ownership information" with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
Sitting on the Sidelines During a Bankruptcy Can Result in Catastrophic Consequences
Bill Siegel discusses the Fifth Circuit holding in Raymond James v. Jalbert (In re: German Pellets La., LLC) - and the consequences for a creditor who opts to "sit on the sidelines" of a bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy Court’s Treatment of Defaults in Executory Contracts
Bill Siegel discusses Hawkeye Entertainment and executory contracts in situations where a lease relates to a bankruptcy.
The “Notwithstanding” Clause May Not Control
What effect does the "notwithstanding" clause in an agreement have over a specific provision of a contract?
Cowles Thompson Secures a Reversal of Summary Judgment Involving the Rescission of Agreement to Purchase a Membership Interest in LLC
Cowles Thompson secures a reversal of a Summary Judgment in a matter involving the rescission of a membership interest in an LLC.
If Bankruptcy Occurs on the Eve of Trial, Is There Cause to Modify the Stay?
Bill Siegel looks at Ornagevale LLC - and whether a debtor who filed bankruptcy on the eve of trial had a commercial lease that had terminated or could be assumed, and whether cause existed to lift or modify the stay.
Landlord Tenant Issues: Terminating a Lease and Writ of Possession
Whether a landlord seeks to terminate a lease, or terminates right of possession, or chooses neither when seeking to evict a tenant can have consequences if the tenant files bankruptcy.
Is Commercial Lease Termination a Fraudulent Transfer? Circuit Courts Differ
Bill Siegel looks at whether commercial lease termination is a fraudulent transfer - and the differing outcomes in the Seventh and Third Circuit Courts of Appeals.
Creditors Catch a Break on Preference Actions and the New Value Defense – Re: Claims for 20-Day Shipments
When a debtor receives a shipment of goods within 20 days before the date it files bankruptcy and has failed to pay for said shipment prior to the bankruptcy filing, […]
Angela Lopez and Bill Siegel Named to the 2023 D Magazine List of Best Lawyers
Cowles Thompson is pleased to announce that D Magazine® recently selected two attorneys for inclusion to its 2023 list of “Best Lawyers in North Texas.”
Immigration Law
Selected […]
Creditors’ Rights Against Officers and Directors
Bill Siegel was invited to write an article for the Bankruptcy spotlight in the May 2023 edition of the Dallas Bar Association’s Headnotes publication. We are sharing the […]
The Texas Two-Step is Alive and Well…But a Judge Dismissed the J&J Bankruptcy Absent Financial Distress
Remember the Texas Two-Step? Well, it is alive and well, but lessons can be learned from the dismissal of the LTL Management, LLC bankruptcy.
Background
(Bill Siegel first discussed this J&J […]