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Picture the typical bankruptcy case. The decision is made to sell the assets, and debtor’s counsel drafts bidding procedures to create a framework to generate the highest and best bid for a particular estate asset. The committee and the secured creditors make comments and the court approves the bidding procedures.
Asset sales of substantially all of the assets of a corporate debtor early in a chapter 11 case have become routine.
Even the smallest chapter 11 reorganizations are complex, with many process handoffs, transactions and communication touchpoints. For cases with substantial or volatile creditor populations, the selection of a claims agent capable of helping a debtor company emerge from chapter 11 successfully can be critical.
The relatively recent decisions of the Third and Fifth Circuits in Philadelphia Newspapers [1] and Pacific Lumber, [2] with respect to the rights of creditors to credit-bid in a sale of assets under a reorganization plan, uprooted the expectations of secured lenders who had come to expect that in the case of a proposed plan effecting a sale of assets free and clear of liens, they would have the
On July 6, 2011, the FDIC issued a final rule implementing certain orderly liquidation authority provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Whether 11 U.S.C.
On April 19, 2011, the High Court of England and Wales heard an application for the sanction of a scheme of arrangement for Rodenstock GmbH, a solvent German company. Two days later, the court entered an order sanctioning the scheme, and indicating that Mr. Justice Briggs’ reasoning would be provided in a reserved judgment.
Two sections of the Bankruptcy Code seemingly stand at odds regarding the protections offered to lessees of real property owned by a bankrupt debtor. Section 365(h) strongly protects a lessee’s right to possession of real property in the face of debtor’s rejection of the lease.