keeping the gold: successfully resolving preference claims

32
z presented by Larry J. McClatchey 2015 Great Lakes Region Credit Conference November 18-19, 2015

Upload: kegler-brown-hill-ritter

Post on 09-Apr-2017

263 views

Category:

Law


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

presented by Larry J. McClatchey2015 Great Lakes Region Credit ConferenceNovember 18-19, 2015

Page 2: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

What is a Preference?Payment or transfer made during the

ninety days prior to bankruptcy

Debtor makes a payment or payments to some creditors and not to others

90

Page 3: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Purpose of Preference Law?Prevent “piecemeal” dismemberment of a debtor

To promote equal distribution among creditors similarly situated

Page 4: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Who Can Avoid a Preferential Transfer?

1 Bankruptcy trustee or “debtor in possession”

2 Representative of Liquidating Trust in chapter 11 case

Page 5: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Elements of a Preference

Transfer of property of

a debtor

To or for benefit of creditor

On account of an

antecedent debt

Made while debtor was insolvent

Within 90 days before bankruptcy

Enables creditor to receive more than if transfer had not been

made

Or 1 year to an insider

Page 6: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Who Has Burden of

?

Page 7: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Plaintiff/trustee must prove each element of preference

Burden of proof is on plaintiff

Defendant/creditor can establish an “affirmative defense”

Creditor has burden of proof on any affirmative defense

Page 8: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

BASIC

1 Contemporaneous exchange for new value

2 Enabling Loan

3 Floating Lien

4 Statutory Lien

Page 9: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Ordinary Course of Business Defense

Encourages creditors to deal with companies on “normal” credit terms

Page 10: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Payment in ordinary course of business is payment:

of a debt incurred in the ordinary course of the business or financial affairs of the debtor and the transferee

made in the ordinary course of business of the debtor and the transferee

made according to ordinary business terms

Page 11: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Ordinary Course of Business Between the Parties

Payment that is “normal” in parties’ course of dealingConsistency with other business transactions between partiesExamines course of conduct + payment history prior to filing

Historical period v. preference period

Consistency late payments may qualify as ordinary payments

Page 12: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Payment NOT in subjective ordinary course of business

Creditor requires a cashier’s check for the first time

Creditor imposes new terms during the preference period

Payment results from coercive collection practices

Creditor imposes or threatens credit hold

Page 13: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Ordinary Business Terms: Objective Ordinary Course

Payment is “ordinary in relation to the relevant industry standard

Examines industry as a whole

Determines practices common to businesses similarity situated

Usually requires expert testimony

Page 14: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Subsequent new value or subsequent advance

Transfer by creditor after payment received

Not secured by otherwise unavoidable security interest

On account of which new value debtor did not make an otherwise unavoidable transfer to or benefit of creditor

New value determined as of petition date, so post-petition payments not relevant

Page 15: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

In re Globe Building Materials, Inc.

Table sets forth dates of shipment by Seneca Petroleum and dates of payment of invoices by debtor

Trustee sued to recover

Petition filed January 19; 90-day period started October 19

$356,823

Page 16: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Page 17: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Must new value remain

unpaid?

Effect of Court

Approved Post-Petition

Payments?

Payments Made by

Third Party Under LC?

New Value Issues in the Courts

Page 18: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Additional Defenses to

Consider

Page 19: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Transfer <$600 in consumer cases <$600

Transfer <$5,000 in business cases<$5000

Improper to sue other than in defendant’s jurisdiction (venue)

Case filed too late (statute of limitations)

Transfer to “critical vendor” of as part of contract assumption

Transfer to holder of unperfected lien rights

Page 20: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Checklist of Defenses Against Preference Claims

Where is the lawsuit filed?

When was the lawsuit filed?

How much is the claim?

Did the debtor make the transfer?

Page 21: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Checklist of Defenses Against Preference Claims

Do lien rights exist?

Debtor receive “20 day goods”?

Has debtor made “critical vendor” offer?

Executory supply agreement with debtor?

Page 22: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

TIPSPractical

Page 23: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Review your invoices to compare to

industry standards

Page 24: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Stay consistent in your collection

practices

Page 25: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

If problem customer files bankruptcy, work up defenses

while fresh

Page 26: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Preserve all records of collection

communications

Page 27: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Don’t ignore a demand letter

Page 28: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

TAKEAWAYS

Page 29: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

OK to be aggressive if consistent

1

Page 30: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Always, always take payment offered

2

Page 31: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

May not face future avoidance or can

settle claim

3

Page 32: Keeping the Gold: Successfully Resolving Preference Claims

z

Thank You!Larry J. McClatchey, DirectorKegler Brown Hill + [email protected]/mcclatchey614-462-5463