Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Basics - YouTube

Channel: Lanigan&Lanigan

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I鈥檓 Eric Lanigan with Lanigan and Lanigan attorneys in Winter Park.
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Florida, I鈥檓 going to talk for a minute about some fundamentals of Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.
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And generally speaking Chapter 11 bankruptcies are associated with businesses.
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You鈥檒l read about it an airline goes into bankruptcy it鈥檚 almost always a Chapter
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11 because as you notice they don鈥檛 disappear, they keep operating that鈥檚 what Chapter
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11 is somewhat all about.
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Chapter 11 can also be used by individuals because Chapter 13 bankruptcy which is for
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individuals who want to reorganize their debt and enter into a payment plan has certain
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ceilings of maximum amount of debt that you can have in a Chapter 13.
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And if you go above that ceiling then you鈥檙e going to have to go into Chapter 11 which
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is more complicated more hands on.
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So let鈥檚 talk about the fundamentals of Chapter 11.
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I think the one thing that probably gets everyone from a major airline right down to a small
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business into a Chapter 11 is that they become aggressively hounded by certain creditors
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and they don鈥檛 have the ability to pay them and those creditors have the ability on any
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given day to put them out of business by levying on property garnishing bank accounts they鈥檙e
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out of business.
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And if you represent creditors you鈥檙e always concerned about racing to the money.
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Because the second creditor to get to the pot of gold finds that the pot of gold is
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empty.
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So the creditors will typically be racing to see who can get to the money first and
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be very aggressive.
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That鈥檚 when a Chapter 11 comes into play because when you file a Chapter 11 someone
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will say what鈥檚 the most fundamental thing that will happen?
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I would say, my answer would be that creditors lose their individual collection rights.
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They are now dealing there are no longer individual creditors they are now dealing with the bankruptcy
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estate which is operating for the benefit of all creditors.
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So the business continues operation and all similarly situated creditors are treated the
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same.
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So there鈥檚 no longer this creditor being highly aggressive and they鈥檙e going to put
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me out of business tomorrow.
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No they鈥檙e not.
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Because now they鈥檙e under the control of the bankruptcy court and they鈥檙e all treated
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collectively.
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And when the bankruptcy is filed, just like a Chapter 7 bankruptcy for an individual or
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a Chapter 13 bankruptcy in Chapter 11 an automatic stay or an automatic freeze goes into effect.
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All collection activity literally stops.
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Literally if someone files a bankruptcy and they鈥檙e loading the cars up on the tow truck
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to take them away they have to stop and put them down.
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So everything stops and basically the purpose of that is to give the debtor some breathing
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room to try to get things reorganized without getting things picked up bank accounts garnished
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each day you can鈥檛 operate a business in that manner.
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So the automatic stay goes into effect everything stops.
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Another fundamental issue of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy is what we call The Debtor in Possession.
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And where that the debtor in possession comes about is if a company were to go into bankruptcy
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and the bankruptcy law was written such that immediately some outsider, a court appointed
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trustee is going to come in and run the business there鈥檚 two real problems with that.
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First of all that鈥檚 a very expensive proposition especially if you get into some of the larger
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companies.
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That they鈥檙e already in Chapter 11 because they鈥檙e cash strapped.
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So the last thing on earth that the business can afford is to bring in a whole new management
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team that鈥檚 very expensive.
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Another fundamental point is if that were to occur, not only would it be expensive,
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prohibitively expensive but it would probably almost certainly cause the business to immediately
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collapse.
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Because all the relationships between existing managers and customers, existing managers
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and employees would all be gone.
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And this trustee or management team would be coming in in an almost impossible situation
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and I think would virtually doom any business that was forced into that position.
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Therefore the law keeps the existing owner management team in place to operate the business
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is what they call the Debtor in Possession of the business.
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Now they run under court oversight and supervision.
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Basically they run the business for the benefit of the creditors subject to the court鈥檚
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supervision.
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The Debtor in Possession they run the business they examine the creditor鈥檚 claims and they
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even decide which claims they think should be paid and which ones should be opposed in
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court.
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A Debtor in Possession can be removed for cause.
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It has to be fraud, dishonesty or gross mismanagement.
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No just mismanagement, gross mismanagement.
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That鈥檚 a heavy burden in any type of legal situation.
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So there鈥檚 a good likelihood that if the Debtor in Possession follows the basic rules,
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does the basic reporting that they will stay the Debtor in Possession and continue to run
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the business throughout the Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
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Sometimes there can be a middle ground where the court would appoint what is referred to
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as an examiner.
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It鈥檚 not somebody brought in to run the team but someone to come in to do an in-depth
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review or examination of the Debtor in Possession activities and to report if they find anything
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untoward or should not be going on.
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So you hate to say it to a client but the bottom line was if you鈥檇 only been here
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a year ago when all of this litigation started going bad, and realize that it had to get
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cut off and get this into a different court, none of this would of happened.
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But because it was too late we鈥檙e stuck in a straight jacket and basically the case
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was almost basically doomed from the beginning.
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So don鈥檛 wait.
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If the business is going south get into a lawyer鈥檚 office that knows something about
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a Chapter 11.
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Discuss your situation.
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Determine whether or not it鈥檚 time to file.
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Or if not, what can be done to avoid or to deal with a creditor and possibly even to
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avoid filing a Chapter 11.
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And again I鈥檓 Eric Lanigan Lanigan and Lanigan attorneys in Winter Park Florida.