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The Settlement Trap, Lindsey Simon Jan 2021

The Settlement Trap, Lindsey Simon

Scholarly Works

Mass tort victims often wait years for resolution of their personal injury claims, but many who successfully navigate this arduous process will not receive a single dollar of their settlement award. According to applicable bankruptcy and state law, settlement payments may be an asset of the estate that the trustee, exercising its significant authority, administers and distributes to creditors instead of a claimant who had filed for bankruptcy. This distribution power maximizes repayment, a critical counterbalance to the robust protections and benefits that debtors receive in bankruptcy.

Setting aside the perceived unfairness of taking desperately needed money from tort victims, …


Section 546(E) Safe Harbor Defense: When To Utilize And When To Preclude, Amanda Tersigni Jan 2017

Section 546(E) Safe Harbor Defense: When To Utilize And When To Preclude, Amanda Tersigni

Bankruptcy Research Library

(Excerpt)

The Bankruptcy Code allows trustees and debtors-in-possession to invoke certain provisions of the United States Bankruptcy Code (“Bankruptcy Code”) to “avoid” particular types of transfers. The types of transfers that a debtor can “avoid” are defined rather broadly. However, one significant exception to this “avoidance power” is section 546(e) and its safe harbor defense. Courts have often wrestled with how to settle the meaning of section 546(e) and how to define the boundaries of the provision’s safe harbor defense. First and foremost, it is important to note that Congress enacted section 546(e) as the safe harbor defense statute in …


Three Approaches To Applying 11 U.S.C § 546(E)’S “Safe Harbor” To Private Lbos, Shlomo Lazar Jan 2012

Three Approaches To Applying 11 U.S.C § 546(E)’S “Safe Harbor” To Private Lbos, Shlomo Lazar

Bankruptcy Research Library

(Excerpt)

The Bankruptcy Code gives a trustee and a debtor-in-possession the authority to avoid fraudulent transactions. However, 11 U.S.C. § 546(e) limits the trustee’s avoiding powers by providing a safe harbor for “settlement payments.” Generally, a “settlement payment” is a payment of cash or securities made to complete a securities transaction. For example, money that an individual pays to a stockbroker to buy publicly traded shares is a settlement payment. A recent issue that has arisen is whether payments made to former shareholders in connection with a private leveraged buyout (LBO) constitute a “settlement payment.”

Depending on which jurisdiction a …


The Evolution Of The Settlement Payment Defense?, Tianja Samuel Jan 2012

The Evolution Of The Settlement Payment Defense?, Tianja Samuel

Bankruptcy Research Library

(Excerpt)

Each year U.S. bankruptcy courts decide hundreds of cases in which debtors, or their trustees, seek to avoid preferential payments. In many of these cases, creditors successfully defend themselves by convincing the court that a statutory safe harbor provision is applicable. The settlement payment defense is one safe harbor provision that—although frequently utilized by creditors—has consistently raised questions about its own scope and applicability. The Second Circuit answered some of these questions, for the first time, in In re Enron Creditors Recovery Corp. In what some believe was an expansive decision, the court held that the settlement payment …


Expanding The Settlement Payments Exception In Lbo’S, Matthew Mcnamara Jan 2009

Expanding The Settlement Payments Exception In Lbo’S, Matthew Mcnamara

Bankruptcy Research Library

(Excerpt)

This memorandum will first give a statutory background of relevant bankruptcy code provisions and their effects on the bankruptcy proceeding. Next, the memorandum will present description of pertinent cases related to the 546(e) ‘settlement payment’ exemption. In particular, the memorandum will document the progression of cases interpreting the meaning of ‘settlement payment’ within 546(e) from a restrictive interpretation to an increasingly broad one. Finally, the memorandum will discuss the case Brandt v. B.A. Capital (In re Plassein International) and its implication on the 546(e) exemption in relation to transfers of stock made in an LBO for publicly-held …