"The Bassel Wilcox Report"

  • PRO-RATA PAYMENTS
    9/12/2011 12:00:00 AM by Pam Bassel

        The term "pro-rata" is used in a Chapter 13 Plan to describe how a creditor will be paid. What it means is delay in getting paid as a secured creditor.  All priority claims, administrative claims and claims listed as being paid in a specific amount will be paid ahead of the pro-rata secured creditor. This could mean the debtor’s attorney’s fees, the I.R.S. and domestic support obligations, among others, could be paid in full before the secured creditor gets any disbursement post-confirmation. Except in the Southern District of Texas (see below), if you are listed to be paid pro-rata, it generally means that the debtor’s attorney will be paid, in full, before you get any disbursement at all as a secured creditor. In these difficult economic times, many debtor’s attorneys are getting little or no down payment on their fees and most of those fees are paid through the Plan, creating a lengthy delay before payments to creditors begin. You are entitled to equal payments beginning month one after the Plan is confirmed which you ...  see more at The Bassel Wilcox Report
  • COLLATERAL SURRENDERED, BUT NOT TURNED OVER
    12/2/2011 12:00:00 AM by Pam Bassel

    This is a frustrating problem for you. You get a Plan or a Plan modification that states that the debtor is going to surrender your collateral. After the Plan is confirmed or the modification is approved, you find out the vehicle was wrecked or impounded and is now worthless or that there are repair or storage charges against your vehicle and it is not cost effective to take possession of it because you won’t recoup your costs in a sale or that the debtor gave/sold your collateral to someone else and will not tell you where the vehicle is located. What do you do in this situation?

    We recommend filing an objection to the Plan or the Modification when you do not know who has your vehicle and it has not been turned over to you. The objection, pre-confirmation, is that the Plan should not be confirmed unless the vehicle is delivered to you, the creditor. Post-confirmation, object to the modification on the grounds that it should not be approved unless the debtor delivers the vehicle to you and, also, that the debtor pays you the remaining balance owed on your allowed sec...  see more at The Bassel Wilcox Report

  • The New Requirement for Proof of Claim
    12/9/2011 12:00:00 AM by Stephen Wilcox

    Generally, in order to be paid in a bankruptcy case, you have to file a proof of claim. Bankruptcy Rule 3001 sets out the specific requirements for a proof of claim. This Rule was amended effective December 1, 2011. Not only did the requirements for what must be included in a proof of claim change, but the rule also provides for bad things to happen if you don’t do it right. The new requirements apply in cases where the debtor is an individual, even in a Chapter 11 proceeding.

    First, a proof of claim "shall conform substantially to the appropriate Official Form." The official form is available at www.uscourts.gov and the official proof of claim form is form B-10. If the claim is based on a writing, then a copy of the writing (such as the note and deed of trust or certificate of title) must be attached to the proof of claim.

    If you are claiming amounts other than the principal amount of the debt, like interest or attorney...  see more at The Bassel Wilcox Report

    

Adequate Protection

If you have a security interest in collateral, whether it is real estate or personal property, like a vehicle, equipment, accounts receivable or inventory, you are entitled to adequate protection. So, what is adequate protection?

The basic idea behind adequate protection is to compensate you for any loss in the value of your collateral. This does not necessarily entitle you to the payments due under your contract or note or to any payment at all. If, for example, your collateral is worth more than what you are owed, that "equity cushion" may be your adequate protection if the equity cushion is large enough.

There are many times, though, when a creditor does not have an equity cushion. The general way that creditors are adequately protected is through monthly payments that cover the depreciation of their collateral. Sometimes that amount is easy to agree upon and sometimes it is more difficult. The debtor wants adequate protection to be as low as possible, so the creditor may have to argue for more.

Finally, no matter whether you have an equity cushion or not, you are entitled to insurance on your collateral. If the debtor does not provide proof of insurance, it is a good idea to demand it.