Bankruptcy Terms Definitions of the United States
Bankruptcy Code
These are basic terms that are used
during the process of a bankruptcy proceeding.
Bankruptcy code terms and bankruptcy
definitions
Up1. ADVERSARY PROCEEDING
A lawsuit arising in or related to a bankruptcy case that is
commenced by filing a complaint with the bankruptcy court.
Up2. ASSUME:
An agreement to continue performing duties under a contract or
lease.
Up3. AUTOMATIC STAY:
An injunction that automatically stops lawsuits, foreclosure,
garnishments, and all collection activity against the debtor the
moment a
bankruptcy petition is filed.
Up4. BANKRUPTCY:
A legal procedure for dealing with debt problems of individuals
and
businesses; specifically, a case filed under one of the chapters
of title 11 of
the United States Code (the Bankruptcy Code).
Up5. BANKRUPTCY ADMINISTRATOR:
An officer of the judiciary serving in the judicial districts
of
Alabama and North Carolina who, like the United States trustee,
is responsible
for supervising the administration of bankruptcy cases, estates,
and trustees,
monitoring plans and disclosure statements, monitoring creditors'
committees, monitoring fee applications, and performing other
statutory duties.
Up6. BANKRUPTCY CODE
The informal name for title 11 of the United States Code (11 U.S.C.
§§ 101– 1330), the federal bankruptcy
law.
Up7. BANKRUPTCY COURT
The bankruptcy judges in regular active service in each district;
a
unit of the district court.
Up8. BANKRUPTCY ESTATE
All legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property at
the
time of the bankruptcy filing. (The estate includes all property
in which the
debtor has an interest, even if it is owned or held by another
person.)
Up9. BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
A judicial officer of the United States district court who is
the
court official with decision-making power over federal bankruptcy
cases.
Up10. BANKRUPTCY MILL
A business not authorized to practice law
that
provides bankruptcy counseling and prepares bankruptcy petitions.
Up11. BANKRUPTCY PETITION
A formal request for the protection of the federal bankruptcy
laws.
(There is an official form for bankruptcy petitions.)
Up12. BANKRUPTCY TRUSTEE
A private individual or corporation appointed in all chapter 7,
chapter 12, and chapter 13 cases to represent the interests of
the bankruptcy
estate and the debtor's creditors.
Up13. BUSINESS BANKRUPTCY
A bankruptcy case in which the debtor is a business or an
individual involved in business and the debts are for business
purposes.
Up14. CHAPTER 7
The chapter of the Bankruptcy Code providing for
“liquidation,” i.e., the sale of a debtor's
nonexempt property
and the distribution of the proceeds to creditors.
Up15. CHAPTER 7 TRUSTEE
A person appointed in a chapter 7 case to represent the interests
of the bankruptcy estate and the unsecured creditors. (The trustee's
responsibilities include reviewing the debtor's petition
and schedules,
liquidating the property of the estate, and making distributions
to creditors.
The trustee may also bring actions against creditors or the debtor
to recover
property of the bankruptcy estate.)
Up16. CHAPTER 11
A reorganization bankruptcy, usually involving a corporation or
partnership. (A chapter 11 debtor usually proposes a plan of reorganization
to
keep its business alive and pay creditors over time. People in
business or
individuals can also seek relief in chapter 11.)
Up17. CHAPTER 12
The chapter of the Bankruptcy Code providing for adjustment of
debts of a “family farmer,” as that term is
defined in the Bankruptcy
Code.
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18. CHAPTER 13
The chapter of the Bankruptcy Code providing for adjustment of
debts of an individual with regular income. (Chapter 13 allows
a debtor to keep
property and pay debts over time, usually three to five years.)
Up19. CHAPTER 13 TRUSTEE
A person appointed to administer a chapter 13 case. (A chapter
13
trustee's responsibilities are similar to those of a
chapter 7 trustee;
however, a chapter 13 trustee has the additional responsibilities
of overseeing
the debtor's plan, receiving payments from debtors, and
disbursing plan
payments to creditors.)
Up20. CLAIM
A creditor's assertion of a right to payment from a debtor
or
the debtor's property.
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21. COMPLAINT
The first or initiatory document in a lawsuit that notifies the
court and the defendant of the grounds claimed by the plaintiff
for an award of
money or other relief against the defendant.
Up22. CONFIRMATION
Approval of a plan of reorganization by a bankruptcy judge.
Up23. CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY
A bankruptcy case filed to reduce or eliminate debts that are
primarily consumer debts.
Up24. CONSUMER DEBTS
Debts incurred for personal, as opposed to business, needs.
Up25. CONTINGENT CLAIM
A claim that may be owed by the debtor under certain circumstances,
for example, where the debtor is a cosigner on another person's
loan and
that person fails to pay.
Up26. CREDITOR
A person to whom or business to which the debtor owes money or
that
claims to be owed money by the debtor.
Up27. DEBTOR
A person who has filed a petition for relief under the bankruptcy
laws.
Up28. DEFENDANT
An individual (or business) against whom a lawsuit is filed.
Up29. DISCHARGE
A release of a debtor from personal liability for certain
dischargeable debts. (A discharge releases a debtor from personal
liability for
certain debts known as dischargeable debts (defined below) and
prevents the
creditors owed those debts from taking any action against the
debtor or the
debtor's property to collect the debts. The discharge
also prohibits
creditors from communicating with the debtor regarding the debt,
including
telephone calls, letters, and personal contact.)
Up30. DISCHARGEABLE DEBT
A debt for which the Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor's
personal liability to be eliminated.
Up31. DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
A written document prepared by the chapter 11 debtor or other
plan
proponent that is designed to provide “adequate information”
to
creditors to enable them to evaluate the chapter 11 plan of reorganization.
Up32. EQUITY
The value of a debtor's interest in property that remains
after liens and other creditors' interests are considered.
(Example: If a
house valued at $60,000 is subject to a $30,000 mortgage, there
is $30,000 of
equity.)
Up33. EXECUTORY CONTRACT OR LEASE
Generally includes contracts or leases under which both parties
to
the agreement have duties remaining to be per-formed. (If a contract
or lease
is executory, a debtor may assume it or reject it.)
Up34. EXEMPT
A description of any property that a debtor may prevent creditors
from recovering.
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35. EXEMPTION
Property that the Bankruptcy Code or applicable state law permits
a
debtor to keep from creditors.
Up36. EXEMPT PROPERTY
Property or value in property that a debtor is allowed to retain,
free from the claims of creditors who do not have liens.
Up37. FACE SHEET FILING
A bankruptcy case filed either without schedules or with incomplete
schedules listing few creditors and debts. (Face sheet filings
are often made
for the purpose of delaying an eviction or foreclosure.)
Up38.
FAMILY FARMER
An individual, individual and spouse, corporation, or partnership
engaged in a farming operation who meet certain debt limits and
other statutory
criteria for filing a petition under chapter 12.
Up39. FRAUDULENT TRANSFER
A transfer of a debtor's property made with intent to
defraud
or for which the debtor receives less than the transferred property's
value.
Up40. FRESH START
The characterization of a debtor's status after bankruptcy,
i.e., free of most debts. (Giving debtors a fresh start is one
pur-pose of the
Bankruptcy Code.)
Up41. INSIDER (of individual debtor)
Any relative of the debtor or of a general partner of the debtor;
partnership in which the debtor is a general partner; general
partner of the
debtor; or corporation of which the debtor is a director, officer,
or person in
control.
Up42. INSIDER (of corporate debtor)
A director, officer, or person in control of the debtor; a
partnership in which the debtor is a general partner; a general
partner of the
debtor; or a relative of a general partner, director, officer,
or per-son in
control of the debtor.
Up43. JOINT ADMINISTRATION
A court-approved mechanism under which two or more cases can be
administered together. (Assuming no conflicts of interest, these
separate firms
or individuals can pool their resources, hire the same professionals,
etc.)
Up44. JOINT PETITION
One bankruptcy petition filed by a husband and wife together.
Up45. LIEN
A charge upon specific property designed to secure payment of
a
debt or performance of an obligation.
Up46. LIQUIDATION
A sale of a debtor's property with the proceeds to be
used for
the benefit of creditors.
Up47. LIQUIDATED CLAIM
A creditor's claim for a fixed amount of money.
Up48. MOTION TO LIFT THE AUTOMATIC STAY
A request by a creditor to allow the creditor to take an action
against a debtor or the debtor's property that would
otherwise be
prohibited by the automatic stay.
Up49. NO-ASSET CASE
A chapter 7 case where there are no assets available to satisfy
any
portion of the creditors' unsecured claims.
Up50. NONDISCHARGEABLE DEBT
A debt that cannot be eliminated in bankruptcy.
Up51. OBJECTION TO DISCHARGE
A trustee's or creditor's objection to the debtor's
being released from personal liability for certain dischargeable
debts.
Up52. OBJECTION TO EXEMPTIONS
A trustee's or creditor's objection to a debtor's
attempt to claim certain property as exempt, i.e., not liable
for any
prepetition debt of the debtor.
Up53. PARTY IN INTEREST
A party who is actually and substantially interested in the subject
matter, as distinguished from one who has only a nominal on technical
interest
in it.
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54. PLAN
A debtor's detailed description of how the debtor proposes
to
pay creditors' claims over a fixed period of time.
Up55. PLAINTIFF
A person or business that files a formal complaint with the court.
Up56. POSTPETITION TRANSFER
A transfer of a debtor's property made after the commencement
of the case.
Up57. PREBANKRUPTCY PLANNING
The arrangement (or rearrangement) of a debtor's property
to
allow the debtor to take maximum advantage of exemptions. (Prebankruptcy
planning typically includes converting nonexempt assets into exempt
assets.)
Up58. PREFERENTIAL DEBT
A debt payment made to a creditor in the 90-day period before
a
debtor files bankruptcy (or within one year if the creditor was
an insider)
that gives the creditor more than the creditor would receive in
the
debtor's chapter 7 case.
Up59. PAYMENT PRIORITY
The Bankruptcy Code's statutory ranking of unsecured
claims
that determines the order in which unsecured claims will be paid
if there is
not enough money to pay all unsecured claims in full.
Up60. PRIORITY CLAIM
An unsecured claim that is entitled to be paid ahead of other
unsecured claims that are not entitled to priority status. Priority
refers to
the order in which these unsecured claims are to be paid.
Up61. PROOF OF CLAIM
A written statement describing the reason a debtor owes a creditor
money. (There is an official form for this purpose.)
Up62. PROPERTY OF THE ESTATE
All legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as
of
the commencement of the case.
Up63. REAFFIRMATION AGREEMENT
An agreement by a chapter 7 debtor to continue
paying a dischargeable debt after the bankruptcy, usually for
the purpose of
keeping collateral or mort-gaged property that would otherwise
be subject to
repossession.
Up64. SECURED CREDITOR
An individual or business holding a claim against the debtor that
is secured by a lien on property of the estate or that is subject
to a right of
setoff.
Up65. SECURED DEBT
Debt backed by a mortgage, pledge of collateral, or other lien;
debt for which the creditor has the right to pursue specific pledged
property
upon default.
Up66. SCHEDULES
Lists submitted by the debtor along with the petition (or shortly
thereafter) showing the debtor's assets, liabilities,
and other financial
information. (There are official forms a debtor must use.)
Up67. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
A series of questions the debtor must answer in writing concerning
sources of income, transfers of property, lawsuits by creditors,
etc. (There is
an official form a debtor must use.)
Up68. STATEMENT OF INTENTION
A declaration made by a chapter 7 debtor
concerning plans for dealing with consumer debts that are secured
by property
of the estate.
Up69. SUBSTANTIAL ABUSE
The characterization of a bankruptcy case filed by an individual
whose debts are primarily consumer debts where the court finds
that the
granting of relief would be an abuse of chapter 7 because, for
example, the
debtor can pay its debts.
Up70. SUBSTANTIVE CONSOLIDATION
Putting the assets and liabilities of two or more related debtors
into a single pool to pay creditors. (Courts are reluctant to
allow substantive
consolidation since the action must not only justify the benefit
that one set
of creditors receives, but also the harm that other creditors
suffer as a
result.)
Up71. 341 MEETING
A meeting of creditors at which the debtor is questioned under
oath
by creditors, a trustee, examiner, or the United States trustee
about his/her
financial affairs.
Up72. TRANSFER
Any mode or means by which a debtor disposes of or parts with
his/her property.
Up73. TRUSTEE
The representative of the bankruptcy estate who exercises statutory
powers, principally for the benefit of the unsecured creditors,
under the
general supervision of the court and the direct supervision of
the United
States trustee or Bankruptcy Administrator.
Up74. TYPING SERVICE
A business not authorized to practice law that prepares bankruptcy
petitions.
Up75. UNITED STATES TRUSTEE
An officer of the Justice Department responsible for supervising
the administration of bankruptcy cases, estates, and trustees,
monitoring plans
and disclosure statements, monitoring creditors' committees,
monitoring
fee applications, and performing other statutory duties.
Up76. UNDERSECURED CLAIM
A debt secured by property that is worth less than the amount
of
the debt.
Up77. UNLAWFUL DETAINER ACTION
A lawsuit brought by a landlord against a tenant to evict the
tenant from rental property—usually for non-payment of
rent.
Up78. UNLIQUIDATED CLAIM
A claim for which a specific value has not been determined.
Up79. UNSCHEDULED DEBT
A debt that should have been listed by a debtor in the schedules
filed with the court but was not. (Depending on the circumstances,
an
unscheduled debt may or may not be discharged.)
Up80. UNSECURED CLAIM
A claim or debt for which a creditor holds no special assurance
of
payment, such as a mortgage or lien; a debt for which credit was
extended based
solely upon the creditor's assessment of the debtor's
future ability
to pay.
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81. VOLUNTARY TRANSFER
A transfer of a debtor's property with the debtor's
consent. |