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A B C D
E F H I
J L M N
O P R S
T U V
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.
Adversary Proceeding: A lawsuit arising
in or related to a bankruptcy case that is commenced by filing
a complaint with the court.
Avoidable
Transfers: The debtor in possession or the trustee, as the case
may be, has what are called "avoiding" powers. Such
powers may be used to undo a transfer of money or property made
during a certain period of time prior to the filing of the bankruptcy
petition. By avoiding a particular transfer of property, the debtor
in possession can cancel the transaction and force the return
or "disgorgement" of the payments or property, which
then are available to pay all creditors. Generally, the power
to avoid transfers is effective against transfers made within
90 days prior to the filing of the petition. However, transfers
to insiders (i.e., relatives, general partners, and directors
or officers of the debtor) made up to a year prior to filing can
be avoided. 11 U.S.C. §§ 101(31), 101(54), 547, 548.
In addition, under 11 U.S.C. § 544, the trustee is given
the authority to avoid transfers under applicable state law, which
often provides for longer time periods. Avoiding powers are used,
for example, to prevent unfair pre-petition payments to one creditor
at the expense of all other creditors.
Assume: An agreement to continue performing duties under a contract
or lease.

Automatic
Stay: An injunction that automatically stops lawsuits, foreclosure,
garnishments, and all collection activity against the debtor the
moment a bankruptcy petition is filed.
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).
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.
Bankruptcy Code: The informal name for title 11 of the United
States Code (11 U.S.C. §§ 101 - 1330), the federal bankruptcy
law.
Bankruptcy Court: The bankruptcy judges in regular active service
in each district; a unit of the district court.
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.)
Bankruptcy Judge: A judicial officer of the United States district
court who is the court official with decision-making power over
federal bankruptcy cases.
Bankruptcy Mill: A business not authorized to practice law that
provides bankruptcy counseling and prepares bankruptcy petitions.
Bankruptcy
Petition: A formal request for the protection of the federal bankruptcy
laws. (There is an official form for bankruptcy petitions.)
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.
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.
Cash Collateral: Section 363 defines "cash
collateral" as cash, negotiable instruments, documents of
title, securities, deposit accounts, or other cash equivalents,
whenever acquired, in which the estate and an entity other than
the estate have an interest. It includes the proceeds, products,
offspring, rents, or profits of property and the fees, charges,
accounts or payments for the use or occupancy of rooms and other
public facilities in hotels, motels, or other lodging properties
subject to a creditor's security interest.
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.
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.)
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.)
Chapter
12: The chapter of the Bankruptcy Code providing for adjustment
of debts of a "family farmer," as that term is defined
in the Code.
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.)
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.)
Claim: A creditor's assertion of a right to payment from a debtor
or the debtor's property.
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.
Confirmation: Approval of a plan of reorganization by a bankruptcy
judge.
Consumer Bankruptcy: A bankruptcy case filed to reduce or eliminate
debts that are primarily consumer debts.
Consumer
Debts: Debts incurred for personal, as opposed to business, needs.
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.
Cramdown: The action by which the court may order a plan approved
over the negative vote of a class of dissenting creditors.
Creditor:
A person to whom or business to which the debtor owes money or
that claims to be owed money by the debtor.
Creditors' Committees: Creditors' committees can play a major
role in chapter 11 cases. The United States trustee, a federal
employee to be distinguished from a private case trustee or panel
trustee, appoints the committee, which ordinarily consists of
unsecured creditors who hold the seven largest unsecured claims
against the debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 1102. The committee may consult
with the debtor in possession on the administration of the case,
investigate the conduct of the debtor and the operation of the
business, and participate in the formulation of a plan. 11 U.S.C.
§ 1103. A creditors' committee may, with the court's approval,
hire an attorney or other professionals to assist in the performance
of the committee's duties. A creditors' committee can be an important
safeguard to the proper management of the business by the debtor
in possession.
Debtor: A person who has filed a petition
for relief under the bankruptcy laws.
Debtor
In Possession: The term refers to a debtor that keeps possession
and control of its assets while undergoing a reorganization under
chapter 11, without the appointment of a case trustee. A debtor
will remain a debtor in possession until the debtor's plan of
reorganization is confirmed, the debtor's case is dismissed or
converted to chapter 7, or a chapter 11 trustee is appointed.
The appointment or election of a trustee occurs only in a small
number of cases. Generally, the debtor, as "debtor in possession,"
operates the business and performs many of the functions that
a trustee performs in cases under other chapters.
Defendant: An individual (or business) against whom a lawsuit
is filed.

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.)
Dischargeable Debt: A debt for which the Bankruptcy Code allows
the debtor's personal liability to be eliminated.
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.
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.)
Examiner: The appointment of an examiner in a chapter 11 case
is rare. The role of an examiner is generally more limited than
that of a trustee. The examiner is authorized to perform the investigatory
functions of the trustee and is required to file a statement of
any investigation conducted. If ordered to do so by the court,
however, an examiner may carry out any other duties of a trustee
that the court orders the debtor in possession not to perform.
11 U.S.C. § 1106. Each court has the authority to determine
the duties of an examiner in each particular case. In some cases,
the examiner may file a plan of reorganization, negotiate or help
the parties negotiate, or review the debtor's schedules to determine
whether some of the claims are improperly categorized. Sometimes,
the examiner may be directed to determine if objections to any
proofs of claim should be filed or whether causes of action have
sufficient merit so that further legal action should be taken.
An examiner may not serve as a trustee.
Executory
Contract or Lease: Generally includes contracts or leases under
which both parties to the agreement have duties remaining to be
performed. (If a contract or lease is executory, a debtor may
assume it or reject it.)
Exempt: A description of any property that a debtor may prevent
creditors from recovering.
Exemption: Property that the Bankruptcy Code or applicable state
law permits a debtor to keep from creditors.
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.
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.) 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.
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.
Fresh Start: The characterization of a debtor's status after bankruptcy,
i.e., free of most debts. (Giving debtors a fresh start is one
purpose of the Bankruptcy Code.)
Homestead:
The way the various exemption acts refer to your principal residence
whether it be a house, apartment, condo or other real property.
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.
Impaired
Claims: Claims which will have their contractual rights modified
or which will be paid less than the full value under a Chapter
11 reorganization.
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 person in control
of the debtor.
Joint
Administration: A court-approved mechanism under which two or
more cases can be administered together. (Assuming no conflicts
of interest, these separate businesses or individuals can pool
their resources, hire the same professionals, etc.)
Joint Petition: One bankruptcy petition filed by a husband and
wife together.
Lien: A charge upon specific property designed
to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.
Liquidation:
A sale of a debtor's property with the proceeds to be used for
the benefit of creditors.
Liquidated Claim: A creditor's claim for a fixed amount of money.

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.
Movant: The party in a lawsuit or other legal proceeding who makes
a motion (application for a court order or judgment).
No-asset
Case: A chapter 7 case where there are no assets available to
satisfy any portion of the creditors' unsecured claims.
Non-dischargeable Debt: A debt that cannot be eliminated in bankruptcy.
Objection
to Discharge: A trustee's or creditor's objection to the debtor's
being released from personal liability for certain dischargeable
debts.
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.
Order
for Relief: An order issued by the court following the filing
of a Chapter 11 petition.
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.
Plan:
A debtor's detailed description of how the debtor proposes to
pay creditors' claims over a fixed period of time.
Plaintiff: A person or business that files a formal complaint
with the court.
Post-petition
Transfer: A transfer of a debtor's property made after the commencement
of the case.
Pre-bankruptcy planning: The arrangement (or rearrangement) of
a debtor's property to allow the debtor to take maximum advantage
of exemptions. (Pre-bankruptcy planning typically includes converting
nonexempt assets into exempt assets.)
Preferential
Debt Payment: 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.
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.

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.
Proof of Claim: A written statement, filed by a creditor, describing
the reason a debtor owes the creditor money. (There is an official
form for this purpose.)
Property
of the Estate: All legal or equitable interests of the debtor
in property as of the commencement of the case.
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 mortgaged property that would otherwise be subject to repossession.
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.
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.
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.)
Stalking Horse: the name given to the party submitting the first
bid to purchase assets. The stalking horse bid can be used to
solicit interest from other bidders and also acts as a floor for
what will be realized at the auction.
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.)
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.
Statutory Lien: A lien arising under a statute, not including
a security interest or judicial lien. A real estate tax lien is
an example of a statutory lien.
Stripdown: The writing down of a secured debt to the value of
the asset that secures it. For example, if a secured debt on a
vehicle is $4,000 but the vehicle is only worth $2,500 the debt
could be set at $2,500.
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.
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.)
Transfer: Any mode or means by which a debtor disposes of or parts
with his/her property.
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.
Typing Service: A business not authorized to practice law that
prepares bankruptcy petitions.
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.
Undersecured
Claim: A debt secured by property that is worth less than the
amount of the debt.
Unlawful Detainer Action: A lawsuit brought by a landlord against
a tenant to evict the tenant from rental property--usually for
nonpayment of rent.
Unliquidated Claim: A claim for which a specific value has not
been determined.
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.)
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.
Voluntary Transfer: A transfer of a debtor's
property with the debtor's consent.
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