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Bankruptcy e-Bulletin

July 25, 2013

Dear constituency list members of the Insolvency Law Committee, the following is a legislative update that may be of interest to insolvency professionals:

SUMMARY

On July 11, 2013 Governor Brown signed into law SB 426 which expands the anti-deficiency language in Code of Civil Procedure (“C.C.P.”) sections 580b and 580d by expressly prohibiting not only: (i) a deficiency judgment against the borrower in connection with either a “purchase money” deed of trust covered under C.C.P. §580b or following a non-judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust covered under C.C.P. §580d, but now also (ii) any liability for any deficiency in the foregoing situations.   However, SB 426 expressly recognizes the right of a lender to collect any such deficiency from any additional collateral held or from any third-party guarantor.

As discussed herein, the new statute could be viewed as “clarifying” rather than “amending” existing California law so that when it becomes effective, it will apply to deficiency obligations then existing and held by any lender or its assignee.

A.           New Legislation (C.C.P. §§580b and 580d)

Prior to the enactment of SB 426, C.C.P. § 580b prohibited a deficiency judgment in connection with the following: (1) any sale of real property for failure of the purchaser to complete the contract of sale;(2) under a deed of trust given to the vendor to secure repayment of the purchase price of the encumbered property; (3) under a deed of trust on residential property given to a lender to secure repayment of a loan (“purchase money loan”) used in whole or in part to pay for the purchase price of a residence to be occupied, in whole or in part, by the purchaser; or (4) a loan used to refinance a purchase money loan except to the extent that the lender advanced new principal to the borrower which was not used to repay existing principal or interest or loan fees and costs.

Read more…

California Governor Brown Signs Bill To Strengthen Oversight of Debt Buyers Bill Will Help Protect Consumers From Unfair Debt Collection Practices

CONSUMERS UNION NEWS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: Thursday, July 11, 2013

California Governor Brown Signs Bill To Strengthen Oversight of Debt Buyers Bill Will Help Protect Consumers From Unfair Debt Collection Practices

SACRAMENTO, CA – Governor Jerry Brown signed legislation today that will strengthen state oversight of the debt buying industry and protect consumers from unfair debt collection practices. SB 233, authored by Senator Mark Leno, requires debt buyers to provide consumers and the courts with documentation to prove that a debt is actually owed.

“There’s been an explosion of shady debt collection tactics in recent years that have triggered a record number of complaints from consumers,” said Suzanne Martindale, staff attorney for Consumers, the policy and advocacy arm of Consumer Reports. “Too many consumers are harassed for debts that they have already paid off or that don’t even belong to them. This new law will help protect consumers by making debt buyers prove they have a legitimate claim when they try to collect past debt.”

Tens of thousands of Californians are contacted every year by debt buyers they have never done business with, for debts that may be old or in an amount that doesn’t match the consumer’s memory or records. The debt may even be owed by someone else or the result of identity theft. Consumers Union’s 2011 report issued with the East Bay Community Law Center detailed how debt buyers are filing an increasing number of lawsuits against consumers even though often they don’t have proof to back up their claims.

Read more…

Feds enforcing anti-harassment rules against banks, other creditors, closing debt-collection law gap

By Martha Neil, from ABAJournal.com

For decades, federal law has protected consumers from being harassed by debt collectors, including law firms.

But there was one big loophole in the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act: It doesn’t apply to the actual debtors, such as banks with credit card operations, only the third parties that collect delinquent debt for them.

Now the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is stepping up to deal with that enforcement gap, reports Bloomberg. In addition to reviewing lenders’ collection practices and potentially fining them, the CFPB also is looking at discriminatory auto lending practices, overdraft fees and payday loans.

“It doesn’t matter who is collecting the debt–unfair, deceptive or abusive practices are illegal,” said Richard Cordray, the director of the CFPB, in a statement e-mailed to the news agency.

Leslie Cohen Law 5k Raised $7,500 to Support Public Counsel’s Debtor Assistance Project (“DAP”)

Hi everyone,

I wanted to recognize and give a big thank you to Leslie Cohen for sponsoring a very fun and successful LCL 5K!

This year, the LCL 5K raised $7,500 to support Public Counsel’s Debtor Assistance Project (“DAP”).

As you know, the DAP provides assistance to over 4,000 individuals and families every year by representing them in Chapter 7 cases, defending pro se litigants against non-meritorious adversary proceedings, providing counsel and advice to debtors at monthly reaffirmation hearings in both Los Angeles and Woodland Hills, and providing desperately needed assistance at the Los Angeles Self Help Desk and Pro Se Clinic.

However, providing these extensive services to pro se litigants would not be possible without your support. A link to the article about the LCL 5K is on our website at: http://www.publiccounsel.org/stories?id=0115. I look forward to seeing everyone at next year’s LCL 5K.

Thank you again Leslie!

Warmest regards,
Maggie

Magdalena Reyes Bordeaux
Supervising Attorney
Public Counsel
Consumer Law Project &
Debtor Assistance Project

Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP Hired In Calif. Ch. 9 Cases After Winston & Strawn LLP Disqualified

National Public Finance Guarantee Corp. has retained Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP to represent it in the Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings of San Bernardino and Stockton, Calif., after a judge disqualified Winston & Strawn LLP from representing the bond insurer in the San Bernardino matter, it said Friday.

Bankruptcy e-Bulletin – Update from the State Bar Business Law Section’s INSOLVENCY LAW COMMITTEE

June 19, 2013

Dear constituency list members of the Insolvency Law Committee (“ILC”), the following is a legislative summary of interest to insolvency practitioners and professionals:

California Assembly Bill AB 929 became effective on January 1, 2013, increasing personal property exemptions under California Code of Civil Procedure (“CCP”) sections 703 and 704 and impacting the homestead exemption as set forth below:

Under AB 182 (2003), a bill developed through coordination between the California Law Revision Commission and the Insolvency Law Committee, the process of increasing exemptions as to personal property under CCP §703.140, the so-called “wild card” set of exemptions, was removed from the political process through application of a first-of-its kind automatic triennial cost-of-living adjustment set by the annual California Consumer Price Index to keep pace with inflation. See CCP §703.150. Increases in the homestead exemption in real property were not part of this automatic adjustment process.

AB 929, a bill sponsored by Assemblyman Bob Wieckowski, a long-time member of the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys, finally ties the homestead exemption to inflation and the increasing cost of home ownership. On April 1, 2013 (and every three years thereafter) the Judicial Council is required to submit adjusted homestead exemptions based on the change in the annual California Consumer Price Index to the Legislature.

AB 929 modifies CCP §704.730 so that the maximum income threshold is increased (from $15,000 to $25,000 if single and from $20,000 to $35,000 if married) for persons 55+ years of age to be eligible for the $175,000 homestead exemption.

AB 929 also revises and recasts the “wild card” set of exemptions so that their language generally mirrors the corresponding CCP section 704 “homestead” set of exemptions for various assets and increases the dollar amount of the exemption for a debtor’s interest in motor vehicles, household furnishings, jewelry, and tools/professional equipment. The amounts under CCP 703.140(b) were further adjusted effective April 1, 2013 based on the change in the annual Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the most recent three-year period. The following lists certain dollar amounts of exemptions under CCP 703.140(b):

Property
Old Amount
New Amount (for Petitions filed from 1/1/13 – 3/31/13)
New Amount (for Petitions filed on or after 4/1/13

Homestead (CCP §703.140(b)(1))
$22,075
$24,060
$25,575

Motor Vehicles (CCP §703.140(b)(2))
$3,525
$4,800
$5,100

Household Items, animals, crops, musical instruments (CCP §703.140(b)(3))
$550
$600
$650

Jewelry (CCP §703.140(b)(4))
$1,425
$1,425 (no change)
$1,525

Wildcard (CCP §703.140(b)(5))
$1,175
$1,280
$1,350

Tools of Trade ((CCP §703.140(b)(6))
$2,200
$7,175
$7,625

Life Insurance (CCP §703.140(b)(8))
$11,800
$12,860
$13,675

Personal Injury ((CCP §703.140(b)(11)(D))
$22,075
$24,060
$25,575

Finally, certain other changes were made to CCP § 703.140. First, under CCP §703.140(b)(11)(D), the exclusion for pain, suffering and actual pecuniary loss for the personal injury exemption is eliminated. Second, under CCP §703.140(b)(2), the motor vehicle exemption is expanded to include one or more vehicles (i.e. previously only one vehicle could be exempted).

These materials were prepared by Dore Law, in San Francisco, California. Editorial contributions were provided by ILC member Monique Jewett-Brewster, of Bryan Cave, LLP, in San Francisco, California and ILC Advisor Robert G. Harris of Binder & Malter, LLP in Santa Clara, California.

Thank you for your continued support of the Committee.

Best regards,

Insolvency Law Committee

The Insolvency Law Committee of the Business Law Section of the California State Bar provides a forum for interested bankruptcy practitioners to act for the benefit of all lawyers in the areas of legislation, education and promoting efficiency of practice. For more information about the Business Law Standing Committees, please see the standing committees web page.

These periodic e-mails are being sent to you because you expressed interest in receiving updates from the Insolvency Law Committee of the State Bar of California’s Business Law Section. As a Section member, if you would also like to sign up to receive e-bulletins from other standing committees, simply click HERE and follow the instructions for updating your e-bulletin subscriptions in My State Bar Profile. If you have any difficulty or need assistance, please feel free to contact John Buelter. If you are not a member, or know of friends or colleagues who might wish to join the Section to receive e-bulletins such as this, please click HERE to join online.

To keep up-to-date on the latest news, case and legislative updates, as well as events from the Business Law Section and other Sections of the State Bar of California as well as the California Young Lawyers Association (CYLA), you can follow them on Facebook or add their Twitter feed.

BLOOMBERG NEWS Bank awarded bonuses for foreclosures, lawsuit says By Hugh Son and David McLaughlin

BLOOMBERG NEWS JUNE 15, 2013 NEW YORK — Bank of America Corp. rewarded staff with cash bonuses and gift cards for meeting quotas tied to sending distressed homeowners into foreclosure, former employees say in court documents.

Mortgage workers falsified records and were told to delay loan-assistance applications by requesting paperwork that the second-biggest US lender had already received, according to statements from former employees filed last week in federal court in Boston.

The lender improperly disqualified applicants to the Home Affordable Modification Program, according to a May 23 statement from Simone Gordon, a loss-mitigation specialist who left the company in 2012.

‘‘We were regularly drilled that it was our job to maximize fees for the bank by fostering and extending delay of the HAMP modification process by any means we could,’’ Gordon said. Managers instructed staff to ‘‘delay modifications by telling homeowners who called in that their documents were ‘under review,’ when in fact, there had been no review,’’ she said.

The bank has denied the plaintiffs’ allegations.

Read more…

Congratulations to Maggie Bordeaux

HENRY SOMMER SCHOLARSHIPA scholarship for a legal aid attorney  in recognition of the extraordinary contributions to NACBA by President Emeritus Henry J. Sommer, who served on NACBA’s Board from 1992 to 2011 and as President from 2005 to 2008.

2013 Recipient: Magdalena Bordeaux (CA)

6/13/13 – Night of Excellence, Charity Networking Event

TMA So. Cal.’s Chapter 11 Annual NIGHT OF EXCELLENCE Charity Networking Event

Thursday, June 13, 2013 at 6:00 p.m.

Petersen Automotive Museum

 

Please join us at RMA Southern California 11th Annual Night of Excellence Charity Networking Event.

This is the single largest networking event of its kind in our market, with an incredible venue, fine cuisine, premium wine tasting, and exciting prizes combining to provide exceptional ambiance for a memorable and productive night.

Register early at www.turnaround.org

We anticipate sell out attendance

Early Registration: $115 Members or $130 Non Members

Late Registration: $135 Members or $150 Non Members

Thank you for volunteering with Public Counsel’s Debtor Assistance Project!

Hi,

Thank you for volunteering with Public Counsel’s Debtor Assistance Project! Your pro bono participation makes it possible to provide legal assistance, guidance and representation to over 4,000 individuals and families every year at the Los Angeles Self-Help desk, Chapter 7 pro se clinics, reaffirmation hearings in Los Angeles and Woodland Hills, and pro bono placement of Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases and adversary proceedings.

THANK YOU!

We recently worked collaboratively with the United States Bankruptcy Court in producing two educational videos about the Chapter 7 bankruptcy process. We are happy to announce that the first Chapter 7 educational video is now available on our website. It is about 35 minutes long and is a video-taped overview of Part 1 of the presentation we provide clients at our monthly Chapter 7 pro se clinics.

The link to the Chapter 7 Overview video presentation: http://www.publiccounsel.org/video?id=0076

The link is available on Public Counsel’s website under the News Section/videos and is titled “Overview of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy and Alternatives to Bankruptcy.”

This project took several months to coordinate with dedicated staff from the United States Bankruptcy Court and wouldn’t have been possible without their assistance.

We would greatly appreciate your assistance with disseminating this video is to clients, organizations or any programs who could benefit from having this information.

The second video will be available later this summer. We will forward you a link once it becomes available.

Thank you again!

Warmest regards,

Maggie

Magdalena Reyes Bordeaux

Supervising Attorney

Public Counsel

Consumer Law Project &

Debtor Assistance Project

publiccounsel.org