By Veronica D. Brown-Moseley, Boleman Law Firm, P.C. (Virginia Beach, VA) Many things can, and often do, change between the time debtors file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition and the end of their case. A variety of circumstances impact a debtor’s ability to afford their Chapter 13 plan payments, including but not limited to: medical problems, disability, loss of employment,...
Critical Case Comment
Print This Article
Link to Post:
By Henry E. Hildebrand, III, Chapter 13 Trustee for the Middle District of Tennessee (Nashville)
Information gleaned from questions included on a debtor’s counsel’s questionnaire for a potential client can be protected by the attorney-client privilege and not subject to discovery by an opposing party.
In re Lori Stickle, 2016 WL 417047 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. February 2, 2016) (Hyman)
Case Summary
Lori Stickle filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition and faced a bitter dispute with beneficiaries of two Wasik Family Trusts for which she served as a fiduciary. As a . . .
It looks like you are not signed in or registered! This content is only available to members.
Or Sign In Below:
Related Articles
When Life Backs Chapter 13 Debtors Into A Corner, § 1329 May Provide A Way Out Of Trouble And A Shorter Path To Discharge
Critical Case Comment – 3002.1 and Reverse Mortgages
Small Business Chapter 11 Update, Where Are We Eight Months In?
Chapter 13 Practice in the Time of COVID-19
How My Law Firm Learned to Stop Leaving Money on the Table Part 4 – Making Willful Stay Violations Pay Off
May the Chapter 13 Trustee Keep Fees Paid Before Dismissal?
Critical Case Comment – But It’s a GOLF CART!
Lawyers are People Too: An Interview with Aki Koyama, Staff Attorney to Chapter 13 Standing Trustee Kathy Dockery
Looking Beyond Taggart: Is the Contempt Standard for a Stay Violation the Same as for a Discharge Injunction Violation?
From the Editor