Real Estate Bankruptcy
by: Sajjad Ahmad
Although real estate bankruptcy cases no longer dominate the bankruptcy
courts' dockets as they did in the early nineties, but they continue
to be filed with great frequency in UK. At its essence, the real
estate bankruptcy is a two party dispute between mortgagee and mortgagor.
Real estate bankruptcy cases are typically filed after a foreclosure
sale has been set. Upon learning of the bankruptcy filing, a secured
creditor has a number of available options, all or some of which
should be exercised, depending on the facts of the case, to maximize
loan recovery.
A lender can ask the court to dismiss the
bankruptcy case as a "bad
faith" filing. A creditor asserting bad faith must prove the
subjective bad faith of the debtor and that any reorganization by
the debtor is objectively futile. For subjective bad faith, the court
will examine whether the debtor invoked the protections of the Bankruptcy
Code without either the intention or ability to reorganize its financial
affairs. To determine objective futility, the court will examine
whether there is indeed a "going concern" to preserve and
whether there is any realistic chance for the debtor to reorganize.
Most courts require a very strong showing to dismiss a case for bad
faith at the outset of a case.
Under the Bankruptcy Code a motion for relief from stay will also
be granted where the secured creditor can prove that there is no
equity in the real property over and above the secured claims, and
that the property is not necessary to the debtor's effective reorganization.
This basis for relief is typically alleged as an alternative to bad
faith, in the same motion. Almost all controversies surround the
value of the real property, making the expert report and testimony
of a licensed real estate appraiser essential to the successful prosecution
of a motion for relief from the automatic stay on these grounds.
The same factors relied upon to support objective futility in the
bad faith filing analysis are used to establish that the property
is not necessary to an effective reorganization.
An alternate ground for relief from the automatic
stay is lack of adequate protection of the secured creditor's interest
in the property.
For example, if the real property is deteriorating in value and the
lender is not receiving post-petition payments, the lender's security
interest in the property is not adequately protected. A creditor
holding a properly perfected assignment of rents has a lien on "cash
collateral" under the Bankruptcy Code. If the assignment of
rents was properly perfected pre-petition, it usually attaches to
the post-petition rents generated by the debtor's real property.
A debtor may not use cash collateral without either a court order
or the consent of the secured creditor. While it is common in nonsingle
asset realty cases for a debtor to negotiate a cash collateral agreement
with the secured creditor before filing for bankruptcy, in single
asset real estate cases, which are typically filed at the eleventh
hour for the express purpose of stopping a foreclosure, such negotiations
are virtually nonexistent.
Unless, within the first day or two of the case, the debtor requests
a cash collateral agreement with the lender, or files a motion with
the court to authorize the debtor's use of post-petition rents, a
lender should immediately advise the debtor in writing that it may
not use cash collateral absent an agreement. If an agreement is not
reached, the debtor will usually petition the court for authorization
on an emergency basis. The lender can also petition the court to
deny authorization on the basis that the debtor lacks the ability
to adequately protect its interests in the rents. In the final analysis,
most secured creditors share the same objective when faced with a
real estate case: to extract their collateral, including rents, from
the bankruptcy as quickly and inexpensively as possible.
Mortgage
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