Chapter 15 Does Not Permit Relief Manifestly Contrary to U.S. Public...
By: Malerie Ma
St. John’s University Law Student
American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review Staff
Applying the “public policy” exception of Chapter 15, the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York refused to enforce a German bankruptcy order that would have allowed the foreign representative[1] access to a chapter 15 debtor’s emails stored in the United States in In re Toft.[2] This case represents one of the first decisions to explore the outer boundaries of the public policy exception in section 1506 of the Bankruptcy Code. This chapter 15 proceeding was brought pursuant to a German case, the foreign main proceeding,[3] in which the foreign representative was granted a “Mail Interception Order” on an ex parte basis. The German “Mail Interception Order,” which was also recognized by the English courts,[4] allowed the foreign representative to, among other things, intercept the debtor’s postal and electronic mail without giving notice to the debtor, Dr. Toft.[5] The Bankruptcy Court refused to grant comity to the decision of the German Court because the relief sought was “manifestly contrary” to U.S. public policy.[6]
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