Establishing the Requirements Necessary in order to Enforce Setoff i...
By: Maria Ehlinger
St. John’s Law Student
American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review Staff
Affirming the ruling in the Unites States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Arizona, The United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Ninth Circuit, in In re RCS Capital Development, LLC, held that a debtor may setoff pre-petition claims against post-petition obligations that it owes because section 558 of the Bankruptcy Code does not contain any restrictive language confining setoffs to pre-petition obligation.[1] The court found that the setoff was valid because all of the requirements of section 558 were met. Specifically, the court found that it was a valid setoff under Nevada law because there was mutuality of claims, debts, and parties, and each party had an enforceable debt against the other.[2] The issue arose after ABC Developmental Learning Centers (U.S.A.), Inc. (“ABC”) filed a proof of claim in the jointly administered chapter 11 bankruptcy cases of RCS Capital Development, LLC (“RCS”) and ACCP LLC (“ACCP”). ABC’s claim was based on an ongoing Nevada lawsuit against ACCP and RCS.[3] RCS objected to ABC’s proof of claim and then moved for summary judgment, arguing that RCS was entitled to set off the post-petition debt it owed to ABC, arising out of the Nevada action, against a debt ABC owed to RCS arising from a separate pre-petition Arizona judgment for breach of contract.[4] The bankruptcy court granted RCS’s motion, finding that the requirements for setoff were met.[5] On appeal, the BAP affirmed the bankruptcy court and held that the setoff was valid.[6]
[more]- Feeds Categories:
