The Second Circuit Announces the Standard for Determining Whether th...
By: Raff Ferraioli
St. John’s Law Student
American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review Staff
In In Re Residential Capital, LLC,[1] the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit remanded the case, while preserving appellate jurisdiction,[2] in order to resolve whether the automatic stay applied to non-debtors.[3] Prior to the appeal, the District Court for the Southern District of New York denied the debtors’ motion to stay a lawsuit brought by the Federal Housing and Finance Agency (“FHFA”) against the debtors’ corporate parents and affiliates.[4] In 2011, FHFA brought an action against the debtors and certain of their corporate parents and affiliates, alleging that they made material misstatements concerning mortgage-backed securities purchased by Freddie Mac.[5] While that suit was ongoing, the debtors filed for bankruptcy.[6] Despite the bankruptcy filing, FHFA continued to prosecute its claims against the non-debtor defendants.[7] The district court held that the automatic stay could not extend to non-debtor entities because they were not in bankruptcy, without determining whether the lawsuit against those entities would have immediate adverse economic consequences on the debtors’ estates.[8]On appeal, the Second Circuit remanded the case, instructing the district court to make such a determination.[9]
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