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By Ed Boltz, 5 August, 2014

N.C. Ct. of App.: Garren v. Watts- Sufficiency of Description of Real Property

Summary: A quit claim deed, recorded with the Buncombe Register of Deeds on May 14, 2009, was blank as to the legal description and only included the handwritten entry “Parcel #960704498200000.”. On April 29, 2010, a “Affidavit of Correction” was recorded including the legal metes and bounds description. The Court of Appeals held that the quit claim deed was void as it inadequately described the property, holding that a tax PIN alone was insufficient. The Court distinguished Fisher v. Town of Nags Head, ___ N.C. App.
By Ed Boltz, 5 August, 2014

N.C. Ct. of App.: Iris Enterprises v. Five Wins- Foreclosure Trustee Bound by Judicial Determination of Claim Balance

Summary: Following failed Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Five Wins obtained a declaratory judgment against Iris finding that Iris owed $894,711.24 to redeem real property from foreclosure. After Five Wins bid $875,000.00 for the properties, WA Ventures made a successful upset bid at the subsequent foreclosure in the amount of $918,750.00 and then assigned the bid to Five Wins.
By Ed Boltz, 5 August, 2014

N.C. S. Ct.: DocRX v. EMI - Full Faith and Credit Precludes Attack on Foreign Judgment based on Intrinsic Fraud

Summary: The North Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the earlier opinion from the Court of Appeals that “the defenses preserved under North Carolina’s UEFJA are limited by the Full Faith and Credit Clause to those defenses which are directed to the validity and enforcement of a foreign judgment.” For a copy of the opinion, please see: DocRX v.
By Ed Boltz, 5 August, 2014

4th Circuit: National Heritage Foundation v. Highbourne Foundation- Non-Debtor Release of Liability Invalid

Summary: A provision of the Chapter 11 plan for National Heritage Foundation (“NHF”) provided that its officers, directors, and employees, the Unsecured Creditor Committee, and their successors and assigns (the “Released Parties”) were released from liability for any acts or omissions relating to NHF. Relying on Class Five Nevada Claimants v. Dow Corning Corp. (In re Dow Corning Corp.), 280 F.3d 648 (6th Cir. 2002), the Fourth Circuit considered (and found the plan of NHF lacking) the following factors in determining the valid of a third-party release: 1.
By Ed Boltz, 5 August, 2014

N.C. S. Ct.: Dallaire v. Bank of America- No Fiduciary Duty between Borrower and Lender

Summary: The Dallaire purchased their home in 1998 for $173,660.00. They filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the Middle District of North Carolina, case number 05-53774, on October 13, 2005, and at that time had three mortgages against the property- the first and second mortgages were both held by Bank of America, in the amounts of $138,900 and $25,000, respectively, and a lien for a business loan to BB&T, in the amount of $241,449.37. The Dallaires received a discharge and did not reaffirm any of the three obligations.
By Ed Boltz, 1 August, 2014

Bankr. E.D.N.C.: In re Morris- Chapter 13 Plan Length Cannot Exceed 60 Months from Confirmation

Summary: Confirmation of the Debtor’s Chapter 13 plan was delayed for 15 months due to an adversary proceeding to cram-down a residential mortgage held by JPMorgan Chase. Following dismissal of the adversary proceeding, the Debtor proposed a plan that would have run for 60 months from confirmation. Because that plan would have run for a total of 75 months from the first §341 Meeting of Creditors, the Trustee objected. Finding that this issue had already been addressed by the 4th Circuit in West v. Costen, 826 F.2d 1376, 1378 (4th Cir.
By Ed Boltz, 29 July, 2014

W.D.N.C.: Legal Newsline v. Garlock Sealing Technology- Requirements for Confidentiality in Sealing of Pleadings and Hearings

Summary: In the bankruptcy of Garlock Sealing Technology, allegations were raised that national counsel for mesothelioma victims had engaged in fraud, deceit, and other activities prohibited by the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, in settling their clients’ claims. After the bankruptcy judge ordered the hearing closed, Legal Newsline filed an emergency motion to keep the hearing at which these issues were raised open to the media and the public. Following Media General Operations, Inc. v.
By Ed Boltz, 29 July, 2014

4th Cir.: In re Railworks Corp- Initial Transferee for Preference Recovery Cannot Be A Mere Conduit

Summary: The Chapter 11 Trustee sought to avoid and recover as preference, premium payments that Railworks transferred made to CPG within 90 days of filing bankruptcy, which later transferred them to TIG, which provided various insurance coverage to Railworks. While CPG had physical control over the transfers it received, it held the funds in trust for TIG. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C.
By Ed Boltz, 15 July, 2014

4th Circuit: Olson v. Midland Funding- FDCPA Statute of Limitations, Non-collection Notices, and Unsucessful Debt Collection Suits

Olson raised FDCPA claims in federal court against Midland, which had brought a debt collection action in state court. These claims were asserted within a year of when Olson first appeared in the state court debt collection action, but more than a year after the alleged violations.
By Ed Boltz, 6 June, 2014

Bankr. W.D.N.C.: In re Crawford- Definition of Dependent for Exemptions

Summary: The Debtor’s great uncle Jennings had, in his waning years, received care and assistance from the Debtor and transferred his Rock Hill, S.C. home to her. When she filed bankruptcy, the Debtor asserted that Jennings was her dependent and claimed the property as exempt under N.C.G.S. § 1C-1601(a)(1).

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