Illinois debtor prisons
By Bob Markoff
Commercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy,
February 2012
The author has been a collection attorney in Illinois for 35 years specializing in enforcing judgments, and has never heard of any consumer sentenced to jail for not paying a bill. There are likely no consumers in an Illinois jail on such a charge. Then why all the media noise about debtor prisons?
The use of receiverships for managing troubled assets
By Samuel H. Levine
Commercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy,
December 2010
Receiverships are something that all lenders should consider in managing distressed real estate. Lenders should also consider creative ways for receivers to manage distressed assets to meet the needs of a particular asset.
When is a credit card agreement an oral contract? Portfolio Acquisitions LLC v. Feltman
By Hon. Daniel T. Gillespie & Kathilynne Grotelueschen
Civil Practice and Procedure,
November 2009
In Illinois, where the statute of limitations is ten years for a written contract and five years for an oral contract, one might well think that a credit card agreement would qualify as a written contract because credit cards are generally issued pursuant to a written card member agreement.
Renegotiating debt? Beware of tax traps
By Steven W. Swibel
Commercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy,
August 2009
In a non-bankruptcy, noninsolvency context, debtors and creditors are often surprised that a debt modification that does not appear to reduce principal or the effective interest rate may nevertheless result in adverse tax consequences.
Renegotiating debt? Tax traps for creditors
By Steven W. Swibel
Corporate Law Departments,
June 2009
Tax consequences of debt modification are not only a debtor’s concern. Creditors are often surprised that debt modification can result in unanticipated adverse tax consequences.
Loan Modification Agreement
Corporate Law Departments,
February 2009
The following sample Loan Modification Agreement has been prepared for educational and information purposes only.
Safeguarding your life savings from future creditors
By Martin P. Ryan
Corporate Law Departments,
March 2005
Protecting assets from the claims of creditors has begun to assume a more prominent role in estate and financial planning due to the increasingly litigious nature of society.
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