I know I looked into buying a home awhile back and the mortgage office I talked with seemed to think it was doable 2
years post bankruptcy and short sale.
Not exact matches
CEO Jack Griffin's 18 - month redo,
post - Tribune split from its mothership, Tribune Company, in mid-2014 was only the latest twist since Sam Zell took control of the company in late December, 2007, performing a clean sweep of top Tribune management, installing his own people and then entering the famed five -
year bankruptcy from hell (David Carr's 2010 nail - in - the - coffin column: «At Flagging Tribune, Tales of a Bankrupt Culture»).
Whether or not you consider the 73,000 - plus Volts (America's «best - selling plug - in») that Chevy sold over five model
years a success or failure probably depends on which side you were on during the great
post -
bankruptcy / bailout automotive rift.
Barnes & Noble Inc., the target of a $ 1 billion bid from Liberty Media Corp.,
posted a wider fourth - quarter loss from a
year earlier, hurt by
bankruptcy liquidation sales at Borders Group Inc. and investments in digital books.
One of the reasons that the trustee will file what we call a pre
bankruptcy and a
post bankruptcy tax return, that means we'll file a tax return from January 1st of the
year so if you went bankrupt today it would be from January 1st to June 9th.
Posted on the internet in August of 2008 as a comment in a discussion on
bankruptcy, the debtor in this personal
bankruptcy story shared how his small business failed because of his failing to develop a business plan: «I took a business risk 3
years ago and didn't have a plan B.
Two
years ago I wrote a
post on What Constitutes Hardship with a Student Loan in a
Bankruptcy in Canada.
The beginning of the
post refers (without linking) to an earlier
post on the same topic: «Last
year in this blog we reported on a decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit finding that inherited IRAs were not «retirement funds» exempt from claims of creditors in
bankruptcy.»
My search of yesterday's news and blog
postings found only one person who indicated he would testify at yesterday's hearing, Dr. Richard Cordero, a New York lawyer who runs the Web site Judicial-Discipline-Reform.org and who describes himself as having been involved in 11 federal
bankruptcy cases in the last five
years.
This
post will highlight four of Justice Martin's decisions that we have blogged on over the
years, in areas ranging from constitutional and health law, to civil litigation and vexatious litigants, to
bankruptcy law and oil and gas assets, to homicide and sexual assault law.
Yesterday I
posted about the number of religious organizations that filed chapter 11 between 2006 and 2017, and how their filings track fluctuations in consumer
bankruptcy filings during those
years.