Home Cookin'
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- May 26, 2009
- Messages
- 9,715
Re: Bought boat, paid for it, dealer files for bankruptcy
11 USC ?101 (10) Creditor = entity with a claim; 101(5) claim= (A) right to payment, , or (B) right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if breach gives rise to right to payment, both including unliquidated, contingent, unmatured or disputed claims. Right to equitable relief is reduced to money under 11 USC 502(c)(2).
When the case was filed, the debtor (dealer) owed the creditor (buyer) his boat or his money back. You're right, after he has his boat and if there is nothing left for the seller to do, his claim is satisfied and he is no longer a creditor. If the seller has remaining responsibilities, though, such as processing the title/registration, warranty and break-in work, then the buyer still has a claim, although unliquidated, unmatured and contingent, and therefore is still a creditor.
The priority claim for his payment treated like a deposit is found at 11 U.S.C. ?507(a)(7), again satisfied by delivery.
The risk of taking delivery post-petition is found at 11 USC ?549, although he would have an "ordinary course" defense.
That's the general skinny; the details get complicated.
(to the guy who got the boat--don't sweat it).
11 USC ?101 (10) Creditor = entity with a claim; 101(5) claim= (A) right to payment, , or (B) right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if breach gives rise to right to payment, both including unliquidated, contingent, unmatured or disputed claims. Right to equitable relief is reduced to money under 11 USC 502(c)(2).
When the case was filed, the debtor (dealer) owed the creditor (buyer) his boat or his money back. You're right, after he has his boat and if there is nothing left for the seller to do, his claim is satisfied and he is no longer a creditor. If the seller has remaining responsibilities, though, such as processing the title/registration, warranty and break-in work, then the buyer still has a claim, although unliquidated, unmatured and contingent, and therefore is still a creditor.
The priority claim for his payment treated like a deposit is found at 11 U.S.C. ?507(a)(7), again satisfied by delivery.
The risk of taking delivery post-petition is found at 11 USC ?549, although he would have an "ordinary course" defense.
That's the general skinny; the details get complicated.
(to the guy who got the boat--don't sweat it).