A temporary order in the parties' marital dissolution case directed debtor to pay a portion of the children's medical and daycare expenses and half the cost of a custody evaluation. Those amounts are in the nature of support and are not dischargeable.
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Opinions
United States Courts Opinions (USCOURTS) collection is a collaborative effort between the U.S. Government Publishing Office (GPO) and the Administrative Office of the United States Courts (AOUSC) to provide public access to opinions from selected United States appellate, district, and bankruptcy courts.
The District of Nebraska offers a database of opinions for the years 1997 to current, listed by year and judge. For a more detailed search, enter the keyword or case number in the search box above.
Claim for damages for delay in closing real estate sale was denied because the trustee timely assumed the contract and acted promptly to complete closing. A proof of claim on a stock sale was prima facie valid, with no substantial evidence to rebut it.
The solvent debtor's Chapter 11 plan was not confirmed because, inter alia, it contained inconsistencies regarding impaired claims, it did not comport with a B.A.P. decision in the case, and it did not provide for post-petition interest on claims.
The bankruptcy trustee was entitled to summary judgment on a receivable listed in the debtor's schedules as owed by a related company. The defendant did not provide any evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the debt's validity.
The bankruptcy trustee was entitled to summary judgment on a receivable listed in the debtor's schedules as owed by a related company. The defendant did not provide any evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the debt's validity.
An adversary proceeding as to the ownership of certain tax refunds should be removed to the district court hearing FIRREA claims against the bank receiver, because both cases involve some of the same issues and are governed by non-bankruptcy law.
The court authorized the deed of trust creditor to amend its timely filed proof of claim to add amounts for the costs and expenses of exercising its power of sale, interest on its claim, and real estate tax payments that it advanced on debtors' behalf.
The first lienholder on debtors' residence, holding an unimpaired claim, was allowed to file an amended proof of claim late because the plan provided for unimpaired claims to be paid in full, so the creditor may add fees, advances, etc., if supported.
The court granted a motion to reconsider an order of contempt for failure to turn over property of the estate, finding that the movant had complied with the order and purged the contempt. The court also vacated the potential for monetary sanctions.
A creditor with a U.C.C./§ 546(c) reclamation claim for goods sold to the debtor may pursue that claim even though the debtor's inventory has been sold, because court orders preserved the creditor's potential interest in the inventory's proceeds.