Here at Shenwick & Associates, we counsel our
clients to avoid violating any laws and regulations. While our
colleagues of the criminal defense bar may lose work from such advice,
it keeps our disciplinary record
clean, our malpractice insurance premiums low and our clients out of
trouble.
However, that's not always possible when dealing with marijuana, which remains a
Schedule I substance under the federal
Controlled Substances Act (which means that the federal government
considers to have a high potential for abuse, no currently accepted
medical use in treatment in the United States and there is a lack of
accepted safety for use under
medical supervision. In contrast,
23 states and the District of Columbia have enacted medical marijuana laws, and two states (
Colorado and
Washington State) have taxed and regulated marijuana for adult non–medical use. This November,
Oregon,
Alaska and
the District of Columbia will be voting on the adult non–medical use of marijuana.
This fundamental conflict between federal law and state law has had unusual consequences for marijuana entrepreneurs. Due to
an obscure provision of the Internal Revenue Code, marijuana
businesses aren't able to deduct ordinary and necessary business
expenses from their federal taxable income. And despite the issuance of
new, highly restrictive guidelines by
the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network in February on how banks can provide services to marijuana businesses without violating their obligations under
the Bank Secrecy Act, marijuana businesses remain largely dependent on cash.
The latest example of the problems that the conflict between state and
federal law can cause impacts one of main practices–bankruptcy and
creditors' rights (we also have a residential and commercial real estate
practice). In August, a
United States Bankruptcy Judge in Denver dismissed
the Chapter 7 case of Frank and Sarah Arenas. Mr. Arenas is in the
business of wholesale marijuana production and distribution. The UST's
motion to dismiss the case was based on Bankruptcy Judge Tallman's
holding in a prior Chapter
11 Colorado bankruptcy case,
In re Rent-Rite Super Kegs West Ltd.
In reviewing the United States Trustee's motion to dismiss and the
Debtors' motion to convert the case to a case under Chapter 13 of the
Bankruptcy Code, Bankruptcy Judge Tallman held that the Chapter 7
Trustee assigned to the case
couldn't take control of Mr. Arenas' assets or liquidate his inventory
without "directly involving [the Chapter 7 Trustee] in the commission of
federal crimes." Similarly, the Debtors couldn't convert their case to
one under
Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code (which would allow them to pay off
debts over time) because the plan would be funded "from profits of an
ongoing criminal activity under federal law" and involve the trustee in
distribution of funds
derived from violation of the law.
Section 1325(a)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code requires that a bankruptcy
court find that a plan is "proposed in good faith and not by any means
forbidden by law" to be confirmable. Bankruptcy courts in
California and
Oregon have issued similar holdings.
In practice, this means that creditors of marijuana businesses should
avoid involuntary bankruptcy filings against marijuana businesses, but
may look to state law alternatives to bankruptcy, such as foreclosure
under
the Uniform Commercial Code, assignment for the benefit of creditors, composition and receivership.
No comments:
Post a Comment