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Pre-Bankruptcy Planning: What's Permitted and What Will Get You in Trouble
Pre-Bankruptcy Planning: What's Permitted and What Will
Get You in Trouble By James (Jim) Shenwick, Esq. | jshenwick@gmail.com |
917-363-3391 | Bankruptcy Attorney | Scarsdale, NY
One of the most common questions I get from clients headed
toward bankruptcy is: "Can I give my house to my sister before I
file?" or "Can I sell my car to my brother for $1,000?"
The short answer: Pre-bankruptcy planning is legal.
Fraudulent transfers are not. The line between the two is where most people
get into trouble.
What the Bankruptcy Code Permits
Debtors may engage in pre-bankruptcy planning. Converting
non-exempt assets into exempt ones — paying down a mortgage on a homestead,
funding an exempt retirement account, purchasing tools of the trade — are
recognized strategies courts have upheld.
What the Code prohibits is transferring property for
nothing, or for far less than it is worth, to put it beyond creditors' reach.
Chapter 7 Trustees have powerful avoidance tools to reverse exactly those
moves.
Under 11 U.S.C. § 548, a Trustee can avoid transfers made
within two years of filing if the debtor received less than reasonably
equivalent value while insolvent. State fraudulent transfer law, incorporated
through 11 U.S.C. § 544(b), can extend that look-back period to four to six
years, depending on the state.
A Recent Case That Draws the Line
In re Albrecht, from the United States Bankruptcy
Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, illustrates precisely where
pre-bankruptcy planning crosses into fraudulent transfer territory.
The Facts
Lucas Albrecht was insolvent and approaching a Chapter 7
filing. He co-owned a Raleigh home valued at $420,000 with his domestic
partner, Kirsten Moore, held as joint tenants. His half-interest was exposed to
his individual creditors.
Under North Carolina law, property held as tenants by the
entirety — available only to married couples — is shielded from the individual
debts of either spouse. Albrecht and Moore married. The following day, they
re-deeded the property from joint tenancy to tenancy by the entirety. Weeks
later, Albrecht filed Chapter 7.
The Chapter 7 Trustee moved to void the transaction. The
court agreed — on two independent grounds.
Ground One: Constructive Fraudulent Transfer
Constructive fraud requires no proof of bad intent. The
Trustee must establish only:
1.
A transfer occurred;
2.
The debtor was insolvent; and
3.
The debtor received less than reasonably
equivalent value.
The court held the transfer was constructively fraudulent as
a matter of law.
Ground Two: Actual Fraudulent Transfer
The court also found actual fraudulent intent — that
Albrecht acted with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. Because
debtors rarely document that intent, courts apply the "badges of
fraud" analysis.
The badges present here:- Transfer
to an insider — a spouse married one day before the re-deeding
- Debtor
retained possession and control after the transfer
- Substantially
all non-exempt assets were transferred
- Debtor
was insolvent at the time of transfer
- Less
than reasonably equivalent value was received
What This Means for Pre-Bankruptcy Planning
Legitimate pre-bankruptcy planning exists and is
well-established. Paying down a mortgage, contributing to a 401(k), or
purchasing exempt personal property can be entirely appropriate — provided it
is done in good faith, without actual intent to defraud, and as far in
advance of filing as possible. Timing matters enormously.
What is not permitted:- Gifting
property to a family member or friend
- Selling
an asset to an insider at a steep discount
- Restructuring
asset ownership to put it beyond creditor reach on the eve of bankruptcy,
without providing reasonably equivalent value to the estate in return
Albrecht is particularly instructive because it
involved a legally recognized ownership form — tenancy by the entirety — that
would have been entirely valid had it predated the financial distress. The
problem was timing and purpose: the conversion occurred the day after the
wedding, weeks before filing, while Albrecht was already insolvent, and the
sole purpose was to remove the asset from creditor reach.
The Trustee's Avoidance Powers Are Broad
Chapter 7 Trustees use their avoidance powers routinely. The
federal look-back window is two years under § 548. State fraudulent transfer
statutes — available to Trustees through § 544(b) — reach back up to six years.
Trustees scrutinize real property transfers, deed changes, and asset
dispositions made in the period leading up to a filing.
Bottom Line
Pre-bankruptcy planning is a legitimate part of bankruptcy
practice. But it must be done carefully and timed properly, with full
understanding of the avoidance rules. Any transfer of significant value — to a
family member, a friend, or a third party at below-market price — made while
the debtor is insolvent and on the eve of bankruptcy is a target. A legal
structure (a deed, a sale, even a marriage) does not insulate the transaction.
James (Jim) Shenwick is a bankruptcy attorney in New York
representing individuals and businesses in Chapter 7 and Chapter 11
proceedings, creditor/debtor disputes, and bankruptcy litigation.
Jim Shenwick, Esq. | 917-363-3391 | jshenwick@gmail.com
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