You have filed Chapter 11 business bankruptcy,
and within the 100-day limit you have
presented a recovery plan to the court. The
plan you
gave included all assets, liabilities,
and business affairs so the creditors could
make
a reasonable assessment about your ability
to repay your debts. The court has polled
the creditors and they have either changed
or accepted it. In most cases, you will
be the “debtor in possession” of
the business and required to run it like
you were the court appointed trustee.
If your business is a corporation, other
than
the investment you made into the company,
your personal assets are not at risk.
If yours is a sole proprietorship, the bankruptcy
proceedings include both your business
and
your personal assets.
What You Need to Know as a Chapter 11 Business
Debtor
As a “debtor in possession,” you
still continue to run the business normally.
However now you must account for all
business property, examine all claims against
the
business and object to those you believe
are invalid. Also the court may force
you to file status reports regularly, as
well
as filing tax returns for the business.
If your business has debts that do not exceed
$2,000,000, the court considers you to
be a “small business debtor.” Your
business is still running and creditors are
not calling every hour on the hour, but your
problems are not over. You must work to make
the business profitable while making all
the payments and filing all the reports the
court has deemed necessary. As “debtor
in possession,” you may use, sell,
or lease property of the company in the ordinary
course of business without prior approval
of the court. When you as a chapter 11 debtor
need operating capital, you can get it from
a lender by giving the lender a court-approved "super
priority" over other unsecured creditors
or a lien on property owned by the business.
This information is only the tip of the
Chapter 11 iceberg, but it should point out
the best course of action is to avoid Chapter
11 business bankruptcy at all costs. It is
not a surefire method for recovery and the
long hours put into saving the business may
be much greater than the long hours you put
into building it. However, your Chapter 11
business does have a chance for survival
and there are countless examples of those
who have done just that.
What
every business owner needs to know about
bankruptcy
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