In re: Wettach

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Wettach was a partner at theTitus law firm, which rented space from Trizec under a long-term lease. After the firm's 1999 dissolution, Trizec filed suit against Titus’s former partners for unpaid rent. The Pennsylvania court found the partners jointly and severally liable for more than $2,700,000. Before that court entered final judgment Wettach filed a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, listing $3,551,500 in assets, including $2,951,500 in personal property, retirement accounts, insurance, and a checking account held by the entireties with his wife. Wettach claimed all of this property as exempt, primarily relying on the exemption for property held by the entireties, 11 U.S.C. 522(b)(1), (3)(B). Wettach joined another law firm and earned wages that the firm directly deposited into the entireties account. The Trustee claimed that these deposits constituted recoverable fraudulent transfers. Before the bankruptcy court could rule, the case was reassigned. The parties consented to the court issuing findings without a new trial. The court ruled in favor of the Trustee, awarding $428,868.12, plus $37,139.01 in interest. The district court and Third Circuit affirmed, rejecting challenges to allocation of the burdens of persuasion and production on the fraudulent transfer claims; evidentiary findings; and a legal determination that the deposit of wages into an account held by the entireties constituted “transfer” of an “asset” under Pennsylvania state law. View "In re: Wettach" on Justia Law