First Chicago Bank & Trust v. Liebowitz, No. 11-2172 (7th Cir. 2011)
Annotate this CaseWhen the debtor voluntarily declared bankruptcy under Chapter 7 its petition was signed only by its president, not a lawyer. The next day the company filed an amended petition signed by a lawyer. Before the filing, the bank had sued debtor for fraud; the suit was automatically stayed, 11 U.S.C. 362(a)(1), so the bank refiled as a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding. The trustee in bankruptcy moved to rescind payments of pre-petition debts that the debtor had made to the bank, on the ground that the payments were voidable preferences because they had been made within 90 days before the filing, 11 U.S.C. 547(b), (f). The parties settled the claim conditional on a determination that the bankruptcy court had had jurisdiction over it. The bank's argument that the signature on the original petition made the proceeding void was rejected by the bankruptcy and district judges. The Seventh Circuit affirmed, finding that the rule was not jurisdictional and that application of relation-back was "obvious."
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