The Various Chapters
Chapter
11, entitled Reorganization, ordinarily is used by
commercial enterprises that desire to continue operating a
business and repay creditors concurrently through a court-approved
plan of reorganization. The chapter 11 debtor has the exclusive
right to file a plan of reorganization for the first 120 days
after the order for relief and must provide creditors with
a disclosure statement containing information adequate to
enable creditors to evaluate the plan. The court ultimately
approves (confirms) or disapproves the plan of reorganization.
Under the confirmed plan, the debtor can reduce its debts
by repaying a portion of its obligations and discharging others.
The debtor can also terminate burdensome contracts and leases,
recover assets, and rescale its operations in order to return
to profitability.
Under chapter 11, the debtor normally goes
through a period of consolidation and emerges with a reduced
debt load and a reorganized business.Chapter 12, entitled
Adjustment of Debts of a Family Farmer with Regular Annual
Income, provides debt relief to family farmers with regular
annual income. The process under chapter 12 is very similar
to that of chapter 13 under which the debtor proposes a plan
to repay debts over a period of time— no more than three
years unless the court approves a longer period, not exceeding
five years. There is also a trustee in every chapter 12 case
whose duties are very similar to those of a chapter 13 trustee.
The chapter 12 trustee’s disbursement of payments to
creditors under a confirmed plan parallels the procedure under
chapter 13. Chapter 12 allows a family farmer to continue
to operate the farm while the plan is being carried out.
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