Arguments For and Against Bankruptcy Shield Heard in GM Case
A federal bankruptcy judge this week heard arguments from consumers who are suing General Motors, saying their cars dropped in value because of a defect with its ignition switches.
Attorneys for GM and several groups of plaintiffs argued before Judge Robert Gerber in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York on Tuesday and Wednesday. Gerber presided over GM’s swift bankruptcy sale in 2009. GM says it is protected by a bankruptcy shield, a set of rules that applies to companies that emerge from bankruptcy protection by buying good assets and leaving behind debt and bad assets.
The plaintiffs’ attorneys argue that GM shouldn’t get that protection because the company engaged in fraud before and after the sale. They want GM to pay for the lost resale value of the plaintiffs’ cars and for loaner vehicles and repairs.
Large sums are at stake: General Motors Co., which emerged from bankruptcy in 2009, is now sitting on about $25 billion in cash. If the plaintiffs lose, they can only seek money from the pre-bankruptcy “old GM,” which isn’t making money and has many other creditors.
GM’s attorneys say the bankruptcy shield still applies and that the judge can’t make changes and exceptions to its protections.
The plaintiffs say they were denied their constitutional rights because GM concealed the problem, denying them a voice in the bankruptcy proceedings and the sale.
While Gerber seemed skeptical of some aspects of the plaintiffs’ case, he said he would be sympathetic if he were convinced that some consumers were denied their rights. He didn’t say when he will make a ruling.
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