Many victims of discrimination must file bankruptcy if they cannot obtain work.
Those bankruptcy filings can be dangerous. The schedule of assets and liabilities presumes the new debtor will disclose a wrongful termination lawsuit as an “asset.” Often, that does not occur.
The failure to disclose a potential lawsuit can occur for any number of reasons: (1) the debtor not understanding that a contingent legal claim, even if not yet pursued in court, is an “asset”; (2) believing a discrimination lawsuit must be filed in court before it becomes an asset for a bankruptcy; (3) relying upon a hurried bankruptcy paralegal to fill out the forms; and (4) not even knowing a discrimination case exists at the time of the bankruptcy filing.
Why does the schedule matter so much? Because, legally, filing bankruptcy creates an estate. The assets of the estate, including any wrongful termination claims, no longer belong to the debtor. They are property of the estate, and they include “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1).
See the issue yet? Yep, it’s one of standing to sue. Filing a wrongful termination suit where the lawsuit was not first disclosed in bankruptcy can result in a legal challenge by the former employer for lack of standing to sue.
So, what should experienced Plaintiff’s counsel do if he/she learns that a victim of employment discrimination has filed bankruptcy?
- If the bankruptcy is still ongoing, check the bankruptcy schedules to see whether the potential lawsuit has been disclosed. If not, amend the schedule to include the lawsuit and surrounding information. Then, with the cooperation of the Bankruptcy Trustee, file the discrimination lawsuit.
- If the bankruptcy already has been discharged, check the bankruptcy schedules to see whether the discrimination claim was disclosed in the first place.
- If it was, then the bankruptcy Trustee has chosen to “abandon” the discrimination claim and the individual regains standing to file the lawsuit. 11 U.S.C. §554(c); Auday v. Wet Seal Retail, Inc., 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 22180 (6th Cir. Tenn. 2012).
- If the discrimination claim was not disclosed in bankruptcy, consider reopening the bankruptcy estate and making the claim known. The Trustee may choose to abandon it, or may choose to pursue it. If the Trustee makes known its intention to abandon, the plaintiff may fairly argue she has standing. If the Trustee pursues the claim, the Trustee will likely cooperate with the filing of a discrimination suit in order to recover proceeds for creditors. Technically, the Trustee becomes the “Real Party in Interest” in this situation, but the lawsuit is preserved and any recovery beyond the bankruptcy debt will revert to the debtor.
In summary, it pays to closely evaluate the bankruptcy schedule before filing a discrimination lawsuit. Do not assume the bankruptcy attorney listed a discrimination lawsuit, or that the client’s ignorance of bankruptcy schedules will be a safeguard. Instead, be proactive, fixing the schedule where necessary, even if the bankruptcy has already been discharged.