The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (2005 Bankruptcy Act), also known as the Bankruptcy Reform Act created a new bankruptcy Chapter 15, entitled "Ancillary and Other Cross-Border Cases." Designed to replace Section 304 (which is repealed) of the Bankruptcy Code, Chapter 15 incorporates into United States bankruptcy law the Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency developed by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law.
Chapter 15 serves as a statutory framework designed to facilitate international cooperation in cases of transnational insolvency that involve a foreign debtor. For purposes of this Chapter, a foreign debtor is generally defined as an entity (other than an individual) that is the subject of an insolvency or bankruptcy proceeding in a country other than the United States having tangible property or business operations located within the territorial jurisdiction of the U.S. courts. Consequently, a foreign debtor is most likely to be a large multinational business. Specifically excluded from filing under Chapter 15, however, are foreign banks that have a branch or agency in the United States.
Chapter 15 is applicable when:
To seek U.S. court recognition of a foreign proceeding (and any relief available as a result of such recognition), a foreign representative must file a petition. The petition must be accompanied by evidence of the existence of the foreign proceeding and of the representative's appointment. At the foreign representative's request, if relief is urgently needed to protect the debtor's assets or the creditors' interests, the court may grant provisional relief before ruling on the petition for recognition.
Once a hearing on the petition is held, the U.S. court recognizes the foreign proceeding. Under Section 304, the courts were permitted the authority to grant such recognition only after assurance there would be no potential prejudice to U.S. creditors or preferential distribution of the debtor's property. Such is not the case under Chapter 15; recognition of a legitimate petition accompanied by the required evidence mentioned above is virtually automatic. The court can refuse to recognize a petition only if doing so would be contrary to U.S. public policy or in conflict with a treaty to which the United States is a party.
Foreign proceedings are recognized as "foreign main proceedings" if they involve a proceeding in a foreign country where the foreign debtor has its main place of business. If the foreign proceeding involves a foreign country where the foreign debtor carries out non-transitory economic activity but does not have its main place of business, the proceeding is classified as a "foreign nonmain proceeding."
Once the petition has been granted recognition, the foreign representative can sue or be sued in U.S. courts, and may apply for appropriate relief. In foreign main proceedings, this relief shall automatically include a stay on actions against the debtor's U. S. assets, provisions to provide for the adequate protection of the interests of secured creditors, and limits on the use, sale, or lease of the debtor's property located within the territorial jurisdiction of the U. S. courts.
Once the U.S. court recognizes a foreign proceeding (main or nonmain), it may (at the request of the foreign representative) grant appropriate relief, including: