Case with a court appointed receiver

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Look at Section 543 but also check case law because courts generally grant
the receiver's motion. You need to be prepared to litigate and you should
go in with a lot of evidence laid out in a nice way.
Sincerely,
*Michael Avanesian *
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On Tue, Dec 13, 2016 at 12:06 PM, tuanl@stevelopezlaw.com [cdcbaa] wrote:
>
>
> Dear List,
>
> I have an interesting PC. PC was sued in state court to abate a nuisance
> on their real property. PC lost the suit and Plaintiff also had the court
> appoint a receiver to manage the repairs to abate the nuisance on the
> property. The receiver's management of the repair costs is poor and costs
> eating through pretty much all of the PC's equity in the property.
>
> I had a couple questions:
>
> 1) Could filing Chap 13 allow the PC to have the receiver removed?
> 2) Would the PC be able to reject any construction contracts that receiver
> entered into by filing the Chap 13?
>
> Thanks,
> Tuan Le
>
>
>
>
Look at Section 543 but also check case law because courts generally grant the receiver's motion. You need to be prepared to litigate and you should go in with a lot of evidence laid out in a nice way.ail_signature" data-smartmail"gmail_signature">
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