Preference/Fraudulent Transfer Risk for Small Business Filers
When a Mississippi small business starts thinking about bankruptcy, the instinct to “clean things up” can backfire. Owners often try to catch up a favorite vendor, repay a family member, or move an asset off the books before filing.
Bankruptcy law calls some of those moves avoidable transfers, the transactions a trustee (or debtor-in-possession in some cases) can unwind to treat creditors more fairly. This post explains the two big categories, that is, preferences and fraudulent transfers, and the practical danger zone to watch before you file.
Preference and Fraudulent Transfer Basics
A preference usually means the business paid one creditor shortly before bankruptcy in a way that puts that creditor ahead of others. The Bankruptcy Code gives a trustee the power to avoid certain pre-bankruptcy payments that meet specific requirements.
A fraudulent transfer does not require a Hollywood “fraud scheme.” Federal law allows avoidance of transfers made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, and it also allows avoidance in common “constructive” situations, such as transferring value for less than reasonably equivalent value when the debtor was insolvent or became insolvent.
Look-Back Periods and Insider Risk
Timing drives these disputes. Preference law generally looks back 90 days before filing, but it can reach one year for certain transfers involving insiders (people with a close relationship or control, like owners, officers, or certain relatives). That is why last-minute repayments to business partners, shareholder loans, or family members often draw extra scrutiny.
Fraudulent transfer risk can extend beyond federal bankruptcy look-back rules because a trustee can also use applicable state law through Bankruptcy Code § 544. Mississippi’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act provides creditor remedies and sets time limits for bringing those claims. As a result, a move you made well before filing can still matter, depending on the facts and the theory.
Protect Your Filing Plan Before You Move Money
We help Mississippi individuals and business owners evaluate debt relief options, including Chapter 7, Chapter 13, and small business Chapter 11, where appropriate. If you worry about payments to insiders, asset transfers, or “catch-up” checks to vendors, we can review the timeline and discuss safer next steps before you file. Reach O’Brien Law Firm, LLC, at 662-672-7619 or contact us online.