Video Showing Examples of Illegal Debt Collection Practices

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The Commonality and Numerosity Requirements in Missouri Class Action Certification - Doyle v. Fluor Corp.

“Commonality” and “Numerosity” are two of a handful of factors that most courts consider in deciding whether to allow a toxic dumping lawsuit to proceed as a class action. In Doyle v. Fluor Corp., a Missouri appellate court explains these requirements and how they should be applied in a particular matter.

file3711266661112.jpg Plaintiffs brought the action alleging that Defendants, owners and operators of a smelting (the process by which metal is extracted from ore) business in Herculaneum, Missouri, released lead, heavy metals and other toxic substances into the air, which in turn caused damage to real property in the surrounding area. Plaintiffs sought damages under theories of negligence, private nuisance, strict liability, and trespass. The trial court granted Plaintiffs’ motion to certify the matter as a class action with the class representatives suing on behalf of nearly 400 people who “own and occupy” residential real property in the area near Defendants’ operation.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals for Missouri’s Eastern District upheld the decision to certify the class. A class may be certified under Missouri law where: 1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable; 2) common questions of law or fact exist among the class; 3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of that of the class; and 4) the representative parties are able to fairly and adequately protect the class' interest. In addition, a court considering certification must also determine that the common factual or legal questions "predominate over any questions affecting only individual members" and that a class action is more suitable than other methods to fairly and efficiently adjudicate the issue.

In affirming the trial court’s decision, the court noted that the “commonality” requirement does not mean that all issues in a particular action be common to all class members, but instead that the common issues predominate over the others. “A single common issue may be the overriding one in a matter, despite the existence of numerous remaining individual questions,” the court ruled. In this case, several of the action’s central issues were shared among the class, including whether Defendants were responsible for emitting toxic metals in to the air; whether such an act constitutes negligence; and whether the pollution caused property in Herculaneum to be contaminated.

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Class Certification Order Affirmed By Appellate Court

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We recently had a win in the Illinois Appellate Court in S37 v. Advanced Refrigeration. The Appellate Court affirmed the trial court's decision to certifiy a class action regarding the claims in that. Advanced sells appliances to various businesses and added a charge on its invoices called government processing requirment. This fee was not required to be paid by the government and was not a government mandated fee. Advanced created the fee to recover costs it allegedly incurrs in complying with government requirements. The Class-Action Complaint alleged that the fee was deceptive in that it allegedly made a profit generating fee appear as if it were a government required fee. Advanced denied these allegations and opposed class-certification. The trial court denied Advanced's motion to dismiss and then certified the case as a class-action.

The Appellate Court granted leave for an appeal of the class-certification decision. Advanced argued that it disclosed the true nature of the fee to all customers and that such alleged disclosure gave rise to individual issues blocking class certification. The Class argued that this defense did not create invididual issues barring class-certification as the defense of full disclosure was common the entire class given Advanced's claim that it told all customers that the fee wasn't a government mandated fee or tax as the fee's name allegedly suggested it was.

The Appellate Court rejected Advanced's arguments and found that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in certifying the class-action.

The Appellate Court held:

We agree with the plaintiff that this case fits the pattern of cases routinely certified as class actions by Illinois courts. See Martin v. Heinold Commodities, Inc., 163 Ill. 2d 33, 643 N.E.2d 734 (1994) (resolved as a class action, the court held the commodity option contracts broker’s disclosure statement was misleading, in violation of the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act, because the “foreign service fee” to be charged investors was a commission from which it would receive compensation); Harrison Sheet Steel Co. v. Lyons, 15 Ill. 2d 532, 155 N.E.2d 595 (1959)(class action was proper where the defendant refused to refund illegal occupation taxes collected from its customers); P.J.’s Concrete Pumping Service, Inc. v. Nextel West Corp., 345 Ill. App. 3d 992, 1003, 803 N.E.2d 1020 (2004) (“The primary factual issue in this case is a uniform billing practice that allegedly violated the Consumer Fraud Act in the same manner as to all class members. The propriety of such a uniform practice is amendable to being resolved in a class action.”).

The Appelalte Court also noted that the brief of the National Association of Consumer Advocates (which filed a friend of the court submission) stated that class-actions provided a way for small claims like this to proceed to court and to obtain justice when small alleged wrongs in the aggregate allegedly harm many consumers:

“ ‘The policy at the very core of the class action mechanism is to overcome the problem that small recoveries do not provide the incentive for any individual to bring a solo action prosecuting his or her rights. A class action solves this problem by aggregating the relatively paltry potential recoveries into something worth someone’s (usually an attorney’s) labor.’ ” Amchem Products, Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591, 617 (1997), quoting Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 109 F.3d 338, 344 (7th Cir. 1997).

You can view the full opinion of the Appellate Court by clicking here.

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Illinois Noncompete Agreements 101 - Nortek Products Ltd v. FNA Group, Inc.

The District Court for the Northern District of Illinois’ recent opinion in Nortek Products Ltd v. FNA Group, Inc. provides a basic overview of how courts consider whether to enforce the terms of a noncompete agreement.

630274_lecture_room_6.jpg Plaintiffs began manufacturing pressure water products for Defendants in 2003. Five years later, the parties entered into a “License Contract” under which Plaintiffs would manufacture pressure washers that included specific hoses that Defendants held a patent on and/or involved specific technology for which Defendants had applied for a patent.

They also entered into a “Nondisclosure, Noncompetition and Non-solicitation Agreement” (NDA) prohibiting Plaintiffs from the "manufacture, assembly, use, sale, marketing, after-sale service or other disposition of any Licensed Product, any related ancillary activities and any other business [Defendants] may license (or co-operate with) [Plaintiffs] or consider licensing (or co-operating with) [Plaintiffs],” for three years after the expiration of the License Contract. The NDA also included a non-solicitation provision, barring Plaintiffs from soliciting Defendants' customers for 10 years after the Licensing Contract’s expiration. Finally, the NDA’s nondisclosure provision stated that Plaintiffs would not disclose Defendants' trade secrets or confidential information. The NDA did not include a geographic limitation.

Plaintiffs filed suit against Defendants for breach of contract. Defendants, in turn, filed a counterclaim alleging that Plaintiffs breached the NDA by soliciting business from Defendants' customers and engaging in unauthorized business activities using Defendants’ confidential and proprietary business information.

In denying Plaintiffs' motion to dismiss the counter claim, the court first determined that the NDA should be considered under an employee-employer framework, rather than in the context of a sale of business. “[B]ecause the covenants in the License Contract serve to protect confidential customer information and customer relationships, they are more akin to covenants ancillary to an employment contract than to a sale of a business,” the court ruled.

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Michigan Toxic Pollution Class Action Stalls in Circuit Court - Dow Chemical v. Henry

A Michigan court recently pumped the breaks on a class action toxic pollution suit against Dow Chemical, finding that while property owners may be able to prove that the chemical giant contaminated local rivers and surrounding property with toxins, the plaintiffs did not meet the standards for bringing the suit as a class action.

712957_water_bubble_2.jpgThe Michigan Messenger’s Eartha Jane Melzer reports that “[o]perations at Dow’s Midland plant have spread dioxin — a highly toxic and cancer-causing byproduct of the chemical manufacturing process — and other chemicals, through the Tittabawassee and Saginaw Rivers and into Lake Huron. Flooding of the rivers downstream from Dow has deposited dioxin-laden sediments on properties in the floodplain.”

Dow Chemcial v. Henry concerns a suit by roughly 150 Tittabawassee property owners filed against Dow on behalf of the more than 2,000 people with property in the floodplain in 2003 and claiming that their property had lost value due to contamination. Two years later, Saginaw County Judge Leopold Borello certified the class of property owners, a ruling that Dow appealed to the Michigan Supreme Court.

In order to be certified as a class, Michigan law requires that a group of plaintiffs meet the following criteria:

(a) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable;
(b) there are questions of law or fact common to the members of the class that predominate over questions affecting only
individual members;
(c) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class;
(d) the representative parties will fairly and adequately assert and protect the interests of the class; and
(e) the maintenance of the action as a class action will be superior to other available methods of adjudication in promoting the convenient administration of justice.

MCR 3.501(A)(1). On appeal, the state supreme court remanded the case to Judge Borello, requiring that he analyze the action under criteria (c) and (d) above.

Upon further consideration, Borello reversed his earlier approval of class status for the group. In so doing, he relied on the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Wal-Mart Stores v. Dukes, a 5-4 ruling in which the court reversed a lower court’s decision to certify a class of women employees alleging bias in pay and promotions, noting that the company’s decentralized structure meant that the case involved millions of employment decisions and that the women failed to show “some glue holding the alleged reasons for all those decisions together.”

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Chicago Tribune Reports on Litigation Arising Out of Bankruptcy of Giordano's Pizza Franchisor

Chicago%27s%20best%20franchise%20termination%20lawyers.png The Chicago Tribune has recently reported on two lawsuits arising out of the bankruptcy of the franchisor for the Giordano's pizza chain.

In one suit the bankruptcy trustee has sued franchisee for failing to use the the required pizza dough thus allegedly harming the quality and uniformity of Giordano's pizzas. This type of lawsuit often arises in the franchise setting the article explains. The article states:

It's common, especially in the restaurant business, for a franchisor to dictate suppliers in their franchise agreements.

"If a customer does not receive essentially the same product, same quality and same experience, the brand image is tarnished and the customer less likely to patronize the franchise in the future," said Christian Burden, a Quarles & Brady LLP partner focusing on disputes involving distributors and franchises. "To use the quintessential example of the Big Mac, from the franchisor's perspective, a Big Mac in Chicago must taste and appear generally the same as a Big Mac in Los Angeles, Toronto, Brazil, and so on."

But it's also not unheard of for franchisees such as those at Giordano's to look for alternative sourcing. ...

You can read the full article by clicking here.

The other Tribune article details a lawsuit filed by the former Giordano's franchisor claiming that the franchisor's lender-banks, former lawyers and other franchisees conspired to rob them of the business. You can view a copy of the complaint in this lawsuit by clicking here. The article describes the lawsuit's claims as follows:

The lawsuit said that the men enlisted Fifth Third Bank, Giordano's chief lender, as well as Chicago lawyer Michael Gesas and several Giordano's franchisees "to participate in the scheme" in which they'd push the Apostolous out and take over the company. Secret meetings were held from September 2010 to February 2011, the lawsuit said. Gesas didn't respond to a request for comment.

First, they intended to weaken the Chicago-based deep dish pizza chain financially, the suit said. Then, the Apostolous "were fraudulently induced" into signing agreements in August 2010 and October 2010 that worsened their lending terms with Fifth Third, which is owed more than $40 million in the bankruptcy.

Fifth Third threatened to "throw the family in the street" if they didn't go along with the new terms, the lawsuit said. Aynessazian, who also owns eight Giordano's franchises, Roche and Gesas made "material omissions" to the Apostolous and failed to represent the interests of the Glenview family, the suit said.

Before the execution of the October 2010 deal with Fifth Third, Apostolou had a heart attack, leaving him even more dependent on his lawyers and Aynessazian. The stress also prompted him to see a psychiatrist, the lawsuit said.

"The final step of the scheme involved seizing control of (Giordano's) by pressuring the Apostolous into filing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy by which the assets and value of (Giordano's) could be usurped for the benefit of Fifth Third, and the Apostolous' ownership interests could be purchased at a materially deflated price for the benefit of the franchisee takeover group," the lawsuit said.

You can read the full article by clicking here.

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SEC Opens New Whistle Blower Office

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The New York Times reports that the SEC has now opened for business its new whistblower office as required by the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill. The office will respond to consumer tips regarding securities fraud. If a consumer tip leads to a successful prosecution and recovery, the consumer and the federal goverment will benefit (and, securities fraud will be deterred). Under the whistle blower program, corporate insider tipsters could receive up to 30 percent of the money the SEC collects from the corporate wrong doer and its officers or directors. To qualify for the fraud tip bounty, an employee needs to provide new information that leads to successful enforcement achieving more than $1,000,000 in fines. The SEC will tap into the $450 million Investor Protection Fund to hand out the rewards. The S.E.C. says the program will help it save money as insider tipsters provide a road map to the financially strapped SEC investigators and attorneys.

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This American Life Reports: "When Patents Attack"

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This American Life reports in an excellent piece on how a billioinaire inventor who founded a company to aggregate patents and to sue for infringement. This practice may in fact be hindering innovation and the economy the story reports:

Nathan Myhrvold is a genius and a polymath. He made hundreds of millions of dollars as Microsoft's chief technology officer, he's discovered dinosaur fossils, and he recently co-authored a six-volume cookbook that "reveals science-inspired tech­niques for prepar­ing food."

Myhrvold has more than 100 patents to his name, and he's cast himself as a man determined to give his fellow inventors their due. In 2000, he founded a company called Intellectual Ventures, which he calls "a company that invests in invention."

But Myhrvold's company has a different image among many Silicon Valley insiders.

The influential blog Techdirt regularly refers to Intellectual Ventures as a patent troll. IPWatchdog, an intellectual property site, called IV "patent troll public enemy #1." These blogs write about how Intellectual Ventures has amassed one of the largest patent portfolios in existence and is going around to technology companies demanding money to license these patents.

Patents are a big deal in the software industry right now. Lawsuits are proliferating. Big technology companies are spending billions of dollars to buy up huge patent portfolios in order to defend themselves. Computer programmers say patents are hindering innovation.

But people at companies that have been approached by Intellectual Ventures don't want to talk publicly.

"There is a lot of fear about Intellectual Ventures," says Chris Sacca, a venture capitalist who was an early investor in Twitter, among other companies. "You don't want to make yourself a target."

You can read a print version of the entire story by clicking here or download the audio version at This American Life's website by clicking here.


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Fraud Magazine Reports: "In the Wake of Significant Legislative Changes, the Civil False Claims Act Hauls in $3 Billion in Fiscal Year 2010"

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Fraud Magazine reports on the new changes in federal false claims act. The article states:

A 123-year-old law now has new teeth to better fight today’s tricky fraudsters. Enacted in 1863, the U.S. federal False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3733 (FCA), was designed to fight unscrupulous contractors during the Civil War. The FCA created liability for persons that knowingly submit, or cause another person or entity to submit, false claims for payment of government funds. Today, violators are liable for three times the amount of government damages as well as civil penalties of $5,500 to $11,000 per false claim. ...

The U.S. Congress reinvigorated the FCA in 1986 when it changed the law in a number of ways. Among other things, the amendments bolstered the act’s qui tam provisions, provided for treble damages — allowing courts to triple the amount of the actual damages to be awarded — and added an anti-retaliation provision that imposes liability on any employer who takes retaliatory actions against an employee because of the employee’s lawful acts in furtherance of a qui tam action. This ushered in a new era for the FCA because the amendments triggered an increase in the number of qui tam suits: now relators initiate the bulk of cases under the FCA. Also, the amendments shifted the FCA’s focus from fraud involving defense contractors to a wide array of industries — most notably health care. This has led to the federal government’s significant and increasing recoveries under the FCA.

In May 2009, Congress further revamped the FCA by passing the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009 (FERA), which included amendments to the FCA. The amendments made key procedural changes to the FCA and expanded the scope of liability (particularly as it relates to health-care providers). The FERA also set aside $165 million to aid fraud detection and enforcement efforts.

These amendments, coupled with a handful of other legislative changes and administrative actions, are already having a material effect on how the government and private sector are combating fraud.

BY THE NUMBERS: 2010 WAS A GOOD YEAR FOR FRAUD

According to a Nov. 22, 2010, U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) press release, the DOJ "secured $3 billion in civil settlements and judgments in cases involving fraud against the government in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2010." Of that sum, $2.3 billion is attributable to cases initiated by whistle-blowers under the FCA relator provisions. This brings the total amount of civil recoveries since the previous major overhaul of the FCA in 1986 to more than $27 billion. This total does not take into account settlements after Sept. 30, 2010, including but not limited to $600 million in civil penalties that were part of a larger $750 settlement with GlaxoSmithKline involving the manufacture and sale of adulterated drug products and three settlements announced in December 2010: 1) $102 million in civil penalties that were part of a $203.5 million global settlement with Elan Corporation resolving off-label marketing allegations, 2) a $421 million settlement stemming from Average Wholesale Price violations by Abbott Laboratories Inc. and Roxanne Laboratories Inc. and 3) a $280 million settlement with Dey, Inc. to resolve marketing spread allegations.

Not all of this money goes back to the government. Successful relators are entitled to collect a percentage of any recovery from the defendant. The range of the relator’s potential recovery, however, depends on whether the government intervened in the qui tam action.

The article goes on to describe what lead the government to beef up the qui tam and whistle blower laws. You can read the full article by clicking here.

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DiTommaso-Lubin's Oak Brook and Chicago Attorneys Peter Lubin and Vincent DiTommaso Named 2011 Illinois Super Lawyers as Class-Action, Business Litigation and Consumer Rights Attorneys

Super Lawyers named Chicago and Oak Brook business trial attorneys Peter Lubin and Vincent DiTommaso Super Lawyers in the Categories of Class Action, Business Litigation and Consumer Rights Litigation. DiTommaso-Lubin's Oak Brook and Chicago business trial lawyers have over a quarter of century of experience in litigating complex class action, consumer rights and business and commercial litigation disputes. We handle emergency business law suits involving injunctions, and TROS, covenant not to compete, franchise, distributor and dealer wrongful termination and trade secret lawsuits and many different kinds of business disputes involving shareholders, partnerships, closely held businesses and employee breaches of fiduciary duty. We also assist businesses and business owners who are victims of fraud.







DiTommaso-Lubin's Wheaton, Naperville, and Hinsdale litigation attorneys have more than two and half decades of experience helping business clients unravel the complexities of Illinois and out-of-state business laws. Our Chicago business, commercial, class-action and consumer litigation lawyers represent individuals, family businesses and enterprises of all sizes in a variety of legal disputes, including disputes among partners and shareholders as well as lawsuits between businesses and and consumer rights, auto fraud, and wage claim individual and class action cases. In every case, our goal is to resolve disputes as quickly and sucessfully as possible, helping business clients protect their investements and get back to business as usual. From offices in Oak Brook, near Aurora and Elgin, we serve clients throughout Illinois and the Midwest.

If you’re facing a business or class-action lawsuit, or the possibility of one, and you’d like to discuss how the experienced Illinois business dispute attorneys at DiTommaso-Lubin can help, we would like to hear from you. To set up a consultation with one of our Chicago class action attorneys and Chicago business trial lawyers, please call us toll-free at 1-877-990-4990 or contact us through the Internet.

Consumer Law and Policy Blog Reports: "Grand Theft Auto, or Preemption Run Amok"

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Consumer Law and Policy Blog Reports:

In a case now before the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, Chase Bank asserts that it may repossess an auto loan borrower’s car without complying with consumer protections in state commercial law. The Maryland District Court found for Chase Bank, concluding that 1) the National Bank Act preempts state repossession notice law and 2) Chase was not bound by the mandatory loan contract term specifically incorporating Maryland repossession law, because as an assignee of the contract, Chase had not voluntarily agreed (!) to the choice of law provision.

The opening brief of the appellants is here and the lower court opinion is here. The logic of the lower court opinion is remarkable. It seems to suggest that even the repossession rules of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code could be preempted by the National Bank Act and OCC regulations. What is truly extraordinary, however, is the idea that a national bank could on the one hand invoke the privilege, created by the UCC and other state law, to repossess collateral without judicial process, while on the other hand disregarding the restrictions and consumer protections that accompany that privilege. If the entirety of state commercial and debt collection law conflicts with the National Bank Act, then there was no state law basis for Chase to seize Ms. Epps' car, and the purported repossession was nothing more than grand theft.

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Video -- The Federal Goverment Loses Hundreds of Billions of Dollars Each Year to Fraud -- Our Chicago Business Trial and Fraud Lawyers Bring Qui Tam and Whistle Blower Claims to Assist in Recovering Some of Those Monies

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Workers Defense Project Documentary

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Construction Workers File Class Action to Obtain Unpaid Overtime

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Video -- Fraudster Barry Minkow Describes How He Conceals Fraud From Auditors -- Our Chicago Litigation Attorneys Combat Business Fraud and Breaches of Fiduciary Duty

Barry Minkow, who, while still in high school, founded ZZZZ Best, a carpet cleaning and restoration company that turned out to be a massive Ponzi scheme, talks about one of the many ways he manipulated auditors.

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Dirty Car Salesmen Come Clean

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Video -- New Complaints Against Car Dealership

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Video On Used Car Dealer Sued For Fraud BY AG -- Our Chicago Auto Dealer Fraud Lawyers File Suit On Behalf of Consumers

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Wall Street Journal Reports: "Judge Rules Against Lightstone And Enforces Bad Boy Clause in Real-Estate Loan Penalizing Borrower For Declaring Bankruptcy"

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Many real-estate loans for large transactions include a so called "bad boy" clause which penalizes borrowers for declaring bankruptcy. Many borrowers didn't take these clauses seriously in the past believing that they could declare bankruptcy and argue that the clauses were uneforcable as violating public policy encourcaging business business reorganizations as permitted by federal bankruptcy laws.

The Wall Street Journal however reports that a federal court following a trial has enforced a "bad boy" clause and penalized Lightstone Holdings LLC $100 million for putting the Extended Stay LLC hotel chain into bankrupcy. The article states:

A New York state judge has ruled that investor David Lichtenstein's Lightstone Holdings LLC owes lenders $100 million because he violated a clause in his loan documents prohibiting him from seeking bankruptcy protection for the Extended Stay Inc. hotel chain.

The ruling Thursday by New York Supreme Court Judge Melvin L. Schweitzer stands to focus more attention on so-called bad-boy clauses in real-estate loans. Those clauses require the borrower to pay lenders a set penalty for putting the property pledged as collateral on a loan into bankruptcy or otherwise wasting its value. ...

The ruling marks a victory for lenders, including Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co.'s Wachovia Corp. and the Federal Reserve's Maiden Lane fund as successor to Bear, Stearns & Co. Those lenders collectively provided Lightstone roughly $2 billion of mezzanine loans, but their claims were wiped out after Extended Stay filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009. ...

Mr. Lichtenstein had agreed to the "bad boy" clause while arranging for nearly $8 billion of financing for his 2007 purchase of the 660-hotel chain from Blackstone Group LP. The deal was one of the last big, debt-financed real-estate buyouts before the lending markets, and subsequently the global economy, went into one of its worst downturns ...

Throughout the bankruptcy, Lightstone's attorneys argued that the bad-boy clause wasn't enforceable.

The full article provides additional insights. You can read the full article by clicking here.

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