Bankruptcy Law

New bankruptcy clawback concept: Trustee pushes college, student to cough up tuition paid by parents

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Traditionally, college tuition wasn’t at issue in bankruptcy cases, in part because it didn’t amount to much.

But with annual payments ranging from $40,000 to $50,000 at some private institutions, and over $30,000 on average, bankruptcy trustees have started focusing on tuition paid by financially struggling parents as a potential clawback opportunity in recent years, the Wall Street Journal (sub. req.) reports. The Bankruptcy Beat page of the Wall Street Journal (sub. req.) also has a story.

Fearful of the expense and uncertainty of litigation, colleges, universities and even the students themselves may be willing to settle for a fraction of the total sought by the trustee rather than fight the clawback attempt in court. Among the potential issues in such cases is whether the tuition money was a fraudulent transfer or a voidable preference by the debtor while insolvent.

However, the law is uncertain and still developing, so some who have fought such clawback attempts have won, the WSJ reports. Over $80,000 in tuition paid by a partner at a collapsed Pittsburgh law firm, Titus & McConomy, was not recoverable, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas Agresti ruled in 2013.

“Even though there may not strictly speaking be a legal obligation for parents to assist in financing their children’s undergraduate college education,” Agresti wrote, “there is something of a societal expectation that parents will assist with such expense if they are able to do so.”

A Hunton & Williams client alert last year summarizes additional cases.

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