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by s1artibartfast
973 days ago
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>The only ambiguity to me in reading this is whether the court considered it different because the wages went unpaid for a while before bankruptcy. This is my entire point. If you go into chapter 7 bankruptcy, and a judge prioritizes senior creditors above unpaid wadges, you are clearly in different territory than if the corporation was neglecting wages before bankruptcy. Everyone keeps linking cases for pre-bankruptcy cases, or ones without bankruptcy at all. Meanwhile, There laws on the books about the prioritization or creditors, and where labors stands, and how much labor gets paid out before, and how much after other creditors. |
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> That is what happened to plaintiff Brett Voris (“Voris”) in Voris v. Lampert.
https://www.gmsr.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Kuang-Too-Ma...
...which is the same case I linked above. So the whole issue is how long wages can be delayed. If you're arguing that "Convoy management is unlikely to be personally liable assuming they didn't delay any wage payments whatsoever and their wage payment intervals are found to be reasonable by the court", then I agree. But it's rather common for some of these conditions to not hold, so the potential for piercing the veil is very real.
(Perhaps you are arguing against other people who think that unpaid wages are always considered theft, in which case I would agree with you. I was respondsing to the comment "you cant prosecute a dead entity for theft"; often you can, and it depends on the details, which I presume are not yet public for Convoy.)