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The owner of Sickles Market has filed for bankruptcy protection, the latest development in the demise of a family business that started 116 years ago. Defunct Sickles Market owner files for ...
From 2020: Robert Sickles Sr., whose Little Silver farm stand became Sickles Market, dies at 92 Bob Sickles, center, flanked by his son Robert Sickles and granddaughter Tori Sickles, as seen in a ...
Its owner, Bob Sickles Jr. of Rumson, and AHS Realty LLC, his business which holds the land of the Little Silver store and his Rumson home, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in May ...
The Bankruptcy Code provides that each state has the choice whether to "opt in" and use the federal exemptions or to "opt out" and to apply the state law exemptions. Florida is an "opt out" state in regard to exemptions. Bankruptcy in the United States is provided for under federal law as provided in the United States Constitution. Under the ...
The Frazier–Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act was an Act of Congress passed in the United States in 1934 that restricted the ability of banks to repossess farms. [1]The U.S. 73rd Congressional Senate bill S. 3580 was signed into law by the 32nd President of the United States Franklin Roosevelt.
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, 295 U.S. 555 (1935), was a decision by the Supreme Court of the United States that held that the Frazier–Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act was an unconstitutional violation of the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause because it interfered with farmers' property rights in contracts they made with the United States. [1]
In its bankruptcy filing, TST Beverages LLC, doing business as Bottles by Sickles, lists $5.26 million in liabilities and $549,388 in assets, including its retail liquor license valued at $400,000.
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