In a 13-page opinion supporting Jefferson County, which last November filed the biggest U.S. municipal bankruptcy, the Alabama Supreme Court said another distressed state government, the City of Prichard, was eligible for Chapter 9 filing under Alabama law even though Prichard had no outstanding bonds.
Lawyers for JPMorgan Chase and other big creditors of Jefferson County maintain that state law barred Jefferson County from filing its $4.23 billion bankruptcy because its massive sewer-system and other debt was in the form of warrants.
The U.S. bankruptcy judge overseeing the case ruled against the creditors last month but appeals of that ruling are under way.
Jefferson County officials welcomed the state court's ruling, which would mean savings at a time the county is pressing state legislators to restore a jobs tax vital to Jefferson County's general fund budget.
"That saved us a ton of attorney fees. I feel real good about it," Jefferson County Commissioner Sandra Little Brown said. "I am now hoping and praying for a general fund fix."
Jefferson County filed for bankruptcy after the unwinding of a tentative agreement that might have cut the county's debt load by $1 billion. County finances have been savaged by massive sewer-system debt, political corruption and the loss of a vital local jobs tax.
Creditors battling the case said Jefferson County was ineligible because it had no bond debt as required by state law. Like most Alabama counties, Jefferson County only had warrants, a form of debt popular in the state since the 1930s that does not require direct voter approval
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