Judy A. O’Neill is a partner with Foley & Lardner LLP and is the firm’s national Automotive Crisis Insolvency chair. She is also a co-head of the firm’s State and Local Fiscal Crisis Group.
Ms. O'Neill practices in bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, commercial transactions and corporate law and business transactions, concentrating on issues arising under the Bankruptcy Code. Her experience has spanned a variety of industries, including the real estate, automotive, retail and health care industries. She has represented clients in all aspects of debt restructurings, debt enforcement, including real and personal property foreclosures. She counsels companies on strategies to prevent court proceedings and representing troubled public and private companies in bankruptcy and in out-of-court proceedings. Her cases include the representation of purchasers and sellers in acquisitions arising from receiverships, foreclosures and bankruptcy proceedings, and unsecured creditors committees, and secured lenders in bankruptcy and out of court restructurings. Her representations of troubled companies has included Blue Water Automotive Systems, Inc. and its affiliates, Noble International LLC and its affiliates, Intermet Corporation and its subsidiaries, Venture Holdings, LLC and its subsidiaries, The 1/2 Off Card Shop, Steinbach Stores, Inc., Pilot Industries and their subsidiaries, Metaldyne Corporation and its affiliates, and special counsel to Oxford Automotive, Inc. and its subsidiaries. Her representations of unsecured creditors has included The Unsecured Creditors Committee of J.L. French, The Unsecured Creditors Committee in Folands, Inc, The Unofficial Committee in Fort Wayne Foundry Inc, and The Official Unsecured Creditors Committee of River City Plastics.
In addition, she has represented a major public school district in analyzing its restructuring alternatives. She assisted with drafting Michigan’s Public Act 4, to address municipal insolvency and restructuring issues. She has instructed at two Emergency Manager training sessions conducted after enactment of P.A. 4, sponsored by Michigan State University and Turnaround Management Association (Michigan Chapter).
Ms. O'Neill is a facilitator for the Eastern District of Michigan Bankruptcy Court. In addition, the Chief Judge of the Eastern District of the Michigan Bankruptcy Court appointed her as an examiner to investigate various issues surrounding the decline of the business in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy case of Collins & Aikman and its affiliates, a multi-billion dollar automotive supplier. In that role, she examined the causes and timing of the issues thwarting the reorganization of the multi-billion dollar revenue auto supplier, and the impact of those issues on the fees incurred by professionals. In that role, she facilitated consensual resolutions of all disputes that prompted the examination, saving the estate multiple millions of dollars.
She also represented a significant creditor in the Alleghany Health and Education Foundation, Mariner Healthcare and Sun Healthcare bankruptcy proceedings. Ms. O'Neill represented several purchasers in the Michigan Healthcare Corporation bankruptcy.
At her former firm, Dykema, Ms. O'Neill managed the Business Department which housed the real estate, bankruptcy, tax, employee benefits and corporate practice groups. Prior to that time, she assisted in the leadership of the Bankruptcy and Creditor's Rights/Reorganization Practice group.
Ms. O’Neill is an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School, where she teaches a Chapter 11 bankruptcy practicum. Previously, she was an adjunct professor at the University of Toledo Law School, where she taught business reorganization in bankruptcy.
Ms. O'Neill received her law degree from University of Michigan Law School in 1980, with high honors, and her undergraduate degree from Michigan State University in 1976, magna cum laude. Prior to practicing law, she was a mathematics teacher.
Ms. O’Neill is a member of the Detroit Metropolitan Bar Association, the Michigan Bar Association, and the American Bar Association. She is a past regional membership director of the American Bankruptcy Institute and its Unsecured Trade Creditors Committee, a past advisory board member of the American Bankruptcy Institute Central States Conference, a past advisory committee member of the Eastern District of Michigan Bankruptcy Court, and a past Debtor/Creditor Committee chairperson of the Detroit Metropolitan Bar Association.
In addition, the American Board of Certification has certified Ms. O’Neill as a Bankruptcy and Creditor's Rights Attorney.
Ms. O’Neill has been Peer Review Rated as AV® Preeminent™, the highest performance rating in Martindale-Hubbell's peer review rating system. In 2002, upon the invitation of the American College of Bankruptcy Fellows, Ms. O’Neill became a fellow in the College and within the same year, the National Registry of Who's Who made her a lifetime member. She has been listed in The Best Lawyers in America® for more than the past decade, and was selected for inclusion in the 25th Anniversary Edition of Best Lawyers in 2008. Ms. O’Neill is also listed in Who’s Who Legal USA: Insolvency & Restructuring 2006, and Who's Who in American Law, 2000 edition, and has also been selected for inclusion in the Guide to the World's Insolvency and Restructuring Lawyers, 2003 and 2006. She was selected by Crain's Detroit Business as one of the "100 Most Influential Women in Michigan," March 2002. Ms. O’Neill has been recognized, since inception, in the lists of Michigan Super Lawyers®. In addition, she has been named to the list of the Top 100 Super Lawyers and Top 50 Women Super Lawyers in Michigan for receipt of the highest point totals in the 2007 - 2011 Michigan Super Lawyers® nomination, research and blue ribbon review process. Ms. O’Neill has also been recognized by Corporate Counsel as one of the Top Lawyers. DBusiness magazine named her in its 2011 list of Top Lawyers in the areas of bankruptcy and creditor/debtor rights law. And most recently, Ms. O’Neill was accepted as a member of Leadership Detroit Class XXXIII, a year-long community program established to enhance leadership skills and create awareness of key regional issues among senior-level executives in southeast Michigan.
Legal 500, "The Client’s Guide to the Legal Profession," identified Foley and Ms. O’Neill as an excellent choice in the bankruptcy and restructuring arena. They noted, based upon the combined opinions of many corporate counsel and law firm clients, that she is "bright, hard-working, creative and attentive to the client."
Publications
- Co-author, "Michigan's Local Government and School District Fiscal Accountability Act of 2011," Lawyers Weekly, Vol. 25. No. 40 (August 15, 2011)
- Co-author, “PA 4 expands powers of emergency manager - will be significant for years,” Michigan Lawyer’s Weekly (August 12, 2011)
- Co-author, "Case Study: In Re Visteon Corp.," Law360 (August 12, 2010)
- Co-author, "Leveraging Critical Vendor Status and Assumption of Contracts to Obtain More Favorable Commercial Trade Terms in Supply Contracts," Inside the Minds, Chapter 11 Bankruptcy and Restructuring Strategies, 2010 Ed. (Aspatore Books, a Thomson Reuters business)
- Co-author, American Bankruptcy Institute's Creditors' Committee Manual
- Co-author, "Franchisor Beware: Using the Bankruptcy Forum to Resolve Disputes with Franchisors," Michigan Business Law
- Co-author: "Inside the Minds: Chapter 11 Bankruptcy and Restructuring Strategies," Aspatore Books, 2008
She is also a frequent speaker on the topics of bankruptcy and trial advocacy.