(A) Title of Complaint. The title of the complaint must indicate, briefly, the nature of the relief sought.
[Comment: See also Local Rule 9015-1 (demand for jury trial).]
(B) Cover Sheet, Corporate Ownership Statement.
(1) Cover Sheet Required When Filing Conventionally. Conventionally filed adversary complaints must be accompanied by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Director’s Form “Adversary Proceeding Cover Sheet”.
(2) Corporate Ownership Statement. A corporate ownership statement shall be filed as required by Bankruptcy Rule 7007.1 and Local Rule 1002-1(A)(2).
(C) Judicial Assignment. Adversary proceedings arising in or related to an existing bankruptcy case shall be assigned to the judge assigned to the existing case. Adversary proceedings transferred from another district shall be assigned randomly.
(D) Permissible Joinder of Parties in Adversary Proceedings.
(1) Complaint Requirements. Adversary complaints listing multiple defendants joined pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7020, shall set forth in the complaint the justifications for permissive joinder consistent with the provisions of Bankruptcy Rule 7020.
(2) Dismissal for Improper Joinder. In an adversary complaint listing multiple defendants not properly joined in accordance with the Bankruptcy Rules, the court shall, pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7021, and without further advance notice or hearing, retain the first listed defendant in the complaint and dismiss, without prejudice, all other defendants in the adversary proceeding.
(3) Consolidation by Court. This rule shall not be construed to preclude court consideration of consolidation of adversary proceedings pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 7042, which makes Rule 42, Fed. R. Civ. P., applicable in adversary proceedings.
[Comment: See Bankruptcy Rules 7020 and 7021 – The plaintiff cannot obtain permissible joinder of multiple defendants based solely on the existence of similar or identical causes of action absent evidence that such right to relief was predicated on, or arising out of a single transaction or occurrence or series of occurrences. For example, an adversary complaint to avoid a preferential transfer or for turnover of property which lists multiple defendants in which a debtor (or trustee) is asserting joinder based on various payments that may be preferential or various claims for goods or services sold or provided to multiple defendants where each transaction was distinct and unrelated does not constitute a “series of transactions or occurrences” that would permit joinder within the meaning of the rule.]