On top of the debt held by T-Mobile, Belmont Trading owes money to a shareholder, the U.S. Small Business Administration and several OEMs, according to a court filing from the company. | Nuangthong/Shutterstock[/caption]
On Friday, T-Mobile asked a judge to order Belmont Trading to pay the $6.08 million that the wireless giant says it's owed. On Tuesday, Belmont Trading filed for bankruptcy protection.
Belmont Trading, a global ITAD and used electronics reseller based in Northbrook, Ill., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Sept. 12, claiming assets of $2.58 million and liabilities of $15.77 million.
The voluntary filing, which is in U.S Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, came just days after T-Mobile sought summary judgment in a separate case. T-Mobile first sued Belmont Trading in October 2022, claiming Belmont Trading, which was its phone resale and recycling vendor before the contract was canceled last year, shortchanged T-Mobile to the tune of $6.60 million.
In its lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, T-Mobile claims its years-old agreement with Belmont Trading required the processor to resell or recycle T-Mobile's outdated, damaged or otherwise unwanted phones. Through the deal, which was amended several times, Belmont Trading would receive service fees or a portion of the sales revenue, and the vendor would remit the remainder of the sales revenue to T-Mobile. The wireless services giant claims Belmont Trading failed to pay it $6.60 million of the sales revenue it owed.
On Aug. 14, T-Mobile filed a request for summary judgment in its favor in the contract dispute. On Sept. 8, T-Mobile submitted a filing noting that Belmont Trading had failed to reply to the motion by the deadline, and T-Mobile asked the judge to immediately rule in its favor and award it $6.08 million (T-Mobile alleges that it can claim damages of at least $6.59 million, but the $6.08 million it's asking for represents "the undisputed portion of T-Mobile's total damages").
[caption id="attachment_12337" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
On top of the debt held by T-Mobile, Belmont Trading owes money to a shareholder, the U.S. Small Business Administration and several OEMs, according to a court filing from the company. | Nuangthong/Shutterstock[/caption]
On Friday, T-Mobile asked a judge to order Belmont Trading to pay the $6.08 million that the wireless giant says it's owed. On Tuesday, Belmont Trading filed for bankruptcy protection.
Belmont Trading, a global ITAD and used electronics reseller based in Northbrook, Ill., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Sept. 12, claiming assets of $2.58 million and liabilities of $15.77 million.
The voluntary filing, which is in U.S Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, came just days after T-Mobile sought summary judgment in a separate case. T-Mobile first sued Belmont Trading in October 2022, claiming Belmont Trading, which was its phone resale and recycling vendor before the contract was canceled last year, shortchanged T-Mobile to the tune of $6.60 million.
In its lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, T-Mobile claims its years-old agreement with Belmont Trading required the processor to resell or recycle T-Mobile's outdated, damaged or otherwise unwanted phones. Through the deal, which was amended several times, Belmont Trading would receive service fees or a portion of the sales revenue, and the vendor would remit the remainder of the sales revenue to T-Mobile. The wireless services giant claims Belmont Trading failed to pay it $6.60 million of the sales revenue it owed.
On Aug. 14, T-Mobile filed a request for summary judgment in its favor in the contract dispute. On Sept. 8, T-Mobile submitted a filing noting that Belmont Trading had failed to reply to the motion by the deadline, and T-Mobile asked the judge to immediately rule in its favor and award it $6.08 million (T-Mobile alleges that it can claim damages of at least $6.59 million, but the $6.08 million it's asking for represents "the undisputed portion of T-Mobile's total damages").
On top of the debt held by T-Mobile, Belmont Trading owes money to a shareholder, the U.S. Small Business Administration and several OEMs, according to a court filing from the company. | Nuangthong/Shutterstock[/caption]
On Friday, T-Mobile asked a judge to order Belmont Trading to pay the $6.08 million that the wireless giant says it's owed. On Tuesday, Belmont Trading filed for bankruptcy protection.
Belmont Trading, a global ITAD and used electronics reseller based in Northbrook, Ill., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Sept. 12, claiming assets of $2.58 million and liabilities of $15.77 million.
The voluntary filing, which is in U.S Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, came just days after T-Mobile sought summary judgment in a separate case. T-Mobile first sued Belmont Trading in October 2022, claiming Belmont Trading, which was its phone resale and recycling vendor before the contract was canceled last year, shortchanged T-Mobile to the tune of $6.60 million.
In its lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, T-Mobile claims its years-old agreement with Belmont Trading required the processor to resell or recycle T-Mobile's outdated, damaged or otherwise unwanted phones. Through the deal, which was amended several times, Belmont Trading would receive service fees or a portion of the sales revenue, and the vendor would remit the remainder of the sales revenue to T-Mobile. The wireless services giant claims Belmont Trading failed to pay it $6.60 million of the sales revenue it owed.
On Aug. 14, T-Mobile filed a request for summary judgment in its favor in the contract dispute. On Sept. 8, T-Mobile submitted a filing noting that Belmont Trading had failed to reply to the motion by the deadline, and T-Mobile asked the judge to immediately rule in its favor and award it $6.08 million (T-Mobile alleges that it can claim damages of at least $6.59 million, but the $6.08 million it's asking for represents "the undisputed portion of T-Mobile's total damages").
Categories