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Business Organizations Law

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University of Michigan Law School

Michigan Law Review

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Reorganization

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Assessing The Chrysler Bankruptcy, Mark J. Roe, David Skeel Mar 2010

Assessing The Chrysler Bankruptcy, Mark J. Roe, David Skeel

Michigan Law Review

Chrysler entered and exited bankruptcy in forty-two days, making it one of the fastest major industrial bankruptcies in memory. It entered as a company widely thought to be ripe for liquidation if left on its own, obtained massive funding from the United States Treasury, and exited via a pseudo-sale of its main assets to a new government-funded entity. The unevenness of the compensation to prior creditors raised concerns in capital markets, which we evaluate here. We conclude that the Chrysler bankruptcy cannot be understood as complying with good bankruptcy practice, that it resurrected discredited practices long thought interred in the …


Bankruptcy Vérité, Lynn M. Lopucki, Joseph W. Doherty Feb 2008

Bankruptcy Vérité, Lynn M. Lopucki, Joseph W. Doherty

Michigan Law Review

In the empirical study we report in Bankruptcy Fire Sales, we compared the recoveries from the going-concern bankruptcy sales of twenty-five large, public companies with the recoveries from the bankruptcy reorganizations of thirty large, public companies. We found that, controlling for the asset size of the company and its presale or pre-reorganization earnings ("EBITDA"), reorganization recoveries were more than double sale recovenes. We are honored that Professor James J. White has chosen to comment on our study. White is an eloquent defender of the status quo, pulls no punches, and always has something interesting to say. Bankruptcy Noir is …


The Solely-For-Voting-Stock Requirement In "B" Reorganizations Satisfied By Cash Payments For Fractional Shares-Mills V. Commissioner, Michigan Law Review Apr 1965

The Solely-For-Voting-Stock Requirement In "B" Reorganizations Satisfied By Cash Payments For Fractional Shares-Mills V. Commissioner, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The Internal Revenue Code requires recognition of gains or losses realized upon a sale or exchange of property. An exception to this general rule is found in section 354(a)(1), the basic nonrecognition provision for stock-for-stock reorganizations. This section provides that a stockholder need not recognize gains or losses "if stock or securities in a corporation a party to a reorganization are, in pursuance of the plan of reorganization, exchanged solely for stock or securities in such corporation or in another corporation a party to the reorganization." However, before section 354 can be reached, the exchange must satisfy one of the …


Federal Priority Statute Gives United States Nontax Priority In Chapter X Corporate Reorganizations-United States V. Anderson, Michigan Law Review Mar 1965

Federal Priority Statute Gives United States Nontax Priority In Chapter X Corporate Reorganizations-United States V. Anderson, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

In a proceeding under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act for the reorganization of an insolvent corporation, the United States claimed first priority for nontax debts under the federal priority statute, Revised Statutes § 3466. The trustee of the corporation contested the claim to priority on the ground that section 199 of Chapter X, which in effect provides the United States in Chapter X proceedings with priority only for tax and customs claims, is exclusive and therefore R.S. § 3466 does not apply. The district court denied the claim to priority. On appeal to the Court of Appeals for the …


Insider Securities Dealings During Corporate Crises, Victor Brudney Nov 1962

Insider Securities Dealings During Corporate Crises, Victor Brudney

Michigan Law Review

The problem of assuring the fidelity of corporate insiders to the public investors in their enterprises figured prominently in legal literature and law reform proposals twenty-five or thirty years ago. In recent years, that question has attracted relatively less attention-in part because of the appearance or recognition of more significant problems in the relationship of publicly-held corporate enterprise to the national well-being, but in part also because of the development by courts, legislatures and administrative agencies-and to some extent by the insiders' community itself-of more exacting standards of loyalty. Recognition of broader obligations to their corporations and to public investors …


Taxation-Federal Income Taxation-Examination Of Certain Problems Under Section 335, Roger B. Harris S.Ed. Apr 1962

Taxation-Federal Income Taxation-Examination Of Certain Problems Under Section 335, Roger B. Harris S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

Stock and securities of controlled corporations may be distributed to shareholders, tax free, in cases of corporate separations which qualify under section 355 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. A corporate separation is effected by the transfer of part of a corporation's assets to a subsidiary, the stock of which is distributed to the parent's stockholders. Such distributions are generally classified into three categories: spin-off, split-off, and split-up. A spin-off occurs when corporation A forms corporation B to which A transfers certain assets, receiving in exchange, the stock of corporation B. A then distributes the stock of …


Taxation- Federal Income Tax-Status Of Stock-For-Stock Exchange Where Boot Is Involved, Roger B. Harris S. Ed Nov 1961

Taxation- Federal Income Tax-Status Of Stock-For-Stock Exchange Where Boot Is Involved, Roger B. Harris S. Ed

Michigan Law Review

Taxpayer was the sole stockholder of International Dairy Supply Company. In 1952, Foremost Dairies, Inc. acquired from taxpayer all his stock in Supply Company in exchange for 82,375 shares of Foremast's common stock and 3,000,000 dollars cash. Taxpayer reported as gain from the transaction only the 3,000,000 dollars "boot" received, less allowable expenses. The Commissioner determined a deficiency of 278,823 dollars, asserting that the nonrecognition provision of the 1939 Code counterpart of section 356 (a) (1) was inapplicable and therefore taxpayer's entire gain realized on the disposition must be recognized. The Tax Court upheld taxpayer's contention that by virtue of …


Business Purpose And The Subchapter S Inspired Reorganization, Eugene C. Roemele Feb 1960

Business Purpose And The Subchapter S Inspired Reorganization, Eugene C. Roemele

Michigan Law Review

The potentially advantageous treatment under subchapter S permitting certain corporations to elect to pass through corporate income and losses to the shareholder, and to avoid the corporate tax, is the result of two different pressures. Tax collector and taxpayer have long been at odds over the purported double taxation of corporate earnings. The limited disregard of the corporate entity as a taxpaying entity then becomes another phase in the cycle begun in 1936, when dividends were subjected to full taxation at the shareholder level. The more recent concern for small business and the small business man has resulted in the …


"Fair And Equitable" Distribution Of Voting Power Under The Public Utility Holding Company Act Of 1935, Leo W. Leary Nov 1953

"Fair And Equitable" Distribution Of Voting Power Under The Public Utility Holding Company Act Of 1935, Leo W. Leary

Michigan Law Review

In the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 Congress gave the Securities and Exchange Commission the task of investigating voting power distribution among security holders in electric and gas holding companies and their subsidiaries. If the Commission finds that the corporate structure or continued existence of any company in a holding company system "unfairly or inequitably" distributes voting power among the investors in the system, it is the Commission's duty to order the offending corporation to take "such steps as the Commission shall find necessary" to cure this condition. This paper is an attempt to ascertain what the Commission …


Federal Procedure-Applicability Of State Decisional Law Interpreting State Statutes Of Limitations Under Section 11 (E) Of The Bankruptcy Act, Charles E. Oldfather S.Ed Apr 1953

Federal Procedure-Applicability Of State Decisional Law Interpreting State Statutes Of Limitations Under Section 11 (E) Of The Bankruptcy Act, Charles E. Oldfather S.Ed

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff is the trustee in bankruptcy of a Virginia corporation whose petition for reorganization under chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act was approved by a Virginia federal district court in 1942. Plaintiff filed this action in a New York federal district court under section 11 (e) of the Bankruptcy Act against defendant, the principal stockholder, and others for breach of fiduciary duty. The alleged breaches of duty occurred in 1927 and 1929. The defendant pleaded the New York statute of limitations and contended that it should be applied as interpreted by New York decisions, which hold that the statute begins …


Bankruptcy-Corporate Reorganization-Power Of Court To Order Interim Payments While Petition Is Pending Under Chapter X Of Bankruptcy Act, William F. Snyder S.Ed. Nov 1949

Bankruptcy-Corporate Reorganization-Power Of Court To Order Interim Payments While Petition Is Pending Under Chapter X Of Bankruptcy Act, William F. Snyder S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

A petition for reorganization was filed, pursuant to Chapter X of the Chandler Act, October 3, 1947, which was adjudged on the same day to be in good faith and within the terms of the act. The corporation was clearly solvent, in the sense that its assets exceeded its liabilities, but needed financial adjustment to meet the principal on outstanding income notes due the following June. Thereafter, and before a plan was approved, the court entered an order directing the trustee of the debtor to pay 6% to the holders of the first mortgage bonds as an interim distribution to …


Taxation-Income Tax-Deductions-Dividends Or Interest, Milton D. Solomon S.Ed. Apr 1946

Taxation-Income Tax-Deductions-Dividends Or Interest, Milton D. Solomon S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

The difficulty of determining whether payments made by a corporation on its securities are dividends or interest has been highlighted by two recent cases, involving substantially similar facts, which came before the Supreme Court on review.


Corporations - Receivers - Rights Of Creditors Or Receiver To Raise An Objection To Corporate Action Which Would Be Open To Shareholders, Jerome J. Dick Mar 1940

Corporations - Receivers - Rights Of Creditors Or Receiver To Raise An Objection To Corporate Action Which Would Be Open To Shareholders, Jerome J. Dick

Michigan Law Review

The writer will attempt to show that the courts, in spite of their language of fraud and breach of trust, are not applying the legal rules of fraud and trust relationship in allowing recovery to the creditor. The cases brought by the receiver for the benefit of creditors can be roughly divided into three broad groups: (1) instances where the court speaks of a trust relationship, holding that the corporation has breached the duty of trust to the creditors; (2) situations where the court speaks of some hazy principle of "fraud" on the creditors; (3) cases where the court forgets …


Corporations - Modification Provisions Of Corporate Mortgages And Trust Indentures, Charles H. Haines Jr. Nov 1939

Corporations - Modification Provisions Of Corporate Mortgages And Trust Indentures, Charles H. Haines Jr.

Michigan Law Review

As early as the late 1800's it was not uncommon to find included in corporate mortgages and trust indentures provisions looking to the modification of the rights of the bondholders by action of a given majority of such holders. Ordinarily the power conferred could not be exercised by the holders of less than seventy-five per cent in value of the outstanding bonds; the modification authorized might be the alteration of security rights, the deferment of payments of interest or principal, the reduction of interest, or even the reduction of the debt. Inasmuch as the same equitable doctrines limit their use, …


Bankruptcy - Corporate Reorganization - Section 77b - Chapter X Of The Chandler Act - Boyd Case Rule, Edmund O'Hare Nov 1939

Bankruptcy - Corporate Reorganization - Section 77b - Chapter X Of The Chandler Act - Boyd Case Rule, Edmund O'Hare

Michigan Law Review

A subsidiary of the defendant corporation filed a reorganization petition under Section 77 B of the Bankruptcy Act and defendant presented a claim of over nine million dollars as a creditor, the claim being grounded upon moneys paid by defendant to the subsidiary for its benefit, management and supervision fees, rental and interest charges, and declared but unpaid dividends. Defendant owned about ninety-eight per cent of the common stock of the subsidiary. As the result of objections by the trustee and preferred stockholders of the subsidiary, defendant's claim was compromised at five million dollars. The reorganization plan provided in part …


Public Utility Holding Company Act - Corporate Simplification And Geographic Integration Under Section Ii, Brackley Shaw Jun 1938

Public Utility Holding Company Act - Corporate Simplification And Geographic Integration Under Section Ii, Brackley Shaw

Michigan Law Review

Section II of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, the so-called "death sentence" clause, carries the specifications for achieving two of the government's main objectives in passing the act: corporate simplification and geographical integration of the large utility holding company systems.


Corporations-Right Of Officers To Purchase Claims Against The Corporation And Enforce Them At Their Face Value Jun 1936

Corporations-Right Of Officers To Purchase Claims Against The Corporation And Enforce Them At Their Face Value

Michigan Law Review

Defendant was enlisted by one of the insolvent corporation's creditors, a holder of preferred stocks and debentures, to buy up landlord's claims against the corporation. These claims were large in number and amounts and were crucial elements in a successful reorganization. By means of the stock vote of the creditor, defendant was elected director of the corporation and remained as such for one month, though during this time he was not active in acquiring landlord's claims. Upon resignation as director, defendant was successful in buying up most of the landlord's claims, it being a fair inference from the facts that …


Corporations-Right Of Stockholder To Inspect Stock Book Of Bankrupt Corporation Under Section 77b Feb 1936

Corporations-Right Of Stockholder To Inspect Stock Book Of Bankrupt Corporation Under Section 77b

Michigan Law Review

Petitioner was the controlling stockholder of B corporation, which had its petition for reorganization under Section 77B of the National Bankruptcy Act approved. Being dissatisfied with the present board, he applied to the district court for an order directing the trustees of B to permit him to examine the stock book for the purpose of securing names of stockholders in order to call a meeting to elect a new board. Application was denied by the district court on the ground that calling a meeting would impede rapidity of reorganization. On appeal, held, application should have been granted, for Section …


Bankruptcy- Preferred Stockholders As Creditors For Accrued Dividends Under Section 77b Of The Bankruptcy Act Nov 1935

Bankruptcy- Preferred Stockholders As Creditors For Accrued Dividends Under Section 77b Of The Bankruptcy Act

Michigan Law Review

Preferred stockholders were "beguiled" into purchasing their stock, and paid, as part of the subscription price, for accrued dividends at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from June 1, 1933, to the date of their respective subscriptions, upon the "virtual promise of refund" on December 1, 1933, the next dividend date. No dividend was declared or paid. Such stockholders seek to file a petition for the reorganization of the corporation under Section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act as "creditors" within the meaning of the word as employed in that section. Held, they are "creditors" within the meaning …


Corporate Reorganization-Section 77 Of The Bankruptcy Act--Power Of Court To Enjoin Sale Of Bonds Pledged As Collateral May 1935

Corporate Reorganization-Section 77 Of The Bankruptcy Act--Power Of Court To Enjoin Sale Of Bonds Pledged As Collateral

Michigan Law Review

The recent Chicago, Rock Island case raised an interesting problem under Section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act. The Chicago, Rock Island as parent railroad of a system extending into one-fourth of the states, had pledged large blocks of its own mortgage bonds and those of its subsidiaries, as security for loans made to it by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and some Chicago, New York, and St. Louis banks, under an agreement whereby the pledgees were given a power of private sale, without notice, upon set contingencies. In addition to the above it had previously pledged with trustees as security for …


Corporations-Right Of General Creditors, After Appointment Of Receiver In Suit Brought For Foreclsoure Of Mortgage Covering Major Portion Of Assets, To Have Receivership Extended For Protection And Eventual Liquidation Of Unmortgaged Assets Jan 1931

Corporations-Right Of General Creditors, After Appointment Of Receiver In Suit Brought For Foreclsoure Of Mortgage Covering Major Portion Of Assets, To Have Receivership Extended For Protection And Eventual Liquidation Of Unmortgaged Assets

Michigan Law Review

When the affairs of a corporation become so involved that it is not able to meet its maturing obligations as they become due and it is necessary either that the corporation be reorganized on a more sound financial basis or that its assets be liquidated in an orderly manner, to the best advantage of its creditors and stockholders, it is customary, as a basis for such reorganization or liquidation, to have a receiver appointed of all the property and assets of the corporation. Such receivership is usually precipitated by the filing in the federal court of a bill of complaint …