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The Confluence Of Bulk Transfer And Fraudulent Disposition Law, Peter A. Alces Sep 2019

The Confluence Of Bulk Transfer And Fraudulent Disposition Law, Peter A. Alces

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


On The Ucc Revision Process: A Reply To Dean Scott, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch Sep 2019

On The Ucc Revision Process: A Reply To Dean Scott, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


An Agenda For Reform Of The Article 9 Filing System, Peter A. Alces, Robert M. Lloyd Sep 2019

An Agenda For Reform Of The Article 9 Filing System, Peter A. Alces, Robert M. Lloyd

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


Abolish The Article 9 Filing System, Peter A. Alces Sep 2019

Abolish The Article 9 Filing System, Peter A. Alces

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


Liquidity, Systemic Risk, And The Bankruptcy Treatment Of Financial Contracts, Riz Mokal Dec 2014

Liquidity, Systemic Risk, And The Bankruptcy Treatment Of Financial Contracts, Riz Mokal

Riz Mokal

Parties to repos, and to swaps and other derivatives are accorded privileged treatment under the bankruptcy laws of several dozen countries. Several key international “best practice” standards urge legislators in other jurisdictions to provide likewise. The beneficiaries of these privileges are solvent counterparties enabled, unimpeded by bankruptcy moratoria, to implement close-out netting arrangements and to dispose of collateral. The purported rationale is mitigation of systemic risk.
Taking a broad international perspective, this Article explores the “domino” contagion view of distress that motivates the privileges. This view derives from the outdated “microprudential” understanding of systemic risk, and is theoretically flawed and …


Remic Tax Enforcement As Financial-Market Regulator, Bradley T. Borden, David J. Reiss Dec 2013

Remic Tax Enforcement As Financial-Market Regulator, Bradley T. Borden, David J. Reiss

David J Reiss

Lawmakers, prosecutors, homeowners, policymakers, investors, news media, scholars and other commentators have examined, litigated, and reported on numerous aspects of the 2008 Financial Crisis and the role that residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) played in that crisis. Big banks create RMBS by pooling mortgage notes into trusts and selling interests in those trusts as RMBS. Absent from prior work related to RMBS securitization is the tax treatment of RMBS mortgage-note pools and the critical role tax enforcement should play in ensuring the integrity of mortgage-note securitization.

This Article is the first to examine federal tax aspects of RMBS mortgage-note pools formed …


The Abcs Of The Ucc: Article 9, Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes Sep 2013

The Abcs Of The Ucc: Article 9, Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes

Russell A. Hakes

No abstract provided.


Eminently Reasonable, David J. Reiss Sep 2012

Eminently Reasonable, David J. Reiss

David J Reiss

Local governments across the country are considering an innovative use of eminent domain. They propose to condemn underwater mortgages (those that exceed the fair-market value of the home) in their communities and restructure them so that home­owners can afford their payments and so that the new mortgage is for less than the fair market value of the property. If this proposal is implemented, the local government will pay the owner of mortgages of "underwater" homes the fair market value for the mortgages. The local government will then restructure each mortgage by reducing the principal amount owed to be in line …


Wall Street Rules Applied To Remic Classification, David J. Reiss, Bradley T. Borden Sep 2012

Wall Street Rules Applied To Remic Classification, David J. Reiss, Bradley T. Borden

David J Reiss

Investors in mortgage-backed securities, built on the shoulders of the tax-advantaged Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (“REMIC”), may be facing extraordinary tax losses because of how bankers and lawyers structured these securities. This calamity is compounded by the fact that those professional advisors should have known that the REMICs they created were flawed from the start. If these losses are realized, those professionals will face suits for damages so large that they could put them out of business.


Adr’S Place In Foreclosure: Remedying The Flaws Of A Securitized Housing Market, Lydia Nussbaum Aug 2012

Adr’S Place In Foreclosure: Remedying The Flaws Of A Securitized Housing Market, Lydia Nussbaum

Lydia R. Nussbaum

Millions of Americans lost their homes during the foreclosure crisis, an unprecedented disaster still plaguing local and national economies. A primary factor contributing to the crisis has been the failure of conventional foreclosure procedures to account for the new realities of securitization and the secondary mortgage market, which transformed the traditional borrower-lender relationship. To compensate for the shortcomings of conventional foreclosure procedures and stem the tide of residential foreclosure, state and local governments turned to ADR processes for a solution. Some foreclosure ADR programs, however, have greater potential to avoid unnecessary foreclosures than others. This article comprehensively examines the key …


Adr's Place In Foreclosure: Remedying The Flaws Of A Securitized Housing Market, Lydia Nussbaum Jul 2012

Adr's Place In Foreclosure: Remedying The Flaws Of A Securitized Housing Market, Lydia Nussbaum

Lydia R. Nussbaum

Millions of Americans lost their homes during the foreclosure crisis, an unprecedented disaster still plaguing local and national economies. A primary factor contributing to the crisis has been the failure of conventional foreclosure procedures to account for the new realities of securitization and the secondary mortgage market, which transformed the traditional borrower-lender relationship. To compensate for the shortcomings of conventional foreclosure procedures and stem the tide of residential foreclosure, state and local governments turned to ADR processes for a solution. Some foreclosure ADR programs, however, have greater potential to avoid unnecessary foreclosures than others. This article comprehensively examines the key …


Predicting The Frequency Of Large Public Company Bankruptcies, Patrick Liu Feb 2012

Predicting The Frequency Of Large Public Company Bankruptcies, Patrick Liu

Patrick Liu

From 1980 to 2010, the number of large corporate bankruptcies in the U.S. spanned the gamut from five in 1981 to ninety-seven in 2001. In 2009, there were ninety-one large corporate bankruptcies. Past researchers have used firm-specific characteristics to predict the likelihood of bankruptcy for a given firm. However, limited research exists regarding which factors can explain nationwide fluctuations in the number of large corporate bankruptcies. Because macroeconomic variables pose systematic risk for all firms, macroeconomic variables’ yearly variations could shed light on bankruptcy filings’ yearly variations. Moreover, utilizing lagged variables, using the prior year’s change in a macroeconomic variable, …


Deposit Accounts Under The New World Order, Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger, David Line Batty, Richard K. Brown Jan 2012

Deposit Accounts Under The New World Order, Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger, David Line Batty, Richard K. Brown

Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger

The new world is upon us. Repent. Revised Article 9 is the law in every state. Commercial deposit accounts are now available as original collateral. Bringing commercial deposit accounts into the Article 9 fold significantly complicates the planning of an Article 9 secured transaction. Attorneys for banks, non-bank creditors and debtors need to understand the new world order and the risks it poses to their clients. They need to develop strategies to minimize those risks so as to protect their clients' positions. Part II of this article describes the new legal framework and some of the risks it creates. Part …


No More Abuse: The Dodd-Frank And Consumer Financial Protection Act's "Abusive" Standard, Tiffany S. Lee May 2011

No More Abuse: The Dodd-Frank And Consumer Financial Protection Act's "Abusive" Standard, Tiffany S. Lee

Tiffany S Lee

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Financial Protection Act creates the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection. This consumer watchdog will be responsible for the most powerful consumer protections in American history. Under section 1031(d) of the Act, the Bureau may ban acts and practices that are unfair, deceptive, or abusive. While the unfair and deceptive standards have existed for some time, “abusive” is a relatively new legal standard with limited jurisprudential history. Thus, ironically, critics assert that the inclusion of the abusive standard is itself an abuse of legislative power. This Article asserts that despite some criticism to …


Allocating Loss In Securities Fraud: Time To Adopt A Uniform Rule For The Special Case Of Ponzi Schemes, Grant Christensen Mar 2011

Allocating Loss In Securities Fraud: Time To Adopt A Uniform Rule For The Special Case Of Ponzi Schemes, Grant Christensen

Grant Christensen

The Global Financial Crisis precipitated a condensing of capital and a fall in global equities markets that resulted not solely in the necessity of government bailouts of the financial industry but also exposed a number of Ponzi schemes that collectively will cost investors tens of billions of dollars. With a new wave of litigation by innocent investors against Ponzi scheme operators just beginning, and likely to take years, it becomes important to clearly identify the methodologies used to value the loss and allocate existing assets among remaining creditors. To that end I offer this article to argue that courts ought …


Allowing Dual Status For Purchase-Money Security Interests In Consumer-Goods Transactions, Richard Nowka Feb 2011

Allowing Dual Status For Purchase-Money Security Interests In Consumer-Goods Transactions, Richard Nowka

Richard H. Nowka

This article advocates that courts should allow a purchase-money security interest in consumer goods to have dual status—part purchase-money and part nonpurchase-money—after the parties refinance the purchase-money obligation or after the secured party makes a future advance. Courts have struggled with this issue since the enactment of Article 9 because the definition of purchase-money security interest (U.C.C. 9-103) arguably permits a court to apply dual status or to hold that a refinancing or future advance “transforms” the purchase-money security interest into a nonpurchase-money security interest. Although Revised Article 9 adopts the dual status rule, a compromise among the drafting committee …


Sit Down And Count The Cost: A Framework For Constitutionally Enforcing The 501(C)(3) Campaign Intervention Ban, Benjamin M. Leff Jan 2011

Sit Down And Count The Cost: A Framework For Constitutionally Enforcing The 501(C)(3) Campaign Intervention Ban, Benjamin M. Leff

Benjamin Leff

Abstract:

Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code prohibits charities from intervening in a political campaign for or against a candidate for public office. The IRS currently interprets the campaign-intervention ban to absolutely prevent charities from communicating their views on candidates, even if such communications are completely financed by non-501(c)(3) affiliates.

This article argues that the current IRS enforcement paradigm is unconstitutional because it exceeds the government interest in preventing tax-deductible donations to be used for campaign-intervention. A constitutional interpretation exists under the current statutory framework, but it would require the IRS to shift its focus exclusively to campaign-intervention-related expenditures. …


Book Review: The Subprime Virus: Reckless Credit, Regulatory Failure, And Next Steps, David J. Reiss Dec 2010

Book Review: The Subprime Virus: Reckless Credit, Regulatory Failure, And Next Steps, David J. Reiss

David J Reiss

John Godfrey Saxe’s 19th century poem, “The Blind Men and the Elephant,” opens with six learned men

Who went to see the Elephant

(Though all of them were blind),

That each by observation

Might satisfy his mind.

The financial crisis is the Elephant of our time. Over the last couple of years, more than six wise men and women have written books purporting to explain the financial crisis and many more such books are surely in the works. Most of these wise ones suffer from the same limitations as the poem’s learned men. As each reaches out, he or she …


Disintermediating Avarice: A Legal Framework For Commercially Sustainable Microfinance, Steven L. Schwarcz Aug 2010

Disintermediating Avarice: A Legal Framework For Commercially Sustainable Microfinance, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

Although microfinance has emerged as a key tool to alleviate poverty, the need for microfinance lending vastly exceeds the amount of funds that can be raised from charitable donors. Commercial bank lending is supplementing donor money, but microfinance loans made by banks are expensive and sometimes even exploitive. This article examines how innovative legal structures can enable microfinance loans to be funded directly from lower-cost, and virtually limitless, capital market sources by removing, or “disintermediating,” the need for a bank intermediary. In that context, the article identifies and attempts to resolve the resulting law-and-business issues of first impression and also …


Making Debtor Remedies More Effective, Melissa B. Jacoby Apr 2010

Making Debtor Remedies More Effective, Melissa B. Jacoby

Melissa B. Jacoby

Commissioned for a conference on credit markets at Harvard Business School in February 2010, this paper explores functional system design and the role of lawyers and intermediaries in providing debtor remedies in a complex legal system. The thesis of this paper, which proceeds in the “law and society” tradition, is that the location of a remedial right within the debtor-creditor system substantially affects the costs and benefits of the remedy for debtors, creditors, the system, and society. In other words, merely adding specific substantive provisions does not directly translate into actual protection. Relatedly, policymakers must recognize that lawyers and other …


Distorting Legal Principles, Steven L. Schwarcz Feb 2010

Distorting Legal Principles, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

This article explores the important but until now largely neglected problem of distorting legal principles. Although legal principles enable society to order itself by preserving broadly based expectations, parties sometimes transact in ways that are so inconsistent with accepted principles as to create uncertainty or confusion that undermines the basis for reasoning afforded by the principles. The article starts by examining a fundamental distortion of the nemo dat legal principle (one cannot give what one does not have), which was a trigger of Lehman Brothers’ recent downfall. A practice called “rehypothecation” so distorted nemo dat that Lehman’s customers were uncertain …


Learning From Our History: Evaluating The Modern Housing Finance Market In Light Of Ancient Principles Of Justice, Brian M. Mccall Dec 2008

Learning From Our History: Evaluating The Modern Housing Finance Market In Light Of Ancient Principles Of Justice, Brian M. Mccall

Brian M McCall

Since I first accepted an invitation to join this symposium, the subprime mortgage crisis has exploded into a systemic financial crisis. Analysis and pundits alike seem on a quest to outdo each other in using dramatic phrases to describe its historic proportions. The causes of a crisis so large must have a multiplicity of causes lying in the realms of bank regulation and supervision, the operation and regulation of the securitization market and the derivatives and insurance markets. Yet, the root and spark of the various financial reverberations initiated in the home mortgage finance market. My presentation will focus on …


It's Just Secured Credit: The Natural Law Case In Defense Of Some Forms Of Secured Credit, Brian M. Mccall Dec 2008

It's Just Secured Credit: The Natural Law Case In Defense Of Some Forms Of Secured Credit, Brian M. Mccall

Brian M McCall

For decades scholars have been debating whether of not the institution of security can be explained and justified. After much discussion from varying points of view and hermeneutics, although some insights have been gained, the answer to the original question remains unresolved. This article attempts to bring new life to this debate by building on Professors Mooney and Harris’ idea of security interest as property right while taking account of the valid concerns of scholars such as Elizabeth Warren and Lyn Lopucki that certain results produced by the current system seem unjust. This reconciliation of these two strands of secured …


Money, Money Everywhere But Not A Drop To Secure: A Proposal To Amend The Perfection Rule For Security Interests In Money And Deposit Accounts, Brian M. Mccall Jan 2007

Money, Money Everywhere But Not A Drop To Secure: A Proposal To Amend The Perfection Rule For Security Interests In Money And Deposit Accounts, Brian M. Mccall

Brian M McCall

It is time that the billions of dollars of money and bank account balances held by debtors be made available as security in a manner that is commercially practical. The rules governing the perfection of security interests in money and deposit accounts need to be reformed to allow perfection by filing. This article builds a case for the proposed revisions by addressing the vexing question “what is money.” A brief history, especially drawing upon the history of the UCC, of answers to this question is presented. Various policy rationales are explored including an examination of the different forms of payment …


Money, Money Everywhere But Not A Drop To Secure: A Proposal For Amending The Perfection Rules For Security Interests In Money And Deposit Accounts, Brian M. Mccall Dec 2006

Money, Money Everywhere But Not A Drop To Secure: A Proposal For Amending The Perfection Rules For Security Interests In Money And Deposit Accounts, Brian M. Mccall

Brian M McCall

It is time that the billions of dollars of money and bank account balances held by debtors be made available as security in a manner that is commercially practical. The rules governing the perfection of security interests in money and deposit accounts need to be reformed to allow perfection by filing. This article builds a case for the proposed revisions by addressing the vexing question “what is money.” A brief history, especially drawing upon the history of the UCC, of answers to this question is presented. Various policy rationales are explored including an examination of the different forms of payment …


Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, Ingrid Hillinger, Raymond Nimmer, Michael Hillinger Dec 2002

Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, Ingrid Hillinger, Raymond Nimmer, Michael Hillinger

Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger

Accompanied by Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, 3rd ed. Teacher's Manual, by Nimmer, Hillinger and Hillinger. Newark, NJ: LexisNexis, 2003


Consumer Protection Rules In And Around The Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act (Ucita), Ingrid Hillinger, Michael Hillinger, Diane Rallis Dec 2000

Consumer Protection Rules In And Around The Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act (Ucita), Ingrid Hillinger, Michael Hillinger, Diane Rallis

Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger

No abstract provided.


Abc’S Of The U.C.C. -- (Revised) Article 9: Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes Dec 1999

Abc’S Of The U.C.C. -- (Revised) Article 9: Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes

Russell A. Hakes

No abstract provided.


Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, Ingrid Hillinger, Raymond Nimmer, Michael Hillinger Dec 1998

Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, Ingrid Hillinger, Raymond Nimmer, Michael Hillinger

Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger

Accompanied by Commercial Transactions: Secured Financing: Cases, Materials, Problems, 2nd ed. Teacher's Manual, by Nimmer, Hillinger and Hillinger. New York: Lexis Publishing, 2000


Abc’S Of The U.C.C. -- Article 9: Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes Dec 1995

Abc’S Of The U.C.C. -- Article 9: Secured Transactions, Russell Hakes

Russell A. Hakes

No abstract provided.