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Full-Text Articles in Law

Special Project: Lender Liability, Journal Staff Apr 1989

Special Project: Lender Liability, Journal Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

In recent years banks and other commercial lending institutions have faced a rapid increase in problem loans.' At the same time, the relatively new phenomenon in United States law known as "lender liability" has signaled an expansion of the legal theories under which courts may find lenders liable for damages incurred by borrowers. Perhaps most significantly, many courts now allow borrowers to recover against lenders based on various tort theories. Because of the broader remedies afforded under tort theories as compared to those remedies previously available in contract, some lenders recently have experienced large adverse verdicts. If courts continue to …


Stock In A Closely Held Corporation:Is It A Security For Uniform Commercial Code Purposes?, Tracy A. Powell Mar 1989

Stock In A Closely Held Corporation:Is It A Security For Uniform Commercial Code Purposes?, Tracy A. Powell

Vanderbilt Law Review

The term security has many applications. No application, however,is more important than when an interest owned or traded is determined to be within the legal definition of security. Security is defined by statutes and applied by many courts for the purposes of federal securities laws and for state blue sky laws. When interpreting the term security for federal securities laws, courts have emphasized the underlying congressional purpose of protecting investors. State courts also have interpreted the term liberally in an effort to protect the public under blue sky laws.'

The definition of security in the Uniform Commercial Code(U.C.C.), however, has …


Foreign Exchange Sales And The Law Of Contracts: A Case For Analogy To The Uniform Commercial Code, Michael L. Manire Oct 1982

Foreign Exchange Sales And The Law Of Contracts: A Case For Analogy To The Uniform Commercial Code, Michael L. Manire

Vanderbilt Law Review

The purpose of this Note is not only to benefit lawyers and judges who must confront these problems in litigation, but also to provide participants in the foreign exchange market with both an understanding of the legal significance of their procedures for making foreign exchange contracts and an appreciation of the possible legal consequences of the mistakes that inevitably result from fol-lowing these procedures.


Recent Cases, Author Unidentified Mar 1974

Recent Cases, Author Unidentified

Vanderbilt Law Review

Civil Procedure--Service of Process--California Long-Arm Statutes Abrogate State's Immunity Doctrine

Seeking recovery of money owed him by defendant European corporations;' plaintiff brought suit in a California state court.While attending federal district court in Florida for the sole purpose of giving a deposition in a trademark infringement suit instituted by one of the corporations, defendants' representative was personally served with process in the California action on behalf of himself and the defendant corporations. Defendants moved to quash service of process on the ground that the immunity rule prohibited service of civil process upon a witness in attendance in a court outside …


Conflict Of Laws--1963 Tennessee Survey, Elliott E. Cheatham Jun 1964

Conflict Of Laws--1963 Tennessee Survey, Elliott E. Cheatham

Vanderbilt Law Review

The most important development in conflict of laws for many years is the enactment of the conflict of laws provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code.' In adopting these provisions the General Assembly did much more than to fix the law for the specific matters covered, important though these are. The General Assembly rejected one widely urged method of choice of law, and it prescribed a wholly different one. It rejected the old vested rights theory which calls for the use of the law of the place of the last element of a transaction to govern the case, as, the place …


An Analysis Of Insurable Interest Under Article Two Of The Uniform Commercial Code, John M. Stockton Jun 1964

An Analysis Of Insurable Interest Under Article Two Of The Uniform Commercial Code, John M. Stockton

Vanderbilt Law Review

The basic requisite of an insurable interest pervades all types of insurance contracts.' The reason most commonly given to justify this requirement is that in the absence of such an interest the agreement is no more than a common wager. A second reason is that the absence of an insurable interest might encourage the insured willfully to destroy the property (or life) of the insured. Despite universal recognition of its need, insurable interest is a term of indefinite meaning. This is evidenced by the many opinions in which courts have had difficulty in determining the existence of such an interest. …