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Articles 1 - 30 of 69
Full-Text Articles in Law
9th Biennial Judge Joe Lee Bankruptcy Institute, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, David G. Epstein, Kenneth N. Klee, Paul H. Asofsky, Beverly M. Burden, Lawrence P. King, Charles P. Normandin, John J. Jerome, Taft A. Mckinstry, Joan Lloyd Cooper, G. Ray Warner, Gerald K. Smith
9th Biennial Judge Joe Lee Bankruptcy Institute, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, David G. Epstein, Kenneth N. Klee, Paul H. Asofsky, Beverly M. Burden, Lawrence P. King, Charles P. Normandin, John J. Jerome, Taft A. Mckinstry, Joan Lloyd Cooper, G. Ray Warner, Gerald K. Smith
Continuing Legal Education Materials
Materials from the 9th Biennial Judge Joe Lee Bankruptcy Institute held December 1999.
America's Uneasy Relationship With The Working Poor, A. Mechele Dickerson
America's Uneasy Relationship With The Working Poor, A. Mechele Dickerson
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Judgment Proofing, Bankruptcy Policy, And The Dark Side Of Tort Liability, Charles W. Mooney Jr.
Judgment Proofing, Bankruptcy Policy, And The Dark Side Of Tort Liability, Charles W. Mooney Jr.
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
State Defiance Of Bankruptcy Law, Eric Winston
State Defiance Of Bankruptcy Law, Eric Winston
Vanderbilt Law Review
Bankruptcy is the principal device by which failing businesses and financially-troubled families get one last chance to reorganize their affairs back to financial health. It is also the graveyard for business failures, the place where we bury dead corporations and divide their remaining assets among their surviving creditors. In the last decade, the bankruptcy system has given seven million middle-class families a way to start over-an opportunity to save their homes from foreclosure, rid themselves of overwhelming debts, and reintegrate themselves into the workforce as productive citizens. It has also been the way that 10,000 corporations have restructured their way …
Asset Protection Devices: Twyne's Case Retold, Ingrid Hillinger, Claudia Tobler
Asset Protection Devices: Twyne's Case Retold, Ingrid Hillinger, Claudia Tobler
Ingrid Michelsen Hillinger
No abstract provided.
Grenztiberschreitendes (Internationales) Insolvenzrecht Dervereinigten Staaten Von Amerika Und Der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Cross-Border Bankruptcy Law Of The United States And Germany), By Edgar J. Habscheid, Hannah Buxbaum
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
State Defiance Of Bankruptcy Law, Kenneth N. Klee, James O. Johnston, Eric Winston
State Defiance Of Bankruptcy Law, Kenneth N. Klee, James O. Johnston, Eric Winston
Vanderbilt Law Review
Bankruptcy is the principal device by which failing businesses and financially-troubled families get one last chance to reorganize their affairs back to financial health. It is also the graveyard for business failures, the place where we bury dead corporations and divide their remaining assets among their surviving creditors.
In the last decade, the bankruptcy system has given seven million middle-class families a way to start over-an opportunity to save their homes from foreclosure, rid themselves of overwhelming debts, and reintegrate themselves into the workforce as productive citizens. It has also been the way that 10,000 corporations have restructured their way …
Letters Of Credit, Voidable Preferences, And The Independence Principle, William H. Widen, David Gray Carlson
Letters Of Credit, Voidable Preferences, And The Independence Principle, William H. Widen, David Gray Carlson
Articles
No abstract provided.
Bankruptcy, W.H. Drake Jr., Christopher S. Strickland
Bankruptcy, W.H. Drake Jr., Christopher S. Strickland
Mercer Law Review
Undeniably, 1998 proved to be an important year for bankruptcy in the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, with the circuit ultimately producing a total of fourteen opinions having material bearing upon the debt relief process. In keeping with the cosmopolitan nature of bankruptcy practice, these decisions involved the court's performance of diversified tasks, ranging from the interpretation of intricate Bankruptcy Code provisions, to the construction of governing requirements from the Uniform Commercial Code, and the resolution of potential conflicts between the bankruptcy process and various constitutional or state law provisions. Provided below is an overview of each decision rendered during …
The Earmarking Defense To Voidable Preference Liability: A Reconceptualization, William H. Widen, David Gray Carlson
The Earmarking Defense To Voidable Preference Liability: A Reconceptualization, William H. Widen, David Gray Carlson
Articles
No abstract provided.
Can Shame, Guilt, Or Stigma Be Taught? Why Credit-Focused Debtor Education May Not Work, A. Mechele Dickerson
Can Shame, Guilt, Or Stigma Be Taught? Why Credit-Focused Debtor Education May Not Work, A. Mechele Dickerson
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Self-Settled Spendthrift Trusts: Should A Few Bad Apples Spoil The Bunch?, Gideon Rothschild, Daniel S. Rubin, Jonathan G. Blattmachr
Self-Settled Spendthrift Trusts: Should A Few Bad Apples Spoil The Bunch?, Gideon Rothschild, Daniel S. Rubin, Jonathan G. Blattmachr
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
It is unfortunate, but perhaps not terribly surprising, that the first two reported cases to consider the application of conflict of laws principles to self-settled spendthrift trusts both involved "bad facts" from an asset protection planning standpoint. In this regard, the adage "bad facts produce bad law" is not a slight on the courts, but rather an acknowledgment of a court's primary duty to do substantial justice to the parties immediately before it. However, in an effort to do substantial justice to the parties immediately before them, the Portnoy and Brooks courts have forged what may well become the first …
Roundtable Discussion, David Aronofsky, Barry S. Engel, Eric Henzy, Gideon Rothschild, Jeffrey A. Schoenblum
Roundtable Discussion, David Aronofsky, Barry S. Engel, Eric Henzy, Gideon Rothschild, Jeffrey A. Schoenblum
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Welcome to the Roundtable panel discussion. Each of the speakers is going to open with a few minutes statement. And then we're going to pose some questions to open discussion, so it will take people through the whole asset protection route from beginning to end, hopefully. And then, any questions you may have we believe we'll have sufficient time to ask those questions and have them answered. You may get very different views. And then we've just decided that the jury will decide whether asset protection trusts are a good thing or a bad thing. Okay. So pay attention.
Greasing The Squeaky Wheels Of Justice: Designing The Bankruptcy Courts Of The Twenty-First Century, Christopher F. Carlton
Greasing The Squeaky Wheels Of Justice: Designing The Bankruptcy Courts Of The Twenty-First Century, Christopher F. Carlton
Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law
No abstract provided.
Individual Bankruptcy: Preliminary Findings Of A Socio-Legal Analysis, Iain D. C. Ramsay
Individual Bankruptcy: Preliminary Findings Of A Socio-Legal Analysis, Iain D. C. Ramsay
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article presents preliminary findings from an empirical study of individuals who filed for bankruptcy in the Toronto bankruptcy district in 1994. The central findings are that bankrupts are both asset- and income-poor at the time of declaring bankruptcy, and have much higher ratios of debt-to-income than the general population. Bankrupts are not drawn solely from low status occupations, but neither are they drawn significantly from the highest status occupations. The major reasons for declaring bankruptcy are adverse employment changes and business failure. There has been a large rise in the number of women declaring bankruptcy since earlier studies in …
Options In Consumer Bankruptcy: An American Perspective, Jean Braucher
Options In Consumer Bankruptcy: An American Perspective, Jean Braucher
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
In both the United States and Canada, a rapid increase in personal bankruptcies has led to demands for stricter laws to force more repayment by consumer debtors. Canada has already taken this step, while the United States may soon do so in response to the counterfactual claim that the problem is debtors with means using bankruptcy as "a method of financial planning." The author suggests that the real problem in both countries, however, is an increase in the ranks of the over-indebted. Bankruptcy is a symptom, signalling to creditors the need to reform themselves. The author concludes that if creditors …
Counselling Consumer Debtors Under Canada's Bankruptcy And Insolvency Act, Ruth E. Berry, Sue L. T. Mcgregor
Counselling Consumer Debtors Under Canada's Bankruptcy And Insolvency Act, Ruth E. Berry, Sue L. T. Mcgregor
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
If no attempts are made to determine the monetary and non-monetary reasons for bankruptcy or its recurrence, debtors may be more likely to choose bankruptcy, or remain in the cycle of bankruptcy. Credit counselling is one mechanism that can assist consumers in paying back debts without resorting to bankruptcy, thereby preventing repeat bankruptcies and heavy debt loads in the future. Canada passed a major milestone in 1992, becoming the first country to make financial counselling mandatory prior to the granting of an unconditional discharge from personal bankruptcy. This article describes the history of the policy analysis involved in making consumer …
Insolvency Counselling--Innovation Based On The Fourteenth Century, Carol Ann Curnock
Insolvency Counselling--Innovation Based On The Fourteenth Century, Carol Ann Curnock
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
In the fourteenth century, poverty (previously viewed as a virtue) was redefined by both church and state as illegal and immoral. This view persists in Canada today. The 1992 amendments to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) included a provision that makes two counselling sessions mandatory for all persons going through bankruptcy. The author reviews The BIA Insolvency Counsellor's Qualification Course that was developed in support of this amendment, and concludes that it is not up to the task. The mandatory counselling presumes a bankrupt person's irresponsibility, addiction, and need for referral to community service agencies. However, these presumptions are …
The Overseas Dimension: What Can Canada And The United States Learn From The United Kingdom, Michael Adler
The Overseas Dimension: What Can Canada And The United States Learn From The United Kingdom, Michael Adler
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The United States and, to a slightly lesser extent, Canada have come to regard personal bankruptcy as a routine method of discharging debts, enabling the debtor to make a fresh start. By contrast, in the United Kingdom, bankruptcy is still seen as a remedy of last resort, and creditors may retain the right to enforce debts. The difference in approach is due to the fact that the United States and Canada have traditionally given priority to risk taking over security, while the United Kingdom has continued to give priority to security over risk taking. However, the British government's enthusiasm for …
Consumer Bankruptcy In Comparison: Do We Cure A Market Failure Or A Social Problem, Johanna Niemi-Kiesilainen
Consumer Bankruptcy In Comparison: Do We Cure A Market Failure Or A Social Problem, Johanna Niemi-Kiesilainen
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The Continental European and Scandinavian bankruptcy laws did not have provisions enabling the discharge of debt until quite recently. While bankruptcy law did not specifically exclude consumer debtors, in the absence of discharge, consumer bankruptcy was meaningless and rare. After the deregulation of credit markets in the 1980s, many west European countries faced a huge increase in consumer debt problems. Several countries passed consumer debt adjustment laws during the late 1980s and 1990s. Unlike the North American consumer bankruptcy laws, the European laws attach moral attributes to the access to adjustment procedures, which require a mandatory payment plan, and offer …
Hidden In Plain View: The Pension Shield Against Creditors, Patricia E. Dilley
Hidden In Plain View: The Pension Shield Against Creditors, Patricia E. Dilley
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Consumer Bankruptcies: An Australian Perspective, Rosalind Mason
Consumer Bankruptcies: An Australian Perspective, Rosalind Mason
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
Over the past three decades, Australia has experienced a significant increase in the number of consumer bankruptcies. Until the early 1970s, the number of business and consumer bankruptcies was approximately equal, whereas in 1997 to 1998, for every business-related bankruptcy, there were approximately four consumer bankruptcies. This article gives a concise overview of insolvency laws in Australia, in particular the administrations applicable to individual debtors. Next, it briefly describes current Australian scholarship on consumer bankruptcy, before outlining pertinent bankruptcy and consumer credit regulation. Suggestions to decrease consumer bankruptcy numbers include extension of the "cooling-off period" for those intending to petition …
The Dark Side Of Student Loans: Debt Burden, Default, And Bankruptcy, Saul Schwartz
The Dark Side Of Student Loans: Debt Burden, Default, And Bankruptcy, Saul Schwartz
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article addresses three hypotheses: (1) only a minority of Canadian student loan borrowers experience severe difficulty in repaying their student loans; (2) those who default on their student loans do so largely because they cannot pay, rather than because they do not want to pay; and (3) for Canadians who are filing for bankruptcy and who have student loans among their debts, bankruptcy is a last resort, and their economic situation is more difficult than that of the average person seeking bankruptcy protection. A review of the literature strongly supports the first two hypotheses; a new analysis of a …
Bankruptcy's Organizing Principle, David Gray Carlson
Bankruptcy's Organizing Principle, David Gray Carlson
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Philosophy And Design Of Contemporary Consumer Bankruptcy Systems: A Canada-United States Comparison, Jacob S. Ziegel
The Philosophy And Design Of Contemporary Consumer Bankruptcy Systems: A Canada-United States Comparison, Jacob S. Ziegel
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The rapid increase in the number of consumer bankruptcies in Canada and the United States over the past fifteen years has again focused attention on the philosophy and design of modern insolvency systems, and on the similarities and differences in the approaches adopted in Canada and the United States. In this article, the author points out that the single most important difference is that the United States has historically subscribed to the debtor's right to a "fresh start" after surrendering the debtor's non-exempt property, whereas Canadian law never has, and does not now, confer an absolute right of discharge. Although …
From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson
From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Empirical Dimensions Of Consumer Bankruptcy: Results From A Survey Of Canadian Bankrupts, Saul Schwartz
The Empirical Dimensions Of Consumer Bankruptcy: Results From A Survey Of Canadian Bankrupts, Saul Schwartz
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The number of consumer bankruptcies in Canada has risen substantially over the last twenty years. Using a 1997 survey of approximately 1,000 Canadian debtors, this article explores the economic situation of debtors seeking bankruptcy protection. This economic situation seems to be quite weak-most of the debtors have very low income, very high debts, and few assets. Moreover, the economic situation of the 1997 debtors seems quite similar to that of the 1977 debtors studied by Wayne Brighton and Justin Connidis almost twenty years ago. The aggregate amount of consumer credit, as a proportion of disposable income, has not risen dramatically, …
Philosophy And Design Of Modern Fresh Start Policies: The Evolution Of Canada's Legislative Policy, John D. Honsberger
Philosophy And Design Of Modern Fresh Start Policies: The Evolution Of Canada's Legislative Policy, John D. Honsberger
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The fresh start concept-the restoration of a bankrupt to his or her former debt-free status-originated in the United States. While lip service is paid to it in Canada, the author's review of the English origins and subsequent evolution of Canadian bankruptcy legislation indicates that a strong commitment to the fresh start policy has never been the Canadian philosophy. Rehabilitation of the debtor is not a matter of great concern in Canada. Indeed, the Canadian legislative policy has always been restrictive of the rights of debtors. With the passage of amendments to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) in 1992 and …
The Changing Politics Of American Bankruptcy Reform, Elizabeth Warren
The Changing Politics Of American Bankruptcy Reform, Elizabeth Warren
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The political atmosphere in which changes to the American bankruptcy laws occur has shifted since the adoption of the 1978 amendments to the United States Bankruptcy Code. Bankruptcy professionals, who once effectively controlled much of the legislative debate, have lost ground to creditors, who have become much more powerful in influencing bankruptcy legislation. The result has been the politicization of the debate and the setting of the stage for a series of amendments that have rhetorical appeal, but that do not reflect the underlying factual reality of the bankruptcy system.
Holding The High Ground: The Position Of Secured Creditors In Consumer Bankruptcies And Proposals, Tamara M. Buckwold
Holding The High Ground: The Position Of Secured Creditors In Consumer Bankruptcies And Proposals, Tamara M. Buckwold
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article examines the position of secured creditors in the event of a consumer debtor's bankruptcy or the filing of a consumer proposal, as determined by the federal and provincial laws of Canada. Secured creditors in Canada are in a remarkably powerful position relative to other claimants in bankruptcy and to their counterparts in the United States. Their rights of realization against the collateral are essentially unaffected by the initiation of either a consumer bankruptcy or proposal. Moreover, recent judicial developments appear to further enhance secured creditors' rights of enforcement, both against the in personam payment obligation and against the …