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Bankruptcy Law Commons

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1984

Discipline
Institution
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Publication
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Articles 1 - 15 of 15

Full-Text Articles in Bankruptcy Law

Postpetition Transfers In Bankruptcy, Darrell W. Dunham Nov 1984

Postpetition Transfers In Bankruptcy, Darrell W. Dunham

University of Miami Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Tax Benefit Rule -- A Judicially Broadened Tool For Transactional Tax Equity, Jerry N. Smith Nov 1984

The Tax Benefit Rule -- A Judicially Broadened Tool For Transactional Tax Equity, Jerry N. Smith

Vanderbilt Law Review

In light of the recent Supreme Court holding in United States v. Bliss Dairy, Inc.10 that the tax benefit rule requires income recognition by a corporation when it distributes previously expensed assets in complete liquidation, this Note assesses the dubious continued vitality of the tax benefit rule's single taxpayer construct-that is, the requirement that the same individual or entity serve as both the deducting and the recovering taxpayer. As the following analysis indicates, expansion of the tax benefit rule into a multiple taxpayer construct potentially requires some form of "recapture" in numerous factual settings previously considered non-taxable under existing nonrecognition …


Title Iii Of The Bankruptcy Amendments Act Of 1984: The Substantive Changes, Lucinda Mcdaniel Oct 1984

Title Iii Of The Bankruptcy Amendments Act Of 1984: The Substantive Changes, Lucinda Mcdaniel

University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Continuing Puzzle Of Secured Debt, Alan Schwartz Oct 1984

The Continuing Puzzle Of Secured Debt, Alan Schwartz

Vanderbilt Law Review

In 1981, I wrote an article showing that no good answer had been given to the question why corporations issue some debt on a secured basis and other debt on an unsecured basis.' This showing had normative implications because claims that the institution of personal property security is efficient or otherwise desirable must be impeached if the actual purposes that security serves are unknown. Consequently, the law's favorable treatment of secured debt-for example, giving it first place in bankruptcy distributions--is without plausible support. My article did not advocate repealing the privileges attached to secured debt, however, because then--current knowledge also …


Exemption Of Erisa Benefits Under Section 522(B)(2)(A) Of The Bankruptcy Code, Michigan Law Review Oct 1984

Exemption Of Erisa Benefits Under Section 522(B)(2)(A) Of The Bankruptcy Code, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

This Note argues that the two federal statutes are exempting statutes under section 522(b)(2)(A), and thus BRISA funds should be exempt in a bankruptcy action when the debtor uses the state exemption scheme. Part I argues that standard principles of statutory interpretation, as applied to the language of the bankruptcy statute, refute the possibility that Congress intended the list of statutes in the legislative history to be exclusive. Having established that statutes other than those listed may be included under section 522(b )(2)(A), Part II first refutes the argument that the absence of BRISA from the list of exempting statutes …


Treatment Of Time-Share Interests Under The Bankruptcy Code, Mark C. Eriks Apr 1984

Treatment Of Time-Share Interests Under The Bankruptcy Code, Mark C. Eriks

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Lifting The Cloud Of Uncertainty Over The Repo Market: Characterization Of Repos As Separate Purchases And Sales Of Securities, William F. Hagerty, Iv Mar 1984

Lifting The Cloud Of Uncertainty Over The Repo Market: Characterization Of Repos As Separate Purchases And Sales Of Securities, William F. Hagerty, Iv

Vanderbilt Law Review

In light of the actual and potential financial harm that repo investors faced after failures of several repo market participants,this Note proposes a new legal characterization of repos and argues for adoption of proposed Bankruptcy Code amendments pertaining to repos. Both of these suggestions would give repo investors significant future financial protection without destroying the financially attractive characteristics of repurchase agreements.

Part II of this Note begins laying the foundation for this proposal by discussing current repo market problems that the failures of several repoissiers have exposed.

Part II discusses new policies concerning the appropriate uses of the collateral securities …


Efficiency Justifications For Personal Property Security, James J. White Mar 1984

Efficiency Justifications For Personal Property Security, James J. White

Vanderbilt Law Review

It is always more interesting to challenge the received wisdom than to defend it. Yet in this case, a careful analysis of the facile assertions about the expansion of credit by the granting of security and about the other presumed efficiencies of security produces arguments and evidence that strengthen rather than weaken the efficiency arguments. In the first place, it appears that the granting of security does in fact expand the credit granted to risky debtors and thus that any efficiency equation must consider the probable benefits of such expansion. Second, a close examination of the actual experience not only …


Iv. Bankruptcy & Creditors' Rights Mar 1984

Iv. Bankruptcy & Creditors' Rights

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Testing The Limits Of The Bankruptcy Court's Exclusive Jurisdiction In Fraud Cases: Discharge Vs. Criminal Restitution, Blake Atkin Mar 1984

Testing The Limits Of The Bankruptcy Court's Exclusive Jurisdiction In Fraud Cases: Discharge Vs. Criminal Restitution, Blake Atkin

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


An Overview Of Workouts From The Perspective Of The Institutional Lender, Richard M. Rosenberg Jan 1984

An Overview Of Workouts From The Perspective Of The Institutional Lender, Richard M. Rosenberg

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Toward A Reform Of The Six-Year Bar To Discharge In Bankruptcy, David C. Williams Jan 1984

Toward A Reform Of The Six-Year Bar To Discharge In Bankruptcy, David C. Williams

Articles by Maurer Faculty

Since early in this century, the six-year bar to discharge has been a familiar feature of bankruptcy law: a debtor who has once been adjudicated a bankrupt and granted a discharge has traditionally been unable to obtain another discharge for six years afterwards. The continued vitality of the measure, originally applicable to all forms of bankruptcy available, is now uncertain and controversial under the new chapter proceedings. The confusion surrounding the six-year bar suggests the need for a fresh consideration of the purposes of the rule. This Note examines the bar's animating rationale and the status of the bar under …


An Uneasy Relationship Between The Bankruptcy Reform Act And The Uniform Commercial Code: Delayed And Continued Perfection Of Security Interests, George L. Dawson Jan 1984

An Uneasy Relationship Between The Bankruptcy Reform Act And The Uniform Commercial Code: Delayed And Continued Perfection Of Security Interests, George L. Dawson

UF Law Faculty Publications

The widespread adoption of article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code in the 1950s and 1960s resulted in an ‘uncertain correlation’ between state personal property security law and the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. Although the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 frequently relied upon existing state law to determine the validity of a secured creditor's interest in the personal property of a bankruptcy debtor, its provisions were more compatible with pre-Code personal property security law. As a result, courts often struggled to reconcile the meanings of the two statutes.

The enactment of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 held out the promise …


Efficiency Justifications For Personal Property Security, James J. White Jan 1984

Efficiency Justifications For Personal Property Security, James J. White

Articles

In February of 1983 Pan American World Airways issued 100 million dollars of convertible secured notes. As security for these notes it put up three Boeing 747 SP aircraft, two 747-100 aircraft, and one McDonnell Douglas DC10-30. The appraised value of these aircraft was 157 million dollars. To the extent possible under the law, Pan American made these aircraft subject to the claims of the owners of the new notes. On default, the note holders would have the first claim on these aircraft, would have the right to repossess them outside of bankruptcy, and would have the right to the …


The Bildisco Case And The Congressional Response, James J. White Jan 1984

The Bildisco Case And The Congressional Response, James J. White

Articles

Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act authorizes one in bankruptcy to "assume or reject any executory contract ...of the debtor." The most frequent use of the section arises when a lessee goes into Chapter 11 and decides either to reject its real estate lease with its lessor or, if the lease is at a favorable rental rate, to assume it and assign it to another. A less frequent but more controversial use of section 365 is to reject one's collective bargaining agreement with his employees.