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Banking and Finance Law

1982

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Articles 1 - 23 of 23

Full-Text Articles in Law

Alternative Mortgage Instruments: Authorizing And Implementing Price Level Adjusted Mortgages, Joel J. Goldberg Oct 1982

Alternative Mortgage Instruments: Authorizing And Implementing Price Level Adjusted Mortgages, Joel J. Goldberg

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

Of the institutions authorized to make mortgage funds available, only federally-chartered and a small minority of state-chartered savings and loan associations are presently authorized to make PLAM loans. This is due, in part, to a variety of legal and underwriting problems that may outweigh the theoretical advantages of PLAM financing. This Note evaluates these legal and underwriting problems and proposes legal measures to accommodate PLAM financing. Part I discusses the development and advantages of the PLAM. Part II analyzes the legal and practical underwriting objections to PLAM financing, including interest regulations, tax ramifications, and commercial desirability. Part II also suggests …


Acceptance And Dishonor: Payable Through Drafts And Personal Money Orders, Arthur G. Murphey Oct 1982

Acceptance And Dishonor: Payable Through Drafts And Personal Money Orders, Arthur G. Murphey

University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review

No abstract provided.


United States: Federal Reserve System Rules Concerning International Banking Facilities: Introductory Note, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein Jun 1982

United States: Federal Reserve System Rules Concerning International Banking Facilities: Introductory Note, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein

Cynthia C. Lichtenstein

No abstract provided.


Loan Participations: Are They "Securities"?, Dennis Scholl, Ronald L. Weaver Apr 1982

Loan Participations: Are They "Securities"?, Dennis Scholl, Ronald L. Weaver

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


"Value" Judgments: Accounts Receivable Financing And Voidable Preference Under The New Bankruptcy Code, Neil B. Cohen Apr 1982

"Value" Judgments: Accounts Receivable Financing And Voidable Preference Under The New Bankruptcy Code, Neil B. Cohen

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Capturing Fiduciary Obligation: Shepherd's Law Of Fiduciaries, Arthur J. Jacobson Apr 1982

Capturing Fiduciary Obligation: Shepherd's Law Of Fiduciaries, Arthur J. Jacobson

Articles

No abstract provided.


Extraterritorial Impact Of The United States Antitrust And Commercial Bribery Considerations, James G. Park Jan 1982

Extraterritorial Impact Of The United States Antitrust And Commercial Bribery Considerations, James G. Park

Penn State International Law Review

Historically, the United States has sought to impose its moralistic values extraterritorially. Our antitrust laws and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act are two well-known examples. Thus, in making the determination to engage in investment in the United States, a foreign entity must consider not only the more publicized restrictions of the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act on its activity within the borders of this country, but also be concerned with the extraterritorial impact of the United States' antitrust laws and the extent to which the decision to invest in the United States may create exposire under United States antitrust …


Special U.S. Rules Directly Affecting Foreign Investment, C. Tanner Rose Jr. Jan 1982

Special U.S. Rules Directly Affecting Foreign Investment, C. Tanner Rose Jr.

Penn State International Law Review

The purpose of this article is to provide a list of special U.S. rules which guide domestic attorneys in counseling foreign investors on tax and finance consequences of their transactions in the United States. A firm grasp of these rules, as a starting point, enables an attorney to formulate proper suggestions to foreign clients in acquiring property and conducting business without being subject to excessive tax consequences.


Antitrust Consideration In Making Investment In The United States, Thomas L. Vankirk Jan 1982

Antitrust Consideration In Making Investment In The United States, Thomas L. Vankirk

Penn State International Law Review

The antitrust laws of the United States have taken on an increasingly significant role with regard to acquisitions and investments generally, and must be taken into consideration by a foreign investor interested in making foreign investments in the United States. Where the requisite contracts exist to establish subject matter jurisdiction, the antitrust laws of the United States will be applied to all proscribed acts regardless of the nationality of the participants. It is clear that most foreign investment in the United States constitutes the requisite minimum contacts required for jurisdiction.

There are two primary antitrust areas which should be addressed …


The Foreign Investment In Real Property Act Of 1980, Lisa B. Petkun Jan 1982

The Foreign Investment In Real Property Act Of 1980, Lisa B. Petkun

Penn State International Law Review

For a number of years, foreign investors were able to invest in real property located in the United States and to avoid, to a great extent, the payment of United States income tax on the operating income from the property and on the gain realized upon the disposition of the property. However, with the enactment of the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of 1980 ("FIRPTA") the ability of foreigners to avoid the United States tax gains realized upon the sale of real property located in the United States has been greatly circumscribed. To accomplish this result, FIRPTA added …


United States Taxation Of Foreign Direct Investment, Alan G. Cohate Jan 1982

United States Taxation Of Foreign Direct Investment, Alan G. Cohate

Penn State International Law Review

This article, while broad in scope, is narrow in focus. It aims solely at those aspects of the United States' internal tax laws which should be considered by the foreign investor in planning for his investment. These tax considerations may affect the structure of operation of the business enterprise in the United States. The article is not intended as a short course in United States taxation, and the reader should be aware that the complexities of the United States Internal Revenue Code and the regulations issued thereunder are so great that no particular fact situation can be correctly analyzed except …


Venezuela Revisited: Foreign Investment, Technology, And Related Issues, Robert J. Radway, Franklin T. Hoet-Linares Jan 1982

Venezuela Revisited: Foreign Investment, Technology, And Related Issues, Robert J. Radway, Franklin T. Hoet-Linares

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

A brief history of foreign investment in Venezuela is necessary to understand recent changes in Venezuelan foreign investment policy. The development of selected industrial sectors, including principally petroleum and mining, but also agriculture, electric power, manufacturing, banking, and insurance, has played a significant role in shaping Venezuelan foreign investment policy. The laws, policies, and their application can then be reviewed in practical terms to provide the practitioner with an understanding of the stated objectives of the host government within the context of Third World movements toward greater control over economic activities.


In Search Of A Uniform Policy: State And Federal Sources Of Consumer Financial Services Law, Ralph J. Rohner, Fred H. Miller Jan 1982

In Search Of A Uniform Policy: State And Federal Sources Of Consumer Financial Services Law, Ralph J. Rohner, Fred H. Miller

Scholarly Articles

Any effort to project the vectors of development in the law affecting consumer financial services for the 1980s must take into account the sources from which the legal ground rules will emanate. Those sources are in one sense bifurcated-i.e., the states have long had a significant role in regulating consumer credit and related consumer transactions, and, since 1968, the federal government has been substantially and increasingly involved in standard setting for consumer financial transactions.

At these two levels of government there is further fragmentation of the lawmaking function. Each of the fifty states, and countless local government entities, enact laws …


The Omnibus Clause Of U.C.C. Section 4-303(1)(D): A Holder's Sword Or A Payor's Shield?, Charles C. Lewis Jan 1982

The Omnibus Clause Of U.C.C. Section 4-303(1)(D): A Holder's Sword Or A Payor's Shield?, Charles C. Lewis

Campbell Law Review

In the years after the promulgation of the 1952 official text, particularly as the New York Law Revision Commission studied it, and as more and more states either studied the Code for enactment or actually enacted it during the late 1950's and early 1960's, law professors, practicing attorneys and bank attorneys commented on each provision of it. Section 4-303(1)(d) and its omnibus clause did not escape this scrutiny. Many of the commentators, however, did no more than describe the purpose of section 4-303's priority rules, point out that section 4-213(1)(c), a remarkably similar section in the Code, did not contain …


1981 Annual Survey Of Consumer Financial Services Law Developments, Ralph J. Rohner Jan 1982

1981 Annual Survey Of Consumer Financial Services Law Developments, Ralph J. Rohner

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


In Re Cheeseman: A Judicial Revision Of Virginia's Homestead Exemption Laws, Henry N. Ware Jr. Jan 1982

In Re Cheeseman: A Judicial Revision Of Virginia's Homestead Exemption Laws, Henry N. Ware Jr.

University of Richmond Law Review

The Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 was the first major revision of federal bankruptcy law in over forty years. An important goal of the Act is to provide the debtor with a "meaningful fresh start." To that end, the Bankruptcy Act provides liberalized allowances in amounts and types of property that a debtor may hold exempt from creditors in an insolvency proceeding. Under section 522 subsection (b) of the Act, however, a state is permitted to "opt out" of the federal exemption scheme and prescribe under its own law the exemptions a debtor may claim. Virginia is among those states …


Developments In Banking Law: 1980-81, Dennis S. Aronowitz, Robert Volk Jan 1982

Developments In Banking Law: 1980-81, Dennis S. Aronowitz, Robert Volk

Faculty Scholarship

The years 1980 and 1981 were marked by a continuation and acceleration of change in the nation's financial institutions in general and in depository institutions in particular. Until recently, the banking and thrift industries have been unique in possessing the capacity to thrive in a changing economy without changing very significantly themselves. This phenomenon was largely attributable to a regulatory environment that protected depository institutions, minimizing competition from unregulated financial entities and imposing a form of organization that permitted institutions to thrive while conducting their activities in traditional ways. The advent of stubbornly high inflation and historically high interest rates …


The Impact Of U.S. Control Of Foreign Assets On Refugees And Expatriates, Michael P. Malloy Jan 1982

The Impact Of U.S. Control Of Foreign Assets On Refugees And Expatriates, Michael P. Malloy

Michigan Journal of International Law

The U.S. Treasury Department has the responsibility of administering several emergency-related programs that affect the property of certain countries (and usually the nationals thereof) designated by its regulations, where the property, or the persons dealing with the property, are subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. These so-called "embargo controls" consist of trade sanctions (i.e., an "embargo" in the narrow sense of the term) and prohibitions on transactions involving assets in which the designated country or its nationals have any interest. These prohibitions, known collectively as a "blocking" of assets, have an impact on refugees and expatriates, …


Extension Of The Most Favored Lender Doctrine Under Federal Usury Law: A Contrary View, William G. Bornstein Jan 1982

Extension Of The Most Favored Lender Doctrine Under Federal Usury Law: A Contrary View, William G. Bornstein

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.


Bank Certificates Of Deposit: Notes Not In Tune With Securities Regulation, Mitchell S. Berkey Jan 1982

Bank Certificates Of Deposit: Notes Not In Tune With Securities Regulation, Mitchell S. Berkey

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Note analyzes the legislative history of the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the Banking Act of 1933 to ascertain whether Congress may have intended to include modern instruments such as high-yield time deposit savings certificates - items utilized today as alternative investment vehicles to minimize the effects of double digit inflation and interest rates. This Note examines the split among the circuits which have attempted to reconcile statutory language and congressional intent with the practicalities of the modern complex financial marketplace in determining whether promissory notes, including certificates of deposit, are securities. This …


The Due-On-Sale Mortgage Clause As A Method Of Reconciling The Competing Interests Of Lender And Borrower, Brenda D. Crocker Jan 1982

The Due-On-Sale Mortgage Clause As A Method Of Reconciling The Competing Interests Of Lender And Borrower, Brenda D. Crocker

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Trends: The Decision To Block Iranian Assets--Reexamined, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein, Edward Gordon Dec 1981

Trends: The Decision To Block Iranian Assets--Reexamined, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein, Edward Gordon

Cynthia C. Lichtenstein

No abstract provided.


Introduction To Cooperative Efforts In International Banking Regulation, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein Dec 1981

Introduction To Cooperative Efforts In International Banking Regulation, Cynthia C. Lichtenstein

Cynthia C. Lichtenstein

No abstract provided.