Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Bankruptcy Law

PDF

Michigan Law Review

Intent

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Bills And Notes-Discharge-Intentional Destruction Due To Mistake As A Discharge, Richard S. Weinstein S.Ed. Apr 1956

Bills And Notes-Discharge-Intentional Destruction Due To Mistake As A Discharge, Richard S. Weinstein S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

The holder of sixteen bonds issued by defendant destroyed the bonds believing them to be worthless after they had been in default as to both principal and interest for six years. Ten years later the defendant went into bankruptcy for reorganization and the holder learned that under the plan of reorganization the bonds were exchangeable for $400 in cash and $600 in preferred stock. When defendant refused to recognize the indebtedness even though the holder tendered an indemnity bond against wrongful payment, the holder instituted suit to recover the value of the bonds. The lower court denied relief to the …


Bankruptcy - Corporate Reorganization - "Good Faith" In Presenting Petitions For Reorganization Proceedings, Arthur P. Boynton Apr 1939

Bankruptcy - Corporate Reorganization - "Good Faith" In Presenting Petitions For Reorganization Proceedings, Arthur P. Boynton

Michigan Law Review

Reorganization proceedings for corporations are now provided for in chapter ten of the recently enacted Chandler Act, which supersedes the provisions of 77B. This legislation, designed to aid corporations which are insolvent or unable to meet their debts as they mature, is available to all commercial corporations except municipal, insurance, and banking corporations and railroad corporations authorized to file a petition under section 77 upon the proper showing. Sections 130 and 131 enumerate the necessary requirements of any petition filed for the purpose of obtaining reorganization. However, the most important prerequisite to this relief, from the standpoint of difficulty in …


Contracts-Fraud-Rescission For Non-Disclosure Of Insolvency, Sheridan Morgan Apr 1936

Contracts-Fraud-Rescission For Non-Disclosure Of Insolvency, Sheridan Morgan

Michigan Law Review

Modern decisions have provided an important device for the protection of creditors through extension of the duty of disclosure by persons in extreme financial distress. The remedy chiefly used is rescission, which can be secured on the ground of "fraud," with restitution of property transferred in ignorance of the purchaser's distressed condition. The "fraud" need not consist of express misrepresentation of fact, though express misrepresentation often appears as an independent ground leading to the same result. The commercial importance of the remedies thus developed seems to justify consideration both of their practical consequences and of the theories on which relief …