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Full-Text Articles in Law

Rethinking Criminal Contempt, John A.E. Pottow, Jason S. Levin May 2017

Rethinking Criminal Contempt, John A.E. Pottow, Jason S. Levin

Articles

It is of course too early to tell whether we are in a new era of bankruptcy judge (dis)respectability. Only time will tell. But this Article performs a specific case study, on one discrete area of bankruptcy court authority, based upon a particular assumption in that regard. The assumption is this: certain high-salience judicial events-here, the recent Supreme Court bankruptcy judge decisions, coupled with earlier constitutional precedents involving the limits of Article III-can trigger overreaction and hysteria. Lower courts may read these Supreme Court decisions as calling into question the permissibility of certain bankruptcy court practices under the Constitution, and …


Turning The Page: The Demise Of The “Queenan Doctrine” Requiring The Adoption Of A Foreclosure Valuation Methodology In Chapter 11 Cases, Harrison Denman May 2017

Turning The Page: The Demise Of The “Queenan Doctrine” Requiring The Adoption Of A Foreclosure Valuation Methodology In Chapter 11 Cases, Harrison Denman

University of Miami Business Law Review

This Article traces the evolution of the default standard applied by bankruptcy courts to valuing a secured lender’s collateral under section 506(a) for purposes of determining whether a “diminution in value” has occurred sufficient to trigger the need for adequate protection. Historically, bankruptcy courts applied a standard premised on the scholarship of Judge Queenan of the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts. That standard called for, absent contractual language to the contrary, application of a foreclosure valuation methodology regardless of the actual or anticipated use of such collateral during the chapter 11 cases. In recent years, there has been …