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Bankruptcy Law

University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law

Bankruptcy

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Subchapter V: A Product Of The Small Business Reorganization Act Of 2019, Seth Snyder Dec 2020

Subchapter V: A Product Of The Small Business Reorganization Act Of 2019, Seth Snyder

Law Student Works

The Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019 (SBRA) went into effect on February 19, 2020 to provide small businesses bankruptcy relief that was previously untenable under a traditional chapter 11 reorganization. The SBRA created subchapter V of chapter 11, codified as 11 U.S.C. §§ 1181 – 1195, that is available for small business debtors with debts less than $2,725,625. The debt limit has been temporarily increased to $7,500,000 until March 26, 2021 by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (the CARES Act).

The timing of the new law could not have been better considering how small businesses have …


Repose Or Not? Informal Objections To Claims Of Exemptions After Taylor V. Freeland, Kenneth D. Ferguson Apr 1997

Repose Or Not? Informal Objections To Claims Of Exemptions After Taylor V. Freeland, Kenneth D. Ferguson

Faculty Works

In Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, over the trustee's untimely objection, the Supreme Court permitted the bankruptcy debtor to exempt $110,000 that was ineligible under substantive exemption law. The Court rejected the view that unless the debtor had a good faith claim to the exemption or a statutory basis for the exemption, even an untimely objection to the debtor's claim of exemption could terminate the debtor's right to the exemption. Disturbed by the prospects of debtors receiving unjustified windfalls, several courts have developed "informal objection" doctrines to circumvent the "strict constructionist" doctrine of Taylor. However, Taylor's potential for encouraging debtors …


Discourse And Discharge: Linguistic Analysis And Abuse Of The "Exemption By Declaration" Process In Bankruptcy, Kenneth D. Ferguson Jan 1996

Discourse And Discharge: Linguistic Analysis And Abuse Of The "Exemption By Declaration" Process In Bankruptcy, Kenneth D. Ferguson

Faculty Works

In Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, the United States Supreme Court interpreted section 522(1) of the Bankruptcy Code according to its "plain meaning" and permitted a debtor to exempt $110,000 that was ineligible for exemption under substantive exemption law. The decision of the Court was premised on the fact that there was no timely objection to the claim of exemption. Although conceding that its decision might tempt debtors to claim exemptions in property ineligible for exemption on the chance that the trustee and creditors would fail to object in time, the Court cataloged a number of other remedies, including denial …


Does Payment By Check Constitute A Transfer Upon Delivery Or Payment?, Kenneth D. Ferguson Jan 1990

Does Payment By Check Constitute A Transfer Upon Delivery Or Payment?, Kenneth D. Ferguson

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The inherent delay between delivery and a check's payment is significant in determining whether the transfer occurs upon delivery or payment of the check. A dilemma is created if a check is received on the 93rd day before the debtor's bankruptcy petition is filed, but payment occurs on the 89th day before the petition is filed. When is the transfer of funds considered to have occurred for the purpose of determining whether the payment is avoidable as a preference, on the 93rd or 89th day before the petition was filed?

The first section of this article analyzes of the legal …