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Full-Text Articles in Law

Municipal Bankruptcy: The Need For An Expanded Chapter Ix, Daniel J. Goldberg Oct 1976

Municipal Bankruptcy: The Need For An Expanded Chapter Ix, Daniel J. Goldberg

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

New York City's default crisis in 1975 presented to Congress and the nation the possibility of a major municipality's entering the federal bankruptcy court. Chapter IX of the Bankruptcy Act, as recently amended by Congress, provides the exclusive remedy by which local governmental units may obtain relief from burdensome indebtedness. Unlike certain other chapters of the Bankruptcy Act, Chapter IX is limited to a voluntary composition or extension of indebtedness. In recent years municipalities have developed complex systems of financing, while experiencing unprecedented expansion in the services which they must provide. Accordingly, a mere composition of municipal indebtedness is no …


Baankruptcy-Usury-Plaintiff's Claim For Compound Interest Ruled Usurious; Simple Interest Disallowed To Give Effect To State's Deterrence Policy, Gerald Bohm Jan 1976

Baankruptcy-Usury-Plaintiff's Claim For Compound Interest Ruled Usurious; Simple Interest Disallowed To Give Effect To State's Deterrence Policy, Gerald Bohm

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Usury is the charging of interest for the use of money as a rate in excess of that permitted by statute. The Bankruptcy Act allows the trustee-in-bankruptcy to plead the defense of usury to a creditor's claim. A debtor-in-possession in a Chapter XI proceeding, who has all the rights and powers of the trustee, may also assert the defense of usury. There is, however, no federal usury statute and the Bankruptcy Act defines neither usury nor its effect. To resolve the usury issue the bankruptcy court has to look to the law of the jurisdiction in which the loan arose. …