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

Law Commons

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

Bankruptcy Law

Property

Institution
Publication Year
Publication
Publication Type
File Type

Articles 31 - 45 of 45

Full-Text Articles in Law

Secrets And Liens: Verification And Measurement In Commercial Finance Law, Jonathan C. Lipson Apr 2004

Secrets And Liens: Verification And Measurement In Commercial Finance Law, Jonathan C. Lipson

ExpressO

This article argues that commercial finance law increasingly uses contract rules to displace property rules, especially as these rules pertain to verifying and measuring property interests. In this context, verification simply means confirming the existence of a property interest, such as a lien or security interest. Measurement means determining the relationships of various property interests to one another (i.e., the priority of interests).

Historically, commercial finance law – in particular the Uniform Commercial Code, which governs loans secured by personal property – provided that something would be treated as “property” only if its property character was fairly easy to discover. …


Abandonments In Bankruptcy: Unifying Competing Tax And Bankruptcy Policies, Michelle A. Cecil Apr 2004

Abandonments In Bankruptcy: Unifying Competing Tax And Bankruptcy Policies, Michelle A. Cecil

Faculty Publications

This Article attempts to resolve one such issue: the tax consequences of property abandonments by the bankruptcy trustee.


Unlawful Preferences And Proprietary Rights, Adrian Walters Dec 2002

Unlawful Preferences And Proprietary Rights, Adrian Walters

Adrian J Walters

No abstract provided.


From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson Apr 1999

From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Don't Go And Do Something Rash About Cram Down Interest Rates, David G. Epstein Jan 1998

Don't Go And Do Something Rash About Cram Down Interest Rates, David G. Epstein

Law Faculty Publications

This Article considers the second and different question of how to value the proposed payments under the plan. While the question of how to value the proposed payments under the plan is different from the question of how to value the creditor's security interest in property, there is a connection between the answers to the questions. The value of the payments must at least equal the value of the security interest.


How Fresh A Start?: What Are "Household Goods" For Purposes Of Section 522 (F)(1)(B)(I) Lien Avoidance?, Michael G. Hillinger Jan 1998

How Fresh A Start?: What Are "Household Goods" For Purposes Of Section 522 (F)(1)(B)(I) Lien Avoidance?, Michael G. Hillinger

Faculty Publications

What do camcorders, walkman players, personal computers, stereo components, firearms, chain saws, lawn and garden tools, bicycles, and video game machines have in common?

Well, they are all the things one might find in the typical American home. Although not necessarily cheap to buy new, such items generally do not retain value over time. They frequently serve as collateral for nonpurchase money loans. In a bankruptcy context, they share another characteristic; courts have had to decide if they are household goods such that a debtor is able to avoid a nonpossessory, nonpurchase money security interest in them. Indeed, over 270 …


Of Hotel Revenues, Rents, And Formalism In The Bankruptcy Courts: Implications For Reforming Commercial Real Estate Finance, R. Wilson Freyermuth Oct 1993

Of Hotel Revenues, Rents, And Formalism In The Bankruptcy Courts: Implications For Reforming Commercial Real Estate Finance, R. Wilson Freyermuth

Faculty Publications

This article is intended to continue the dialogue begun by the proposed Restatement and has two distinct goals in this effort. Parts I through III argue that the position of the Restatement drafters is both legally and functionally sound and that bankruptcy courts should embrace and apply the proposed Restatement in administering distressed real estate developments. Part I reviews the reasoning articulated in the hotel bankruptcy cases, demonstrating how courts have applied the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code and state law in a formalistic manner to extinguish the hotel mortgagee's lien upon postpetition room revenues. Part II rejects the analysis …


Successor Liability In Bankruptcy: Some Unifying Themes Of Intertemporal Creditor Priorities Created By Running Covenants, Products Liability, And Toxic-Waste Cleanup, David G. Carlson Apr 1987

Successor Liability In Bankruptcy: Some Unifying Themes Of Intertemporal Creditor Priorities Created By Running Covenants, Products Liability, And Toxic-Waste Cleanup, David G. Carlson

Faculty Articles

No abstract provided.


Installment Land Contracts--The National Scene Revisited, Dale A. Whitman, Grant S. Nelson Jan 1985

Installment Land Contracts--The National Scene Revisited, Dale A. Whitman, Grant S. Nelson

Faculty Publications

In 1977 we published an article in this Review that discussed the legal aspects of the installment land contract. The installment contract was then, and continues to be, widely used as a device for seller financing of real estate. In our judgment, and increasingly in the judgment of the courts, that is a mistake. Few situations, if any, would lead an informed lawyer to advise his client to use an installment contract rather than its financing cousin, the note secured by a mortgage or deed of trust. Since the prior article was published, the courts have continued to place impediments …


Prudent Planning Or Fraudulent Transfer? The Use Of Nonexempt Assets To Purchase Or Improve Exempt Property On The Eve Of Bankruptcy, Alan N. Resnick Jan 1978

Prudent Planning Or Fraudulent Transfer? The Use Of Nonexempt Assets To Purchase Or Improve Exempt Property On The Eve Of Bankruptcy, Alan N. Resnick

Hofstra Law Faculty Scholarship

The debt collection process in Anglo-American law is based on the creditor's right to receive payment from liquidation of the debtor's assets. Judicial procedures are available to the unsecured creditor for the purpose of converting the debtor's assets to cash. Whenever the debtor's matured liabilities are greater than his assets, the collection process may be characterized as one of "grab law" in which the first creditors to take the debtor's assets succeed in effectuating collection.

It is an economic necessity for creditors to have an efficient collection mechanism which gives them maximum protection in the event of default by the …


Abstracts Of Recent Cases, Boyd Lee Warner Ii Dec 1963

Abstracts Of Recent Cases, Boyd Lee Warner Ii

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Business Associations -- 1955 Tennessee Survey, Paul J. Hartman Aug 1955

Business Associations -- 1955 Tennessee Survey, Paul J. Hartman

Vanderbilt Law Review

Nature and Formation of Partnerships: The question whether a contract sued on was a partnership arrangement so as to be cognizable only in equity was considered by the Tennessee Court of Appeals in Powel v. Bundy.' There Bundy, a real estate broker, sued Powell on the lawside to recover $500, alleged to be plaintiff's one-half share of a commission earned by their joint efforts in selling a tract of real estate, but which commission had been collected and wrongfully retained by defendant. Among other defenses interposed was defendant's contention that the contract sued on was that of a partnership arrangement …


Rights Of Creditors In Insurance -- The Tennessee Exemption Statutes, Paul J. Hartman Jun 1952

Rights Of Creditors In Insurance -- The Tennessee Exemption Statutes, Paul J. Hartman

Vanderbilt Law Review

The subject of the availability of assets to creditors is important when a trustee in bankruptcy as a representative of creditors is seeking to gather assets to pay off creditors; and the subject is of equal importance where a single creditor, not in a bankruptcy proceeding, is seeking to satisfy his claim out of the assets of his debtor. Whatever is property in the hands of the debtor is available to his creditors, unless it is exempt by law. This property is his estate, considered indifferently from the standpoint of the single creditor who seeks to realize for himself alone, …


Taxation--Exemptions--Income-Producing Real Property Of Charity, M. D. B. Jr. Dec 1946

Taxation--Exemptions--Income-Producing Real Property Of Charity, M. D. B. Jr.

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Foreign Voluntary Assignments For The Benefit Of Creditors, Edson R. Sunderland Jan 1903

Foreign Voluntary Assignments For The Benefit Of Creditors, Edson R. Sunderland

Articles

AlI laws concerning property rights are based upon the broad - doctrine that every person who owns property may dispose of the same as he sees fit. The right of disposal of property is inseparably united to the right of property itself, and indeed is an essential element of the concept of property. It might even serve as a definition of property, viewing property as that which one may dispose of,-a definition too general, it is true, for practical purposes, but undoubtedly a correct and valuable metaphysical theorem