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Business Organizations Law

University of Michigan Law School

Michigan Law Review

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Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Capital Market, Corporate Law Approach To Creditor Conduct, Mark J. Roe, Frederico Cenzi Venezze Oct 2013

A Capital Market, Corporate Law Approach To Creditor Conduct, Mark J. Roe, Frederico Cenzi Venezze

Michigan Law Review

The problem of creditor conduct in a distressed firm—-for which policymakers ought to have the distressed firm’s economically sensible repositioning as a central goal—-has vexed courts for decades. Because courts have not come to coherent, stable doctrine to regulate creditor behavior and because they do not focus on building doctrinal structures that would facilitate the sensible repositioning of the distressed firm, social costs arise and those costs may be substantial. One can easily see why developing a good rule here has been hard to achieve: A rule that facilitates creditor intervention in the debtor’s operations beyond the creditor’s ordinary collection …


Corporations - Rights Of Action By The Representative Of Corporate Creditors - Effect Of Corporate Assent, Edward W. Adams Jun 1942

Corporations - Rights Of Action By The Representative Of Corporate Creditors - Effect Of Corporate Assent, Edward W. Adams

Michigan Law Review

By various acts the directors and officers of a corporation--its agents for the conduct of corporate business--may wrong the corporation or make possible a wrong to the corporation or to the body of corporate stockholders. When the corporation becomes involved in insolvency proceedings, in order to make available to creditors as many assets as possible, the receiver or trustee in bankruptcy determines whether some cause of action will lie to recover damages or property, or whether he may successfully defend to preserve assets. If the corporation itself could have been successful in the litigation, the solution would be easy because …


Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Deductions - Loss Upon Sale To Corporation Wholly Owned By Taxpayer, G. Randall Price Jun 1940

Taxation - Federal Income Tax - Deductions - Loss Upon Sale To Corporation Wholly Owned By Taxpayer, G. Randall Price

Michigan Law Review

In 1932 the taxpayer sold to the X corporation, which he wholly owned and controlled, certain shares of stock in partial payment of a debt which he owed to X corporation. The selling price, which was the market value of the stock, was less than the stock had cost the taxpayer. It was found that the sale was entered into with the intent of creating a deductible loss and thus reducing the taxpayer's taxable income. In computing his taxable income for 1932, the taxpayer deducted the amount of the loss on the sale of this particular stock to his wholly …