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Series

Bankruptcy Law

1994

Institution
Keyword
Publication

Articles 1 - 21 of 21

Full-Text Articles in Law

Bankruptcy Reform, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, Gene Humphreys, W. Thomas Bunch, Thomas L. Canary, David M. Cantor, Tracey N. Wise, Meritt S. Dietz, Phillip M. Moloney, Jeffrey W. Morris, John S. Egan, Sandra D. Freeburger, Randy D. Shaw Dec 1994

Bankruptcy Reform, Office Of Continuing Legal Education At The University Of Kentucky College Of Law, Gene Humphreys, W. Thomas Bunch, Thomas L. Canary, David M. Cantor, Tracey N. Wise, Meritt S. Dietz, Phillip M. Moloney, Jeffrey W. Morris, John S. Egan, Sandra D. Freeburger, Randy D. Shaw

Continuing Legal Education Materials

Presentation materials from the Bankruptcy Reform Course held by UK/CLE in December 1994.


Differing Perceptions Of Attorney Fees In Bankruptcy Cases, Theodore Eisenberg Oct 1994

Differing Perceptions Of Attorney Fees In Bankruptcy Cases, Theodore Eisenberg

Cornell Law Faculty Publications


The Value Of Obvious Empirical Results And The Omniscient Mr. Palans: Response To Mr. Palans' Comments, Theodore Eisenberg Oct 1994

The Value Of Obvious Empirical Results And The Omniscient Mr. Palans: Response To Mr. Palans' Comments, Theodore Eisenberg

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

Mr. Palans' comment raises one worthwhile question. Most of the rest of his rant is either off the subject or too shallow to warrant extended discussion. The useful question Mr. Palans raises is whether this research is of value. The article did not defend this mode of work; perhaps I am too immersed in it to always keep in mind the merits of discussing the question. So let me spell out its benefits here.


Consumer Bankruptcy: A Roundtable Discussion, Janice E. Kosel Apr 1994

Consumer Bankruptcy: A Roundtable Discussion, Janice E. Kosel

Publications

No abstract provided.


Should We Abolish Chapter 11? The Evidence From Japan, Theodore Eisenberg, Shoichi Tagashira Jan 1994

Should We Abolish Chapter 11? The Evidence From Japan, Theodore Eisenberg, Shoichi Tagashira

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

Optimizing reorganization proceedings for small and midsized businesses is an important issue in every industrial country. But little information exists about the actual operation of such proceedings. Recent U.S. bankruptcy studies focus either on consumer bankruptcies or on large Chapter 11 cases involving publicly listed firms. This article presents the results of a comprehensive empirical study of Japan's most frequently used business bankruptcy reorganization provision. Small and midsized reorganizations have become important for several reasons. First, unlike large firms, the vast majority of small businesses fail to obtain confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan and end up in liquidation, thus …


Person Or Property? On The Legal Nature Of The Bankruptcy Estate, Stephen M. Mcjohn Jan 1994

Person Or Property? On The Legal Nature Of The Bankruptcy Estate, Stephen M. Mcjohn

Suffolk University Law School Faculty Works

This article addresses the legal nature of the bankruptcy estate: whether the bankruptcy estate is a collection of property interests, like the traditional conception of a decedent's estate, or whether the estate is the legal person in which such property interests vest, analogous to a corporation, a partnership, or an individual. The legal nature of the bankruptcy estate becomes most important when a corporation which files a chapter 11 petition becomes a debtor in possession. Suppose Acme Corporation files a chapter 11 bankruptcy petition and becomes a debtor in possession; Acme's property becomes the bankruptcy estate. What is Acme Corporation's …


What Is Right About Bankruptcy Law And Wrong About Its Critics, Samuel Bufford Jan 1994

What Is Right About Bankruptcy Law And Wrong About Its Critics, Samuel Bufford

Journal Articles

My comments in this paper focus on the papers in thus Symposium by Professors Barry Adler, James Bowers, and Philippe Aghion, Oliver Hart, and John Moore. I argue that the central points of these papers are gravely mistaken because they completely misunderstand the character of the bankruptcy caseload and procedures, they ignore some important purposes of bankruptcy reorganization, and they misstate the success rate for reorganizations. I have chosen these papers for comment for two reasons: they recommend radical changes in bankruptcy law, and they are based on the thinnest knowledge of bankruptcy practice. Incidentally, they also all take an …


Postpetition Lending Under Section 364: Current Issues - Incentives To Lenders To Provide Financing To Borrowers Who Are The Subject Of Bankruptcy Cases, David G. Epstein Jan 1994

Postpetition Lending Under Section 364: Current Issues - Incentives To Lenders To Provide Financing To Borrowers Who Are The Subject Of Bankruptcy Cases, David G. Epstein

Law Faculty Publications

A bankruptcy debtor is not viewed by most lenders as a desirable customer. Most lenders arc understandably reluctant to extend credit to such a borrower. This reluctance compounds the difficulties of a bankruptcy debtor. Without new financing, the cash needs of a debtor often will cause the debtor's assets to be liquidated, thereby foreclosing any hope of reorganization and defeating the rehabilitative purposes of the Bankruptcy Code. To counter the understandable reluctance of financial institutions to lend to bankruptcy debtors, section 364 of the Bankruptcy Code provides incentives to lenders to provide financing to borrowers who are the subject of …


Rethinking The Line Between Corporate Law And Corporate Bankruptcy, David A. Skeel Jr. Jan 1994

Rethinking The Line Between Corporate Law And Corporate Bankruptcy, David A. Skeel Jr.

All Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, And Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act Of 1986, Moussa Ismael Abojhanim Jan 1994

Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, And Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act Of 1986, Moussa Ismael Abojhanim

LLM Theses and Essays

The Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, and Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act of 1986, enacted as Public Law No. 99-554, introduced Chapter 12 to the Bankruptcy Code specifically aimed at providing debt relief to family farmers. This thesis explores providing debt relief to family farmers. It also explores the background leading to the enactment of Chapter 12, including the economic challenges faced by American family farmers in 1970s and 1980s. Additionally, it discusses the legislative history, congressional response, and the provisions of Chapter 12, noting its advantages over chapter 11 and 13 for family farmers in reorganizing their finances and maintaining …


Debtor Protection At The Close Of The Twentieth Century, Douglass Boshkoff Jan 1994

Debtor Protection At The Close Of The Twentieth Century, Douglass Boshkoff

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


The Tax Consequences Of Abandonment Under The Bankruptcy Code, Jack F. Williams Jan 1994

The Tax Consequences Of Abandonment Under The Bankruptcy Code, Jack F. Williams

Faculty Publications By Year

No abstract provided.


Bankruptcy In The Seventh Circuit: 1993, Douglass Boshkoff Jan 1994

Bankruptcy In The Seventh Circuit: 1993, Douglass Boshkoff

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Turning And Turning In The Widening Gyre: The Problem Of Potential Conflicts Of Interest In Bankruptcy, Nancy B. Rapoport Jan 1994

Turning And Turning In The Widening Gyre: The Problem Of Potential Conflicts Of Interest In Bankruptcy, Nancy B. Rapoport

Scholarly Works

This article is the first in a series of articles discussing the problem of conflicts of interest in bankruptcy cases. It argues that the traditional means for discovering and handling conflicts of interest - based on state-law ethics rules - fundamentally misconceives the problem in a bankruptcy context. State law ethics rules presume that the parties are always in static positions; in bankruptcy law, alliances shift all the time. The article proposes a possible method of handling potential conflicts of interest in bankruptcy cases.


A Property-Based Theory Of Security Interests: Taking Debtor's Choices Seriously, Steven L. Harris, Charles W. Mooney Jr. Jan 1994

A Property-Based Theory Of Security Interests: Taking Debtor's Choices Seriously, Steven L. Harris, Charles W. Mooney Jr.

All Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Joint Tax Return Liability And Bankruptcy, Ann F. Thomas Jan 1994

Joint Tax Return Liability And Bankruptcy, Ann F. Thomas

Other Publications

No abstract provided.


Reorganization Realities, Methodological Realities, And The Paradigm Dominance Game, Lynn M. Lopucki Jan 1994

Reorganization Realities, Methodological Realities, And The Paradigm Dominance Game, Lynn M. Lopucki

UF Law Faculty Publications

The comments I present here pertain to two subjects. The first is the Warren and Westbrook attack on "arm chair theorists' and the response of the Conferees to this attack. The second is the problem of sample selection and its relationship to regularized data gathering.


Some Gloomy Thoughts Concerning Cross-Border Insolvencies, Douglass Boshkoff Jan 1994

Some Gloomy Thoughts Concerning Cross-Border Insolvencies, Douglass Boshkoff

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Conspiracy, Literalism, And Ennui At The Supreme Court: An Examination Of Bankruptcy Cases Decided From 1990- To 1993, Bruce A. Markell Jan 1994

Conspiracy, Literalism, And Ennui At The Supreme Court: An Examination Of Bankruptcy Cases Decided From 1990- To 1993, Bruce A. Markell

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Hail Britannia?: Institutional Investor Behavior Under Limited Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr., Bernard S. Black Jan 1994

Hail Britannia?: Institutional Investor Behavior Under Limited Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr., Bernard S. Black

Faculty Scholarship

A central puzzle in understanding the governance of large American public firms is why most institutional shareholders are passive. Why would they rather sell than fight? Until recently, the Berle-Means paradigm – the belief that separation of ownership and control naturally characterizes the modern corporation – reigned supreme. Shareholder passivity was seen as an inevitable result of the scale of modern industrial enterprise and of the collective action problems that face shareholders, each of whom owns only a small fraction of a large firm's shares.

A paradigm shift may be in the making, however. Rival hypotheses have recently been offered …


Memorial Service, Judge Justin J. Mahoney, Roger J. Miner '56 Jan 1994

Memorial Service, Judge Justin J. Mahoney, Roger J. Miner '56

Judges

No abstract provided.