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Chapter 11

University of Baltimore Law

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Virtual Clerk's Office: A Proposed Model Judgement Lien Act For The Computer Age, Charles Shafer Jan 1995

The Virtual Clerk's Office: A Proposed Model Judgement Lien Act For The Computer Age, Charles Shafer

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This article addresses one aspect of the law regarding the satisfaction of judgments: when a creditor is determined to have a lien on property of the debtor. The unnecessary cumbersomeness of the present system, which limits the ability of creditors to promptly obtain a legally cognizable interest in specific property, hampers creditors in preventing the debtor's use, sale, or hypothecation of property that could be used to satisfy their debts. This is particularly true of intangible property and property where federal law or the law of sister states controls transfers. Not only do judgment creditors face the risk that the …


Determining Whether Property Is Necessary For An Effective Reorganization: A Proposal For The Use Of Empirical Research, Charles Shafer Jan 1990

Determining Whether Property Is Necessary For An Effective Reorganization: A Proposal For The Use Of Empirical Research, Charles Shafer

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The automatic stay is considered to be one of the most important provisions of the Bankruptcy Code for Chapter 11 debtors. It is the shield behind which the debtor may go about the process of reorganization using the mechanisms provided by the other sections of the Code. The stay permits a debtor the time to formulate a repayment or reorganization plan.

Resisting a challenge to the stay is, therefore, often crucial to the reorganizing debtor. By preventing the initiation or pursuit of legal action against a debtor, the stay allows the debtor to devote its limited time and resources to …