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Loan Payments To Secured Creditors As Preferences Under The 1984 Bankruptcy Amendments, Richard F. Duncan
Loan Payments To Secured Creditors As Preferences Under The 1984 Bankruptcy Amendments, Richard F. Duncan
Nebraska College of Law: Faculty Publications
The recent bankruptcy amendments made significant revisions in the law of preferences. At least one of these changes, the elimination of the forty-five day rule from section 547(c)(2), has the potential of rendering the trustee impotent against creditors who receive preferential loan payments while other creditors go unpaid. If this possibility materializes, the primary policy of bankruptcy preference law, equality of distribution among similarly situated creditors, will be severely undercut. The bankruptcy courts should respond by construing the ordinary course requirement strictly so as to avoid extending its protection to preferential payments of long-term loans and other atypical financings. If …