Consumers who grant security interests to creditors pay lower rates in return, but this seemingly innocuous arrangement has recently been regulated extensively. The Uniform Consumer Credit Code authorizes courts not to enforce certain security interests if enforcement would impose "undue hardship" on the consumer. Several states also prohibit creditors who foreclose from later suing for deficiency judgments, in which they attempt to recover the difference between the unpaid debt and the amount realized on foreclosure. This prohibition reduces the attractiveness of security as a risk reduction device. In addition, proposals have been made to prevent creditors from taking security interests in consumer goods collateral except for purchase mon...
Section 9-312 of the Uniform Commercial Code determines the priority of conflicting security interes...
A brief examination of the history of the guarantee reveals that equity treated the guarantor as a f...
The response of sympathetic lawmakers to perceived abuses in the consumer credit field is almost tot...
Consumers who grant security interests to creditors pay lower rates in return, but this seemingly in...
Security interests in consumer goods have been extensively regulated, this regulation taking the pri...
The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), now effective everywhere except Louisiana, is conspicuously neutr...
This article focuses on a secured party\u27s right to hold a debtor liable for a deficiency when res...
This article first summarizes the many restrictions that the American consumer bankruptcy system imp...
The Uniform Commercial Code becomes operative in Nebraska at midnight on September 1, 1965. From tha...
This article reviews the legal infrastructure of tools that protect debtors’ assets or income, or th...
The Uniform Commercial Code protects a buyer in ordinary course of business from claims by third par...
One can view the law of creditors\u27 rights as a series of cyclesin which alternatively the rights ...
Despite advances in finance theory, secured debt remains a puzzle. As a consequence, the justificati...
This essay revisits earlier work on the relationship between insolvency law and secured credit, the ...
Section 364(c) and (d) of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the creation of security interests in rea...
Section 9-312 of the Uniform Commercial Code determines the priority of conflicting security interes...
A brief examination of the history of the guarantee reveals that equity treated the guarantor as a f...
The response of sympathetic lawmakers to perceived abuses in the consumer credit field is almost tot...
Consumers who grant security interests to creditors pay lower rates in return, but this seemingly in...
Security interests in consumer goods have been extensively regulated, this regulation taking the pri...
The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), now effective everywhere except Louisiana, is conspicuously neutr...
This article focuses on a secured party\u27s right to hold a debtor liable for a deficiency when res...
This article first summarizes the many restrictions that the American consumer bankruptcy system imp...
The Uniform Commercial Code becomes operative in Nebraska at midnight on September 1, 1965. From tha...
This article reviews the legal infrastructure of tools that protect debtors’ assets or income, or th...
The Uniform Commercial Code protects a buyer in ordinary course of business from claims by third par...
One can view the law of creditors\u27 rights as a series of cyclesin which alternatively the rights ...
Despite advances in finance theory, secured debt remains a puzzle. As a consequence, the justificati...
This essay revisits earlier work on the relationship between insolvency law and secured credit, the ...
Section 364(c) and (d) of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the creation of security interests in rea...
Section 9-312 of the Uniform Commercial Code determines the priority of conflicting security interes...
A brief examination of the history of the guarantee reveals that equity treated the guarantor as a f...
The response of sympathetic lawmakers to perceived abuses in the consumer credit field is almost tot...