Liquidators and administrators are skilled in increasing the payouts to creditors. To that end, practitioners faced with the fallout from the GFC have become increasingly interested in an old common law rule, now dusted down and re-branded as 'the anti-deprivation rule'. Its 19th-century formulation remains apt: ‘there cannot be a valid contract that a man’s property shall remain his until his bankruptcy, and on the happening of that event shall go over to someone else, and be taken away from his creditors.’ That is the UK version. The US version, the ipso facto rule, is enshrined in statute. A contractual arrangement which infringes the rule is void. Avoidance increases the asset pool available for distribution to the insolvent’s general c...
This article highlights differential treatment of trustees when they make application for the cleara...
Banking law and bankruptcy law clash. This is most evident when a bank holding company (parent compa...
In the United Kingdom a broad principle has been developing which effectively allows trustees to imp...
(Excerpt) A trustee or debtor-in-possession is provided with a plethora of powers under title 11 of ...
One of the most important and valuable tools that a business debtor has for reorganization under the...
The purpose of this Article is to expose that function of bankruptcy law that distinguished it from ...
Governments have bailed out banks that were considered too big to fail (TBTF). In an attempt to end ...
Thirty years after the enactment of the Bankruptcy Code, the courts have yet to agree on a theory of...
The Takings Clause is a vital consideration in determining the treatment of secured creditors in ban...
The constructive trust remedy plays an important role in bankruptcy because it places restitution cl...
Examines, with reference to case law, the pro-commerce approach of UK insolvency law regarding the c...
Modem bankruptcy law uses the date of the bankruptcy petition as a hypothetical line of cleavage, ...
Creditors have more than a dozen prejudgment, no-notice remedies which permit them to seize or encum...
Courts have struggled toward a unified theory to explain when the trustee has exclusive jurisdiction...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) allows a trus...
This article highlights differential treatment of trustees when they make application for the cleara...
Banking law and bankruptcy law clash. This is most evident when a bank holding company (parent compa...
In the United Kingdom a broad principle has been developing which effectively allows trustees to imp...
(Excerpt) A trustee or debtor-in-possession is provided with a plethora of powers under title 11 of ...
One of the most important and valuable tools that a business debtor has for reorganization under the...
The purpose of this Article is to expose that function of bankruptcy law that distinguished it from ...
Governments have bailed out banks that were considered too big to fail (TBTF). In an attempt to end ...
Thirty years after the enactment of the Bankruptcy Code, the courts have yet to agree on a theory of...
The Takings Clause is a vital consideration in determining the treatment of secured creditors in ban...
The constructive trust remedy plays an important role in bankruptcy because it places restitution cl...
Examines, with reference to case law, the pro-commerce approach of UK insolvency law regarding the c...
Modem bankruptcy law uses the date of the bankruptcy petition as a hypothetical line of cleavage, ...
Creditors have more than a dozen prejudgment, no-notice remedies which permit them to seize or encum...
Courts have struggled toward a unified theory to explain when the trustee has exclusive jurisdiction...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) allows a trus...
This article highlights differential treatment of trustees when they make application for the cleara...
Banking law and bankruptcy law clash. This is most evident when a bank holding company (parent compa...
In the United Kingdom a broad principle has been developing which effectively allows trustees to imp...