This Note rejects the statutory arguments that have been advanced in favor of the transformation rule, and argues that the rule is inconsistent with both the policies motivating section 522 of the Bankruptcy Code and the overall purposes of the U.C.C. priority system. Part I examines the treatment of purchase money security in the U.C.C. scheme. It also describes the exemption provisions of the 1978 Bankruptcy Code and the legislative concerns that shaped those provisions. Part II summarizes the judicial adoption of the transformation rule and the statutory basis relied upon by courts in applying it. Part III argues that neither the statutory language nor the policies underlying the U.C.C. and the Bankruptcy Code justify the transformation ...
Case law under the Former Act provided nearly absolute protection to perfected security interests at...
This Note argues that the two federal statutes are exempting statutes under section 522(b)(2)(A), an...
Section 544(b) of the Bankruptcy Code endows the trustee with the power to avoid fraudulent transfer...
This Note rejects the statutory arguments that have been advanced in favor of the transformation rul...
There are several reasons why Congress should define the term “purchase-money security interest” in ...
While secured lenders may have been content to ride the crest of judicial legislation, the only perm...
The Takings Clause is a vital consideration in determining the treatment of secured creditors in ban...
This Note examines whether the new value exception remains part of the revised Bankruptcy Code. Part...
This article explores two straightforward concepts, one from bankruptcy, and one from the priority s...
The reforms of 2005 yield important but subtle changes in the Bankruptcy Code\u27s treatment of fina...
(Excerpt) The fraudulent conveyance provision of the Bankruptcy Code, (“the Code”), Section 548, is ...
This Note argues that strict construction of section 522(f)(2) is most consistent with congressional...
In response to criticism by the credit industry and the dramatic rise in the amount of consumer bank...
A very large number of chapter 13 plans are confirmed each year. Unlike chapter 11 plans (for non-in...
(Excerpt) This Note sides with the “no harm, no foul” approach in this debate, arguing that bankrupt...
Case law under the Former Act provided nearly absolute protection to perfected security interests at...
This Note argues that the two federal statutes are exempting statutes under section 522(b)(2)(A), an...
Section 544(b) of the Bankruptcy Code endows the trustee with the power to avoid fraudulent transfer...
This Note rejects the statutory arguments that have been advanced in favor of the transformation rul...
There are several reasons why Congress should define the term “purchase-money security interest” in ...
While secured lenders may have been content to ride the crest of judicial legislation, the only perm...
The Takings Clause is a vital consideration in determining the treatment of secured creditors in ban...
This Note examines whether the new value exception remains part of the revised Bankruptcy Code. Part...
This article explores two straightforward concepts, one from bankruptcy, and one from the priority s...
The reforms of 2005 yield important but subtle changes in the Bankruptcy Code\u27s treatment of fina...
(Excerpt) The fraudulent conveyance provision of the Bankruptcy Code, (“the Code”), Section 548, is ...
This Note argues that strict construction of section 522(f)(2) is most consistent with congressional...
In response to criticism by the credit industry and the dramatic rise in the amount of consumer bank...
A very large number of chapter 13 plans are confirmed each year. Unlike chapter 11 plans (for non-in...
(Excerpt) This Note sides with the “no harm, no foul” approach in this debate, arguing that bankrupt...
Case law under the Former Act provided nearly absolute protection to perfected security interests at...
This Note argues that the two federal statutes are exempting statutes under section 522(b)(2)(A), an...
Section 544(b) of the Bankruptcy Code endows the trustee with the power to avoid fraudulent transfer...