p\u3eThe first question for consideration is the applicability of the shelter provision of section 2-403(1) to these cases. This section may be relied upon by different parties depending upon the nature of the sale. When a bankruptcy sale is involved, the buyer may claim, as Armstrong did in Mitchell, that the section allows him to succeed to the trustee\u27s priority over unperfected security interests. When an ordinary judicial sale is involved, however, there is no intermediate transferee with both title to the property and a clear claim to priority, and the secured party may rely on this section to assert that the buyer takes no greater rights than his debtor had or had power to transfer and that thus the buyer takes subject to the un...
(Excerpt) Although the entitlement to receive dividends is not explicitly addressed in the United St...
Are investors in securitized receivables to be treated as the owners of an asset whose sale has take...
The secured creditor enjoys several advantages over his unsecured brethren. If the debtor defaults o...
p\u3eThe first question for consideration is the applicability of the shelter provision of section...
This Note explores the rationale underlying the courts\u27 conflicting decisions in light of the pur...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) allows a trus...
Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code empowers a secured creditor to sell collateral. This power ...
This paper explores the legitimacy—or illegitimacy—of filing and maintaining a case under the Bankru...
Enormous revolutions have occurred in commercial law since the publication of the landmark GILMORE O...
Property is generally understood in two ways. Most people think of property as a thing that is owned...
(Excerpt) Creditors that have a security interest in the same collateral will often dispute the prio...
Once an appreciation of section 9-315\u27s intended breadth is triggered, however, troublesome quest...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) gives the tru...
While secured lenders may have been content to ride the crest of judicial legislation, the only perm...
Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) Section 1-201(35) provides in its detailed definition of security in...
(Excerpt) Although the entitlement to receive dividends is not explicitly addressed in the United St...
Are investors in securitized receivables to be treated as the owners of an asset whose sale has take...
The secured creditor enjoys several advantages over his unsecured brethren. If the debtor defaults o...
p\u3eThe first question for consideration is the applicability of the shelter provision of section...
This Note explores the rationale underlying the courts\u27 conflicting decisions in light of the pur...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) allows a trus...
Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code empowers a secured creditor to sell collateral. This power ...
This paper explores the legitimacy—or illegitimacy—of filing and maintaining a case under the Bankru...
Enormous revolutions have occurred in commercial law since the publication of the landmark GILMORE O...
Property is generally understood in two ways. Most people think of property as a thing that is owned...
(Excerpt) Creditors that have a security interest in the same collateral will often dispute the prio...
Once an appreciation of section 9-315\u27s intended breadth is triggered, however, troublesome quest...
(Excerpt) Section 363(f) of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) gives the tru...
While secured lenders may have been content to ride the crest of judicial legislation, the only perm...
Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) Section 1-201(35) provides in its detailed definition of security in...
(Excerpt) Although the entitlement to receive dividends is not explicitly addressed in the United St...
Are investors in securitized receivables to be treated as the owners of an asset whose sale has take...
The secured creditor enjoys several advantages over his unsecured brethren. If the debtor defaults o...