The Law of Sales and Secured Financing


Book Description

This casebook provides detailed information on legal aspects of sales and secured financing. The casebook provides the tools for fast, easy, on-point research. Part of the University Casebook Series; , it includes selected cases designed to illustrate the development of a body of law on a particular subject. Text and explanatory materials designed for law study accompany the cases.













Basic Sales Finance


Book Description

This book combines UCC Articles 2 (sales) and 9 (secured transaction) for either a three- or four-hour course focusing on business sales (B2B) and commercial financing. Coverage is transactionally arranged and integrated - back and forth between Articles 2 and 9 - based on a recurring fact pattern of Our Bank financing Our Store which buys goods from Our Supplier and resells to Our Buyer[s]. The book mixes explanatory text, cases, and problems to support a variety of teaching and learning styles. And statutory provisions themselves are reprinted when and where they are referenced so there is no need to hunt for them in or outside the book. The problems include actual, recent bar examination questions interspersed throughout the book for comprehensive review. The book covers everything that is fundamentally important in both sales and secured transactions in ways and means that allow students to manage and benefit from the wide, integrated coverage.




The Law of Security and Title-Based Financing


Book Description

Personal property security is an important subject in commercial practice, as it is the key to much of the law of banking and sale. This second edition has been fully updated and expanded to cover all important issues and changes within this highly complex area of law. It explains traditional methods of securing debts (such as mortgages, charges, and pledges) on property other than land, describing how these are created, how they must be registered (or otherwise 'perfected') if they are to be valid, the rights and duties of the parties, and how the security is enforced if the debt is not paid. The new edition includes an expanded section on priorities in which it explains how 'priority' disputes between competing interests over the same property are resolved. In addition the book covers the law governing other transactions that perform a similar economic function (such as finance leases, retention of title clauses, and sales of a company's book debts). These are not currently treated by the law as security and are therefore subject to different rules on perfection, priority, and enforcement. There is much expansion of the discussion relating to enforcement including the issue of 'right of use' following Lehman, more analysis on administration and all forms of non-possessory security and quasi-security, and a new chapter on enforcement of security addressing the right of appropriation under FC/FCAR and the Cukurova case. The conflict of laws section includes developments under the Rome I Regulation affecting assignment issues, the UNIDROIT Convention 2009 in relation to tiered holdings and the Cape Town Convention's extensions made to coverage of asset-backed security over equipment. It also addresses the changes brought about by the abolition of Slavenburg registration. This edition contains relevant points from the Banking Act 2009 concerning its impact on security, such as the power to protect certain interests on a transfer of property, and also considers amendments regarding liquidators' expenses under the Insolvency Rules. The authors additionally deal with the role of step-in rights and why they are part of the statutory definition of project finance in the Enterprise Act. Previously published as The Law of Personal Property Security, this new edition brings together all of the law on this complex area, providing guidance in the context of commercial practice, especially with increased coverage of conflict of laws, priority, insolvency, and enforcement.










Commercial Transactions, Secured Financing


Book Description

The principal job of the transactional attorney is to identify the risks of a proposed transaction, evaluate them, and suggest ways to minimize or avoid them by careful contract drafting or other planning. That requires understanding that transaction and the legal framework in which it will occur. Like prior editions, the third edition of Commercial Transaction: Secured Financing attempts to develop the chief skills of the transactional attorney - risk identification and avoidance - as it teaches asset-based financing transactions and the law regulating such transactions, both personal property and real estate, state and federal, statutory and case law. time exclusively to discussing one problem from the problem set that follows each topic or issue. The problems seek to: establish black letter law; pose drafting or other planning issues; and/or raise interpretive issues. An extensive teacher's manual describes the authors' suggested analysis of each and every problem and red flags potential land mines. of the federal law of bankruptcy on that state law scheme. Part two focuses on three specific areas of secured financing - inventory and receivables, promises and fixed assets - and develops certain risks idiosyncratic to each area.