Effective Enforcement of Creditors’ Rights


Book Description

The problem of enforcing a money judgment exists in every legal system in the world, but the methods and orientation vary significantly. Effective enforcement proceedings are crucial to ensure full access to justice for creditors. Complete and full knowledge of the debtors’ assets is crucial to choose the appropriate enforcement measure. But each legal system must balance the creditors’ rights to an efficient enforcement with the debtors’ rights. The wide differences between enforcement proceedings mirror the way each society tries to find a balance between confronting rights and interests. This book explores and compares how different legal systems approach these issues with a focus on the discovery of debtors’ assets, which is a common problem for enforcement and execution proceedings in almost every jurisdiction. This is the first book to compare enforcement proceedings around the world and presents a variety of information and country reports from leading experts from four continents. It represents the joint work of academic and legal authorities from Germany, Japan, Korea, France, the UK, Switzerland, Austria, Spain, Poland, Russia, Greece, North America, Taiwan, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and the EU.







Creditors' Rights, Debtors' Protection, and Bankruptcy


Book Description

This book follows the traditional format developed for creditors' and debtors' rights courses. It is suitable for a three-hour combined course covering collection efforts of creditors on an individual basis as well as the bankruptcy law centering on creditors' collective efforts. The first part of the book deals with the rights of debtors and creditors, generally and individually. The chapters cover diverse matters, but all are related to that single goal of the creditor: to collect the debt owing by the debtor. The second part of the book contains the material devoted to bankruptcy. A Teacher's Manual is available to professors.




Effective Enforcement of Creditors’ Rights


Book Description

The problem of enforcing a money judgment exists in every legal system in the world, but the methods and orientation vary significantly. Effective enforcement proceedings are crucial to ensure full access to justice for creditors. Complete and full knowledge of the debtors’ assets is crucial to choose the appropriate enforcement measure. But each legal system must balance the creditors’ rights to an efficient enforcement with the debtors’ rights. The wide differences between enforcement proceedings mirror the way each society tries to find a balance between confronting rights and interests. This book explores and compares how different legal systems approach these issues with a focus on the discovery of debtors’ assets, which is a common problem for enforcement and execution proceedings in almost every jurisdiction. This is the first book to compare enforcement proceedings around the world and presents a variety of information and country reports from leading experts from four continents. It represents the joint work of academic and legal authorities from Germany, Japan, Korea, France, the UK, Switzerland, Austria, Spain, Poland, Russia, Greece, North America, Taiwan, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and the EU.




Creditor Rights and the Public Interest


Book Description

Creditor Rights and the Public Interest supports the greater representation of non-traditional creditors in the process of insolvency restructuring in Canada, concentrating particularly on restructuring under the federal Companies' Creditors' Arrangement Act (CCAA). Arguing in favour of the representation of such non-traditional creditors as workers, consumers, trade suppliers, and local governments, Janis Sarra describes the existing process of addressing their interests, analyzes four case studies that focus on non-creditor groups, and compares the Canadian approach to that of several other countries, such as Germany, France, and the United States. Sarra draws on a comprehensive body of academic literature that covers a broad range of issues--insolvency theory, corporate governance theory, legislative history, and bankruptcy and insolvency practice. She further surveys the relevant legislation and supplements her analysis with insights drawn from extensive primary research of court records and personal interviews with lawyers, judges, and government officials. Creditor Rights and the Public Interest ultimately illustrates the way in which the concept of the public interest can be utilized to foreground the concerns of non-traditional stakeholders. Sarra provides a coherent account of the justification for recognizing these creditors by situating insolvency law in a legal regime that realizes a duty to maximize all of the interests and investments at stake in the corporation. In an academic field where scholarship is currently scarce, Sarra's text will be a welcome contribution.




Debtor-creditor


Book Description

This unique book comprehensively reintroduces creditors' remedies and debtors' rights under state and federal, nonbankruptcy law. The coverage: includes commercial and consumer debt transactions; spans the full range of both new and traditional means of judicial and private enforcement; explores modern arrangements for structuring debt and security; focuses consistently on the core issues of defining who is liable for the debt and who has what rights in what property; and probes how debtor-creditor law applies and adapts, by public or private law, to modern transactional forms and circumstances and also to contemporary attitudes about the proper balance of debtors' and creditors' interests. The text will support almost anything the professor wants to teach. The book is designed and arranged so that its many discrete topics and materials stand alone and allow a professor to easily select and arrange its content to exactly fit courses of va




Creditors' Rights


Book Description




Florida Creditors' Rights Manual


Book Description

This four volume looseleaf sourcebook discusses pleading and procedural requirements of Florida statutes and caselaw relevant to creditors' rights. Techniques for preventing fraudulent transfers and related remedies are discussed in detail in the work.




Creditors' Rights and Bankruptcy


Book Description

Increasing the Odds of a Creditor's Judgment; Judgment Liens; Enforcing Judgments Through Execution; Finding Property of the Debtor; Garnishment; Fraudulent Conveyances; Bulk Sales; Shielding Exempt Property; Special Rights Under State Law; Federal Tax Lien; Attachment; Replevin; Lis Pendens; Fourteenth Amendment Protection; Other Sources of Due Process Protection; Overview of Bankruptcy; Commencement and Dismissal of a Bankruptcy Case; Stay of Collection Activities; Property of the Estate; Exemptions in Bankruptcy; Avoiding Pre-Bankruptcy Transfers; Post-Bankruptcy Transfers; Effect of Bankruptcy on Secured Claims; Chapter 7 and Unsecured Claims; Leases and Executory Contracts; Discharge; Chapter 11; Chapter 13; Allocation of Judicial Power Over Bankruptcy Matter.




Debtors' and Creditors' Rights


Book Description

This treatise focuses on developments in pre-judgement and post-judgement debtor-creditor law, along with issues under the Bankruptcy Code. The increasing consumer Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy filings are discussed in the work.