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Many current bankruptcy debates—from critical vendor orders to the Supreme Court's decision last year in Czyzewski v. Jevic Holding Corporation—begin with bankruptcy's distributional rules and questions about how much discretion a judge should have in applying them. It is a mistake, however,...
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Over the last few years, reorganization practice has undergone a massive change. A new device — the restructuring support agreement — has transformed Chapter 11 negotiations. This puts reorganization law at a crossroads. Chapter 11's commitment to a nonmarket restructuring with a rigid...
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When a firm encounters financial distress, there is a significant possibility that, at some point, the firm itself should be shut down and its assets put to a better use. But Chapter 11 and indeed all market-mimicking reorganization regimes other than a speedy auction entrust the shutdown...
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The Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation creates an “Orderly Liquidation Authority” (OLA) that shares many features in common with the Bankruptcy Code. This is easy to overlook because the legislation uses a language and employs a decision-maker (both borrowed from bank regulation) that...
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In RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v Amalgamated Bank, the Supreme Court's statutory interpretation focuses on an emerging theme of its bankruptcy jurisprudence: the proper domain of the bankruptcy judge. While one might expect the Court to approach that question of domain as it has for administrative...
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