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The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law by Thomas H. Jackson The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law
By Thomas H. Jackson
2001/10 - Beard Books
1587981149 - Paperback - Reprint -  296 pp.
US$34.95

Provides insight and analysis of the fundamental principles of bankruptcy law and their application to bankruptcy problems. This book will prove interesting reading to bankruptcy attorneys, other attorneys, business persons, and those fascinated by the interplay between economics and policy.

Publisher Comments

Categories: Bankruptcy & Restructuring | Law

This title is part of the Bankruptcy Primer and Treatises lists.

Of Interest:

Bankruptcy & Distressed Restructurings: Analytical Issues and Investment Opportunities

Bankruptcy Crimes: Third Edition

Bankruptcy Investing: How to Profit from Distressed Companies

Distressed Securities: Analyzing and Evaluating Market Potential and Investment Risk

The Executive Guide to Corporate Bankruptcy

The PRC Enterprise Bankruptcy Law: The People's Work in Progress

Why Companies Fail: Strategies for Detecting, Avoiding, and Profiting from Bankruptcy

This book sets forth a careful analysis of the fundamentals of bankruptcy law as well as informed insights into the subject. The author's premise is that there is an intellectual coherence that underlies bankruptcy law and that its first or underlying principles are few and elegant. These principles can then be developed by defining their potential operation in the existing social, economic, and legal world to identify precisely what bankruptcy law should encompass, how it can accomplish its goals, and the constraints on its ability to do so. The purpose of the book is to suggest what the underpinnings of bankruptcy law should be and then to apply that learning to a variety of issues while testing the existing bankruptcy law against them. The book is designed to prod analysts to think about these underpinnings in analyzing bankruptcy problems.

From the back cover blurb:

This books sets forth a careful analysis of the fundamentals of bankruptcy law.  It provides a keen insight into the subject.  The author's premise is that there is an intellectual coherence that underlies bankruptcy law and that its first or underlying principles are few and elegant.  Bankruptcy law can be used to keep firms in operation, and bankruptcy law inevitably touches other bodies of law.  These principles can then be developed by defining their potential operation in the existing, social, economic and legal world to identify precisely what bankruptcy law should encompass, how it can accomplish its goals, and the constraints on its ability to do so.  The purpose of the book is to suggest what the underpinnings of bankruptcy law should be and then to apply that learning to a variety of issues while testing the existing bankruptcy law against them.  The book is designed to prod analysis to think about these underpinnings in analyzing bankruptcy problems.  This books will prove interesting reading to bankruptcy attorneys, other attorneys, business persons, and those fascinated by the interplay between economics and policy.

From Turnarounds and Workouts, January 15, 2002
Review by Gail Owens Hoelscher:

The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law is clearly the culmination of a long career of reflective attention to overriding issues and trends in bankruptcy.  In it, Thomas Jackson presents a theoretical framework on which bankruptcy law is built, and emphasizes the need for a workable theory on what bankruptcy law can and should do.  Problems in bankruptcy cases, he believes, are resolved too often in an ad hoc manner because the field of bankruptcy analysis lacks the discipline of determining if and why such problems are proper concerns of bankruptcy law to begin with.

The objective of The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law is to "show why bankruptcy's principal role limits what other functions it can usefully perform. "  Mr. Jackson explores the idea that bankruptcy law has become more controversial because its scope has been extended beyond its mandate.  Bankruptcy law's original, historical function is debt collection.  Indeed, bankruptcy law is principally "an ancillary, parallel system of debt collection law," and provides creditors with a compulsory and collective forum to sort out their relative entitlements to a debtor's assets."

Since the 1980s, according to Jackson, it has become "...fashionable, for example, to state that keeping firms in operation is a goal of bankruptcy law.  It is likewise fashionable to see bankruptcy law as embodying substantive goals of its own that need to be "balanced" with (among others) labor law, with environmental law, or with the rights of secured creditors or other property claimants... (I)ncluding too much in bankruptcy law can undermine what everyone agrees it should be doing in the first place.

Mr. Jackson allows that bankruptcy law historically has had a second role as well: to provide for "some sort of a financial fresh start for individuals."  He devotes the tenth chapter of this book to his views on the difference between a financial fresh start for individuals and a financial fresh start for corporations.

The first nine chapters of The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law deal with the question of how assets in a bankruptcy case are to be used.  The goal, Mr. Jackson says, should be "to permit the owners of assets to use those assets in a way that is most productive to them as a group in the face of incentives by individual owners to maximize their own positions."  Bankruptcy law should concern itself with converting ownership of assets from debtor to creditor and reducing the cost of said conversion.

Throughout his book, Mr. Jackson applies his theoretical framework to a variety of pertinent issues while testing the current provision of the Bankruptcy Code.  These issues include determining liabilities and the basic role of non-bankruptcy law; redefining liabilities (the basic trustee avoiding powers of section 544); determining the assets available for distribution; executor contracts in bankruptcy; prebankruptcy opt-out activity and the role of preference law; running bankruptcy's collective proceeding; timing the bankruptcy proceedings; reconsidering reorganizations, and the scope of discharge and exempt property.

The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law  will prove enlightening and thought provoking to the lay reader and business person interested in the interplay between business, economics, and policy, as well as to the bankruptcy professional with a desire to distinguish forest from tree.

Thomas H. Jackson was educated in Williams College and Yale Law School. He is the current president of the University of Rochester, after being on the faculty of Harvard Law, Stanford, and University of Virginia. He also clerked for US District Court Judge Marvin E. Frankel from 1975 to 1976, and for Supreme Court Justice William H. Rehnquist from 1976 to 1977. Fostered by his writings of bankruptcy and commercial texts used in law schools around the country, he has close ties with the practicing bankruptcy bar, including membership in the National Bankruptcy Conference and amicus participation in major bankruptcy cases. He has also served as Special Master for the US Supreme Court in a dispute involving every state in the nation over the disposition of unclaimed dividends held by brokerage houses.

Introduction: The Two Roles of Bankruptcy Law 1
1 The Role of Bankruptcy Law and Collective Action in Debt Collection 7
2 Determining Liabilities and the Basic Role of Nonbankruptcy Law 20
3 Refining Liabilities: The Basic Trustee Avoiding Powers of Section 544 68
4 Determining the Assets Available for Distribution 89
5 Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: The Combination of Assets and Liabilities 105
6 Prebankruptcy Opt-Out Activity and the Role of Preference Law 122
7 Running Bankruptcy's Collective Proceeding 151
8 Timing the Bankruptcy Proceeding: The Problems of Proper Commencement 193
9 Reconsidering Reorganizations 209
10 The Fresh-Start Policy in Bankruptcy Law 225
11 The Scope of Discharge and Exempt Property 253
Index to Bankruptcy Code Sections 281
General Index 283

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