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My new book is out – the Law of Failure.
The sub-title is "A Tour Through the Wilds of American Business Insolvency Law," which pretty much tells the whole story. I try to cover all business insolvency law – not just the Bankruptcy Code. State laws, and federal laws like Dodd-Frank's OLA are covered too. All in a concise little volume.
In my research I discovered that many states have specialized receivership and other insolvency laws for specific types of businesses. And some states – I'm looking at you New Hampshire – still have corporate "bankruptcy" statutes on the books from the days when there was no federal bankruptcy law, or (as was the case with the early Bankruptcy Act) the law did not extend to all types of businesses. Can any of these laws really work? It is hard to say, since the Supreme Court has not dealt with a bankruptcy preemption issue in a very long time.
I welcome discussion on this question, or the book in general, from Slips readers, either below or via email.
I started reading this book over the Labor Day weekend and am thoroughly enjoying it. The analysis regarding how only two entities are possible candidates to be debtors under (thus far never used) subchapter V of chapter 7 is fascinating. This is a valuable project and I would encourage an even deeper analysis as suggested in the introduction.
Posted by: Whitman L. Holt | September 04, 2018 at 01:59 PM