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Book Review
Debt's
Dominion: A History of Bankruptcy Law in America. By David A. Skeel Jr.
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001. xiv, 281 pp. $35.00, ISBN
0-691-08810-1.)
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published before the recent rash of corporate reorganizations, David A. Skeel
Jr.'s Debt's Dominion could have been written as a primer for how
and why today's corporations are so fast to seek the protections offered by
American bankruptcy law. Skeel notes how 'U. S. bankruptcy law is far more
sympathetic to debtors than are the laws of other nations.' English
bankruptcy, for example, historically was driven by the needs of creditors to
protect their investments and/or assets; that usually resulted in a long-term
process of court-sanctioned repayments that normally ended, at the corporate
level, with the firing of management, the imposition of a trusteeship
organized by the creditors, and the eventual breakup and sale of the bankrupt
company's assets. Not so with American bankruptcy law. Here, bankruptcy is
almost always initiated by the debtor and is thus seen as a shield by which a
debtor can 'get a second chance.' For personal bankruptcy, it means the
immediate discharge (voiding) of debts, providing a clean slate to begin
again. At the corporate level, the result is not only that management gains
court protection from its creditors and hence time to reorganize its debts
under the umbrella of the court's protection, but that the entire process is
placed in the hands of the very managers who had driven the company into
bankruptcy in the first place. |
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