快速、廉价和债权人控制:公司重组失败了吗?

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
M. Jacoby
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Courting Failure is rich with systematic empirical data, anecdotes, law, theories, allegations, and controversies, as would be expected from a researcher who has made critical contributions to our understanding of corporate reorganization for over two decades. Plenty of academics, lawyers, and judges are examining myriad aspects of Courting Failure, including whether LoPucki oversteps by characterizing the bankruptcy system as corrupted, whether a significant repeat filing is per se undesirable, whether LoPucki uses the ideal parameters to measure repeat filings and failure in bankruptcy, and how all of this affects the international market for judicial services. By contrast, I highlight other aspects of Courting Failure's ambitious thesis that ultimately cannot be sustained. First, Courting Failure cannot tell us enough about the pathways through which competition contributes to failed reorganizations for us to rely on the competition thesis to fuel policy change. 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引用次数: 9

摘要

学术界对美国式公司重组的支持一直处于历史最高水平,或者,至少,要求废除第11章的呼声一直处于历史最低水平。现在,对《破产法》第11章持批评态度的人赞同地说,破产过程变得更快、更便宜、更受债权人控制,而且与市场力量更加融合。世界知名的经济学家将现代的第11章视为改善国际主权债务重组的建议的基础。然而,现代第11章的认可绝不是普遍的。在《追求失败:大案件的竞争如何腐蚀破产法院》一书中,著名的破产专家林恩·洛普基教授描绘了处于危机状态的破产制度。在这本书中,我们了解到,在第11章中脱颖而出的上市公司中,近一半的大公司在短短几年内又申请了破产申请。LoPucki将高重复提交率归因于法官通过安抚案件调解人来竞争案件,案件调解人是指导公司决定地点选择的当事人。高重复提交率首先影响了两个有吸引力的地方,特拉华地区和纽约南区,然后随着其他法官试图将案件吸引到自己的法院,这种情况蔓延到全国。“追求失败”的政策处方是通过限制公司的场地选择来消除场地间的竞争。自从《追求失败》出版以来,LoPucki已经说服了一位著名的参议员提出立法来实现这一目标。《追求失败》一书丰富了系统的经验数据、轶事、法律、理论、指控和争议,正如一位在过去20多年里为我们理解公司重组做出了重要贡献的研究人员所期望的那样。大量的学者、律师和法官正在研究《追求失败》的无数方面,包括LoPucki是否越界,将破产制度描述为腐败,重大的重复申请本身是否不可取,LoPucki是否使用了理想的参数来衡量破产中的重复申请和失败,以及所有这些如何影响国际司法服务市场。相比之下,我强调了《追求失败》这本雄心勃勃的论文的其他方面,但这些方面最终无法维持下去。首先,《追求失败》无法充分告诉我们竞争是如何导致重组失败的,因此我们无法依靠竞争理论来推动政策变革。《求爱失败》的重复申请数据和他的竞争实践的例子在时间上或实质上都不匹配,特别是在1997年及之后出现的公司中重复申请的惊人增长方面。其次,《追求失败》一书隐含地依赖于对法院实践驱动因素的描述,这与越来越多的关于司法政治和行为决定因素的理论和实证跨学科研究不相符。法律界的其他人赞同LoPucki关于大型破产案件司法竞争的假设,尽管他们对其优点有不同的看法。然而,即使一些法官确实在大型破产案件中竞争,更广泛的文献也对竞争或缺乏竞争是否像《追求失败》一书所暗示的那样,是司法实践的主要塑造者表示怀疑。特别是,《追求失败》没有充分考虑到第11章交易模式的兴起,以及对这种模式的日益认识可能如何影响法官实践的演变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fast, Cheap, and Creditor-Controlled: Is Corporate Reorganization Failing?
Academic support for American-style corporate reorganization has been at an all-time high, or, at least, calls for the repeal of chapter 11 have been at an all-time low. Critics of chapter 11 now say, approvingly, that the process has become faster, cheaper, more creditor-controlled, and more integrated with market forces. World-renowned economists have looked to modern chapter 11 as the foundation of proposals to improve sovereign debt restructuring internationally. Endorsement of the modern chapter 11 is by no means universal, however. In Courting Failure: How The Competition for Big Cases is Corrupting the Bankruptcy Courts, Professor Lynn LoPucki, a well known academic with deep expertise in bankruptcy, portrays the bankruptcy system in a state of crisis. In this book, we learn that nearly half of the largest firms emerging from chapter 11 as publicly held companies are filing another bankruptcy petition in just a few years. LoPucki attributes the high repeat filing rate to the judges who compete for cases by appeasing case placers, the parties who guide a firm's decision regarding venue selection. A high repeat filing rate first afflicted two magnet venues, the District of Delaware and the Southern District of New York, then spread nationwide as other judges have tried to attract cases to their own courts. Courting Failure's policy prescription is to eliminate inter-venue competition by restricting firms' venue choice. Since the release of Courting Failure, LoPucki has convinced a prominent Senator to introduce legislation accomplishing exactly that. Courting Failure is rich with systematic empirical data, anecdotes, law, theories, allegations, and controversies, as would be expected from a researcher who has made critical contributions to our understanding of corporate reorganization for over two decades. Plenty of academics, lawyers, and judges are examining myriad aspects of Courting Failure, including whether LoPucki oversteps by characterizing the bankruptcy system as corrupted, whether a significant repeat filing is per se undesirable, whether LoPucki uses the ideal parameters to measure repeat filings and failure in bankruptcy, and how all of this affects the international market for judicial services. By contrast, I highlight other aspects of Courting Failure's ambitious thesis that ultimately cannot be sustained. First, Courting Failure cannot tell us enough about the pathways through which competition contributes to failed reorganizations for us to rely on the competition thesis to fuel policy change. Courting Failure's repeat filing data and his examples of competitive practices do not match up temporally or substantively, particularly with respect to the striking increase in repeat filings among firms emerging in 1997 and thereafter. Second, Courting Failure implicitly relies on an account of the drivers of court practices that does not square with the growing body of theoretical and empirical interdisciplinary research on the determinants of judicial politics and behavior. Others in the legal academy share LoPucki's assumption of judicial competition for large bankruptcy cases, although they have different views of its merits. Even if some judges do compete for large bankruptcy cases, however, the broader literature casts doubt that competition or the lack thereof is the dominant shaper of judicial practices in the way that Courting Failure suggests. In particular, Courting Failure takes insufficient account of the rise of the transactional model of chapter 11 and how the increasing recognition of this model might affect the evolution of judges' practices.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Founded in 1951, the Buffalo Law Review is a generalist law review that publishes articles by practitioners, professors, and students in all areas of the law. The Buffalo Law Review has a subscription base of well over 600 institutions and individuals. The Buffalo Law Review currently publishes five issues per year with each issue containing approximately four articles and one member-written comment per issue.
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