第十一章程序中的关系偏好

IF 0.6 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Brook E. Gotberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在破产界,债权人讨厌所谓的“优先”行动已不是什么秘密,这种行动允许债务人在破产前夕为遗产的利益收回向债权人支付的款项。这种怨恨在贸易债权人中尤其明显,这些债权人往往是按信贷条件向债务人提供货物和服务的无担保企业。名义上,优先行动旨在平衡每个无担保债权人必须承担破产解除损失的程度,或者阻止债权人以这种方式向债务人追讨债务,从而将资不抵债的债务人推向破产。但经验证据强烈表明,至少在破产法第11章的重组程序中,优惠措施并不能实现上述任何一个既定目标。对债务人、贸易债权人和参与中小型破产法破产案的律师的采访表明,债权人并没有被优先行为所阻止,而且在一个债务人能够选择避免哪些优先转移以及在解决优先行为时接受多少优先转移的制度中,优先行为并不是平等适用的。相反,这些访谈提出了第11章中优先法律的另一种理由,这种理由更符合促进债务人在重组过程中对债权人行使战略杠杆的能力。这样看来,避免偏好法实际上是偏好永久化法,目的是在破产程序中保留有价值的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Relational Preferences in Chapter 11 Proceedings
It is no secret in the bankruptcy community that creditors hate so-called “preference” actions, which permit a debtor to recover payments made to creditors on the eve of bankruptcy for the benefit of the estate. This resentment is particularly palpable among trade creditors, which tend to be unsecured businesses providing the debtor goods and services on credit terms. Nominally, preference actions are intended to equalize the extent to which each unsecured creditor must bear the loss of a bankruptcy discharge, or to discourage creditors from rushing to collect from the debtor in such a way that will push an insolvent debtor into bankruptcy. But empirical evidence strongly suggests that, at least in chapter 11 reorganization proceedings, preference actions do not fulfill either of these stated goals. Interviews with debtors, trade creditors, and attorneys involved in small-and medium-sized chapter 11 bankruptcy cases establish both that creditors are not deterred from collecting by preference actions, and that preference actions are not applied equally in a system where debtors are able to choose which preferential transfers to avoid and how much to accept in settlement of preference actions. Instead, these interviews suggest an alternative justification for preference law in chapter 11, one more consistent with promoting a debtor’s ability to exercise strategic leverage over its creditors in an effort to reorganize. In this way, the law of preference avoidance is actually one of preference perpetuation, in the interest of preserving valuable relationships within bankruptcy proceedings.
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CiteScore
1.10
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