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Secured Transactions
Professor Neustadter
Syllabus - Fall 2004
Course description (3 units. Graded.)
The course examines uniform
state law governing consensual security interests in personal property
and fixtures (Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code), a subject
relevant to a wide range of law practice, including commercial and
consumer finance, family law, and bankruptcy. Specific topics
include creation and perfection of security interests, priority
disputes between competing claimants to property, rights and remedies
of the creditor and debtor upon default, and the rights of the secured
party and debtor in bankruptcy.
The class meets MW 11:00
-12:15 p.m., in Bannan 135, beginning August 16, 2004.
Required reading materials
1. Lopucki and Warren,
Secured Credit: A Systems Approach (4th Ed. Aspen);
2. Warren, Bankruptcy
and Revised Article 9 (Aspen 2003 or later) (paperback statutory
supplement) (or any statutory compendium containing Article 1 and
Revised Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code).
Recommended reference sources
White and Summers, Uniform
Commercial Code: Secured Transactions (5th Ed. West Group)(paperback).
Assignments
I will post assignments on
my electronic reserve page for the course shortly after the end
of each class meeting. Typically, assignments will follow
the sequence in the outline of reading assignments below.
Class attendance and participation
I expect regular class attendance
and consistent preparation of assignments in anticipation of class
discussion. If you are not prepared for class discussion because
of illness or for other appropriate reasons, please notify me prior
to the start of class.
Classroom etiquette
The classroom environment
must be conducive to learning for all students. Distractions
made possible by advances in technology undermine that goal.
Accordingly, during class, in addition to usual courtesies, kindly
- disable and refrain from using cell phones,
pagers, and any other communication device except for your laptop
computer
- refrain from connecting to the Internet
- refrain from displaying wallpaper, screen
savers, or other material on your laptop computer that you can
reasonably expect to be offensive to other students
Examination and grade
There will be a final examination
in the course. Your grade in the course will be the grade
you receive on the examination, except that I reserve the right
to adjust your course grade downward for excessive absenteeism or
frequent lack of preparation.
The examination will be "limited
open book." This means that during the examination you
may consult the Lopucki and Warren casebook, your statutory supplement,
material distributed in class or through electronic reserve, and
any notes, outlines or other work product, hard copy or electronic,
that you have produced either alone or in cooperation with other
students in the class. You may not consult any other
materials, including the White and Summers text, because the cost
of these additional materials may disadvantage some students, and
you may not consult prior practice examinations or model answers.
Copies of prior examination
questions are posted on my website under the Prior Exam subheadings
Commercial Transactions and Secured Debt. I have model answers
available for some of the questions and will make them available
to anyone who sends me a copy of their answer.
Contact information and office hours
Office: Bergin 207
Phone (with voice mail): (408) 554-4378
E-mail: gneustadter@scu.edu
FAX: (408) 554-4426
Web site: http://www.scu.edu/law/FacWebPage/Neustadter/
My formal office hours are
MW 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. I am on campus a significant portion
of most weekdays except late Tuesday and Thursday afternoons and
welcome unscheduled visits or appointments at times other than formal
office hours.
Reading Assignments
Reading assignments are to
Lopucki and Warren, Secured Credit: A Systems Approach. For
each assignment to the casebook, you should also study those sections
of UCC Article 9 and 1 (together with Official Comments) referred
to in or inferred from the assigned portions of the casebook and
apply the relevant sections to the assigned problems. You
will find those UCC sections in your statutory supplement.
For class discussion, prepare only those problems from the casebook
that are specifically identified below.
Part One: The Creditor-Debtor Relationship
Chapter 1. Creditor's Remedies Under
State Law
- Introduction (pp. xxv-xxviii) and Remedies
of Unsecured Creditors Under State Law (pp. 3-20)(Problems 1.1-1.6)
- Security and Foreclosure (pp. 21-36)(2.1-2.2)
- Repossession of Collateral (pp. 37-58)(Probs.
3.1-3.7)
- Article 9 Sale and Deficiency (pp. 80-94)(Probs.
5.1-5.5)
Chapter 2. Creditor's Remedies in Bankruptcy
- Bankruptcy and the Automatic Stay (pp. 95-114)(Probs.
6.1-6.6)
- The Treatment of Secured Claims in Bankruptcy
(pp. 115-134)(Probs. 7.1-7.5, 7.7)
Chapter 3. Creation of Security Interests
- Formalities for Attachment (pp. 135-154)(Probs.
8.1-8.5)
- What Collateral and Obligations are Covered?
(pp. 155-167)(Probs. 9.1-9.5)
- Proceeds, Products, and Other Value-Tracing
Concepts (pp. 168-182)(Probs. 10.1-10.6)
- Tracing Collateral Value During Bankruptcy
(pp. 183-195)(Probs. 11.1-11.5)
- The Legal Limits on What May Be Collateral
(pp. 196-213)(No problems/no class discussion)
Chapter 4. Default: The Gateway to Remedies
- Default, Acceleration, and Cure (pp. 217-248)(Probs.
13.1, 13.3, 13.4, 13.6)
Chapter 5. The Prototypical Secured
Transaction
- The Prototypical Secured Transaction (pp.
253-72)(Probs. 15.1-15.4, 15.6)
Part Two: The Creditor-Third Party
Relationship
Chapter 6. Perfection
- The Personal Property Filing System (pp.
275-293)(Probs. 16.1-16.4)
- Article 9 Financing Statements: The Debtor's
Name (pp. 294-311)(Probs. 17.1, 17.3, 17.5, 17.6)
- Article 9 Financing Statements: Other Information
(pp. 312-326)(Probs. 18.1-18.4, 18.6)
- Exceptions to the Article 9 Filing Requirement
(pp. 323-344)(Probs. 19.1-19.4)
- The Land and Fixtures Recording Systems (pp.
345-360)(Probs. 20.1, but not (f) and (g), 20.2, 20.3)
- Characterizing Collateral for the Purpose
of Perfection (pp. 361-374)(Probs. 21.1, 21.3)
Chapter 7. Maintaining Perfection
- Maintaining Perfection Through Lapse and
Bankruptcy (pp. 375-389)(Probs. 22.1-22.3, 22.5)
- Maintaining Perfection Through Changes of
Name, Identity, and Use (pp. 390-402)(Probs. 23.1-23.3, 23.5)
- Maintaining Perfection Through Relocation
of Debtor or Collateral (pp. 403-414)(Probs. 24.1-24.3)
Chapter 9. Competitions for Collateral
- The Concept of Priority: State Law
(pp. 433-445) (Probs. 26.1-26.5)
- Lien Creditors Against Secured Creditors:
The Basics (pp. 463-471)(Review Prob. 16.1 at p. 291, Probs. 28.1-28.4)
- Lien Creditors Against Secured Creditors:
Future Advances (pp. 472-485)(Probs. 29.1-29.2)
- Trustees in Bankruptcy Against Secured Creditors:
The Strong Arm Clasue (pp. 486-506)(Probs. 30.1)
- Trustees in Bankruptcy Against Secured Creditors:
Preferences (pp. 507-518)(Probs. 31.1-31.3)
- Secured Creditors Against Secured Creditors:
The Basics (pp. 519-534)(Probs. 32.1-32.7)
- Buyers Against Secured Creditors (pp. 592-608)(Probs.
36.1-36.6)
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