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Santa Clara University School of Law
Secured Debt - Syllabus
Professors Mertens and Neustadter
Spring 2000
E-book
Prior Exams
Discussion Threads
Course Description
4 units. Graded.
Secured debt (i.e. debt for which the
creditor has collateral) is an integral part of commercial, real estate, family,
insolvency, consumer, and other areas of law practice. Repayment of debt may be secured by
real property, personal property, fixtures, or a combination of both, and the security may
exist by virtue of statute, judicial process, or consent of the parties. This course
focuses primarily on key issues relating to the creation and documentation of
consensual secured debt, the rights of the secured party and debtor upon the debtor's
default, resolution of priority disputes between multiple parties with an interest in the
same collateral, and the rights of the secured party and debtor in the event of the
debtor's bankruptcy.
Typically, these issues are addressed in
distinct courses: Real Property Secured Transactions (real property collateral in
consensual transactions); Commercial Law I (personal property and fixture collateral in
consensual transactions); and Debtors' and Creditors' Rights (security through the
judicial process, and bankruptcy). The integration of these topics in one course offers
students a more complete and penetrating view of the law of secured debt, facilitates an
understanding of mixed collateral transactions, and brings the potential of bankruptcy
from sideshow to the mainstream of thinking about the meaning of secured debt.
You are not eligible to register for the
course if you have previously received credit for Commercial Transactions I (Course 256)
or Real Property Secured Transactions (Course 284). If you receive credit for Secured Debt
you may not thereafter register for either Course 256 or Course 284.
Required Course Materials
Materials for the course are Mertens and
Neustadter, Secured Debt (Version 4.0). If you are a student in the class, you may
download the materials to the hard drive of your computer without charge by pursuing the
E-Books link from the home page of Professor Neustadter's web site. Contact
Professor Neustadter or Professor Mertens for a password that will allow you to download
the materials. The materials should be navigated and viewed with a browser (Netscape
or Microsoft Internet Explorer).
Hard copy of the electronic course
materials is available, upon request, for the cost of duplication. Some sample forms have not yet been incorporated in the electronic course
materials and will be distributed separately for the cost of duplication.
Supplementary reference material
Supplementary reference material will be
placed on two hour reserve in the Law Library under Professor Neustadter's name. We
recommend that you see what is available early in the semester.
California Mortgage and Deed of Trust
Practice, published by the California Continuing Education of the Bar (C.E.B.) is
available for $66.00 (half its normal price) from the Campus Store. Do not purchase
this book until after the first class meeting, during which Professor Mertens will discuss
the advisability of purchasing the book.
Assignments
Reading assignments will be announced in
class and thereafter posted as an announcement on the Heafy E-Res page for Secured Debt
(the page is listed under Professor Neustadter's name). From time to time we
will also post other materials or news on this E-Res page.
The sequence of assignments will
generally follow the California Template in the electronic course materials. You should
consider any assignment of a section of the Uniform Commercial Code to automatically
include an assignment to read the Official Comments for the assigned section and you
should pursue appropriate cross references from any sections assigned.
Course requirements
1. Class Attendance and
Participation
We 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
note your name on a piece of paper and give it to one of us prior to the start of
class. We reserve the right to adjust your final course grade downward for excessive
absenteeism or frequent lack of preparation.
2. Foreclosure Sales
As a condition to receiving credit for
the course, you must attend a non-judicial real property foreclosure sale and submit a
short written summary of the sale (with only your student identification number) to one of
us. Sales are held on the Market Street side of the Santa Clara County Superior Court
located at 191 N. 1st Street, San Jose. The best times are Fridays at 11:00 a.m. and
Wednesdays at 1:00 p.m. or 2:00 p.m. Alternatively, you may attend such a sale in
another county. Foreclosure companies can generally tell you when and where such
sales are commonly held. We encourage you to submit your summary as an attachment to
e-mail.
3. Discussion Threads
We encourage you to participate in discussion of class
topics through the Secured Debt Conference available through the Discussion link on
Professor Neustadter's web site. Use this conference to post or respond to questions
or ideas for the benefit of the entire class. You may post anonymously. We may
also post questions and comments.
4. Examination
There will be an ungraded
self-administered quiz midway through the semester, the answers to which we will discuss
in class. There will be a final examination at the end of the semester. It will be
"limited open book," allowing you reference during the examination to the
electronic and hard copy versions of the teaching materials, to any other materials
distributed in class or electronically, and to any materials (such as notes and outlines,
including those embedded in software) that you have prepared yourself or in cooperation
with others in the class. You may answer the examination in writing, or through use
of your own laptop computer or a desk top computer in the Law Library without the
restrictions imposed by the Examinator exam taking software.
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