Professor Bill Henning and colleague urge the Supreme court

Posted by Texas A&M School of Law on Feb 25, 2020 2:45:19 PM

In early February, Texas A&M School of Law Professor Bill Henning and Professor John McGarvey of the University of Kentucky College of Law filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court urging the Court to grant certiorari, or a request for judicial review, in In re I80 Equipment, LLC.,  938 F.3d 866 (7th Cir. 2019). tcwilliam-h-henning (1)

Professors Henning and McGarvey are members of the Uniform Law Commission (ULC), serve as vice-chair and chair, respectively, of the ULC’s Committee on the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), are both members of the American Law Institute (ALI) and both serve on the Permanent Editorial Board for the Uniform Commercial Code (PEB). 

The ULC and ALI promulgated the UCC, and the PEB was established to oversee its ongoing development. Professors Henning and McGarvey, and many other members of these organizations, have been concerned about what has been described as a tsunami of badly reasoned decisions applying the UCC, and they decided to try to do something about it.

In the case at issue, the Seventh Circuit held that the requirement that a publicly searchable Article 9 financing statement contain information about the collateral could be satisfied by a cross-reference to a private security agreement. Because third-party searchers do not have access to this agreement, the decision has the capacity to undermine a critical component of the country’s most important commercial law. There is no support for it in the decisional law and it is at odds with the First Circuit’s decision in In re Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico, 914 F.3d 694 (1st Cir. 2019), cert. denied 140 S.Ct. 47 (Oct. 7, 2019).

Because of the importance of the issue and the split in the circuits, Professors Henning and McGarvey hope the Supreme Court will grant certiorari and bring clarity to this important topic.

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Texas A&M School of Law is an American Bar Association-accredited institution located in downtown Fort Worth. In 2013, the law school acquired Texas Wesleyan University School of Law. Since integrating with Texas A&M six years ago, the law school has sustained a remarkable upward trajectory by dramatically increasing entering class credentials, adding 10 clinics and six global field study destinations, increasing the depth and breadth of its career services, student services, academic support and admissions functions and hiring 28 new faculty members.

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Texas A&M, established in 1876 as the first public university in Texas, is one of the nation’s largest universities with more than 66,000 students and more than 440,000 living alumni residing in over 150 countries around the world. A tier-one university, Texas A&M holds the rare triple land-, sea- and space-grant designation. Research conducted at Texas A&M represented annual expenditures of more than $905.4 million in fiscal year 2017. Texas A&M’s research creates new knowledge that provides basic, fundamental and applied contributions resulting, in many cases, in economic benefits to the state, nation and world.

About Research at Texas A&M University: As one of the world's leading research institutions, Texas A&M is at the forefront in making significant contributions to scholarship and discovery, including that of science and technology. Research conducted at Texas A&M represented annual expenditures of more than $905.4 million in fiscal year 2017. Texas A&M ranked in the top 20 of the National Science Foundation’s Higher Education Research and Development survey (2016), based on expenditures of more than $892.7 million in fiscal year 2016. Texas A&M’s research creates new knowledge that provides basic, fundamental and applied contributions resulting, in many cases, in economic benefits to the state, nation and world. To learn more, visit http://research.tamu.edu.