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Clawing Back Tuition Payments in Bankruptcy: Looking to Ancient and Recent History to Define the Future.

Authors :
Huish, Derek A.
Source :
Iowa Law Review. May2019, Vol. 104 Issue 4, p2151-2221. 71p. 1 Chart.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Tuition clawback lawsuits are a relatively recent phenomenon in bankruptcy in which trustees are attempting to recover tuition that was paid to universities by insolvent parents for their adult children's education. This Note contains an Appendix that catalogs iy 2 tuition clawback lawsuits to help examine and explain what is happening. Out of the cases that have been ruled on, courts have struggled with the question of whether tuition payments by insolvent parents are constructively fraudulent. More specifically, the main point of debate has been whether tuition paid by an insolvent parent for an adult child provides "reasonably equivalent value" to the debtor-parent(s). Based on an analysis of thefacts of 152 tuition clawback lawsuits arid the historical development of fraudulent transfer law, this Note concludes that tuition payments for an adult child do not provide reasonably equivalent value to their parents. Although this conclusion would resolve the current split on the question, it does not necessarily provide a solution that balances the rights of creditors with the rights of parents to help their children and the rights of universities to be protected. Thus, this Note proposes amendments to the Bankruptcy Code to better strike a balance between competing rights arid policy considerations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00210552
Volume :
104
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Iowa Law Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137008077