Payment Systems and Other Financial Transactions: A Systems Approach, Seventh Edition
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Book length
600 pages
Publication Date
2019-09-10
Edition
Seventh Edition
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents
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Written by Ronald J. Mann, one of the country’s leading Commercial Law scholars, Payment Systems and Other Financial Transactions continues to deliver clear, detailed practical explanations of how payment systems actually work. Using a systems approach, the text and problems focus on rules that are applied in practice. Easily adapted to any 50-minute, 75-minute, or two-hour long class, this casebook is suitable for use in courses on Payment Systems, Negotiable Instruments, or Commercial Paper.
New to the 7th Edition:
In re Caesars Operating - Posner opinion on standard for bankruptcy court injunction to protect guarantors
Receivers of Sabena v Deutsche Bank - a major New York opinion on wire transfers
In re Adamson Apparel - a new twist on lingering Deprizio liability
3M v HSBC - liability for fraud in a back-to-back letter-of-credit scenario
New revisions to Regulation CC
Substantial revisions of the problem sets
Professors and students will benefit from:
An easy-to-teach organization so class sessions flow naturally from problem sets
Coverage of the things students actually want to learn, that they will encounter in practice
Assignment structures that make it easy to pick and choose topics for syllabus
A casebook that teaches the things students need to know to succeed in clerkships and jobs
Self-contained assignments that make preparation easy
Problem sets that focus attention to the issues that matter
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Law clerk to Judge Joseph T. Sneed, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (1985-1986). Law clerk to Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Supreme Court of the United States (1986-1987) . Practiced real estate and transactional law in Houston, Texas (1987-1991). Worked for the Justice Department as an Assistant for the Solicitor General of the United States, (1991-1994) . Joined the University of Texas faculty in 2003. Assistant professor of law (1997-1999), and professor of law (1999-2003), at the University of Michigan. Assistant professor of law (1994-1997), and professor of law (1997), at Washington University. Visiting professor of law at Harvard in 2005. Joined the Columbia Law School faculty on July 1, 2007 as Albert E. Cinelli Enterprise Professor of Law. Member of the American Law Institute. Recently served as the reporter for the amendments to Articles 3 and 4 of the Uniform Commercial Code.