It’s Just Secured Credit! The Natural Law Case in Defense of Some Forms of Secured Credit

38 Pages Posted: 26 Aug 2009 Last revised: 12 Jan 2010

See all articles by Brian McCall

Brian McCall

University of Oklahoma - College of Law

Date Written: August 26, 2009

Abstract

For decades scholars have been debating whether of not the institution of security can be explained and justified. After much discussion from varying points of view and hermeneutics, although some insights have been gained, the answer to the original question remains unresolved. This article attempts to bring new life to this debate by building on Professors Mooney and Harris’ idea of security interest as property right while taking account of the valid concerns of scholars such as Elizabeth Warren and Lynn Lopucki that certain results produced by the current system seem unjust. This reconciliation of these two strands of secured credit theory is rooted in the article’s wider scope of consideration which Lynn M. Lopucki called “one of the few truly new ideas about secured credit to come along in the past decade.” Security Interests cannot be evaluated normatively outside of the contexts in which they are employed. Using the natural law theory of usury and business credit to distinguish the lending of money for consumption from the investment of capital in a business, the article concludes that the use of security as a device for achieving various agreements among capital investors in a business venture is just. Once the system in principle is justified, the article suggests three specific changes to particular aspects of existing law which are necessary to conform more completely secured credit law in the business finance context to this normative theory which provides for its justification. Thus, the conclusion may be more modest than the hopes of the original debate. All security is not explained and justified in every context. Yet, this more limited scope may provide the key to solving the puzzle of secured credit. Perhaps scholars have failed to agree on the answer to the original question because the answer is more subtle than a simple yes or no. Secured Credit can be explained and justified but not for the same reason in every context. The article provides the answer in the context of business credit by exploring the interaction of security with the principles of natural law theory of business credit and investment.

Keywords: Security Interest, Secured Credit, Finance, Natural Law

Suggested Citation

McCall, Brian Michael, It’s Just Secured Credit! The Natural Law Case in Defense of Some Forms of Secured Credit (August 26, 2009). Indiana Law Review, Vol. 43, p. 7, 2009, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1462313

Brian Michael McCall (Contact Author)

University of Oklahoma - College of Law ( email )

300 Timberdell Road
Norman, OK 73019
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
126
Abstract Views
844
Rank
404,654
PlumX Metrics