I am very pleased to be a member of the new organization designed and intended to promote history that gives dignity to all and is honest and accurate, the Alliance for Texas History.

---> www.alliancefortexashistory.org

The first annual conference of the Alliance will be held in San Marcos, Texas, on the campus of Texas State University beginning on Wednesday, May 14, 2025, through Saturday, May 17. Here is the schedule of presentations.....going to be difficult to choose among many very interesting papers!

---> heyzine.com/flip-book/f911b2f711.html#page/1


I support the statement of the American Historical Association explaining its civil action against the Administration's clumsy attempt to control the historical enterprise for weird and partisan purposes

 The American Historical Association (AHA) has joined other scholarly groups to file a well crafted civil action against the Administration seeking to restore the National Endowment for the Humanities. I support the AHA.



On reverence for heritage

    “A people with no reverence for the heritage left them, a philosopher once observed, will indeed leave nothing of themselves to be remembered proudly.” 

William Edward Syers, *Off the Beaten Trail* at v (1971). 

Shout out to Harrison Ford

Of all the Super Bowl advertisements last night, I liked best the Jeep ad by Harrison Ford, but this morning the NYTimes critic panned it, rating it number 56.

My rejoinder to the Times critic:

You should re-review the Harrison Ford ad for Jeep. It is a dual message: buy Jeep, of course (it takes a lot of money to get an ad on the air during the Super Bowl), but more significantly it's a plug -- in basic, language that the followers of the right-wing strongman-wannabe can understand -- all about the fundaments of our democratic society. Should've been number one on your list.

Watch it for yourself:

     www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDn_uFEXGXk

One of my cases: In re Conex, on the topic of removal and remand of state court lawsuits--and the successful defense of a "wrongful removal" claim

     Here is a case from my days of bankruptcy practice in which I represented the prevailing party in the matter of its removal of a state court lawsuit by an affiliate of three debtors to the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Texas, the district in which that action was pending, and then, when the home Bankruptcy Court in Delaware adjudged that the cause of action was not property of its specific debtors' estates, then the remand from the Texas bankruptcy court to the Texas state court. At that point the plaintiffs alleged and tried to reserve a liability claim for "wrongful removal" against our client, but obviously that was insupportable as the Bankruptcy Court easily held. 

This decision should have been reported by West!

The case is Conex Int'l Corp. v. Fluor Enter., Inc. (In re Conex Holdings, LLC), Case No. 11-01010 (Bankr. E.D. Tex. 2012).



the article in Bloomberg's about the proposal to delete the income tax exemption for municipal bonds

 

The story today in Bloomberg's about one of the changes to the Revenue Code to finance the new president's projects and actions under consideration in some quarters in Congress surprised me: to delete the exemption of municipal bonds from income taxation. I thought that exemption was sacrosanct.

In fact, in my new article on the history of municipal bankruptcy, focusing on the enactment of the First and Second Municipal Bankruptcy Acts in 1934 and 1937 in response to the huge numbers of defaults on muni bonds in the early Great Depression, I had written in my introduction that the exemption from income tax had been a big driver for muni bond issuance since the first income tax law:
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Municipal bonds had occupied a sacrosanct place in the world of finance for two reasons. First, there had been almost no defaults since the 1870s.  Second, under the Seventeenth Amendment, the first income tax in 1913 had exempted municipal-bond interest which “effectively made the federal government a partner with state and local governments” for the building of a vast amount of infrastructure such as highways.  So payment defaults of the late twenties and early thirties shocked the bondholding community. Their lawyers’ resort to litigation was reflexive, and more and more insolvent political subdivisions and special taxing districts found themselves as defendants haled into courts in mandamus suits seeking to compel greater tax collections to force payment of bond arrearages.

Such municipalities were “insolvent” within the definitions in the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 (the BA’98)  and the general understanding of lawyers and judges of the day,  but on the eve of the Depression, that act afforded relief only for individuals, partnerships, and, since 1910, corporations (but specifically excluding banks and insurance companies—and municipal corporations),  and only in the forms of court-supervised liquidation of assets in exchange for a discharge of debts or an opportunity to reach an court-enforced composition with creditors.  Railroads and a few other firms imbued with some sort of public interest could restructure outside of bankruptcy through the federal-court device of equity receivership ; but while theoretically possible, receiverships for municipalities required a statutory basis  and were “rarely available.”  

from Josiah Daniel, 
Law and Economics or Legal History? 
Hatton Sumners and the Genesis of 
Municipal Bankruptcy, 1933-1938 
(forthcoming)