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47 Santa Clara L. Rev. [i] (2007)

handle is hein.journals/saclr47 and id is 1 raw text is: SANTA CLARA LAW REVIEW
VOLUME 47                        2007                       NUMBER 1
CONTENTS
ARTICLES
THE SUPERIOR POSITION OF THE CREDITOR IN THE
COMMUNITY PROPERTY REGIME: HAS THE COMMUNITY
BECOME A MERE CREDITOR COLLECTION DEVICE?
This article is a first step in an effort to critically examine the
continued vitality of the community regime for regulating spousal
property. Specifically, the article examines the American community
property regimes in light of how they measure up against non-
community property states in terms of creditor protection. The
results are often surprising. The community regime grants creditors
access to a variety of property for all manner of debts. For instance,
the entirety of the community property, including the non-debtor
spouse's wages, may be seized in some community property states for
the other's premarital debts. That the non-debtor spouse has no
connection to the debt and, indeed, that it carries no benefit for the
family is irrelevant. Nearly everything brought in by the spouses
during marriage may be seized for it. Such a result would never
obtain in the forty-one non-community property states, where a
creditor is fairly allowed to seize only the property of the party with
whom he engages. A community creditor often receives quite a
windfall. Exploration of other creditor rights demonstrates similarly
bizarre results. The neutral observer might correctly conclude that
the community property regime in the twenty-first century is really
little more than a creditor collection device. After exposing the
exceptional creditor bent of the community property regime, the
article goes on to explore the problem with the community's approach
to debt collection. Examining the history of the regime's adoption and
retention shows that the community has strayed so far from its goals
of protecting women and attracting settlement that it is almost
unrecognizable. Moreover, such a departure is unnecessary in light
of the reasonable expectations of the creditors involved with the
spouses and the protection they are granted by other, more general
laws. The article concludes by suggesting that the community needs
to utilize a more common law approach to debt collection if it is to
remain a viable marital property regime for the centuries to come.
Andrea   B. Carroll .........................................
ESSAY
THE FACE OF DIGNITY: PRINCIPLED OVERSIGHT OF
BIOMEDICAL INNOVATION
Revolutionary advances in biomedical science and technology
strike at human quintessence and thus compel our attention. In this
Essay, Professor Hartman develops the idea of dignity as a basis for
overseeing those advances and for devising policy to guide their
progress and, more importantly, their uses. Facial transplantation, a
provocative advance, is examined as paradigmatic for a dignity-
centered approach to assessing biomedical progress and usage.

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