About the Pretended Speciality of Law 20.027 in Regard to Law 20.720 of Insolvency in Chile. Reflections About the Conditions That a Rule Must Fulfill to Be Considered Special

Authors

  • Sebastián Campos Micin Universidad de Chile http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3236-8630

    Doctorando en Derecho por la Universidad de Chile. Magíster en Derecho con mención en Derecho Privado por la misma casa de estudio, y magíster en Economía y Derecho del Consumo por la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (España). Profesor asistente del Departamento de Derecho Privado de la Universidad de Chile.

  • Jesús Ezurmendia Álvarez Universidad de Chile http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0616-2823

    Profesor del Departamento de Derecho Procesal de la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Chile. Abogado licenciado en Ciencias Jurídicas y Sociales por la misma casa de estudios. Magíster en Derecho Procesal por la University College of London (Inglaterra) y doctor en Derecho por la UPV/EHU (País Vasco)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/derechopucp.202302.010

Keywords:

Judicial Liquidation Procedure, Insolvency, Principle of Speciality, Credit with a State Guarantee for the Financing of Higher Education Studies, Collective Enforcement, Bankruptcy Law

Abstract

This article critically examines the jurisprudential line developed in recent times by the civil chamber of the Chilean Supreme Court regarding the exclusion of credit with state guarantee for the financing of higher education studies of the bankruptcy liquidation procedure. After identifying the conditions of application of the specialty criterion and the principles that inform the bankruptcy proceedings, it is explained why, contrary to what the room maintains, the mechanisms contemplated in title V of Law No. 20.027 are not really special in view of the bankruptcy liquidation procedure regulated by Law No. 20.720. In general, it is maintained that not all regulations associated with general or special hypotheses of insolvency are part of bankruptcy law. To the extent that the regulation does not refer to a collective process, with bodies that tend to increase the recovery rate of creditors and/or safeguard the credit system and economic public order, the regulation is not part of bankruptcy law. In this understanding, it is concluded that the mechanisms contemplated by Law No. 20.027 are not part of bankruptcy law, since all of them are nothing more than means of individual protection, even when they are associated with a hypothesis of insolvency.

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Published

2023-11-28

How to Cite

Campos Micin, S., & Ezurmendia Álvarez, J. (2023). About the Pretended Speciality of Law 20.027 in Regard to Law 20.720 of Insolvency in Chile. Reflections About the Conditions That a Rule Must Fulfill to Be Considered Special. Derecho PUCP, (91), 349–376. https://doi.org/10.18800/derechopucp.202302.010