Name | Burst Planet |
---|---|
Publisher | Admin |
Format | File |
Rating | 4.32 / 5 ( 7351 votes ) |
Update | (11 days ago) |
RPG Maker MZ is a Power RPG Maker game engine and programming system, created by Cactuar. * The game engine allows you to create whole engine plus the game files yourself and can save RPG Maker files, such as events, enemy and level data, etc. * RPG Maker MZ has been used in various commercial projects. Click here to see more. * RPG Maker MZ is currently available for PC, iPhone, iPad, Android, Linux, Mac, and Nintendo 3DS * For more information about the engine, check out the RPG Maker MZ website at: * For further details on the game engine, check out this link: * DHTM review is included in this package because it was used in this project. * Other preview are available on the projects page. (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1990) (quoting In re Morse, 114 B.R. 659, 669 (Bankr.D.N.H.1990)). In re Morse, 114 B.R. at 669, decided that the debtor’s right to have the continuation payments terminated was an executory contract under the Bankruptcy Code. The Morse court stated that “a contract is executory if the obligations of both parties are so far unperformed that the failure of either party to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing performance of the other…. [T]he relevant question is whether any future performance remains on both sides.” Id. at 665 (emphasis in original). The Morse court, therefore, further explained the bankruptcy code definition of an executory contract by stating: [C]ontracts are executory when the consideration for performance remains due on both sides. Id. Because future payments are due the debtor, future performance remains on both sides, and the contract is executory. Because the payment of the promissory note is not contingent on any future performance by the debtor, future performance by the debtor is not required by the contract and, accordingly, the contract is not executory under the bankruptcy code. See 11 U.S.C. § 365(a) (1979). Id. at 665. Thus, the Morse court noted that the debtor’s right to the funds in question was a non-executory contract