Chattel is personal property that is movable between locations, as opposed to real property, which has a fixed location. Common examples include mobile homes, furniture, and automobiles. This article explains what chattel is and how it is used as security in chattel mortgages.
Chattel paper refers to a document used in secured transactions to sell property on credit while retaining some interest in the property.
The se- curity or lease interest is embodied in a writing which evidences the debt. This writing constitutes the "chattel paper," which may consist of a conditional sales contract, a chattel mortgage, a security agreement or a chattel lease,2 with or without an accompanying negotiable instru- ment.
It is fine (and ethical) to withdraw your paper at any stage. Also, you have no obligation to justify the withdrawal (but the editor will be curious, of course). The reviewers have put in work so it may not be NICE, but that is another story.
Withdrawing an academic article means asking a journal to stop considering the article for publication at any point prior to its actual publication.
Submitted: all required steps are complete and the submission is ready for review. Pending: the submission is not complete i.e. there are required fields still to complete. Withdrawn: where the submission should no longer to be considered for the conference.
Causes for Retraction Intentional academic misconduct: Simultaneous submissions to multiple journals, conflicts of interest, fabrication or manipulation of data, failure to comply with research protocols, plagiarism, or salami slicing.
Reasons for Manuscript Withdrawal Evolution of the existing literature, availability of new data, or change in the author's viewpoint, all rending the original paper outdated or irrelevant. In other situations, the choice stems from practical constraints like lacking the time or resources to address reviewer comments.
Reasons for manuscript withdrawal One of the most common reasons for withdrawing a manuscript is when the researcher discovers errors or inaccuracies in their study that they may not have been aware of at the time of submission.