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Delaware

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A Delaware Response To Delaware's Choice, Lawrence Hamermesh, Norman Monhait Dec 2013

A Delaware Response To Delaware's Choice, Lawrence Hamermesh, Norman Monhait

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

This article is an invited response to Professor Subramanian’s article “Delaware’s Choice.” The article expresses skepticism, for two primary reasons, about the need for the change to Delaware’s takeover statute that Professor Subramanian proposes. First, there is uncertainty that the constitutionality of that statute would be evaluated today under a test as demanding as the one that was applied when the statute was upheld in the late 1980s. Second, citing an earlier article by A. Gilchrist Sparks and Helen Bowers, we question whether a constitutional evaluation of the takeover statute should be limited to data on tender offers that are …


M&A Under Delaware's Public Benefit Corporation Statute: A Hypothetical Tour, Frederick Alexander, Lawrence Hamermesh, Frank Martin, Norman Monhait Dec 2013

M&A Under Delaware's Public Benefit Corporation Statute: A Hypothetical Tour, Frederick Alexander, Lawrence Hamermesh, Frank Martin, Norman Monhait

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

Noting the enthusiastic initial response to Delaware’s 2013 public benefit corporation statute, this Article presents a series of hypotheticals as vehicles for comment on issues that are likely to arise in the context of mergers and acquisitions of public benefit corporations. The Article first examines appraisal rights, concluding that such rights will be generally available to stockholders in public benefit corporations, and noting the potential for ambiguity in defining “fair value” where the corporation’s purposes extend to public purposes as well as private profit. Next, the Article examines whether and to what extent “Revlon” duties and limitations on deal protection …


Consent In Corporate Law, Lawrence Hamermesh Dec 2013

Consent In Corporate Law, Lawrence Hamermesh

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

Recent Delaware case law explores and extends what the author describes as the “doctrine of corporate consent,” under which a stockholder is deemed to consent to changes in the corporate relationship that are adopted pursuant to statutory authority (such as by directors adopting bylaws). This essay examines whether and to what extent there may be limits on the application of the doctrine of corporate consent, and whether fee-shifting bylaws exceed those limits.


Delaware Corporate Law And The Model Business Corporation Act: A Study In Symbiosis, Jeffrey Gorris, Lawrence Hamermesh, Leo Strine Dec 2010

Delaware Corporate Law And The Model Business Corporation Act: A Study In Symbiosis, Jeffrey Gorris, Lawrence Hamermesh, Leo Strine

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

No abstract provided.


Silos, Corporate Law, And Bankruptcy Law, Lawrence Hamermesh Dec 2009

Silos, Corporate Law, And Bankruptcy Law, Lawrence Hamermesh

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

No abstract provided.


The Challenge To Delaware's Preeminence In Corporate Law, Lawrence Hamermesh Dec 2008

The Challenge To Delaware's Preeminence In Corporate Law, Lawrence Hamermesh

Lawrence A. Hamermesh

This short essay suggests that the focus on federal-state jurisdictional conflict over regulation of corporate governance in the U.S. is misplaced, and that declining levels of IPO's in the U.S. should be a concern shared by lawmakers at both state and federal levels. Those who reflexively advocate inflexible federal governance rules of wide application -- as opposed to regulatory reforms aimed carefully at unboundedly risky financial practices -- should prevail only upon a clear understanding that the potential benefits of such governance rules outweigh the risks associated with them.


A Business Review Of The Delaware Series: Good Business For The Informed, Ann E. Conaway Dec 2007

A Business Review Of The Delaware Series: Good Business For The Informed, Ann E. Conaway

Ann E. Conaway

Delaware has long attempted to provide business structures that reflect the demands of the business community in an efficient and productive manner. One prime example of this demand/response is the "series" interest available in Delaware limited partnerships, LLCs, and statutory trusts. The series structure combines the flexibility that different types of businesses desire along with the statutory and contractual support that Delaware provides to all of its unincorporated business organizations. Other states have now emulated the Delaware series concept, although there is still considerable confusion as to how a series works. This piece provides an overview of some of the …