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Full-Text Articles in Law

Liquid Business, Vanessa C. Perez Oct 2019

Liquid Business, Vanessa C. Perez

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


How And Why Corporations Became (And Remain) Persons Under Criminal Law, W. Robert Thomas Jan 2018

How And Why Corporations Became (And Remain) Persons Under Criminal Law, W. Robert Thomas

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Leaving Law Firms With Client Fees: Florida's Path, Donald J. Weidner Dec 2017

Leaving Law Firms With Client Fees: Florida's Path, Donald J. Weidner

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Typology Of Public-Private Equity, Sung Eun (Summer) Kim Jul 2017

Typology Of Public-Private Equity, Sung Eun (Summer) Kim

Florida State University Law Review

Private equity, which pools funds for investment in private businesses, is one of the largest and fastest growing investment opportunities in the markets today. Private equity traditionally sought investments exclusively from sophisticated investors such as high net worth individuals and institutional investors. More recently, however, a growing number of private equity businesses have gone public and opened their doors to public investors, who are drawn to these investments because of the possibility of high returns and the opportunity to diversify their investment portfolios. In this Article, I review the universe of public-private equity (or PPE) businesses that are traded on …


Intermediate Scrutiny For Corporate Political Contributions, Joseph K. Leahy Apr 2017

Intermediate Scrutiny For Corporate Political Contributions, Joseph K. Leahy

Florida State University Law Review

A corporation contributes to a Super PAC that supports a candidate for public office. A shareholder sues, alleging that management breached its duty of loyalty by making the contribution to promote its own political views rather than to serve the corporation’s best interests—i.e., by acting in bad faith. What standard will a Delaware court apply when reviewing management’s decision to cause the corporation to make the contribution?

Myriad scholars have opined that the court will apply the standard of review for ordinary business decisions: the management-friendly business judgment rule. Unfortunately for our shareholder plaintiff, this rule presumes that management acts …


Saying Yes: Reviewing Board Decisions To Sell Or Merge The Corporation, Franklin A. Gevurtz Jan 2017

Saying Yes: Reviewing Board Decisions To Sell Or Merge The Corporation, Franklin A. Gevurtz

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Equity In Llc Law?, Mohsen Manesh Oct 2016

Equity In Llc Law?, Mohsen Manesh

Florida State University Law Review

To what extent does equity play a role in LLC law? To what extent do courts retain the judicial discretion “to do right and justice” in circumstances in which the LLC statute and the applicable LLC agreement do not otherwise offer an adequate remedy to an aggrieved LLC member or manager? Until recently, the answer to these questions was quite clear: Equity is subordinate to the freedom of contract and the express terms of the agreement governing an LLC. But the Delaware Chancery Court’s decision in In re Carlisle Etcetera has upended this basic precept of LLC law and practice. …


Shareholder Political Primacy, Jay B. Kesten Jan 2016

Shareholder Political Primacy, Jay B. Kesten

Scholarly Publications

Corporate political activity raises an important and diffcult question of corporate law: who decides when the corporation should speak and what it should say? In several cases, the Supreme Court has provided a clear answer: shareholders, acting through the procedures of corporate democracy. While this holding has attracted substantial academic and public criticism, there has been no sustained evaluation (beyond identifying the potential agency costs of corporate political activity) of the possibility that the Supreme Court's appeal to the fraught concept of "corporate democracy," though woefully under-theorized, might be the best allocation of power in the limited context of corporate …


Donald Weidner And The Modern Law Of Partnerships, Robert W. Hillman Jan 2016

Donald Weidner And The Modern Law Of Partnerships, Robert W. Hillman

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Three Problems (And Two Solutions) In The Law Of Partnership Formation, Shawn J. Bayern Jan 2016

Three Problems (And Two Solutions) In The Law Of Partnership Formation, Shawn J. Bayern

Scholarly Publications

This Article considers several foundational questions concerning the formation of general partnerships, a topic that has received little modern attention and that is governed largely by classical axioms rather than adaptive modern considerations. Its three main topics concern (1) the timing of partnership formation, (2) the aggregation of multiple distinct questions under the single heading of “partnership formation,” and (3) the rarely challenged proposition that general partners ought to be liable for partnership obligations, a doctrine that is surprisingly at odds with the rest of modern business-entity law.


Capital Accounts In Llcs And In Partnerships: Powerful Default Rules And Potential Tax Significance, Donald J. Weidner Jan 2015

Capital Accounts In Llcs And In Partnerships: Powerful Default Rules And Potential Tax Significance, Donald J. Weidner

Scholarly Publications

Balance sheets for limited liability companies and for partnerships differ from corporate balance sheets in one important respect. Accounting for these alternative forms traditionally includes a separate equity account, or “capital account,” for each owner. Accounting practice and caselaw suggest that, at least as a default rule or norm, these accounts guide distributions on liquidation or buyout, and, if negative, may also reflect debts to the firm. Indeed, the statutory default rule of partnership law in most states requires that individual capital accounts be maintained and given economic significance on liquidation or buyout. Although the statutory law of LLCs does …


The Fiduciary Gap, Kelli A. Alces Jan 2015

The Fiduciary Gap, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Balance And Team Production, Kelli A. Alces Jan 2015

Balance And Team Production, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Adjudicating Corporate Auctions, Jay B. Kesten Jan 2015

Adjudicating Corporate Auctions, Jay B. Kesten

Scholarly Publications

In light of recent developments in auction theory, this Article re-examines Delaware corporate law governing directors' actions when structuring the sale of a corporation. A foundational doctrine of Delaware law is that when the board of directors resolves to sell a corporation, it must obtain the highest price reasonably available. Auction theory posits that, in certain circumstances germane to corporate takeovers, revenues can be maximized through the use of ex ante precommitments to the rules of the auction. Delaware law, however, does not fully endorse directors' ability to make such precommitments, primarily out of the concern that the board will …


Political Uncertainty And The Market For Ipos, Jay B. Kesten, Murat C. Mungan Jan 2015

Political Uncertainty And The Market For Ipos, Jay B. Kesten, Murat C. Mungan

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Of Bitcoins, Independently Wealthy Software, And The Zero-Member Llc, Shawn J. Bayern Jul 2014

Of Bitcoins, Independently Wealthy Software, And The Zero-Member Llc, Shawn J. Bayern

Scholarly Publications

An innovative software technology known as Bitcoin makes it easier for software to operate with some degree of financial autonomy. In a meaningful sense, it is now possible for software to conduct business on its own account, without using the traditional financial system as an intermediary and without a financial existence tied to an existing natural or legal person. This Essay explores this possibility and suggests that legally autonomous entities, such as a limited liability company (LLC) with no members, are a useful legal structure for factually autonomous systems.


Larry Ribstein's Fiduciary Duties, Kelli A. Alces Jan 2014

Larry Ribstein's Fiduciary Duties, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

Larry Ribstein, throughout his remarkable scholarly career, developed a theory formed around his analysis that the end of fiduciary obligation is a near possibility. Understanding fiduciary obligations as a carefully defined term may indicate, however, that this fiduciary obligation can be a useful part of a wider selection of relationships than Ribstein allowed. This Article both considers Ribstein’s theory of fiduciary duty, and ultimately turns that same theory on its head by advocating the use of a narrow duty in a variety of contexts as opposed to a broad duty in a limited range of circumstances


Legal Diversification, Kelli A. Alces Nov 2013

Legal Diversification, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

The greatest protection investors have from the risks associated with capital investment is diversification. This Essay introduces a new dimension of diversification for investors: legal diversification. Legal diversification of investment means building a portfolio of securities that are governed by a variety of legal rules. Legal diversification protects investors from the risk that a particular method of minimizing agency costs will prove ineffective and allows investors to own securities in a variety of firms, with each security governed by the most efficient set of legal rules given the circumstances of the investment. Diversification of investment by legal rules is possible …


Financial System Engineering, Manuel A. Utset Apr 2013

Financial System Engineering, Manuel A. Utset

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Towards A Moral Agency Theory Of The Shareholder Bylaw Power, Jay B. Kesten Apr 2013

Towards A Moral Agency Theory Of The Shareholder Bylaw Power, Jay B. Kesten

Scholarly Publications

Corporate bylaws are the new leading edge of a decades-long struggle between shareholders and managers over the allocation of decision-making authority in public companies. Bylaws are the only method by which shareholders can unilaterally restrict the powers and discretion of the board. Yet the scope of this statutory authority remains notoriously uncertain. Corporate law scholars generally agree that there is a limited domain in which shareholders can restrict managerial authority, but disagree on the appropriate boundary. The Delaware Supreme Court recently confronted this issue for the first time in CA, Inc. v. AFSCME Employees Pension Plan, but that decision …


Fraudulent Corporate Signals: Conduct As Securities Fraud, Manuel A. Utset Jan 2013

Fraudulent Corporate Signals: Conduct As Securities Fraud, Manuel A. Utset

Scholarly Publications

Paying a dividend, repurchasing shares, underpricing an initial public offering, pledging collateral, and borrowing using short-term, instead of long-term debt, are all forms of corporate communications. They are “corporate signals” that tell investors certain things about a company’s operations and current financial position, and about the managers’ confidence in its future performance. This Article provides the first comprehensive analysis of the relationship between corporate signals and securities fraud. The incentive to communicate using corporate signals has increased in recent years, a phenomenon that, I argue, is due to the grow-ing complexity of public corporations, and, importantly, to a number of …


The False Promise Of Risk-Reducing Incentive Pay: Evidence From Executive Pensions And Deferred Compensation, Kelli A. Alces, Brian D. Galle Oct 2012

The False Promise Of Risk-Reducing Incentive Pay: Evidence From Executive Pensions And Deferred Compensation, Kelli A. Alces, Brian D. Galle

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Strengthening Investment In Public Corporations Through The Uncorporation, Kelli A. Alces Jul 2012

Strengthening Investment In Public Corporations Through The Uncorporation, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Partners Without Partners: The Legal Status Of Single Person Partnerships, Donald J. Weidner, Robert J. Hillman Jan 2012

Partners Without Partners: The Legal Status Of Single Person Partnerships, Donald J. Weidner, Robert J. Hillman

Scholarly Publications

Is it possible to have a partnership consisting of one person, a partner without a partner? The question will arise when all but one of the members leaves a partnership. The Revised Uniform Partnership Act attempts to give greater stability to partnerships by narrowing the circumstances under which dissolutions occur, but it also fails to address the fundamental and important question of whether a partnership may be continued by a sole surviving partner.

In this Article, we explore the issues raised by a single person partnership. In particular, we address the central issue of whether the departure of the penultimate …


Beyond The Board Of Directors, Kelli A. Alces Jan 2011

Beyond The Board Of Directors, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


The Equity Trustee, Kelli A. Alces Oct 2010

The Equity Trustee, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

As we reel from the effects of a recent financial disaster, it is apparent that there is a significant gap in corporate governance and accountability for management. One reason we have experienced this financial cataclysm is the inability of shareholders to do the "shareholderj ob. " Shareholders, as the putative owners of corporations, hold a venerated place in corporate governance. They are responsible for electing directors and monitoring management as well as valuing companies through trades in a vigorous market. The shareholder collective action problem and resulting rational apathy have kept shareholders from effectively fulfilling their role in corporate governance. …


Revisiting Berle And Rethinking The Corporate Structure, Kelli A. Alces Jul 2010

Revisiting Berle And Rethinking The Corporate Structure, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Managerial Entrenchment And Shareholder Wealth Revisited: Theory And Evidence From A Recessionary Market, Jay B. Kesten Jan 2010

Managerial Entrenchment And Shareholder Wealth Revisited: Theory And Evidence From A Recessionary Market, Jay B. Kesten

Scholarly Publications

Does managerial entrenchment create or destroy shareholder value? This Article presents both theory and evidence that the answer to this question is not monolithic, but rather depends on factors that vary greatly with the macroeconomic climate, such as firm profitability, takeover frequency, and valuation of takeover premiums. The mainstream view, both of academics and market participants, is that entrenchment reduces accountability to shareholders and amplifies agency costs, thus decreasing shareholder wealth. Two influential studies (Bebchuk, Cohen & Ferrell (2009) and Gompers, Ishii & Metrick (2003)) present empirical evidence consistent with this conclusion, finding statistically significant negative correlations between entrenchment and …


Debunking The Corporate Fiduciary Myth, Kelli A. Alces Jan 2009

Debunking The Corporate Fiduciary Myth, Kelli A. Alces

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Obedience As The Foundation Of Fiduciary Duty, Rob Atkinson Oct 2008

Obedience As The Foundation Of Fiduciary Duty, Rob Atkinson

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.