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Articles 61 - 90 of 576
Full-Text Articles in Law
State Takeover Statutes Revisited, Richard A. Booth
State Takeover Statutes Revisited, Richard A. Booth
Michigan Law Review
I have a confession to make. The title of my article that appeared recently in this review, The Promise of State Takeover Statutes, was deliberately chosen for its shock value. Since few if any reflective works have supported state takeover statutes, it occurred to me that a title suggesting there was something positive in them might get someone's attention. Clearly it did. In a recent piece entitled Missing the Point About State Takeover Statutes, Professors Lyman Johnson and David Millon take issue with my title. I say that they take issue with my title because it does not …
Misreading The Williams Act, Lyman Johnson, David Millon
Misreading The Williams Act, Lyman Johnson, David Millon
Michigan Law Review
This Article examines the emerging controversy over preemption of the most potent of recent antitakeover laws, the so-called business combination statutes recently passed by Delaware, New York, and other states, and Pennsylvania's director-approval statute. After examining the strategy employed by the states to shield these statutes from constitutional attack, we consider the issues raised by the preemption claim and the arguments currently being advanced by the SEC and others in favor of preemption. Resolving the preemption controversy requires inquiry into the original meaning and objectives of the Williams Act. We argue that this should involve attention not only to the …
Coase Defends Coase: Why Lawyers Listen And Economists Do Not, Stewart Schwab
Coase Defends Coase: Why Lawyers Listen And Economists Do Not, Stewart Schwab
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Firm The Market and The Law by Ronald Coase
Missing The Point About State Takeover Statutes, Lyman Johnson, David Millon
Missing The Point About State Takeover Statutes, Lyman Johnson, David Millon
Michigan Law Review
In a recent article in this journal, Professor Richard Booth offers an extended appraisal of state legislation regulating hostile corporate takeovers. We think Booth's article requires comment for two reasons. The first reason is perhaps more obvious, though less interesting from our point of view. To be blunt, "unfairness" to shareholders due to coercion arising out of two-tier or partial offers simply does not occur with enough frequency to warrant a sixty-seven-page article in a major law review. According to recent congressional testimony by SEC Commissioner Cox, from 1982 to 1986 the number of two-tier offers declined from 18% of …
Corporate Auctions And Directors' Fiduciary Duties: A Third-Generation Business Judgment Rule, Steven G. Bradbury
Corporate Auctions And Directors' Fiduciary Duties: A Third-Generation Business Judgment Rule, Steven G. Bradbury
Michigan Law Review
This Note proposes a rationale and a methodology for applying the business judgment rule when directors resist a hostile bid during the auction phase of a control contest. Part I examines the changes that occur in the responsibilities of target directors when a corporate auction is initiated. This Part describes the Unocal business judgment rule test and discusses its usefulness in the auction phase of a takeover. While the test requires modification if it is to complement effectively the auction-phase duties announced in Revlon, this Part suggests that the business judgment rule continues to be relevant and important during …
The Promise Of State Takeover Statutes, Richard A. Booth
The Promise Of State Takeover Statutes, Richard A. Booth
Michigan Law Review
The purpose of this article is, first, to describe the problems associated with two-tier tender offers and the closely related, and perhaps still more coercive, partial tender offer. Second, the article will address the natural question why such offers have not already been banned, suggesting a better view of what coercion means in the context of a tender offer. Third, the article will offer a management-oriented view of coercion, explaining the legitimate interests of managers (and other groups) in resisting takeovers, as well as how greenmail and poison pills, though subject to abuse, can be used quite properly to combat …
Japan's High Technology Industries: Lessons And Limitations Of Industrial Policy, Steven R. Englund
Japan's High Technology Industries: Lessons And Limitations Of Industrial Policy, Steven R. Englund
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Japan's High Technology Industries: Lessons and Limitations of Industrial Policy edited by Hugh Patrick
Corporations And Society: Power And Responsibility, Sara Anne Engle
Corporations And Society: Power And Responsibility, Sara Anne Engle
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Corporations and Society: Power and Responsibility edited by Warren J. Samuels and Arthur S. Miller
Adventures In Finance, Deborah A. Demott
Adventures In Finance, Deborah A. Demott
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Finance and Industrial Performance in a Dynamic Economy: Theory, Practice, and Policy by Merritt B. Fox
The Bigness Complex: Industry, Labor, And Government In The American Economy, James R. Steffen
The Bigness Complex: Industry, Labor, And Government In The American Economy, James R. Steffen
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Bigness Complex: Industry, Labor, and Government in the American Economy by Walter Adams and James W. Brock
Shareholders Versus Managers: The Strain In The Corporate Web, John C. Coffee Jr.
Shareholders Versus Managers: The Strain In The Corporate Web, John C. Coffee Jr.
Michigan Law Review
Part I will seek to understand why firms trade in the stock market at a substantial discount from their asset value. It will answer that existing theories of the firm have not given adequate attention to a critical area where shareholders and managers have an inherent conflict, one that the existing structure of the firm does not resolve or mitigate. Despite the significant changes in the internal structure of the corporation over the last half century that have been described by business historians, there remains a deep internal strain between shareholders, on the one hand, and managers and employees, on …
Target Litigation, Michael Rosenzweig
Target Litigation, Michael Rosenzweig
Michigan Law Review
In Part I, I explore the motives of litigious target managers. I briefly examine the takeover defense literature and empirical evidence regarding the frequency of target litigation, both of which indicate that target managers usually sue bidders in order to defeat unwanted takeover attempts. I also suggest that judicial reactions to target lawsuits largely confirm this hypothesis.
I then discuss, in Part II, target management's conflict of interest in control contests and the particular strategic considerations that lead target managers to sue hostile bidders. I argue that target litigation is peculiarly likely to be frivolous and, based on a study …
The Birth Of A Public Corporation, Jon C. Teaford
The Birth Of A Public Corporation, Jon C. Teaford
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Public Property and Private Power: The Corporation of the City of New York in American Law, 1730-1870. by Hendrik Hartog
Second Generation State Takeover Legislation: Maryland Takes A New Tack, Michigan Law Review
Second Generation State Takeover Legislation: Maryland Takes A New Tack, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
This Note examines the approach recently adopted by the Maryland legislature in special session one year after the Supreme Court's decision in MITE. Maryland has departed radically from the regulatory approach of first generation statutes; however, this Note argues that the statute has failed to escape the constitutional infirmities of its predecessors. Part I outlines the various mechanisms that regulate acquisition of corporate control: the federal tender offer regulatory mechanism known as the Williams Act, state takeover legislation such as the Illinois statute invalidated in MITE, and the new Maryland statute. Part II analyzes the debate concerning the …
The Supervision Of Corporate Management: A Comparison Of Developments In European Community And United States Law, Alfred F. Conard
The Supervision Of Corporate Management: A Comparison Of Developments In European Community And United States Law, Alfred F. Conard
Michigan Law Review
In 1971, Eric Stein published an account of the remarkable progress of the European Economic Community (EEC) toward a harmonized law of business corporations. The progress was particularly striking from an American viewpoint, because the harmonization was achieved by moving toward the more rigorous of the various national standards, in contrast to the "race of laxity" or "race for the bottom" that has characterized the movement toward uniformity in the corporation laws of U.S. states.
Federalism And Company Law, Richard M. Buxbaum
Federalism And Company Law, Richard M. Buxbaum
Michigan Law Review
It would be a simplifying and historically dubious reduction to equate state interest in corporation law with interventionist or regulatory policies and federal interest with liberal or facilitative ones. So long as a federal legal system presupposes the continuing involvement of two governments with the same subject, however, it is only the subordinate polity's interest in intervention or regulation that makes for interesting reading. State facilitative policies in an era of national facilitative policies raise no questions, and a state's continuing adherence to laissez faire policies when the national government turns interventionist typically creates no conflict. It is only the …
New Ways In Corporate Governance: European Experiments With Labor Representation On Corporate Boards, Klaus J. Hopt
New Ways In Corporate Governance: European Experiments With Labor Representation On Corporate Boards, Klaus J. Hopt
Michigan Law Review
Corporate governance has been discussed in Europe for over 150 years. Indeed, in the 1840's, when the first Corporation Act was enacted in Prussia, three troubling features of the corporate organization form had already been discerned: (I) the vulnerability of small investors who lacked the influence and sophistication to. control the corporation; (2) the risk to creditors and the public created by the limited liability of the corporation, especially when combined with inadequate funds and poorly controlled management; and (3) the power that big corporations could amass economically, by monopolizing markets, and politically, by exerting influence on public opinion and …
Competition, Integration And Economic Efficiency In The Eec From The Point Of View Of The Private Firm, Michel Waelbroeck
Competition, Integration And Economic Efficiency In The Eec From The Point Of View Of The Private Firm, Michel Waelbroeck
Michigan Law Review
As early as 1956, experts appointed by the six original Member State governments to investigate measures to pursue integration after the failure of the European Defence Community clearly established this link between the abolition of barriers to trade and an increase in the intensity of competition. In what has come to be known as the "Spaak Report," the experts noted the technology gap then separating Europe from the United States and proposed, as a remedial measure, the creation of a ''vast zone of common economic policy, constituting a powerful production unit, and allowing a continued expansion, and increased stability, an …
European Merger Control: Legal And Economic Analyses On Multinational Enterprises, Volume 1, Michigan Law Review
European Merger Control: Legal And Economic Analyses On Multinational Enterprises, Volume 1, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of European Merger Control: Legal and Economic Analyses on Multinational Enterprises, Volume 1 edited by Klaus Hopt
The Attorney-Client Privilege And The Corporate Client: Where Do We Go After Upjohn?, Michigan Law Review
The Attorney-Client Privilege And The Corporate Client: Where Do We Go After Upjohn?, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
Part I of this Note examines two of the more popular standards, the Seventh Circuit's "subject matter test" and the Eighth Circuit's "modified subject matter test" and concludes that neither approach is entirely consistent with the purposes of the privilege. Part II argues that the courts should adopt the Eighth Circuit's test with two further modifications. One revision is but a demand for clarification and consistency: the courts should explicitly adopt Dean Wigmore's legal advice requirement for corporate clients. The other modification is more radical: the command requirement should be eliminated. Under this approach, every employee may stand in the …
Toward Understanding Unlawful Organizational Behavior, Diane Vaughan
Toward Understanding Unlawful Organizational Behavior, Diane Vaughan
Michigan Law Review
The emergence and growth of regulatory agencies charged with controlling organizational misconduct has been so widespread that the monitoring and regulation of corporate interactions has itself become "big business," with the complexity of the regulatory agencies at times matching or even exceeding that of the organizations they regulate. The effectiveness of these efforts to control unlawful organizational behavior has been assessed in many different ways. The records of agency investigations, administrative hearings, and judicial proceedings provide data on enforcement actions, court decrees, trials, convictions, penalties, and other indicators that allow empirical estimates to be made. A realistic assessment of agency …
The Organization As Weapon In White-Collar Crime, Stanton Wheeler, Mitchell Lewis Rothman
The Organization As Weapon In White-Collar Crime, Stanton Wheeler, Mitchell Lewis Rothman
Michigan Law Review
This Article explores the advantages of using organization or occupation in the more typical case. Our inquiry takes this as its central question: What difference does it make when a white-collar crime is committed in the course of one's occupation or when acting on behalf, or with the assistance, of an organization? If we are becoming, as some have argued, an organizational society, then we should see the results of this change reflected in illicit as well as licit behavior. The organizational form may be used for either social or antisocial ends. Our principal hypothesis, as the title suggests, is …
The Sentencing Of White-Collar Criminals In Federal Courts: A Socio-Legal Exploration Of Disparity, Ilene H. Nagel, John L. Hagan
The Sentencing Of White-Collar Criminals In Federal Courts: A Socio-Legal Exploration Of Disparity, Ilene H. Nagel, John L. Hagan
Michigan Law Review
This Article addresses that question by examining judicial sentencing philosophy as applied to white-collar criminality and reporting data that illuminate the operation of that philosophy. Part I of the Article argues that the traditional purposes and limits of criminal sentencing may plausibly justify either disparate or comparable sentences in cases of white-collar and common criminality. Part II describes the obstacles to an accurate empirical inquiry into how judges resolve these uncertainties in the theory of punishment. Part III presents a study designed to overcome as many of these obstacles as possible. What is most dramatic is that the resulting data …
Enforced Self-Regulation: A New Strategy For Corporate Crime Control, John Braithwaite
Enforced Self-Regulation: A New Strategy For Corporate Crime Control, John Braithwaite
Michigan Law Review
Part I outlines the concept of enforced self-regulation, sketches its theoretical underpinnings, and illustrates its application in the context of corporate accounting standards. Part II argues the merits of enforced self-regulation. Part III dispels notions that the proposal is a radical departure from existing regulatory practice and points to areas in which necessary empirical research could be conducted by discussing incipient manifestations of partial enforced self-regulation models in the aviation, mining, and pharmaceutical industries. Part IV considers in some detail the weaknesses of the proposed model. The final Part considers the importance of determining an optimal mix of regulatory strategies; …
The Criminal Liability Of Corporations And Other Groups: A Comparative View, L. H. Leigh
The Criminal Liability Of Corporations And Other Groups: A Comparative View, L. H. Leigh
Michigan Law Review
Briefly, three positions concerning corporate liability may be identified. First, there are systems of full corporate criminal liability, such as those in England and the United States. Second, there are systems that recognize only partial corporate criminal liability, for example Denmark, Belgium, and France. Finally, some systems do not permit such liability at all, or permit it only under the guise of administrative offenses. Italy and West Germany afford examples of this restrictive view of corporate liability.
This Article will sketch each of these positions in some detail, beginning, in Part I, with those systems that authorize full liability. Part …
Antitrust Suits By Targets Of Tender Offers, Frank H. Easterbrook, Daniel R. Fischel
Antitrust Suits By Targets Of Tender Offers, Frank H. Easterbrook, Daniel R. Fischel
Michigan Law Review
We explore in this Article the basis and consequences of the target's suit under the antitrust laws. We approach the question from the perspective of federal antitrust law and state corporation law.
We argue in Part I that the target is a singularly poor "private attorney general" because it is a beneficiary, not a victim, of any violation. An antitrust suit thus must be understood as an attempt by managers to defend their own positions, not as an attempt to vindicate the public interest. In the jargon of antitrust, the target is not a victim of "antitrust injury" and therefore …
The Effect Of Insider Trading Rules On The Internal Efficiency Of The Large Corporation, Robert J. Haft
The Effect Of Insider Trading Rules On The Internal Efficiency Of The Large Corporation, Robert J. Haft
Michigan Law Review
Academics have hotly debated these justifications for years, and none of the three has achieved universal acclaim. This Article suggests another perspective: Prohibiting insider trading may enhance business decision-making in large corporations. With the exception of proponents of the Business Property view, analysts have focused on how an insider trading rule affects the national securities markets and traders in those markets. The internal governance of the large corporation is a different matter, one deserving separate consideration.
The Continuing Debate On Corporate Governance, J. Kirkland Grant
The Continuing Debate On Corporate Governance, J. Kirkland Grant
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Modern Corporate Manager: Responsibility and Regulation by William A. Groening and The Limits of Corporate Power: Existing Constraints on the Exercise of Corporate Discretion by Ira M. Millstein and Salem M. Katsh
Corporate Crime, Michigan Law Review
Corporate Crime, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Corporate Crime by Marshall B. Clinard and Peter C. Yeager
Corporations And Information: Secrecy, Access, And Disclosure, Michigan Law Review
Corporations And Information: Secrecy, Access, And Disclosure, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Corporations and Information: Secrecy, Access, and Disclosure by Russell B. Stevenson, Jr.