Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Corporate law (2)
- Corporation law (2)
- Securities law (2)
- Air pollution (1)
- Bad debt (1)
-
- Board diversity (1)
- Business organizations (1)
- Commercial law (1)
- Constitutional law (1)
- Corporate finance (1)
- Corporate financial policy (1)
- Corporate insiders (1)
- Corporate liability (1)
- Corporate merger transactions (1)
- Corporations (1)
- Creditor (1)
- Derivative action (1)
- Duel-class share structures (1)
- Economic analysis of law (1)
- Fraud (1)
- Fraudulent mismanagement (1)
- Free exercise of religion (1)
- Future actions (1)
- Green v. Santa Fe (1)
- Investment (1)
- Legal scholarship (1)
- Liability (1)
- Majority stockholders (1)
- Management (1)
- Regulating fair disclosure (1)
Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
The Misuse Of Tobin’S Q, Robert Bartlett, Frank Partnoy
The Misuse Of Tobin’S Q, Robert Bartlett, Frank Partnoy
Vanderbilt Law Review
In recent years, scholars have addressed the most important topics in corporate law based on a flawed assumption: that the ratio of the market value of a corporation’s securities to their book value is a valid measure of the value of the corporation. The topics have included staggered boards, incorporation in Delaware, shareholder activism, dual-class share structures, share ownership, board diversity, and other significant aspects of corporate governance. We trace the history of this flawed assumption, and document how it emerged from Tobin’s q, a concept from an unrelated area in macroeconomics. We show that scholars have misused Tobin’s q, …
Inflated Private Offering: Regulating Corporate Insiders And Market Moving Disclosures On Social Media, Marisa Papenfuss
Inflated Private Offering: Regulating Corporate Insiders And Market Moving Disclosures On Social Media, Marisa Papenfuss
Vanderbilt Law Review
This Note will explore Regulation FD’s development, from its enactment in 2000 to its status in the age of social media. It will ultimately propose a safe harbor provision that clearly delineates when issuers and corporate insiders are not subject to the regulation’s requirements. Part I provides an overview of Regulation FD’s provisions and enforcement as well as the SEC’s subsequent guidance, which attempts to elucidate the regulation’s application to new technologies. Part II analyzes the specific problems that arise when Regulation FD is applied to information distributed through social media and assesses scholars’ proposed solutions to these problems. Lastly, …
The Economics Of Corporation Law And Securities Regulation, Larry E. Ribstein, C. Paul Rogers
The Economics Of Corporation Law And Securities Regulation, Larry E. Ribstein, C. Paul Rogers
Vanderbilt Law Review
To evaluate this book as a teaching tool one must consider several questions. First, of what value is an economic analysis of law? Second, should one consider economics in a corporations or securities law course? Third, does this book offer a worthwhile approach to bringing economics into the corporate law curriculum? Last, how well has this approach been executed in the book? It may be a bit late to ponder the value of an economic analysis of the law. Economic legal theorists are both extending and deepening the thinking about economics' role in facilitating an understanding of law. This new …
Corporate Directors' Liability For Resisting A Tender Offer: Proposed Substantive And Procedural Modifications Of Existing State Fiduciary Standards, Oby T. Brewer, Iii
Corporate Directors' Liability For Resisting A Tender Offer: Proposed Substantive And Procedural Modifications Of Existing State Fiduciary Standards, Oby T. Brewer, Iii
Vanderbilt Law Review
This Note will review recent decisions applying state law fiduciary standards and will propose procedural and substantive modifications to existing standards. The proposed modifications will compel target directors to recognize and fulfill fiduciary obligations when faced with a decision whether or not to resist a tender offer.
Preamble, Herbert Wechsler
Preamble, Herbert Wechsler
Vanderbilt Law Review
As readers of the Review are undoubtedly aware, the American Law Institute was organized in 1923 as a permanent organization of lawyers, judges, and law teachers "to promote," as its charter recites, "the clarification and simplification of the law and its better adaptation to social needs." ...
Work on the Code began' in 1969 with Professor Loss as the Reporter, aided by consultants and advisers whose experience and expertise is equaled only by their high distinction in this field. Five tentative drafts have been printed in the years from 1972 to 1976 and a sixth, which now is off the …
Fiduciaries And Fairness Under Rule 10b-5, Thomas J. Sherrard
Fiduciaries And Fairness Under Rule 10b-5, Thomas J. Sherrard
Vanderbilt Law Review
In Marshel v. AFW Fabric Corp., decided on February 13,1976, the court unanimously sustained a challenge to long-form merger under New York law for the sole purpose of "going private,"concluding that despite full disclosure, the merger itself constituted a fraudulent scheme because it represented an attempt by the majority stockholders, in violation of their fiduciary obligations, to utilize corporate funds strictly for personal benefit and for no legitimate corporate purpose...
It is the purpose of this article to analyze the Green and Marshel decisions against the backdrop of previous cases in the area of fraudulent mismanagement, to gauge their impact …
Recent Cases, Susan E. Dominick, Robert D. Butters, Walter T. Eccard
Recent Cases, Susan E. Dominick, Robert D. Butters, Walter T. Eccard
Vanderbilt Law Review
The first amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion, although couched in absolute terms, has never been considered an absolute right. The first significant free exercise case, Reynolds v.United States,' upheld the conviction of a Mormon polygamist who claimed a religious exemption from the bigamy laws on the basis of the first amendment. The Court held that while Congress was left powerless to legislate in matters of mere opinion, it was nonetheless" left free to reach actions which were in violation of social duties or subversive of good order."'
Susan E. Dominick
=========================
The instant decision appears to be the …
Characterization Of Shareholder-Creditor Bad Debt: United States V. Generes Sounds The Knell For Deductions From Ordinary Income, Bland W. Cannon, Jr.
Characterization Of Shareholder-Creditor Bad Debt: United States V. Generes Sounds The Knell For Deductions From Ordinary Income, Bland W. Cannon, Jr.
Vanderbilt Law Review
The primary focus of this Note is on the development of the judicial doctrines interpreting the provisions of section 166 as applied to share-holder losses on loans to related corporations. Whether, in any given case, advances by shareholders will be considered loans or capital investments is beyond the scope of this work. For purposes of this study, the existence of a valid debtor-creditor or debtor-guarantor relationship between the corporation and its shareholder will be assumed. A brief description of the statutory scheme of the bad debt and loss provisions will be followed by a discussion of the origins and development …
The Taxation Of Stock Dividends And The Tax Reform Act Of 1969--Foreboding Implications And Constitutional Uncertainties, John A. Pickens
The Taxation Of Stock Dividends And The Tax Reform Act Of 1969--Foreboding Implications And Constitutional Uncertainties, John A. Pickens
Vanderbilt Law Review
Federal income taxation of stock dividends has followed a diverse course. Since the introduction of a federal income tax on all stock dividends in 1916, five major changes have occurred in this area. The most recent of these changes is embodied in section 421 of the Tax Reform Act of 1969, which amends section 305 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. When the 1969 Amendments are compared with the treatment of stock dividends under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, they can be viewed, in conjunction with the regulations issued in 1969 under the 1954 Code, as initiating a …
Insider Liability For Short-Swing Profits Pursuant To Mergers And Related Transactions, James P. Hemmer
Insider Liability For Short-Swing Profits Pursuant To Mergers And Related Transactions, James P. Hemmer
Vanderbilt Law Review
This article considers the problems presented by the application of section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to corporate merger transactions. Mr. Hemmer argues that the"matching across" proposal, which has been suggested by some commentators, should not be applied to the merger situation. Instead, the author advocates that the "possibility of abuse" test, which the courts have applied to conversion transactions, should also. be applicable to the corporate merger. Mr. Hemmer feels this approach will prevent the abuses for which section 16(b) was enacted and, at the same time, provide the courts with a flexible test for this …
Rule 10b-5 And The Stockholder's Derivative Action, Lewis D. Lowenfels
Rule 10b-5 And The Stockholder's Derivative Action, Lewis D. Lowenfels
Vanderbilt Law Review
This article focuses upon a new, emerging private cause of action based upon section 10(b) and rule 10b-5-a stockholder's derivative action initiated on behalf of a corporation which has been defrauded in connection with the purchase or sale of securities. Five reported cases, three decided in the last three months of 1964, have sustained a stockholder's derivative suit based upon section 10(b) and rule 10b-5. The significance of these decisions becomes apparent, not only when one considers that the derivative suit has traditionally been an internal corporate matter governed exclusively by state law, but also when one focuses upon the …
Corporations -- Effect Of Statements Made In Stock Prospectus, Law Review Staff
Corporations -- Effect Of Statements Made In Stock Prospectus, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Law Review
In the case of United Funds, Inc. v. Carter Products, Inc.,' the City Circuit Court of Baltimore, Maryland, handed down a decision which" broke new legal ground." The case, involving the effect of statements made in stock prospect uses on a corporation's future actions, has provoked surprisingly little discussion by legal commentators, and none at all on the "new" ground it broke. The purpose of this comment is to examine the Carter Products decision, to attempt to place it in proper legal perspective, and finally to evaluate it as a new development in the law.
Fifteen-Year Survey Of Corporate Developments, 1944-1959, Miguel A. De Capriles
Fifteen-Year Survey Of Corporate Developments, 1944-1959, Miguel A. De Capriles
Vanderbilt Law Review
The foregoing survey, it is believed, amply demonstrates the kaleidoscopic variety of the corporate developments of the past fifteen years, even though for obvious reasons much of the detail has had to be omitted. General conclusions are difficult to draw. It seems likely that the success of capitalist enterprise in this, period and the self-imposed improvement in standards of corporate. Fanchon & Marco, Inc. v. Paramount Pictures, 202 F.2d 731 (2d Cir. management have retarded the underlying trend toward expansion of the role of government in the regulation of economic affairs. There has been no occasion for new dramatic statutory …
Initial Capitalization And Financing Of Corporations, Chester Rohrlich
Initial Capitalization And Financing Of Corporations, Chester Rohrlich
Vanderbilt Law Review
Since one of the varied uses to which stock purchase options maybe put is as a means of raising, or facilitating the raising, of capital, we deem it appropriate to direct attention to them. Like so many instrumentalities, they are subject to abuse and raise some difficulties, but used honestly and with discretion, they do represent a means (a) of compensating promoters and underwriters and retaining their continuing interest in the financial success of the corporation, (b) of adding speculative attraction to the security with which it is issued, or, less frequently, (c) of raising funds by direct and independent …
Business Associations--1959 Tennessee Survey, F. Hodge O'Neal
Business Associations--1959 Tennessee Survey, F. Hodge O'Neal
Vanderbilt Law Review
The Eighty-first General Assembly enacted a considerable number of significant statutes affecting business organizations or their activities. One of the new statutes made important changes in the Securities Law of 1955. Several of the statutes were designed, or at least professed to be designed, to encourage the commercial and industrial development of Tennessee. On the other hand, Tennessee courts handed down during the survey period only two or three opinions touching on business associations questions, and those questions were of but little importance. In general, this article discusses the statutes first, then the judicial decisions.