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Full-Text Articles in Law

Why Do Venture Capital Funds Burn Research And Development Deductions?, Calvin H. Johnson Dec 2007

Why Do Venture Capital Funds Burn Research And Development Deductions?, Calvin H. Johnson

Calvin H. Johnson

Venture capital funds form a separate corporation for each venture that they support, within their portfolio of diverse ventures. The separate incorporation reduces the tax value that could be achieved from deducting research and development costs. The resulting taxes are draconian, sometimes confiscatory. If R&D deductions were used optimally, taxable investors could achieve a tax regime that does not reduce their pretax return, and taxable investors would drive tax-exempt investors out of the funds. If capital must come from tax-exempt investors, the funds should still be trying to use the R&D deductions against taxable income of the successful ventures. Tax …


Dukes V. Wal-Mart: A New Interpretation Of The Class-Action Model, Mark Fischer Nov 2007

Dukes V. Wal-Mart: A New Interpretation Of The Class-Action Model, Mark Fischer

Mark Fischer

Dukes V. Wal-Mart: A New Interpretation of the Class-Action Model By: Mark Fischer TABLE OF CONTENTS Dukes v. Wal-Mart: A New Interpretation of the Class-Action Model Page Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………..1 Background……………………………………………………………………………………..2 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23……………………………………………………..............5 I. Commonality………………………………………………………………………….6 II. Typicality…………………………………………………………………………….7 Due Process Concerns…………………………………………………………………..............8 Impermissible Predomination of Monetary Claims over Claims for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief…………………………………………………………………………………………....9 Ninth Circuit Panel Dissenting Opinion………………………………………………………...9 Wal-Mart’s Response: Petition for Rehearing En Banc……………………………………….12 I. Application of Rule 23……………………………………………………………....12 II. Plaintiff’s Lack of Article III Standing……………………………………………..16 III. Title VII and Due Process Impact of the Panel’s Ruling………………………….17 Dukes’ Trickle-Down Effect on Corporate America…………………………………………..19 Conclusion…………………………………………………………………………………......20 TABLE OF AUTHORITIES Page(s) …


Adhesion Contracts And The Twenty First Century Consumer, Leon E. Trakman Nov 2007

Adhesion Contracts And The Twenty First Century Consumer, Leon E. Trakman

Leon E Trakman Dean

Ecommerce has transformed the law of contract. Consumers are increasingly subject to myriads of conditions in shrink-wrap, box-wrap, click-wrap and browse-wrap contracts. Opening software wrapping or clicking “I agree” in a dialog box on a computer subjects the user to a series of onerous conditions that restrict end use and limit the supplier’s liability. These developments are counterbalance by the growth of new market-savvy classes of consumers who are willing and able to sue brand name producers in class and other actions. Faced with these Twenty First Century developments, courts struggle to find middle ground between regulating mass transactions in …


What Liquidation Does For Secured Creditors, And What It Does For You, Riz Mokal Nov 2007

What Liquidation Does For Secured Creditors, And What It Does For You, Riz Mokal

Riz Mokal

A core objective of collective insolvency regimes is to preserve value in the insolvent estate. This value is then to be distributed in accordance with the appropriate statutory scheme. Value might be lost for any of a variety of reasons, including, in particular, (i) misuse of corporate assets by those with influence over the distressed company, and (ii) precipitate individualistic enforcement action by particular claimants, which dismembers the corporate estate and thus destroys synergetic values. The statutory liquidation regime attempts to counter this, in order not simply to benefit those with claims against the company, but also with a view …


French Judges' Far Reaching Powers In Partners And Shareholders Disputes, Jean-Charles Bancal Sep 2007

French Judges' Far Reaching Powers In Partners And Shareholders Disputes, Jean-Charles Bancal

Jean-Charles Bancal

FRENCH JUDGES’ FAR REACHING POWERS IN PARTNERS AND SHAREHOLDERS DISPUTES ABSTRACT At the time of the French Revolution, one of the main concerns of the new regimes was to fight what was called the gouvernement des juges. The Napoleonic codification reduced judges powers to interpret the law and negated their role as law makers. But since then, French judges, have corrected what they consider inequitable situations. Through various self defined rules such as abuse of right or Principes généraux du droit, these judge implemented rules have cast off the yoke of the Civil Code in many field, particularly in property …


The "Carrot" Approach To Accounting Standard Setting, Neal F. Newman Sep 2007

The "Carrot" Approach To Accounting Standard Setting, Neal F. Newman

Neal F Newman

For years, accounting standard setters have been waging a battle against financial fraud and obfuscated and distorted financial reporting. The standard setters, however, have been steadily losing ground as accounting fraud and obfuscated financial reporting continues to proliferate the public company landscape. The ongoing battle between financial information prepares and regulators has resulted in an accounting and financial reporting regime that is fragmented, overly complex and allows for accounting results that are devoid of economic substance. Poor financial reporting has been deemed to be of such significance, that the Securities and Exchange Commission has formed an advisory committee whose purpose …


Taxing Blackstone, Victor Fleischer Sep 2007

Taxing Blackstone, Victor Fleischer

Victor Fleischer

No abstract provided.


Does An Independent Board Improve Nonprofit Corporate Governance?, Kathleen M. Boozang Aug 2007

Does An Independent Board Improve Nonprofit Corporate Governance?, Kathleen M. Boozang

Kathleen M. Boozang

No abstract provided.


Piercing The Corporate Veil In Regulated Industries, Douglas G. Smith Aug 2007

Piercing The Corporate Veil In Regulated Industries, Douglas G. Smith

Douglas G Smith

This article addresses the theoretical justifications for limited liability and the exceptions to limited liability under the various veil piercing doctrines. In particular, the article considers whether veil piercing is appropriate in regulated industries such as insurance and banking, which have comprehensive regulatory structures that are designed to prevent much of the conduct that veil piercing is designed to remedy. The article concludes that veil piercing is not justified under such circumstances because the economic costs outweigh any benefits.


Bond Defaults And The Dilemma Of The Indenture Trustee , Steven L. Schwarcz, Gregory M. Sergi Aug 2007

Bond Defaults And The Dilemma Of The Indenture Trustee , Steven L. Schwarcz, Gregory M. Sergi

Steven L Schwarcz

This article, attached for your review, rethinks the standard of care for trustees of public bonds. The present standard is intolerably vague, generating cost and inefficiency in the public bond markets. Yet bondholder governance is increasingly recognized as a critical component of the larger realm of corporate governance, and indeed more than eighty percent of capital market financing raised by U.S. corporations now occurs through public bond offerings. This article examines how that standard of care should be modified to make indenture trustees more effective.


Does An Independent Board Improve Nonprofit Corporate Governance?, Kathleen M. Boozang Jul 2007

Does An Independent Board Improve Nonprofit Corporate Governance?, Kathleen M. Boozang

Kathleen M. Boozang

A variety of forces have converged to pressure nonprofit boards to follow the lead of the for-profit sector to become independent, even while empirical evidence from the business sector suggests that board independence from management is not fulfilling expectations, and may be related to weakened firm performance. This background, and the paucity of governance studies in the nonprofit sector, suggests that nonprofits are prematurely jumping onto the independent board bandwagon. There is no convincing articulation of why nonprofit boards should be independent–what is it that independent boards are supposed to be able to uniquely accomplish, how many independent directors are …


Stock Market, Corporations And Their Regulation: A Few Glimpses Into Reality, Palladam M. Vasudev Jul 2007

Stock Market, Corporations And Their Regulation: A Few Glimpses Into Reality, Palladam M. Vasudev

Palladam M Vasudev

The paper examines events in three public companies – Enron Corp., Sycamore Networks and Amazon.com, from the perspective of corporate law and securities law. The events are interpreted in terms of the applicable law, and explain how it influences them. In particular, the paper demonstrates how the prevailing loose legal regime for corporations and the stock market-centricity of corporate arrangements give rise to specific varieties of negative behaviour. The paper adopts a critical approach, and is an effort to describe the consequences of the minimalist philosophy underlying corporate and securities regulation.


Companies And Corporations: Their Transition From Status To Contract And Its Political Economy, Palladam M. Vasudev Jul 2007

Companies And Corporations: Their Transition From Status To Contract And Its Political Economy, Palladam M. Vasudev

Palladam M Vasudev

This article traces the state of corporate law in the English-speaking world since 1720, identifies the political economy of the changes that occurred since mid-nineteenth century, and the consequences for corporate law. During this period, there was a transition from the position that incorporation was a status to be conferred by the law to the position that they were the products of private contracts. In addition, they came to be treated as the property of their shareholders. These conceptual changes have had far-reaching consequences for the growth of corporations and were used to largely abandon the public regulation of corporations. …


Fitting The Pension Protection Act Of 2006 Into The Defined Contribution Paradigm, Crystal L. Lyons Jul 2007

Fitting The Pension Protection Act Of 2006 Into The Defined Contribution Paradigm, Crystal L. Lyons

Crystal L. Lyons

No abstract provided.


“Fees On Fees” In New York: Attention Coporate Agents, George Klidonas May 2007

“Fees On Fees” In New York: Attention Coporate Agents, George Klidonas

George Klidonas

It is well settled law in New York that corporate officers and directors shall be indemnified for suits brought against them as agents of the corporation. The only limitation is that they are successful on the merits of the case and the corporate agent did not engage in conduct pursuant to bad faith. But what happens when that agent asks the corporation to indemnify them and the corporation refuses? According to a recent Court of Appeals case, if that agent files a subsequent indemnification suit, the agent is not entitled to legal fees for costs arising out of the subsequent …


Contract-Centered Veil Piercing, Nicholas L. Georgakopoulos Apr 2007

Contract-Centered Veil Piercing, Nicholas L. Georgakopoulos

Nicholas L Georgakopoulos

The application of the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil to contract disputes has been attacked as undesirable. This article shows that applying piercing to contracts is desirable. Contract-centered veil piercing functions akin to a penalty-default clause that encourages the efficient production of information, avoids wasteful precaution, and promotes the use of the corporate form for entrepreneurship.


Patent Dispute Identification In China :Harmony Between The Protection And Restraint, Dong Zhang Apr 2007

Patent Dispute Identification In China :Harmony Between The Protection And Restraint, Dong Zhang

Dr. Dong Zhang

How to keep a balance between restraining patent abuse and weakening local intervention has been a global issue, especially in such developing countries as China, while meeting a serious challenge of intellectual property protection. This article argues that patent right is definitely a kind of property, which must remain fully within the reach of antitrust law and it is against regulating special independent provisions in the drafted Chinese antitrust law to emphasize unduly on IP abuse. This requires an inquiry into intent that is consistent with antitrust essentials and preserves legitimate patent claims.


The Cameroonian Experience Under Ohada: Business Organizations In A Developing Economy, Claire Moore Dickerson Apr 2007

The Cameroonian Experience Under Ohada: Business Organizations In A Developing Economy, Claire Moore Dickerson

Claire Moore Dickerson

The Cameroonian experience underscores that corporate social responsibility is socio-political contruct implemented by governance concepts. In the US, we have not yet engaged in a sufficiently broad discussion of what is our understanding of corporate social responsibilty.


Overcoming Chad’S Oil Curse: The African Union Convention On Preventing And Combating Corruption As A Framework For Securing Foreign Investments, Jennifer L. Akre Apr 2007

Overcoming Chad’S Oil Curse: The African Union Convention On Preventing And Combating Corruption As A Framework For Securing Foreign Investments, Jennifer L. Akre

Jennifer L Akre

This comment addresses the issue of corruption in Africa, particularly with regard to Chad’s “partial expropriation” of foreign oil companies in the summer of 2006. It argues Chad violated principles of customary international law and key provisions of the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption by unilaterally altering the regulatory scheme of the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project. The comment contends that such partial expropriations essentially amount to extortion, and therefore fall under the purview of regional anti-corruption agreements like the AU Corruption Convention. It will focus on the Convention as a possible solution for addressing scenarios like the one …


Re-Evaluating Declaratory Judgment Jurisdiction In Intellectual Property Disputes, Lorelei Ritchie De Larena Mar 2007

Re-Evaluating Declaratory Judgment Jurisdiction In Intellectual Property Disputes, Lorelei Ritchie De Larena

Lorelei Ritchie de Larena

The Declaratory Judgment Act of 1934 was quickly tagged by the U.S. Supreme Court as a simple procedural measure. Whether simple or procedural, the addition of the declaratory judgment option has dramatically increased the rights of would-be defendants. This is of special interest in patent law, where without the ability to initiate legal action, an alleged infringer would typically have no recourse but to either drop a lucrative business and lose a massive investment, or to languish in legal limbo while potentially accruing liability for treble damages. The option of a mirror-image lawsuit removes the patentee’s ability to unilaterally decide …


Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim Mar 2007

Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim

Ali A Ibrahim

This paper discusses various legal and regulatory issues for developing strong capital and securities markets in the transition economies. Toward this end, the paper analyses the available literature, and emphasizes that: (i) the development of corporate governance should be gradual and must take into consideration the customary laws that impact on the ownership structures and related preferences for doing business in the emerging markets; and (ii) the foreign investment policies should be consistent with the development of corporate governance and vice versa.


The Evolution And Endpoint Of Responsibility: The Fcpa, Sox, Leftist Leaders, Gratuitous Promises, And A Novel Csr Code, Aaron N Einhorn Mar 2007

The Evolution And Endpoint Of Responsibility: The Fcpa, Sox, Leftist Leaders, Gratuitous Promises, And A Novel Csr Code, Aaron N Einhorn

Aaron N Einhorn

Over the past thirty years, multinational corporations have emerged as engines of global development and have enjoyed increased political and economic power. In order to control this power, states and intergovernmental organizations have placed greater and greater responsibilities upon corporations. Passage of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in 1977, for example, required corporations to establish internal controls and imposed vicarious liability for third parties acts of bribery. Amendments to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in 1998 expanded corporate responsibility under the Act even further. Subsequently, in 2002, the United States passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, restructuring the very systems of governance …


The Case For For-Profit Charities, Anup Malani, Eric Posner Mar 2007

The Case For For-Profit Charities, Anup Malani, Eric Posner

Anup Malani

Nonprofit firms may earn profits, but they may not distribute them to any affiliated persons. If a nonprofit firm has a “charitable” purpose under § 501(c)(3) of the tax code, the firm receives numerous tax advantages. For example, donors may deduct their donations to the firm from their taxable personal income. For-profit firms may distribute profits to affiliated persons, but receives no tax advantages for engaging in “charitable” activities. We argue that the law should not link tax benefits to corporate form in this way. There may be good arguments for recognizing the nonprofit form and good arguments for providing …


Unofficial Official Comments, Nigel Stark Mar 2007

Unofficial Official Comments, Nigel Stark

Nigel Stark

My Note examines Justice Antonin Scalia’s “plain meaning” theory and asks whether, assuming that theory is correct, whether official comments should be used to interpret a statute. Specifically, I examine the use of the UCC’s Official Comments and its various state variations. I conclude that, under Justice Scalia’s theory, the use of official comments is to interpret the statute is improper and should be avoided.


The Fetishization Of Independence, Usha Rodrigues Mar 2007

The Fetishization Of Independence, Usha Rodrigues

Usha Rodrigues

According to conventional wisdom, a supermajority independent board of directors is the ideal corporate governance structure. Debate nevertheless continues: empirical evidence suggests that independent boards do not improve firm performance. Independence proponents respond that past studies reflect a flawed definition of independence. Remarkably, neither side in the independence debate has looked to Delaware, the preeminent state source for corporate law. Comparing Delaware’s notions of independence with those of Sarbanes-Oxley and its attendant reforms reveals two fundamentally different conceptions of independence. Sarbanes-Oxley equates independence with outsider status: an independent director is one who lacks financial ties to the corporation and is …


Dr. Jones And The Raiders Of Lost Capital: Hedge Fund Regulation, Part Ii, John W. Verret Mar 2007

Dr. Jones And The Raiders Of Lost Capital: Hedge Fund Regulation, Part Ii, John W. Verret

John W Verret

Hedge funds can sometimes achieve remarkable returns. The market fees exceed that of other asset classes, leading some fund managers to engage in illicit behavior, including fraud, that violates their duty to their investors and tempts institutional investors to violate their fiduciary duty to their principals. I will examine the hedge fund registration requirement struck down during the summer of 2006, as well as the tools used by other regulators to oversee institutional investors. This study relies on a survey of literature on financial regulation, commentary on the hedge fund registration rule, models of self-regulation, and examples in other areas …


New Governance, Compliance, And Principles-Based Securities Regulation, Cristie L. Ford Mar 2007

New Governance, Compliance, And Principles-Based Securities Regulation, Cristie L. Ford

Cristie L. Ford

The UK securities regulator, the Financial Services Authority, claims that its "principles-based" approach to securities regulation is simply "better" than what it characterizes as the prescriptive, rules-based American approach. The striking shift in financial sector business from New York to London over the last two years has brought the question of the wisdom of principles-based regulation into sharp relief. In fact, an FSA-style regulatory approach may also be taking hold in Canada, through the agency of the province of British Columbia. This paper examines BC's innovative proposals for a principles-based securities regime through the lens of New Governance theory. I …


Corporate Governance, Director Liability, And Good Faith, Elizabeth Nowicki Mar 2007

Corporate Governance, Director Liability, And Good Faith, Elizabeth Nowicki

Elizabeth Nowicki

Corporate directors are obligated to act “in good faith,” and directors face personal monetary liability to their shareholders for acts “not in good faith.” Yet no modern court has imposed liability accordingly. Every time the issue of a director’s good faith comes up in court, the court forces the complaining shareholder to prove that her directors acted affirmatively in bad faith as opposed to merely in the absence of good faith. The judiciary completely misses the point that acts lacking good faith are not always the same as acts affirmatively taken in bad faith. A director can act in the …


Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim Feb 2007

Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim

Ali A Ibrahim

This paper discusses various legal and regulatory issues for developing strong capital and securities markets in the transition economies. Toward this end, the paper analyses the available literature, and emphasizes that: (i) the development of corporate governance should be gradual and must take into consideration the customary laws that impact on the ownership structures and related preferences for doing business in the emerging markets; and (ii) the foreign investment policies should be consistent with the development of corporate governance and vice versa.


Controlling Family Shareholders In Developing Countries: Anchoring Relational Exchange, Ronald J. Gilson Feb 2007

Controlling Family Shareholders In Developing Countries: Anchoring Relational Exchange, Ronald J. Gilson

Ronald J. Gilson

The Law and Finance account of the ubiquity of controlling shareholders in developing markets is based on conditions in the capital market: poor shareholder protection law prevents controlling shareholders from parting with control out of fear of exploitation by a new controlling shareholder who acquires a controlling position in the market. This explanation, however, does not address why we observe any minority shareholders in such markets, or why controlling shareholders in developing markets are most often family-based. This paper looks at the impact of “bad law” on shareholder distribution in a very different way. Developing countries typically provide not only …