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Selected Works

2008

Corporations

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Institution
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Articles 31 - 60 of 75

Full-Text Articles in Law

Multiple Personalities Incorporated: Accepting The Multi-Dimensional Personhood Of The Modern Corporation, Susanna K. Ripken Jul 2008

Multiple Personalities Incorporated: Accepting The Multi-Dimensional Personhood Of The Modern Corporation, Susanna K. Ripken

Susanna K. Ripken

One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For years, corporate theorists have tried to construct a complete and coherent theory of the corporate person. Some have argued that the corporation is merely a fictional, artificial person that exists only as a concession of state law. Others have asserted that the corporation is a real, independent person that has an ontological existence and identity of its own. The popular theoretical paradigm today is that the corporation is neither an artificial nor a real person; it is merely a nexus of contracts among the …


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

this article addresses both the theoretical and practical elements of M&A due diligence regarding IP and IT, with an emphasis on recent developments.


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

No abstract provided.


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

This article is intended to address both the theoretical and practical elements of M&A due diligence associated with intellectual property and information technology issues.


The Direction Of Corporate Law: The Scholars' Perspective, John C. Coffee Jr., Richard A. Booth Marbury Research Professor Of Law, R. Franklin Balotti, David C. Mcbride, Edward P. Welch Jul 2008

The Direction Of Corporate Law: The Scholars' Perspective, John C. Coffee Jr., Richard A. Booth Marbury Research Professor Of Law, R. Franklin Balotti, David C. Mcbride, Edward P. Welch

Richard A Booth

Transcript of a panel on a scholar's approach to corporation law.


Why Arbitrate? The Questionable Quest For Efficiency In Hallstreet Street Associates, Llc V. Mattel, Inc., 550 U.S. __ (2008), David K. Kessler Jul 2008

Why Arbitrate? The Questionable Quest For Efficiency In Hallstreet Street Associates, Llc V. Mattel, Inc., 550 U.S. __ (2008), David K. Kessler

David K Kessler

The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) makes arbitration agreements between private parties legally enforceable. The policy favoring arbitration underlying the FAA has been justified as serving two ends: it protects freedom of contract, and it creates an efficient alternative dispute resolution system. Previous decisions by the Court have indicated a belief that, when those two goals come into conflict, the result that preserves freedom of contract should prevail. In Hallstreet Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., however, a recent case involving the Federal Arbitration Act, the Court's decision preserved perceived efficiency at the expense of freedom of contract. The Court held that …


At The Intersection Of Property And Insolvency: The Insolvent Company's Encumbered Assets, Riz Mokal Jul 2008

At The Intersection Of Property And Insolvency: The Insolvent Company's Encumbered Assets, Riz Mokal

Riz Mokal

This is the working paper for an invited article published in (2008) 20(2) Singapore Academy of Law Journal 495.

When a company becomes subject to winding-up proceedings, it is widely thought to lose beneficial ownership of its property. The property is held, instead, on a ‘statutory trust’ to discharge the company’s liabilities. The attribution of this ‘proprietary’ effect to the commencement of winding-up has, however, created significant confusion. Faring particularly poorly is our understanding of the status of those of the company’s assets in which others held proprietary rights prior to this point, notably, assets the company’s title to which …


Going From The Frying Pan Into The Fire? A Critique Of The U.S. Treasury’S Newly Proposed Section 987 Currency Regulations, Joseph L. Tobin Jun 2008

Going From The Frying Pan Into The Fire? A Critique Of The U.S. Treasury’S Newly Proposed Section 987 Currency Regulations, Joseph L. Tobin

Joseph L Tobin

In September 2006, the IRS proposed new regulations for taxation of currency gains and losses for U.S. corporations' foreign branches. The IRS has announced that it would like to finalize them as soon as possible, perhaps as early as the summer of 2008. The new regulations withdraw the old section 987 regulations of 1991. The IRS believes these new regulations are necessary in order to prevent taxpayers from taking "artificial" currency losses on assets such as land and machinery -- assets which do not vary with the exchange rate, according to the IRS. The new regulations propose to stop these …


International Strategic Alliance, Mohd Arif Jun 2008

International Strategic Alliance, Mohd Arif

Mohd Arif

A Strategic Alliance is a relationship between firms to creat more value than they can on their own


Ceo Postings: Leveraging The Internet’S Communications Potential While Managing The Message To Maintain Corporate Governance Interests In Information Security, Reputation And Compliance, Margo E. K. Reder May 2008

Ceo Postings: Leveraging The Internet’S Communications Potential While Managing The Message To Maintain Corporate Governance Interests In Information Security, Reputation And Compliance, Margo E. K. Reder

Margo E. K. Reder

CEO POSTINGS –

LEVERAGING THE INTERNET’S COMMUNICATIONS POTENTIAL WHILE MANAGING THE MESSAGE TO MAINTAIN CORPORATE GOVERNANCE INTERESTS IN INFORMATION SECURITY, REPUTATION AND COMPLIANCE

By Margo E. K. Reder

For approximately eight years, Whole Foods Market, Inc. [Whole Foods] CEO John Mackey posted messages to Yahoo! Financial’s online message board for Whole Foods. Rather than using his real name, Mr. Mackey like many posters to chat rooms, created an online alter ego and posted his comments under a pseudonym. As “Rahodeb” Mr. Mackey promoted his Whole Foods chain, boasted about personal stock gains in Whole Foods stock, company plans and performance …


Reaffirming The Rights Of Foreign Investors To The Protection Of Icsid Arbitration: Sempra Energy International V. The Argentine Republic, Daniel Krawiec May 2008

Reaffirming The Rights Of Foreign Investors To The Protection Of Icsid Arbitration: Sempra Energy International V. The Argentine Republic, Daniel Krawiec

Daniel A Krawiec II

Earlier this decade, the Argentine government responded to a substantial domestic economic crises by passing several emergency laws and unilaterally changing the terms of its investment agreements with foreign investors. Sempra v. Argentine Republic is an important case because the tribunal decisively reaffirmed the right to ICSID arbitration for American investors harmed by Argentina’s actions. Furthermore, the tribunal held that the U.S.-Argentina bilateral investment treaty provided substantial substantive investment protection.


The Love Song Of The Delaware Court Of Chancery, David K. Kessler May 2008

The Love Song Of The Delaware Court Of Chancery, David K. Kessler

David K Kessler

Though corporate law can often seem dry and uninteresting, it is full of wonderful stories, complex characters, and powerful language. As such, the field of corporate law lends itself to the medium that has long best captured those elements: poetry. The attached document is an adaptation of T.S. Eliot’s The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock to the theme of corporate law. It has been enthusiastically received on the Harvard campus by former Law School Dean (and Corporations guru) Robert Clark and the Vice-Chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery, Leo Strine. I understand that this submission is far more …


The Pirates Will Party On!, William A. Drennan Mar 2008

The Pirates Will Party On!, William A. Drennan

William A Drennan

The government went off course when it attempted to stop outrageous CEO compensation schemes with new income tax rules on nonqualified deferred compensation. IRC Section 409A should be scuttled.


Federalizm Vs. State Law In The Regulation Of Corporations: A Conflicting Or Complimentary Shift In Corporate Jurisprudence? How Delaware Has Responded, Christine G. Ondimu Mar 2008

Federalizm Vs. State Law In The Regulation Of Corporations: A Conflicting Or Complimentary Shift In Corporate Jurisprudence? How Delaware Has Responded, Christine G. Ondimu

Christine G Ondimu Ms.

The essence of this paper is to analyze how federal corporate law has shaped Delaware State’s corporate law jurisprudence. I argue that recent federal engagement in corporate law should be welcomed and sustained by congress when state corporate law rules fall short in providing adequate protection for investors. Using a small number of case law, it will be acknowledged as we develop this paper that Delaware’s corporate law has had a fundamental shift in the wake of Enron and WorldCom and the advent of the Sarbanes- Oxley Act, 2002. At the same time we will also show how Delaware has …


The Effect Of Enhanced Disclosure On Open Market Stock Repurchases, Michael N. Simkovic Mar 2008

The Effect Of Enhanced Disclosure On Open Market Stock Repurchases, Michael N. Simkovic

Michael N Simkovic

Publicly traded companies distribute cash to shareholders either through dividends or through anonymous repurchases of the companies’ own stock on the open market. Companies must announce a repurchase authorization, but do not actually have to repurchase any stock, and until recently did not have to disclose whether or not they were in fact repurchasing any stock. Scholars and regulators noticed that companies frequently announced repurchases but then appeared not to complete them. They feared that such announcements might be used by insiders to exploit public investors. To reduce opportunities for exploitive behavior, the SEC required that companies disclose their repurchase …


Should Securities Industry Self-Regulatory Organizations Be Considered Government Agencies?, Roberta S. Karmel Mar 2008

Should Securities Industry Self-Regulatory Organizations Be Considered Government Agencies?, Roberta S. Karmel

Roberta S. Karmel

Abstract for

“Should Securities Industry Self-Regulatory Organizations Be Considered Government Agencies?”

by Roberta S. Karmel, Centennial Professor, Brooklyn Law School

Securities industry self-regulatory organizations (“SROs”) began as private sector membership organizations of securities industry professionals. This article addresses the questions of whether, and to what extent, securities industry SROs have become government agencies, and whether, and to what extent, they should be subject to constitutional and statutory controls on government agencies. It focuses principally on the Financial Industry Regulatory Agency (“FINRA”), a new entity which combined the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (“NASD”) and the member regulation functions of …


Shari'ah's Black Box: Civil Liability And Criminal Exposure Surrounding Shari'ah-Compliant Finance, David Yerushalmi Mar 2008

Shari'ah's Black Box: Civil Liability And Criminal Exposure Surrounding Shari'ah-Compliant Finance, David Yerushalmi

David Yerushalmi

This article examines the multitude of legal issues - both criminal and civil - that Shari'ah-compliant finance (SCF) presents to U.S. financial institutions and their professional advisers. In short, SCF is the practice of investing in conformity with Islamic law (Shari'ah). Such investment appears at first glance innocuous. With only a modicum of probing, however, SCF turns out to be a black box, where the financial industry and their legal professionals have hidden a doctrine at war with the West and have ignored the dangers and risks posed by Shari'ah authorities who determine the rules and principles of this industry. …


Provena Covenant Medical Center And Its Unresolved Tax-Exempt Status - It's Time For The Illinois Supreme Court To Revise The Methodist Old People's Home Test, Joseph J. Hylak-Reinholtz Mar 2008

Provena Covenant Medical Center And Its Unresolved Tax-Exempt Status - It's Time For The Illinois Supreme Court To Revise The Methodist Old People's Home Test, Joseph J. Hylak-Reinholtz

Joseph J. Hylak-Reinholtz

Not-for-profit hospitals tax exemptions have been challenged by government officials for providing insufficient charity care to needy patients. In Illinois, not-for-profit tax exemptions are analyzed under a test developed by the state Supreme Court in Methodist Old Peoples Home v. Korzen. This comment argues, in light of the Provena litigation and subsequent appeal, that the court must revise its outdated test to reflect the realities of providing health care today in a not-for-profit system.


Ownership, Limited: Reconciling Traditional And Progressive Corporate Law Via An Aristotelian Understanding Of Ownership, Ronald J. Colombo Mar 2008

Ownership, Limited: Reconciling Traditional And Progressive Corporate Law Via An Aristotelian Understanding Of Ownership, Ronald J. Colombo

Ronald J Colombo

Concern over issues of corporate social responsibility and corporate governance persists, fueled, in large part, by recent (and ongoing) corporate scandals of one sort or another. The debate over the nature of the corporation – and, consequently, the proper role of directors, shareholders, and other stakeholders – plays an important role in the consideration of such concerns. If one conceptualizes the corporation as an entity owned by the shareholders, then one would probably be more likely to view directors as mere agents, tasked with maximizing the wealth of their principals (the shareholders). On the other hand, rejecting such a conceptualization …


Corporate Corruption And The Complicity Of Congress And The Supreme Court - The Tortuous Path From Central Bank To Stoneridge Investment Partners, Llc V. Scientific-Atlanta, Inc.., Charles W. Murdock Feb 2008

Corporate Corruption And The Complicity Of Congress And The Supreme Court - The Tortuous Path From Central Bank To Stoneridge Investment Partners, Llc V. Scientific-Atlanta, Inc.., Charles W. Murdock

Charles W. Murdock

This article asserts that Congress and the federal courts are complicit in the widespread corporate corruption that has come to light this past decade. It begins by exploring the notion of bias and then chronicles judicial developments which have protected corporate officials, who have engaged in securities fraud and other wrongful conduct, at the expense of innocent shareholders and investors. It also analyzes the public policy in favor of corruption embodied in the Private Litigation Securities Reform Act, and the actions of federal courts in expanding the protection of PLSRA even beyond that dictated by the language of the statute. …


Mutual Fund Investors: Divergent Profiles, Alan R. Palmiter, Ahmed E. Taha Feb 2008

Mutual Fund Investors: Divergent Profiles, Alan R. Palmiter, Ahmed E. Taha

Ahmed E Taha

Mutual funds are owned by almost half of all U.S. households, manage over $12 trillion dollars in assets, and have become a primary vehicle for retirement and investment savings in the United States. Who are mutual fund investors? The answer is critical to regulatory policy for the mutual fund industry. Fund investors, by selecting the funds in which they invest, play a central role in determining asset allocation and in controlling the fees and expenses that funds charge. Thus, the functioning of the mutual fund market turns on the knowledge and financial sophistication of fund investors.

This article examines the …


Opting Only In: Contractarians, Waiver Of Liability Provisions, And The Race To The Bottom, Sandeep Gopalan Feb 2008

Opting Only In: Contractarians, Waiver Of Liability Provisions, And The Race To The Bottom, Sandeep Gopalan

Sandeep Gopalan

Corporate law scholarship is replete with those who favor an enabling approach to regulation, with companies having the right to opt in to particular requirements or regimes. Opting in (or out) permits private ordering and allows for efficient relationships that are a product of bargaining between owners and managers. This paper tests the core claim of scholars in the nexus of contracts tradition - that private ordering as a process of bargaining creates optimal rules. We do this by analyzing empirical evidence in the context of waiver of liability provisions. The article examines the history of these provisions, emphasizing that …


Protecting Financial Markets: Lessons From The Subprime Mortgage Meltdown, Steven L. Schwarcz Feb 2008

Protecting Financial Markets: Lessons From The Subprime Mortgage Meltdown, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

Why did the recent subprime mortgage meltdown undermine financial market stability notwithstanding the protections provided by market norms and financial regulation? This article attempts to answer that question by identifying anomalies and obvious protections that failed to work, and then by examining hypotheses that might explain the anomalies and failures. The resulting explanations provide critical insights into protecting financial markets.


Takeover Regulation As A Wolf In Sheep’S Clothing: Taking U.K. Rules To Continental Europe, Marco Ventoruzzo Feb 2008

Takeover Regulation As A Wolf In Sheep’S Clothing: Taking U.K. Rules To Continental Europe, Marco Ventoruzzo

Marco Ventoruzzo

Aesop was an optimist. In his cautionary fable that inspired the famous admonition about wolves in sheep's clothing, the predator intentionally dons a sheep's fleece in order to sneak up on a lamb. His disguise, it turns out, is so effective that he ends up being mistaken for the real thing and killed by another wolf. According to Aesop, even the most effective fraud can turn against its perpetrator, and justice be done. The results are not always so salutary with other clandestine predators, including legal rules that appear aimed at protecting vulnerable groups, but instead provide valuable tools to …


Corporate Governance: The Oecd Principles, The Scope For A “Model Of The Successful Company”, And A New Challenge For The Company Law Agenda And The Broader Regulatory Agenda, Luca Cerioni Feb 2008

Corporate Governance: The Oecd Principles, The Scope For A “Model Of The Successful Company”, And A New Challenge For The Company Law Agenda And The Broader Regulatory Agenda, Luca Cerioni

Luca Cerioni Dr.

The OECD Principles of Corporate Governance, and the Methodology for assessing their implementation, seem to support those academic contributions which overcome the classic distinction between the shareholders primacy and the stakeholders’ models of companies; they also appear to require a re-conceptualisation of the interests involved and not simply a model of company, but a model of the successful company. This paper proposes such a model, and asserts its validity from a property rights perspective and from a human rights perspective. It subsequently argues that shaping of a corporate governance framework based on this model would raise a key challenge for …


Approaching Comparative Company Law, David C. Donald Feb 2008

Approaching Comparative Company Law, David C. Donald

David C. Donald

This paper identifies some common errors that occur in comparative law, offers some guidelines to help avoid such errors, and provides a framework for entering into studies of the company laws of three major jurisdictions. The first section illustrates why a conscious approach to comparative company law is useful. Part I discusses some of the problems that can arise in comparative law and offers a few points of caution that can be useful for practical, theoretical and legislative comparative law. Part II discusses some relatively famous examples of comparative analysis gone astray in order to demonstrate the utility of heeding …


Book Review: Huse, Boards, Governance And Value Creation, Donal C. Wells Feb 2008

Book Review: Huse, Boards, Governance And Value Creation, Donal C. Wells

Donal C Wells

Morten Huse's new book brings together his years of studies and commentary on the function of corporate boards. Perhaps its most provocative contents are studies relating to Norway's requirement that public- and private-sector corporate boards include at least 40% women. The generally salutary results he reports support arguments that greater board diversity can have a prophylactic effect against corporate fraud, profligacy and other harmful behaviors. This book review focuses on Huse's included studies of women serving as directors.


‘Baby Boomers’ And The Branding Of Political Speech: An Unintended Consequence Of Bono’S Red Campaign, Robert E. Koulish Jan 2008

‘Baby Boomers’ And The Branding Of Political Speech: An Unintended Consequence Of Bono’S Red Campaign, Robert E. Koulish

Robert E. Koulish

In this paper I will examine the likely demise of the commercial speech doctrine. The paper examines Bono's Red Campaign and cause related marketing as a case study to reveal how the supreme court is likely to vote on commercial speech the next time it visits the issue. The Court came close to overthrowing the doctrine in its 2002 Nike non-decision. Next time out, the Court is likely to blur the distinction between commercial speech and political speech, and thus give corporations the right of personhood to mislead consumers in advertising, marketing and public relations. The demise of commercial speech …


Regulation Of Pharmacy Benefit Managers: An Economic Analysis Of Regulation And Litigation As Agents Of Health Care Change, Kevin C. Green Jan 2008

Regulation Of Pharmacy Benefit Managers: An Economic Analysis Of Regulation And Litigation As Agents Of Health Care Change, Kevin C. Green

Kevin C Green

Pharmacy benefit managers or “PBMs” have come under intense legal and regulatory scrutiny in recent years. Each of the major PBMs has been targeted by public and private litigation including a major ongoing task force comprised of U.S. Attorneys and Attorneys General from twenty states. Moreover, more than 30 bills to regulate PBMs have been introduced in state legislatures since 2002. This paper provides an economic analysis of PBM regulation. I analyze the economic arguments put forward on both sides of the regulation debate and evaluate the existing empirical evidence on PBM conduct in the context of these arguments. I …


Auction Rate Securities: Mechanics And Turmoil, Sachin Raval Jan 2008

Auction Rate Securities: Mechanics And Turmoil, Sachin Raval

Sachin R Raval

This study's objective was to understand the origins, mechanics and recent turmoil of the Auction Rate Securities market. Prior to the 2008 collapse, the ARS market had a successful 20-year history. Many investors believed that auction rate securities were cash equivalents with above market yields. Unfortunately, due to the credit crunch, these securities became illiquid, as no buyers were willing to take existing holders' positions. Furthermore, the clearing rate or interest rate of these securities is set through a Dutch auction. In 2006, the SEC conducted a probe of the ARS market. This probe revealed that broker/dealers prevented failed auctions …