Lecture 2 - Key Features of the Corporate Form Flashcards

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1
Q

Scope of Corporate Law

A

Corporate law responds to “three principal sources of opportunism: [1] conflicts between managers and shareholders, [2] conflicts among shareholders, and [3] conflicts among shareholders and the corporation’s other constituencies, including creditors and employees.” (JOHN ARMOUR p.3)

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2
Q

Sources of Corporate Law

A

o Corporate statutes/codes (Delaware)
o Common law
o US Federal securities laws
o Securities exchange rules (e.g., NYSE)

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3
Q

Entity shielding (strong form)

A

• Priority rule
• Continuity of existence, liquidation
protection

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4
Q

Legal Personality (Basic character. of corporations)

A

o Separate legal persona / patrimony
o Entity shielding
o Rules of authority
o Procedures for lawsuit

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5
Q

Limited Liability

A

Owner shielding – shareholders are protected from the claims of creditors (whether contract or tort) of the corporation

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6
Q

Transferable shares (Basic character. of corporations)

A

o Fungibility of ownership interests
o Enhanced liquidity
o Relationship to liquidation protection and limited liability

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7
Q

Delegated management w/board structure (Basic character. of corporations)

A

o Separation of board from operational mgmt
o Elected board
o Reduces costs of decision-making
o Multiple members

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8
Q

Investor Ownership (Basic character. of corporations)

A

o Allows specialization of roles

o More homogenous ownership class

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9
Q

The Dark Side of the Corporate Form

A
  • Personality Issues
  • Abuses of Limited Liability
  • Unusual Share Transfers
  • Abuses of Managerial Power
  • Absentee Owner Problems
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10
Q

In the economics literature, a firm is often characterized as a ‘nexus of contracts’

A

coordinating the actions of multiple persons through exercise of its contractual rights

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11
Q

‘separate patrimony’ (civil law term)

A

involves the demarcation of a pool of assets that are distinct from other assets owned, singly or jointly, by the firm’s owners (the shareholders), and of which the firm in itself, acting through its designated managers, is viewed in law as being the owner

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12
Q

rule of ‘liquidation protection’ (entity shielding)

A

Individual owners of the corporation (the shareholders) cannot withdraw their share of firm assets at will, thus forcing partial or complete liquidation of the firm

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13
Q

priority rule (entity shielding)

A

Grants to creditors of the firm, as security for the firm’s debts, a claim on the firm’s assets that is prior to the claims of the personal creditors of the firm’s owners

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14
Q

Entity shielding (weak form)

A

Found in partnerships, which are characterized only by the priority rule and not by liquidation protection.

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15
Q

Asset partitioning

A

◦ permits flexibility in the allocation of risk and return between equity- holders and debt-holders
◦ greatly simplifies the administration of both business and individual bankruptcy
◦ facilitates tradability of the firm’s shares (third characteristic of the corporate form)

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16
Q

Types of Corporations

A
  • Publicly-traded (“public”) or privately- held
  • Listed or unlisted - applies to public corporations
  • Widely-held vs. closely-held (“close”)
17
Q

The Clumsy Side of the Corporate Form – Close Corporations

A
  • May not want perpetual existence, survivability
  • May not get the benefit of limited liability
  • May eliminate or limit free transferability
  • May want to adjust centralized management
18
Q

Default rules of corporate law

A

◦ provide convenient standard forms
◦ encourage revelation of information
◦ facilitate choice of the most efficient among several alternative rules
◦ provide a means of accommodating, over time, developments that cannot easily be foreseen at the outset

19
Q

Rationale for mandatory terms

A

♣ based on some form of ‘contracting failure’
• that some parties might otherwise be exploited because they are not well informed
• that the interests of third parties might be affected
• that collective action problems (such as the notorious ‘prisoners’ dilemma’) might otherwise lead to contractual provisions that are inefficient or unfair