In this article, I consider how corporate law and limited liability company law treat five different areas: agency authority, derivative actions, formation issues, veil piercing, and oppression of minority owners. For each such area, I consider whether the law varies depending on the kind of entity involved, why that might be the case, and whether the law should be rationalized; that is, whether legislatures or the courts should seek to harmonize the law across entities. While this short article focuses primarily on corporations and limited liability companies, the issues considered here apply as well to partnerships and, where appropriate, reference is made to partnership law
Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law. Yet liability has never been absolute...
In every developed market economy, the law provides for a set of standard form legal entities. In th...
This article examines selected circumstances likely to give rise to claims of breach of fiduciary du...
In this article, I consider how corporate law and limited liability company law treat five different...
In this Article we discuss how U.S. entity law has evolved in recent decades so that (i) limited lia...
This article is the forward to the Symposium on Oregon\u27s Limited Company Act. For most of this ce...
This Article explores the implications of the emergence of the limited liability company for our und...
States are enacting legislation that permits creation of a new business entity known as the Limited ...
Limited liability company (LLC) laws utilize provisions clearly of partnership origin in varying deg...
Part I briefly discusses the development of the limited liability company form and its roots in the ...
This chapter in a forthcoming book examines the external aspects of agency law in the context of uni...
The limited liability company (LLC) is the newest form of business entity in this country. An LLC co...
The recent proliferation of small business entity forms is primarily a result of their tax character...
When the law conceptualizes the legal form that houses a closely held business, does it matter wheth...
This article is the first chapter of the second edition of The Anatomy of Corporate Law: A Comparati...
Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law. Yet liability has never been absolute...
In every developed market economy, the law provides for a set of standard form legal entities. In th...
This article examines selected circumstances likely to give rise to claims of breach of fiduciary du...
In this article, I consider how corporate law and limited liability company law treat five different...
In this Article we discuss how U.S. entity law has evolved in recent decades so that (i) limited lia...
This article is the forward to the Symposium on Oregon\u27s Limited Company Act. For most of this ce...
This Article explores the implications of the emergence of the limited liability company for our und...
States are enacting legislation that permits creation of a new business entity known as the Limited ...
Limited liability company (LLC) laws utilize provisions clearly of partnership origin in varying deg...
Part I briefly discusses the development of the limited liability company form and its roots in the ...
This chapter in a forthcoming book examines the external aspects of agency law in the context of uni...
The limited liability company (LLC) is the newest form of business entity in this country. An LLC co...
The recent proliferation of small business entity forms is primarily a result of their tax character...
When the law conceptualizes the legal form that houses a closely held business, does it matter wheth...
This article is the first chapter of the second edition of The Anatomy of Corporate Law: A Comparati...
Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law. Yet liability has never been absolute...
In every developed market economy, the law provides for a set of standard form legal entities. In th...
This article examines selected circumstances likely to give rise to claims of breach of fiduciary du...