Recently, courts have embraced the contractarian theory that corporate charters and bylaws constitute a “contract” between the shareholders and the corporation and have been more willing to uphold bylaws unilaterally adopted by the directors. This paper examines the contractarian theory by drawing a parallel between amending charters and bylaws, on the one hand, and amending contracts, on the other. In particular, the paper compares the right to unilaterally amend corporate bylaws with the right to unilaterally modify contract terms, and highlights how contract law imposes various limitations on the modifying party’s discretion. More generally, when the relationship of contracting parties is compared to that of shareholders and managers, ...
Corporate law is undergoing an explosion of governance by private ordering. With increasing frequenc...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...
Constitutions constitute a polity and create and entrench power. A corporate constitution - the gove...
Recently, courts have embraced the contractarian theory that corporate charters and bylaws constitut...
Corporate directors have been utilizing a potent mechanism in dealing with shareholder activism and ...
Boards and shareholders are increasing using charter and bylaw provisions to customize their corpora...
A half-filled glass of water can be described as either half full or half empty. The structure of Am...
Solomon-like, the Delaware legislature in 2015 split the baby by amending the Delaware General Corpo...
Both praise and controversy surround director-adopted bylaws that affect shareholders\u27 litigation...
The default rules of corporate law make shareholders’ control rights a function of their voting powe...
Corporate governance mechanisms designed to ensure that managers act in shareholders’ interest have ...
Recent work in both the theory of the firm and of corporate law has called into question the appropr...
American corporations are structured in such a way that shareholders, and shareholders alone, have t...
Corporate law scholarship has long debated the extent to which corporate law rules are default or ma...
The interplay between contract and state corporate law in shaping corporate governance is not a nove...
Corporate law is undergoing an explosion of governance by private ordering. With increasing frequenc...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...
Constitutions constitute a polity and create and entrench power. A corporate constitution - the gove...
Recently, courts have embraced the contractarian theory that corporate charters and bylaws constitut...
Corporate directors have been utilizing a potent mechanism in dealing with shareholder activism and ...
Boards and shareholders are increasing using charter and bylaw provisions to customize their corpora...
A half-filled glass of water can be described as either half full or half empty. The structure of Am...
Solomon-like, the Delaware legislature in 2015 split the baby by amending the Delaware General Corpo...
Both praise and controversy surround director-adopted bylaws that affect shareholders\u27 litigation...
The default rules of corporate law make shareholders’ control rights a function of their voting powe...
Corporate governance mechanisms designed to ensure that managers act in shareholders’ interest have ...
Recent work in both the theory of the firm and of corporate law has called into question the appropr...
American corporations are structured in such a way that shareholders, and shareholders alone, have t...
Corporate law scholarship has long debated the extent to which corporate law rules are default or ma...
The interplay between contract and state corporate law in shaping corporate governance is not a nove...
Corporate law is undergoing an explosion of governance by private ordering. With increasing frequenc...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...
Constitutions constitute a polity and create and entrench power. A corporate constitution - the gove...