A new and separate opportunity for oppression exists because LLC law purports to (1) recognize a species of persons holding legal rights vis-á-vis the LLC (assignees) while (2) denying those persons any remedies whatsoever in connection with those rights. This article addresses the conceptual mechanics, history, and ultimate instability of that denial. The article also considers a note of irony—namely, that the plight of the bare naked assignee derives from a construct, the organization as aggregate, that LLC law has in all other respects emphatically transcended. To understand the plight of the assignee of an LLC interest, one must first understand a bit of partnership law and history. Part II provides that necessary foundation, ackno...
Every state authorizes shareholder derivative litigation, and the vast majority extend this remedy t...
While state law recognizes an LLC as a distinct type of entity, an LLC is not a distinct entity for ...
When should a contractual right be assignable to a non-party? English law’s answer to this question ...
Rather than being a simple hybrid, the U.S. limited liability company is better described as a recom...
The organizational law of limited liability companies (LLCs) and partnerships has always fundamental...
Limited liability company (LLC) laws utilize provisions clearly of partnership origin in varying deg...
The power and complexity of the single member limited liability company (“SMLLC”) comes from a conce...
This Article uses those two benchmarks to analyze Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc. and its im...
States are enacting legislation that permits creation of a new business entity known as the Limited ...
Rather than being a simple hybrid, the U.S. limited liability company is better described as a recom...
This chapter in a forthcoming book examines the external aspects of agency law in the context of uni...
In this article, I consider how corporate law and limited liability company law treat five different...
Twenty years ago, the New York Limited Liability Company Law was enacted, including § 609(a), which ...
In July, 2006, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved Re-ULLCA - th...
This article seeks to explain under what circumstances federal employment statutes should apply to L...
Every state authorizes shareholder derivative litigation, and the vast majority extend this remedy t...
While state law recognizes an LLC as a distinct type of entity, an LLC is not a distinct entity for ...
When should a contractual right be assignable to a non-party? English law’s answer to this question ...
Rather than being a simple hybrid, the U.S. limited liability company is better described as a recom...
The organizational law of limited liability companies (LLCs) and partnerships has always fundamental...
Limited liability company (LLC) laws utilize provisions clearly of partnership origin in varying deg...
The power and complexity of the single member limited liability company (“SMLLC”) comes from a conce...
This Article uses those two benchmarks to analyze Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc. and its im...
States are enacting legislation that permits creation of a new business entity known as the Limited ...
Rather than being a simple hybrid, the U.S. limited liability company is better described as a recom...
This chapter in a forthcoming book examines the external aspects of agency law in the context of uni...
In this article, I consider how corporate law and limited liability company law treat five different...
Twenty years ago, the New York Limited Liability Company Law was enacted, including § 609(a), which ...
In July, 2006, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved Re-ULLCA - th...
This article seeks to explain under what circumstances federal employment statutes should apply to L...
Every state authorizes shareholder derivative litigation, and the vast majority extend this remedy t...
While state law recognizes an LLC as a distinct type of entity, an LLC is not a distinct entity for ...
When should a contractual right be assignable to a non-party? English law’s answer to this question ...