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Published byRosalind Young Modified over 7 years ago
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Company Law (Weeks 10-11) 1. Roots and History of Company Law
2. General Aspects of Company Law 3. Company Law in the EU 4. Company Law in USA 5. Company Law in Turkey
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1. ROOTS AND HISTORY OF COMPANY LAW
A) Laws related to credit, interest, merchants, division of labor have been around for thousands of years - e.g. Code of Hammarabi, and Roman “Lex Mercatoria” B) Commercial Codes developed later in Europe (1800s) - French Civil and Commercial Codes (shaped commercial law in much of Europe in early 1800s) - German codes (modeled on French codes; later exported to Austria, Switz, Nordic countries) - Ottoman Commercial Codes 1) 1850 – translation of French Commercial Code 2) 1926 – based on German model 3) 2012 – revised code effective this summer
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2. GENERAL ASPECTS OF COMPANY LAW
A) Company Law Governs Internal Affairs of Businesses 1) Try to reduce/minimize the net cost of production (make things run efficiently). 2) Accomplishes this goal by controlling the relationships between shareholders, directors, and managers. B) Two Dominant Models 1) Anglo-Saxon/American (UK) - Rules focus on maximizing shareholder return 2) Continental Europe (Germany) - Don’t focus only on shareholders’ interests (look also at employees, creditors, public, environment, etc.) * Modern times have seen gradual shift towards 2nd model
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3. COMPANY LAW IN THE EUROPEAN UNION (EU)
A) Premised on Four Basic “Freedoms” (esp. # 1 and 2) 1) Right of Establishment 2) Free Movement of Capital 3) Movement of Goods/Services 4) Movement of People/Workers B) Directives (generally require disclosure of info) 1) Intended to harmonize laws of EU members 2) Results to be achieved are binding on members, but the form/method of implementation is member choice C) Regulations & Recommendations 1) European corporate form = “SE” (Societas Europaea)
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C) The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
4. COMPANY LAW IN THE USA A) Background - Regulators: 1)States, 2)Fed. Govt, 3) Securities Exchanges - Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002): Intended to “protect investors” B) Choosing an Entity / Common Types of Entities - Sole Proprietorship - Partnership - Corporation - Limited Liability Company C) The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
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CHOOSING A BUSINESS ENTITY
A) Ease of Formation/Maintenance B) Tax Treatment C) Liability Issues Choices: Sole Proprietorship, Partnership, Corporation, LLC (see slides 7-10)
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A) Owner and Business are single entity
SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP A) Owner and Business are single entity B) Formation C) Tax Consequences D) Liability Issues
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B) “General” Partnerships
A) Partnership Basics 1) Definition/Formation 2) Tax Consequences 3) Liability Issues (personal liability, joint-and-several) B) “General” Partnerships 1) Definition 2) Roles/responsibilities of partners (Agreement?) C) “Limited” Partnerships 1) Generally designated with “L.P.” 2) Roles/responsibilities
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A) Business is a legal person, separate from owners
CORPORATION A) Business is a legal person, separate from owners 1) Created under state law (Articles of Incorporation) 2) Can sue and be sued; has 1st Amendment “speech” rights B) Important Characteristics 1) Income is subject to “double taxation” 2) Provides limited liability for owners C) Main Actors/Parties 1) Shareholders 2) Board of Directors 3) Officers & Managers * Business Judgment Rule D) Financing – Debt v. Equity Financing; “Capital Structure” E) Common Types – Private, Public C corp, S corp, Non-profit
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LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC)
A) Background 1) Created under state law (Articles of Organization) 2) Recognized in all 50 U.S. states 3) Owners are called “members” * Respective shares, duties, power, etc. are spelled out in an Operating Agreement (function like corporate “bylaws”) B) Important Characteristics 1) Tax treatment of a partnership (flow-through) 2) Limited liability of a corporation (for owners) C) Differences from S Corp
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The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
A) Governs Sale-of-Goods Ks in USA 1) Art. 2 governs sales 2) Title to goods is exchanged for $ (or other value) B) Merchants – regularly deals in a particular good Firm offers (not revocable up to 90 days) C) Writing Requirement 1) Sale of goods priced ≥$500 (compare CISG)
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D) Acceptance – any reasonable method
1) Mailbox rule = effective on dispatch (compare CISG) 2) Additional/Different Terms – not fatal to K (compare CISG) E) Open Terms OK 1) Price, payment, & delivery terms can be set later 2) Exception – Quantity must generally be specified F) Performance Duties 1) Seller – “Perfect Tender Rule” 2) Buyer – Accept goods and pay for them 3) Both – Good faith, commercial reasonableness
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