XXX COMPARATIVE COMPANY LAW XXX

SYLLABUS

Professor Alan Palmiter Summer 2007

Wake Forest University Comparative Law Program

School of Law Venice, Italy

Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Day 1 - July 16

I. INTRODUCTION

Introduction 1

Drury & Xuereb, Introduction - Comparative Company Law 2

Notes 5

A. What is a company?

Palmiter, The Corporation -- An Overview 8

Notes 12

Paillusseau, The Nature of the Company 15

Easterbrook & Fischel, Contractual Freedom in Corporate Law 24

Notes 31

Day 2 - July 17

B. Types of companies

Palmiter, Choice of Organizational Form 33

Notes (w/ business forms) 38

Companies in Italy 39

Notes (w/ business forms) 45

Lorenzo Stanghellini, The Italian System of Corporate Governance 52

Notes (w/ business forms) 55

C. Company law in the European Community - EU Company Law

Introductory Notes 56

Conard, The European Alternative to Uniformity in Corporation Laws 57

Notes 64

Carney, The Political Economy of Competition for Corporate Charters 64

Notes 68

Report of the High Level Group of Company Law Experts

on a Modern Regulatory Framework for Company Law in Europe 69

Kellerhalls & Truten Creation of European Company 72

Notes 76


Day 3 - July 18

II. FORMATION OF BUSINESS

A. Shareholder Liability for Defective Incorporation

1. Defective incorporation rules -- United States

Cantor v. Sunshine Greenery, Inc., (N.J. Super 1979) 79

Model Business Corporation Act §§ 2.01-2.04, 14.20-14.21 81

Notes 85

2. Defective incorporation rules in Europe

Second Company Law Directive (1968) 87

Notes 90

Italian Civil Code 92

Notes 94

Drury, Nullity of Companies 95

Marleasing v. La Comercial Int'l de Alimentacion, (ECJ 1991) 98

Notes 99

Day 4 - July 19

B. Corporate Choice of Law

1. Choice of law in United States: internal affairs doctrine

Model Business Corporation Act § 15.03, 15.05 101

Notes 102

McDermott v. Lewis, (Del. 1986) 104

Romano, The Genius Of American Corporate Law 109

Notes 114

2. Choice of law in Europe: siege social and the EU

English, Company Law in the European Single Market 117

Reform of Italian System of Private International Laws 118

Notes 118

Carney, The Political Economy of Competition for

Corporate Charters 111

Notes 126

Centros Ltd v. Erhvervs-og Selskabsstyrelsen (ECJ 1999) 129

Wymeersch, Centros: A Landmark Decision in European

Company Law 133

Notes 138

Uberseering BV v Nordic Construction Company

Baumanagement GmbH (NCC). 139

Notes 144

Kamer van Koohandel v. Inspire Art, Ltd. 144

Notes 148


Day 5 - July 23

III. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

A. Power Over Business Earnings

1. Locus of corporate power -- United States

Delaware General Corporation Law, §§ 141, 170 151

Sinclair Oil Co v. Levien,(Del. 1971) 151

Notes 155

Litle v. Waters, (Del. Ch. 1992) 155

Notes 157

2. Locus of corporate power -- Europe

Introductory Notes 158

Italian Civil Code, arts. 2350, 2377, 2380-2395, 2423, 2432-33 159

Notes 167

Stanghellini, Corporate Governance in Italy: Strong Owners,

Faithful Managers: an Assessment and a Proposal for Reform 168

Note 175

Report of the High Level Group of Company Law Experts

on a Modern Regulatory Framework for Company Law in Europe 176

Note 181

Communication from the Commission to the Council and The European

Parliament: Modernizing Company Law (2003) 182

Day 6 - July 24

B. Corporate Purposes

1. Shareholder wealth maximization -- United States

Dodge v. Ford Motor Co., (Mich. 1919) 185

Pennsylvania Business Corporation Law, § 1715 (1990)) 191

Notes 191

Mitchell, A Framework for Enforcing Corporate Constituency Statutes 192

Macey, An Economic Analysis for Making Shareholders the Exclusive Beneficiaries of Corporate Fiduciary Duties 201

Notes 206

2. Companies as social institutions in Europe

Notes 208

Italy Civil Code 209

Stanghellini, Corporate Governance in Italy: Strong Owners,

Faithful Managers: an Assessment and a Proposal for Reform 211

Notes 216

Hopt, Labor Representation on Corporate Boards: Corporate Governance and Economic Integration in Europe 217

Notes 222

Corporate Law Different Across Legal Systems:

Corporate Governance Around the World (WSJ 2003) 224


C. Worker Rights in Business Changes [not included]

1. Employee rights on transfer of business: United States

McLeod, Rekindling Labor Law Successorship in an Era of Decline

11 Hofstra Labor L. J. 271 (1994)

Alarcon v. Keller Industries, Inc., No. 92-17045

(9th Cir. June 17, 1994)

Macey, Externalities, Firm-Specific Capital Investments, and the

Legal Treatment of Fundamental Corporate Changes,

[1989] Duke L. J. 173

2. Employee rights on transfer of business: Europe

Council Directive, Official Journal The European Community, 77/187/EEC

P Bork Int'l A/S v. Foreningen af Arbeejdseldere, [1988] ECR 3057 (ECJ, Case 101/87)

Litster v. Forth Dry Dock Co.,2 CMLR 194 (House of Lords 1989)

Day 7 - July 25

IV. SHAREHOLDER LIQUIDITY AND STOCK MARKETS

A. Insider Trading Regulation

1. Insider trading regulation -- United States

Introductory Notes 227

United States v. O’Hagan, Supreme Court of the United States

521 U.S. 642 (1997) 228

Palmiter, Insider Trading, Securities Regulation: Examples & Explanations 234

Notes 243

2. Insider trading regulation: Europe

Notes 244

Council Directive of 28 January 2003 On Insider Dealing And Market Manipulation 244

Raghavan, Ascarelli & Woodrugg, Europe’s Police Are Out of Luck

on Insider Cases (SJ 2000) 249

Langevoort, Defining Insider Trading: The Experience in Other

Countries, (April 1992) 252


IV. SHAREHOLDER LIQUIDITY AND STOCK MARKETS

B. Corporate Takeovers [Not Included]

1. Introduction to regulation of takeovers: United States

Palmiter, Takeover Contests -- An Introduction, Corporations: Examples AND Explanations

2. Ownership structures and takeovers: Europe

Lorenzo Stanghellini, Corporate Governance in Italy: Strong Owners,

Faithful Managers: an Assessment and a Proposal for Reform,

6 Ind. Int'l & Comp. L. Rev. 91 (1995)

Gilson, The Political Ecology of Takeovers: Thoughts on Harmonizing

the European Corporate Governance Environment,

61 Fordham L. Rev. 161 (Oct. 1992)

Day 8 - July 26

C. Shareholder Activism

1. Ownership structures and shareholder activism: United States

Notes 259

Robert W. Hamilton, Corporate Governance in America 1950-2000:

Major Changes but Uncertain Benefits 260

Carolyn Brancato, The Institutional Investor’s Goals for Corporate Law in the Twenty-first Century 269

2. Ownership structures and shareholder activism: Europe

Stanghellini, Corporate Governance in Italy: Strong Owners, Faithful Managers: An Assessment and a Proposal for Reform 278

Notes 291

Ronald Gilson, Globalizing Corporate Governance: Convergence of Form

Or Function 293

Notes 303

______________________________

Internet resources:

$ Law articles - Social Science Research Network (SSRN)

http://ssrn.com/

$ Delaware General Corporation Law

http://www.delcode.state.de.us/title8/c001/

$ Model Business Corporation Act (NC BCA)

http://wwws.wfu.edu/~palmitar/CorporationLawPolicy/Conexus/Conexus.htm

$ Italian Civil Code (company law provisions, including 2003 reforms) http://www.aspman.it/raggio/CodiceCivile/Nuovo Codice Civile.htm

$ Italian Civil Code

http://www.jus.unitn.it/cardozo/obiter_dictum/codciv/codciv.htm


Class Participation and Grading

Daily preparation and answers. The readings are interesting and the cases worth learning. Ours will be a small group; your contributions will add to the class experience.

To prepare for class, you will want to prepare your own summary of the readings. For each case, article and statute, you should prepare a “brief” – either on a separate sheet of paper or in the margin. The brief should contain the following:

F Factual summary of the case (or facts anticipated by the article or statute)

I Issue (or issues) addressed by the author and the author's position

R Statement of the rule (or rules) proffered by the author

A Summary of the analysis presented by the author

C Your view (importance of the case, article or statute)

US students. For US students, I will base your grade on class participation (25%) and a final exam to be administered when we return to the States (75%). The written portion of the exam will call for multiple-choice responses and short essays demonstrating your knowledge and understanding of the principal topics of all three areas covered in the course -- civil law, European law and comparative company law. Following the written exam, I also anticipate that there will be an oral component in which I will ask follow-up and more general questions based on the written exam. You should expect these events will happen in late September.

Italian students. For Italian students who are taking the course for a grade, I will base your grade on class participation (25%) and a course paper to be sent me by email by September 30 (75%). The paper (between 10-15 pages in length) should identify a court decision in Italy or elsewhere in Europe. It should compare the actual outcome in the case to what would have been the outcome had the case been litigated in an identified US jurisdiction (such as Delaware). Your paper should have the following parts: (1) an introduction that identifies the case, the issues it raises, and the main points of the paper; (2) a section that describes the case and its outcome, including excerpts (translated) of the important passages from the court’s opinion or judgment; (3) a section that analyzes how the case would have been decided in a US jurisdiction, with specific reference to relevant statutes (legislation), cases (jurisprudence) and law review articles (doctrine); (4) a comparison of the two approaches, including any relevant references to the course materials; and (5) your conclusion on this comparative law project.

Please keep your materials and notes from the course.