Closely Held Business Organizations


Book Description

This is still the most comprehensive business organizations casebook to focus on closely held business. The book offers more coverage on LLCs than any other business organizations book, and the principal change in the new edition focuses on the most recent uniform LLC Act (as well as Delaware law). Everything else has been brought up to date, including material on the Model Business Corporation Act (which now speaks as of December 2010), Delaware law (which includes corporations, limited partnerships, and limited liability companies), and federal securities law (included in the public corporation supplement).




Closely Held Organizations


Book Description

This casebook covers the law of "closely held" businesses--those with few owners. Such businesses face special problems when compared, for example, to large, publicly held corporations. The book primarily covers four legal areas, through cases, statutes, and original informational notes and commentary: (1) agency law (covering questions of authority, fiduciary duties, and respondeat superior); (2) partnership law (the Revised Uniform Partnership Act and significant common-law developments); (3) the law of close corporations (basic corporate structure, common-law underpinnings and modern statutes, and protections of minority interests); and (4) the law of limited liability companies (LLCs). The book also introduces some problems in the law of small nonprofit organizations and of hybrid companies, such as the "low-profit" LLCs that have been authorized by recent statutes. The book is intended for use in modern versions of the "Agency and Partnership" course, courses on unincorporated or closely held businesses, and the first part of integrated "Business Organizations" sequences of courses. It adopts a functionalist approach to law and introduces students to economic reasoning in business law without relying exclusively on the methods or ideologies of legal economists.




The Law of Business Organizations


Book Description

As a part of our CasebookPlus offering, you'll receive the print book along with lifetime digital access to the eBook. Additionally you'll receive the Learning Library which includes quizzes tied specifically to your book, and outline starter and digital access to leading study aids in that subject and the Gilbert Law Dictionary. This title covers the law of business associations for introductory courses. It discusses business organizations, including agency, general partnerships, closely held corporations, publicly held corporations, limited partnerships, limited liability partnerships, and limited liability companies. The material on the unincorporated business forms has been revised, updated, and expanded to reflect the centrality of these forms of business organization in modern law practice and in the economy generally. Among other state and model statutes, the Revised Uniform LLC Act (2006), the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (1997), the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (2001), and the Third Restatement of Agency (2006) are discussed and cited.




Managing Closely Held Corporations


Book Description

Like its companion the Corporate Director's Guidebook, this new title covers topics in plain English so the principles are easily understood by nonlawyers




Business Planning


Book Description

"The planning discussions reflect the impact of tax changes through the close of 2010 and include new commentary on today's toughest challenges: the struggle to crawl out of a debilitating recession; the drop in global demand and associated deleveraging; the causes and effects of chronic unemployment; unprecedented government debts and deficits; the scope and impacts of the banking financial crisis; the perpetual uncertainty of taxes; the challenges of health care reform in the years ahead; and tax prospects for the future."--Publisher's website.




Business Organizations


Book Description

Business Organizations: Statutes, Problems, and Cases (Second Edition) comprehensively covers all important aspects of business organizations law, including agency law; partnerships and limited liability partnerships; limited partnerships; limited liability companies; corporate law basics; the duties of care and loyalty; derivative lawsuits; closely held corporations; controlling shareholders; mergers and acquisitions; the Securities Act of 1933; and insider trading. Each chapter features detailed learning objectives, as well as dozens of problems for in-class discussion that require law students to delve into and apply statutes and case law. The second edition of the textbook has completely up-to-date coverage, including recent changes to the Revised Uniform Partnership Act and the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act; important new Delaware cases concerning controlling shareholders, takeover defenses, and other matters; changes in the Securities Act of 1933 and new SEC rules on crowdfunding and other exempt offerings; and recent developments in the law of insider trading. The electronic supplement to the textbook contains an additional chapter with up-to-date coverage of publicly traded corporations and advanced corporate governance issues. The supplement also contains 350 multiple-choice questions with detailed explanations that students can use to assess their mastery of the subject matter. In sum, Business Organizations will give all students a solid grounding in the knowledge and skills that all business attorneys should have. Michael K. Molitor is a Professor at Western Michigan University Thomas M. Cooley Law School in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he has taught since 2004. Before joining WMU-Cooley, Professor Molitor practiced corporate and securities law for nearly ten years at a large law firm based in Grand Rapids. He graduated cum laude from Wayne State University Law School in 1994. Professor Molitor teaches courses in Business Organizations, Securities Regulation, Secured Transactions, and Wills, Estates, and Trusts.




Introduction to Business


Book Description

Introduction to Business covers the scope and sequence of most introductory business courses. The book provides detailed explanations in the context of core themes such as customer satisfaction, ethics, entrepreneurship, global business, and managing change. Introduction to Business includes hundreds of current business examples from a range of industries and geographic locations, which feature a variety of individuals. The outcome is a balanced approach to the theory and application of business concepts, with attention to the knowledge and skills necessary for student success in this course and beyond. This is an adaptation of Introduction to Business by OpenStax. You can access the textbook as pdf for free at openstax.org. Minor editorial changes were made to ensure a better ebook reading experience. Textbook content produced by OpenStax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.




The Law of Corporations in a Nutshell


Book Description

The Corporation in Perspective; Unincorporated Business Forms; Formation of Corporations; Limited Role of Ultra Vires; Preincorporation Transactions; "Piercing the Corporate Veil" and Related Problems; Financing the Corporation; Distribution of Powers Within a Corporation; Special Problems; Shares and Shareholders; Directors; Officers; Closely Held Corporation; Publicly Held Corporation; Duties of Directors, Shareholders and Officers; Indemnification and Insurance; Shareholder's Suits; Class Action Suits; Dividends, Distributions and Redemptions; Inspection of Books and Records; Organic Changes; Amendments, Mergers and Dissolution.




Mastering Corporations and Other Business Entities


Book Description

The title of the basic business law course--Corporations, Business Associations Business Organizations, or Business Entities--varies from law school to law school and from year to year. However, in these courses, the core coverage is essentially the same--agency principles, partnership law, fiduciary duties, securities fraud, and changes in corporate control. This relatively concise book is intended to reach students in the basic corporate law course, regardless of course title. This book attempts to make the usual coverage as easy and straightforward as possible. Although the vast majority of law students take a corporations or basic business organizations course, there are surprisingly few attempts to systematically organize the most important doctrines and theories covered. Of the few books that track the basic business law course, even fewer still are of recent vintage. This book attempts to fill those lacunae. The book intends to aid students, of course, in the basic Corporations or Business Organizations courses. Additionally, this book would be a useful resource to students in other closely related courses in law school, like Agency & Partnership, Closely Held Firms, Mergers & Acquisitions, and Securities Regulation, to name just a few. In addition to law schools, the book is also written with an eye toward the graduate students in business administration who are frequently enrolled in a basic business law course, as well as the newly minted corporate attorney who wants a refresher text.




United States Attorneys' Manual


Book Description