Comparative Company Law 2200-1CWPC121-ERA
The course is supposed to cover the following issues:
1. Introduction to the Course
2. Introduction to Corporate Law
3. Corporation as Legal Person and Limits of Limited Liability (Piercing the Corporate Veil Doctrine)
4. Introduction to Comparative Company Law
5. The Types of Business Organisations
6. Formation of companies
7. Governing the Corporation (Management, Board of Directors)
8. Governing the Corporation: Shareholders Meetings and Shareholders Resolutions
9. Shareholders Rights (including Minority Shareholders Rights) and their Protection
10. The Company’s Share Capital
11. The Nature of Shares and Classes of Shares
12. M&A (Mergers & Acquisitions)
13. Corporate Groups
Type of course
Mode
Prerequisites (description)
Course coordinators
Learning outcomes
After finishing this course a student should be able to:
KNOWLEDGE
- define fundamental comparative law terms and company law terms,
- understand key issues and problems to be dealt with by corporate law and the most discussed doctrines (e.g. piercing the corporate veil, business judgment rule)
- present basic rules in force in Germany, England, France and the US on partnerships & company law,
- identify key similarities and differences between company law in civil law jurisdictions and company law in common law jurisdictions,
- discuss perspectives of further unification of company law in the EU;
SKILLS
- apply comparative law method in practice,
- analyse pieces of legislation on company law coming from different jurisdictions
- analyse companies’ charters (articles of association) from different jurisdictions
- choose the appropriate form for conducting particular business (compare different types of business organisations)
- prepare a draft of articles of association (charter of a company)
Assessment criteria
Assessment will be on the basis of an essay (70%), performance in class (20%), and attendance (10%).
The essay must be on a relevant topic of each student‘s choice, subject to approval by the course instructors.
Length: the essays should be 10-15 pages in length (Times New Roman 12- point front; 1,5 line spacing, default margin settings).
Essays should be sent electronically (file formats: doc, docx, pdf) to osajda@wpia.uw.edu.pl
The following criteria will apply to the assessment of essays submitted: accuracy and comprehensiveness of identification of the research problem, accuracy and comprehensiveness of information on national laws given in sections 2-5, skill in application of the comparative method (structure, comprehensiveness and conclusiveness of comparative argument and conclusions) formal correctness (formatting, citing and proper style of footnotes).
Performance in class:
Active participation means reading the assigned texts and engaging in discussions (answering the questions, presenting a student’s opinions).
Attendance:
Students may miss two units of the course without notifying the course instructor.
Practical placement
none
Bibliography
Textbooks:
Andenas M., Wooldridge F., European Comparative Company Law, (Cambridge: CUP, 2009)
Ventoruzzo M. ed., Comparative Corporate Law, (St. Paul: West Acad. Publ. 2015)
Cahn A., Donald D.C., Comparative Company Law, 2nd. ed. (Cambridge: CUP, 2018)
R. Kraakman ed. at al., The anatomy of corporate law: a comparative and functional approach, 3rd. ed. (Oxford: OUP, 2017)
Additional readings may be assigned for particular classes.
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: