Friday, March 29, 2013
Lehavi on The Corporation as a Nexus of Property
Amnon Lehavi (Radzyner School of Law - Israel) has posted The Corporation as a Nexus of Property on SSRN. Here's the abstract:
The
study of property is thriving. Having been long dominated by a
disintegrative approach building on the bundle of rights concept,
property scholarship is reintroducing essentialist models, with the
right to exclude featuring prominently as property’s core.
While
the new essentialism school studies various resources, from land to
intellectual property, largely missing from its accounts is the most
prominent source of wealth: the business corporation. Whereas corporate
law theory is increasingly looking beyond the “nexus of contracts” model
to illuminate the firm’s proprietary foundations, property theory has
yet to fit the business corporation into its newly integrative
framework.
The Article argues that this deficiency is not
merely a coincidence. In many ways, the business corporation undermines
the paradigms of current property theory. To start with, the underlying
notion of divorce of ownership from control in the business corporation
seems antagonistic to the owner’s right to exclude in property. In
addition, while property theory recognizes the need to pool together
resources and overcome collective action problems, conventional models
of property governance, such as residential community associations, seem
alienated from the power relations and vertical authority within the
business firm. Specifically, the setting of a majority shareholder
enjoying a control premium alongside owing fiduciary duties to dispersed
minority shareholders is allegedly at odds with the horizontal
governance assumption in contemporary property paradigms.
This
dissonance does not release, however, property theory from accounting
for the core features of the business corporation. Moreover, the Article
argues that once we move from a model of substantive essentialism to
one that identifies the institutional and structural traits of property,
then the corporation becomes a much better fit for property theory.
This shift sets the ground for reconceptualizing the firm as a “nexus of
property.”
Steve Clowney
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/property/2013/03/lehavi-on-the-corporation-as-a-nexus-of-property.html