信托法之路

D. Kershaw
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引用次数: 3

摘要

当代对公司法律演变的描述认为,立法者对压力集团和市场的经济利益都高度敏感。从这个角度看,法律是管理者、投资者、机构股东和联邦政府施加压力的产物,也是州议员为迎合这些压力集团的利益而采取的激励措施的产物。这一视角主导了我们目前对美国公司法演变的理解,并在公司法变化的比较叙述中变得非常有影响力。这篇文章听起来有点反对的意味。这篇文章认为,学科的钟摆过于倾向于法律演变的外部解释,而远离法律变化的内部解释,后者认为法律的路径,至少在一定程度上,是法律体系内部产生的约束的产物——法律的相对自主性。为了论证这一观点,本文考察了19世纪美国和英国公司法中公司概念的内在约束以及这两个司法管辖区自营法的演变。它显示了两个司法管辖区是如何从相同的关于自我交易的法律命题开始的,由于这一命题与截然不同的公司概念的相互作用而迅速分化的。与美国对自营交易法演变的主流解释相反,当代自营交易规则并不是外部市场压力在法律上无法解释的产物,而是信托法路径贯穿公司概念的逻辑一致的产物。本文表明,对于当代公司法来说,在一般公司成立之初,就有相当大的必然性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Path of Fiduciary Law
Contemporary accounts of corporate legal evolution view lawmakers as highly responsive to the economic interests of both pressure groups and markets. Through this lens law is understood to be the product of pressures exerted by managers, investors, institutional shareholders and the Federal Government, and the incentives of state lawmakers to accommodate the interests of these pressure groups. This lens dominates our current understanding of corporate legal evolution in the United States and is becoming highly influential in comparative accounts of corporate legal variation. This article sounds a note of objection. The article argues that the disciplinary pendulum has swung too far toward external accounts of legal evolution and too far away from internal accounts of legal change which view the path of law, at least in part, as the product of the internally generated constraints of the legal system – the relative autonomy of the law. To make this argument, the article considers the internal constraint of the conception of the corporation in 19th century US and UK corporate law and the evolution of self-dealing law in these two jurisdictions. It shows how two jurisdictions that started from the same legal proposition about self-dealing diverged rapidly as a result of the interaction of this proposition with profoundly different conceptions of the corporation. Contrary to the dominant account of the evolution of self-dealing law in the United States, the contemporary self-dealing rule is not the legally unexplained product of external market pressures but the logical and consistent product of the path of fiduciary law trodden through the corporate conception. The article shows that for contemporary corporate law a significant dose of inevitability was administered at the inception of general incorporation.
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