The Separation of Voting and Control: The Role of Contract in Corporate Governance

G. Rauterberg
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The default rules of corporate law make shareholders’ control rights a function of their voting power. Whether a director is elected or a merger is approved depends on how shareholders vote. Yet, in private corporations, shareholders routinely alter their rights by contract. This phenomenon of shareholder agreements—contracts among the owners of a firm—has received far less attention than it deserves, mainly because detailed data about the actual contents of shareholder agreements has been lacking. Private companies disclose little, and shareholder agreements are thought to play a trivial or nonexistent role in public companies. I show that this is false—15% of corporations that go public in recent years do so subject to a shareholder agreement. With this dataset in hand, I show the dramatic extent to which these shareholders redefine their control rights by contract. Shareholders restrict the sale of shares and waive aspects of the duty of loyalty. Above all, however, shareholders use their agreements to bargain with each other over votes for directors, and to bargain with the corporation itself for other control rights, such as vetoes over major corporate actions. In essence, while statutory corporate law makes control rights a function of voting power, shareholder agreements make control rights a function of contract instead, separating voting and control. Studying this phenomenon raises new questions of doctrine, theory, and empirics that go to foundational issues in corporate law. Is it desirable to let shareholders redesign corporate control rights wholesale by contract? What should be the law that governs their contracts when they do so? I provide a novel account of shareholder agreements’ use in public firms, before offering preliminary views on their welfare effects, implications for corporate theory, and on their governing law, which remains strikingly underdeveloped.
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表决权与控制权的分离:契约在公司治理中的作用
公司法的默认规则使股东的控制权成为其投票权的函数。无论是选举董事还是批准合并,都取决于股东如何投票。然而,在私营公司,股东通常会通过合同改变他们的权利。这种股东协议现象——公司所有者之间的契约——受到的关注远远不够,主要是因为缺乏有关股东协议实际内容的详细数据。私人公司很少披露信息,股东协议被认为在上市公司中起着微不足道或根本不存在的作用。我证明这是错误的——近年来,15%的上市公司都是根据股东协议上市的。有了这个数据集,我展示了这些股东通过合同重新定义控制权的戏剧性程度。股东限制出售股份,放弃忠诚义务的某些方面。然而,最重要的是,股东们利用他们的协议相互讨价还价,争夺董事的投票权,并与公司本身就其他控制权进行讨价还价,比如对重大公司行动的否决权。从本质上讲,法定公司法使控制权成为表决权的功能,而股东协议则使控制权成为合同的功能,将表决权和控制权分离开来。对这一现象的研究提出了关于公司法基础问题的学说、理论和经验的新问题。让股东通过合同批发方式重新设计公司控制权是否可取?当他们这样做时,应该用什么法律来管理他们的合同?我对股东协议在上市公司中的应用进行了新颖的描述,然后对其福利效应、对公司理论的影响以及其治理法律(这方面的研究仍明显不发达)提出了初步看法。
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