The Siren Song of Unlimited Contractual Freedom

L. Strine, J. Laster
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

One frequently cited distinction between alternative entities — such as limited liability companies and limited partnerships — and their corporate counterparts is the greater contractual freedom accorded alternative entities. Consistent with this vision, discussions of alternative entities tend to conjure up images of arms-length bargaining similar to what occurs between sophisticated parties negotiating a commercial agreement, such as a joint venture, with the parties successfully tailoring the contract to the unique features of their relationship. As judges who collectively have over 20 years of experience deciding disputes involving alternative entities, we use this chapter to surface some questions regarding the extent to which this common understanding of alternative entities is sound. Based on the cases we have decided and our reading of many other cases decided by our judicial colleagues, we do not discern evidence of arms-length bargaining between sponsors and investors in the governing instruments of alternative entities. Furthermore, it seems that when investors try to evaluate contract terms, the expansive contractual freedom authorized by the alternative entity statutes hampers rather than helps. A lack of standardization prevails in the alternative entity arena, imposing material transaction costs on investors with corresponding effects for the cost of capital borne by sponsors, without generating offsetting benefits. Because contractual drafting is a difficult task, it is also not clear that even alternative entity managers are always well served by situational deviations from predictable defaults. In light of these problems, it seems to us that a sensible set of standard fiduciary defaults might benefit all constituents of alternative entities. In this chapter, we propose a framework that would not threaten the two key benefits that motivated the rise of LPs and LLCs as alternatives to corporations: (i) the elimination of double taxation at the entity level and (ii) the ability to contract out of the corporate opportunity doctrine. For managers, this framework would provide more predictable rules of governance and a more reliable roadmap to fulfilling their duties in conflict-of-interest situations. The result arguably would be both fairer and more efficient than the current patchwork yielded by the unilateral drafting efforts of entity sponsors.
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无限契约自由的塞壬之歌
备选实体- -例如有限责任公司和有限合伙公司- -与其对应的公司实体之间经常被提及的一个区别是,备选实体享有更大的合同自由。与这一观点相一致的是,关于替代实体的讨论往往会让人联想到一种公平的讨价还价,就像老练的各方就商业协议(如合资企业)进行谈判时所发生的那样,双方成功地根据各自关系的独特特点定制了合同。作为拥有超过20年裁决涉及替代性实体的纠纷经验的法官,我们利用这一章来提出一些关于替代性实体的共同理解在多大程度上是合理的问题。根据我们已经裁决的案件以及我们对司法同事裁决的许多其他案件的阅读,我们没有发现在其他实体的管理工具中保荐人和投资者之间进行公平交易的证据。此外,当投资者试图评估合同条款时,替代实体法规授权的广泛合同自由似乎是阻碍而不是帮助。替代实体领域普遍缺乏标准化,给投资者带来重大交易成本,对发起人承担的资本成本产生相应影响,却没有产生抵销性利益。由于合同起草是一项困难的任务,因此也不清楚,即使是可选择的实体管理人员,也总是能从可预测违约的情境偏差中得到很好的服务。鉴于这些问题,在我们看来,一套合理的标准受托违约可能会使替代实体的所有组成部分受益。在本章中,我们提出了一个框架,该框架不会威胁到促使有限责任公司和有限责任公司作为公司替代品崛起的两个关键好处:(i)在实体层面消除双重征税;(ii)在公司机会原则之外签订合同的能力。对于管理人员来说,这个框架将提供更可预测的治理规则和更可靠的路线图,以在利益冲突的情况下履行他们的职责。可以说,其结果将比目前由实体提案国单方面起草的拼凑工作更公平和更有效。
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