|
||||
|
||||
Fiduciary Duty in Transitional Civil Law Jurisdictions Lessons from the Incomplete Law TheoryKatharina PistorColumbia University School of Law Chenggang XuUniversity of Hong Kong ECGI - Law Working Paper No. 01/2002 Abstract: In Anglo-American law, fiduciary duty is the core legal concept to address conflicts among directors/managers and shareholders. The concept is developed and constantly refined by courts in the process of adjudication. By contrast, most civil law jurisdictions, including many transition economies, either lack the procedural rules that would enable parties to bring such cases to courts, or have not developed a sufficient body of case law to determine the contents and meaning of this concept. This paper asks, whether courts should be allocated the right to define and enforce fiduciary duty principles. Based on our theory of the incompleteness of law, this paper argues that when law is highly incomplete, but the expected harm can be contained and does not cause externalities, allocating lawmaking and law enforcement to courts is optimal. Breaching fiduciary duty is such an area, as harm is typically limited to shareholders of a given company. While courts in transition economies may have difficulties living up to the task of exercising lawmaking rights in this area, we propose that there are few alternatives and that encouraging an active learning process should therefore be encouraged. We investigate emerging case law on the duty of loyalty in Poland and Russia and draw some comparisons to German case law.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 43 Keywords: incomplete law, transition economies, fiduciary duty, law enforcement JEL Classification: K10, K23, K40, K42, P3 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: October 24, 2002Suggested Citation |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo1 in 0.484 seconds