The Unwritten Law of Corporate Reorganizations

The Unwritten Law of Corporate Reorganizations PDF

Author: Douglas G. Baird

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2022-05-26

Total Pages: 203

ISBN-13: 1009076973

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

The law of corporate reorganizations controls the fate of enterprises worth billions of dollars and has reshaped entire sectors of the economy, yet its inner workings largely remain a mystery. Judges must police a small and closed fraternity of professionals as they sit down at a conference table and forge a new future for a distressed business, but little appears to tell judges how they are to do this. Judges, however, are in fact bound by a coherent set of unwritten principles that derive from a statute Parliament passed in 1571. These principles are not simply norms or customary practices. They have hard edges, judges must enforce them, and parties are bound by them as they are by any other law. This book traces the evolution of these unwritten principles and makes accessible a legal world that has long been closed off to outsiders.

Unwritten Rules and the New Contract Paradigm

Unwritten Rules and the New Contract Paradigm PDF

Author: David A. Skeel

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 12

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

In a recent essay -- part of a larger book project -- Douglas Baird contends that the standard accounts of the history of corporate reorganization miss an essential feature: the extent to which both current and prior practice have been governed by unwritten rules (such as full disclosure and the opportunity for each party to participate in the negotiations) that “are well-known to insiders, but largely invisible to those on the outside.” According to Professor Baird, the unwritten rules, not bankruptcy's distribution provisions or other features of the Bankruptcy Code, are the essence of corporate reorganization. This essay is a short response to Professor Baird's important and largely compelling claim, written for the same symposium. After briefly describing Professor Baird's central argument about the role of unwritten rules, my essay makes two simple points. First, what's good for bankruptcy insiders is not always good for everyone. William Douglas and other New Deal reformers believed that insiders' temptation to favor their own interests poisoned the entire reorganization enterprise in their era. Although the reformers' complaints were often exaggerated, it is important to recognize the costs of a system run by insiders. Second, the essay argues that bankruptcy's written rules -- by which I mean both statutory provisions and the parties' contracts -- still matter, and they matter a lot.