European Company Law

Channel 1
ALESSANDRA PAOLINI Lecturers' profile

Program - Frequency - Exams

Course program
The course will cover the following subjects: 1) Introduction to the course European Company Law Methodology of the Course Sources of the European Company Law Types and Functions of Companies The distinction between closely held and publicly traded corporations/companies. Law versus Contract incorporate affairs. Mandatory Law versus Default Provisions. Regulatory Competition. Common structures of Corporations/Companies: legal personality; limited liability; transferability of shares; investor ownership 2) Cross-Border Establishment and Corporate Mobility - Real seat theory and incorporation theory - Right of primary Establishment (Daily Mail, Überseering, Sevic, Cartesio, Vale, Polbud Cases) 3) Right of secondary Establishment (Segers, Centros, Inspire Art Cases) - Cross-border conversion (Vale, Polbud cases). The recent EU directive on cross-border conversion, merger and division. - The current Debate: twenty years after Centros decision. Cross-border conversion in Dir. 2019/2121 4) Formation of a new company - Setting up a new company: instrument of incorporation- articles of association – preventive control – registration Validity of obligations entered into by the company Nullity of the Company Private companies/public companies/State owned companies Cases: Job Centre I and II; Ubbong Isolatie BV 5) The essential elements of the company’s financial structure. The concept of company capital; the differences in this regard between continental European and Anglo-American company law; the debate on the advantages and inconveniences of capital-based company law systems compared to those that ignore this concept; the imposition by law of a minimum capital; capital formation and capital contributions; capital maintenance: recapitalise or liquidate rule and its role 6) Capital maintenance - Dividend distribution - Non mandatory capital reduction - Transaction on the company’s own shares - Financial assistance Companies with symbolic capital in European law 7) Annual and consolidated accounts - annual accounts; - accounting principles; - IAS/IFRS principles; - Consolidated accounts - Audit 8) Corporate Governance - What is Corporate Governance? - ECL corporate governance goals (transparency and engagement of shareholders); - one tier vs. two tier systems. - Board of directors - boards in listed companies; - Directors’ liability - Conflict of interests - Powers of representation - executive remuneration; - statutory audit; 9) Shareholders’ meeting - Shareholders powers; - Shareholders/Directors relation; - procedure; - listed companies and empty voting; - one share-one vote rule and its abandonment; - capital increase and pre-emptive rights of shareholders; - equal treatment of shareholders; 10) Shareholders’ Right Directives - Shareholder Primacy 11) Mergers and Divisions - EU Directives - Types of mergers and divisions - Cross-border operations - Equal treatment of shareholders and squeeze-out 12) The Cross-border Merger Directive 13) Takeover regulation; - Mandatory bid rule and equity treatment of shareholders - Breakthrough rule and poison pills - Passivity rule - Squeeze-out and sell-out rights 14) Uniform Company Law - EEIG - Societas Europaea
Prerequisites
Although there are no formal prerequisites, it is advisable to have already taken at least one exam in the private law area. Students should indeed have a basic knowledge of Civil Law (particularly with regards to property, contracts, power of attorney) and possibly, some basics in Company Law, as well as a good knowledge of English language (minimum level: B2).
Books
Textbook: N. DE LUCA, European Company Law – Text, Cases and Materials, Cambridge University Press, 2021 [Chapters 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 (except 16.6 and following), 18, 19] OR A. VICARI, European Company Law, De Gruyter, 2021 [Chapters: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14] The students are also required to take into account the most recent legislative sources, in particular Directive (UE) 2017/1132. Some European Court of Justice’s cases will also made available to the students. Suggested readings (optional): • L. Enriques, EC company law directives and regulations: how trivial are they?, in University of Pennsylvania journal of economic law, 2006, 1.; • J. Armour – H. Hansmann – R. Kraakman, The Essential Elements of Corporate Law, available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1436551 • M. Gelter, Centros, the Freedom of Establishment for Companies, and the Court's Accidental Vision for Corporate Law, available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2564765 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2564765 • Enriques-Macey, Creditors versus Capital Formation: the case against the European Legal Capital Rules, 2001, available at http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu • Miola, Legal Capital and Limited Liability Companies: The European Perspective, in ECFR, 2005. • G.E. Colombo, International Accounting Principles (IAS/IFRS), Share Capital and Net Worth, ECFR, 2007, 553 ff.; • Hopt, 2015, Corporate Governance in Europe: A Critical Review of the European Commission's Initiatives on Corporate Law and Corporate Governance, available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2644156; • Belcredi, Ferrarini, The European corporate governance framework: issues and perspectives, ECGI Working paper, 2013, at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2264990 • L. Bebchuck, The Case for increasing Shareholder Power, Discussion Paper No. 500, 12/2004, in Harvard Law Review, Vol. 118, 2005, p. 833-917, at http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/olin_center/ • J. Schmidt, Cross border mergers, divisions and conversions: accomplishments and deficits of the company law package, in ECFR, 2019, • Heidenmuller, The Rise and Fall of Regulatory Competition in Corporate Insolvency Law in the European Union, in ECFR, 2019; • Zhang, Preventive Restructuring Frameworks: A Possible Solution for Financially Distressed Multinational Corporate Groups in the EU, in EBOR, 2019 • Lombardo-Pasotti, The Societas Europaea: a Network Economics Approach, ECFR, 2004
Teaching mode
Teaching will be carried out as frontal lectures (also using telematic instruments for distance courses), aimed at framing the issues in a systematic context, taking into account the connection with European law and the evolution of internal law. During the course legislative, doctrinal and courts material will be provided to the students. During the Covid-19 health emergency, the course was held in "blended" mode, when allowed, or remotely. Attendance on a regular basis, although not mandatory, is highly recommended in order to achieve the expected learning outcomes.
Frequency
During the Covid-19 health emergency, the course is held in "blended" mode, when allowed, or remotely. Attendance on a regular basis, although not mandatory, is highly recommended in order to achieve the expected learning outcomes.
Exam mode
The final exam consists of a written test. Midterm exams (not mandatory) will take place for students attending the lectures. The written exam may consist in the resolution of some multiple-choice questions, as well as the writing of a short essay on the topics covered in previous lessons, as well as a case study on a ECJ decision. To pass the exam, it is necessary to achieve a good knowledge of the core subjects of European Company Law. To achieve a higher grading, students are required to show a deep knowledge of the legislative, doctrinal and court subjects and to be able to connect, in a consistent and convincing way, the different issues, offering their own point of view.
Bibliography
Textbook: N. DE LUCA, European Company Law – Text, Cases and Materials, Cambridge University Press, 2021 [Chapters 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 (except 16.6 and following), 18, 19] OR A. VICARI, European Company Law, De Gruyter, 2021 [Chapters: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14] The students are also required to take into account the most recent legislative sources, in particular Directive (UE) 2017/1132. Some European Court of Justice’s cases will also made available to the students. Suggested readings (optional): • L. Enriques, EC company law directives and regulations: how trivial are they?, in University of Pennsylvania journal of economic law, 2006, 1.; • J. Armour – H. Hansmann – R. Kraakman, The Essential Elements of Corporate Law, available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1436551 • M. Gelter, Centros, the Freedom of Establishment for Companies, and the Court's Accidental Vision for Corporate Law, available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2564765 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2564765 • Enriques-Macey, Creditors versus Capital Formation: the case against the European Legal Capital Rules, 2001, available at http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu • Miola, Legal Capital and Limited Liability Companies: The European Perspective, in ECFR, 2005. • G.E. Colombo, International Accounting Principles (IAS/IFRS), Share Capital and Net Worth, ECFR, 2007, 553 ff.; • Hopt, 2015, Corporate Governance in Europe: A Critical Review of the European Commission's Initiatives on Corporate Law and Corporate Governance, available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2644156; • Belcredi, Ferrarini, The European corporate governance framework: issues and perspectives, ECGI Working paper, 2013, at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2264990 • L. Bebchuck, The Case for increasing Shareholder Power, Discussion Paper No. 500, 12/2004, in Harvard Law Review, Vol. 118, 2005, p. 833-917, at http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/olin_center/ • J. Schmidt, Cross border mergers, divisions and conversions: accomplishments and deficits of the company law package, in ECFR, 2019, • Heidenmuller, The Rise and Fall of Regulatory Competition in Corporate Insolvency Law in the European Union, in ECFR, 2019; • Zhang, Preventive Restructuring Frameworks: A Possible Solution for Financially Distressed Multinational Corporate Groups in the EU, in EBOR, 2019 • Lombardo-Pasotti, The Societas Europaea: a Network Economics Approach, ECFR, 2004
Lesson mode
Teaching will be carried out as frontal lectures (also using telematic instruments for distance courses), aimed at framing the issues in a systematic context, taking into account the connection with European law and the evolution of internal law. During the course legislative, doctrinal and courts material will be provided to the students. Due to the persistence of the Covid-19 health emergency, and in order to grant lectires to the ZUEL, China, students, the course is held in "blended" mode. Attendance on a regular basis, although not mandatory, is highly recommended in order to achieve the expected learning outcomes.
  • Lesson code1056319
  • Academic year2024/2025
  • CourseEuropean studies
  • CurriculumComparative and European Law (Percorso valido anche ai fini del conseguimento del doppio titolo italo-albanese)
  • Year2nd year
  • Semester1st semester
  • SSDIUS/04
  • CFU6
  • Subject areaAttività formative affini o integrative