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10 March 2021

BOOK: Andreas TELEVANTOS, Capitalism Before Corporations - The morality of business associations and the roots of commercial equity and law (Oxford: OUP, 2021). ISBN 9780198870340, 99.00 USD

 

(Source: OUP)

OUP is publishing e new book on early capitalism and the genesis of unincorporated trading entities.

ABOUT THE BOOK

To what extent did English law facilitate trade before the advent of general incorporation and modern securities law? This is the question at the heart of Capitalism before Corporations. It examines the extent to which legal institutions of the Regency period, especially Lord Eldon's Chancellorship, were sympathetic to the needs of merchants and willing to accommodate their changing practices and demands within established legal doctrinal frameworks and contemporary political economic thought. In so doing, this book probes at the heart of modern debates about equity, trusts, insolvency, and the justifiability of corporate privileges.

Corporations are an integral part of modern life. We bank with corporations, we usually buy our groceries from them, and they provide us with most news and media. We take it for granted too that most large-scale business, and even much small-scale business, is carried out by corporations. Things were not always so. Televantos considers the Bubble Act of 1720, which criminalised the forming of corporations without a Royal Charter or Act of Parliament, its repeal in 1825, and the subsequent impact. Much of the modernisation of Britain's industry therefore took place before general incorporation was allowed. Unaided by statute, traders had to create business organisations using the basic building blocks of private law: trusts, partnership, and agency.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Andreas Televantos is an Associate Professor at the University of Oxford Law Faculty, and the Hanbury Fellow and Tutor in Law at Lincoln College. His research focusses on trusts, fiduciaries, equitable remedies, and legal history.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Part I: Regency era business structures

1. Partnership as organisational law

2. The use of trusts in business structures

Part II: Binding business assets

3. Ostensible authority and the ordinary course of business

4. Judicial resistance to merchant demands, factors and paternalism in the King's Bench

5. The authority of trustees and executors

Part III: Business failure, risk, and insolvency distribution

6. Trusts and the risk of bankruptcy

7. Partnership dissolution and bankruptcy

Conclusion

Appendix

Glossary

 

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