Contracting with companies
1.3 hrs read
Rate this book:
About This Book
This book surveys the main rules of Company Law governing the making of contracts with companies. It adopts an economic perspective, examining these rules in terms of the risks they apportion between companies and parties contracting with them. It reviews the use that has been made of economics in the analysis of Company Law and considers what guidance this can provide in analysing corporate contracting. The book then examines the relevant law and the issues raised by this law, covering the role of corporate constitutions as the source of the authority of corporate agents, the mechanisms of corporate activity and decision-making, the identification of corporate contracting parties, pre-incorporation contracts and other contracts with non-existent companies, the contractual power of a company's board, the protection of parties dealing with subordinate corporate agents and the regulation of contracts in which a director has a conflict of interest
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Andrew Griffiths (contract law)
Agents without principals
Agents without principals
An economic perspective on trade mark law
Contemporary Trade Mark Law
Contemporary Trade Mark Law
Corporate governance and the u
Corporate governance and the uses of the company
Economic Perspective on Trade
Economic Perspective on Trade Mark Law
Modern Intellectual Property Law