| Author: | Gonzalo Villalta Puig |
| Subjects: | Corporation Law (Other articles) Corporation law -- Australia (Other articles) |
| Issue: | Volume 7, Number 3 (September 2000) |
| Category: | Comment |
Companies will be desirable or necessary when the arrangements that are to pivot on them are not conveniently or realistically to be erected directly around individual human beings... The individual human being is fickle, short-lived, and difficult to organise into larger-scale economic and political associations on a permanent basis.[19]
[S]ome form of limited liability is essential if the maintenance and continuation of the system of private enterprise as is practised in advanced industrial capitalist societies is to continue.[31]
Limited liability arguably reduces the costs involved in the separation of ownership and control... First, limited liability reduces the need to monitor management and other shareholders. Secondly, limited liability and free transfer of shares with which it is arguably linked facilitate the market for control. This acts as an incentive to management to perform efficiently. Thirdly, limited liability, in adding to the marketability of shares improves the information fed to the market place by the increased volume of transactions. Fourthly, limited liability allows shareholders to diversify their holdings. Fifthly, it facilitates optimal investment decisions since a positive attitude to risk taking will ensue.[32]
Corporate personality is essentially a metaphorical use of language clothing the formal group with a single legal identity by analogy with a natural person... [But] As Cardozo J said in the American case of Berkey v Third Avenue Rly [(1926) 244 NY 84 at 94-5]: "metaphors in law are to be narrowly watched, for starting as devices to liberate thought, they often end by enslaving it."[38]