I attended the BLPB “Connecting the Threads” symposium last week at the University of Tennessee and, as per usual, had an excellent time with the students, staff, and faculty associated with the Transactions journal.  Upon asking the regular bloggers in this space, I was assured that it was acceptable to “toot my own horn” about publications.  To that end, please allow me to mention that my article on Contracting Out of Partnership has (finally) come out in the most recent issue of the Journal of Corporation Law.  If interested, the abstract is as follows:

Can parties contract out of the general partnership form of business organization, even if their conduct would otherwise establish a partnership? Although a recent judicial decision suggests that they can, treating contractual disclaimers of partnership as dispositive is inconsistent with modern statutes. More importantly, permitting parties to contract out of partnership imposes substantial costs by undermining the protections of fiduciary duty, creating uncertainty about the operating rules for the business, and threatening to deny the rights of third parties. These costs outweigh the benefits of promoting freedom of contract and providing certainty on the partnership formation question, particularly because such benefits can largely be captured within existing partnership and LLC law.

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Photo of John P. Anderson John P. Anderson

Dean Anderson’s scholarship focuses on securities enforcement, white-collar crime, and intersections of law and philosophy (e.g., business ethics, constitutionalism, problems of pluralism, and human rights).

His recent articles address the law and ethics of insider trading, the problem of how to build a…

Dean Anderson’s scholarship focuses on securities enforcement, white-collar crime, and intersections of law and philosophy (e.g., business ethics, constitutionalism, problems of pluralism, and human rights).

His recent articles address the law and ethics of insider trading, the problem of how to build a just and enduring constitutional order in the face of increasing religious and cultural pluralism, and the theoretical underpinnings of our international human rights regime. Read More