FUND AS A CORPORATE LEGAL ENTITY: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF FOREIGN LEGISLATION

Authors

  • Ganiev Niholbek Valievich Doctor of Philosophy in Law

Abstract

The modern business corporation or company represents one of the core instruments of capitalist economies. The aggregation of capital in corporate entities provided such a driving force for growth and development that, by the mid-19th century—when the first general incorporation statutes (i.e., statutes governing company formation) were enacted—no one had even anticipated its full potential. However, alongside critical examinations of capitalism, corporate law and corporate theories continue to evolve. The discussion presented in this article is based on a new paradigm in the understanding of companies. This paradigm envisions the fund (partnership capital) as a legal entity encompassing several rights and supported materially by the state, serving as a conceptual basis for the modern corporation. The focus of the article lies in the creation of companies as a fusion of elements that have evolved into the modern corporate form. The article also explores the reasons why the development of this modern form took until the end of the 19th century.

 

References

1. Reinier Kraakman and others The Anatomy of Corporate Law (3rd ed, Oxford University Press, New York, 2017) 5

2. English Oxford Living Dictionaries “nexus” (2017) accessed 3 August 2017

3. Susan Watson “How the Company Became an Entity: A New Understanding of Corporate Law” [2015] JBL 120. See Salomon v Salomon and Co, Ltd [1897] AC 22 (HL).

4. Henry Hansmann, Reinier Kraakman and Richard Squire “Law and the Rise of the Firm" (2006) 119 Harvard Law Review 1335.

5. The Case of Sutton’s Hospital (1612) 10 Rep 23a, 77 ER 960 (Exch Ch).

6. Bubble Act 1720 (UK) 6 Geo I c 18. Also known as the Royal Exchange and London Assurance Corporation Act 1719.

7. Maximilian Koessler “The Person in Imagination or Persona Ficta of the Corporation” (1949) 9 Louisiana Law Review 435 at 437.

8. At 438, translating Pope Innocent, quoted by Gillet La Personnalité Juridique en Droit Ecclésiastique (Malines, Belgium, 1927) at 121–122.

9. Otto Gierke Political Theories of the Middle Age (Frederic William Maitland translation, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1900) at xiv

10. On this point see F W Maitland, “The Corporation Sole” in D. Runciman and M. Ryan (eds) Maitland State, Trust and Corporation (Cambridge University Press, 2003) 10.

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Published

2025-04-21