100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Law for Eship & Business Innovation - FULL course summary - Entrepreneurship & business innovation - Tilburg University $8.05   Add to cart

Summary

Law for Eship & Business Innovation - FULL course summary - Entrepreneurship & business innovation - Tilburg University

 124 views  3 purchases
  • Course
  • Institution

This summary covers all the content that is covered in the course: Law for Eship & Business Innovation. This course is part of the Bachelor: Entrepreneurship and Business Innovation, at Tilburg University. Year 2, semester 2 COMPLETE SUMMARY

Preview 4 out of 51  pages

  • June 15, 2022
  • 51
  • 2021/2022
  • Summary
avatar-seller
Full Summary
Law

Document made to be studied at 150-180% zoom (do this for best experience)

Document is concise and includes table of contents, as the exams are open-book

,Introduction to (business) law and legal systems
Reading: Entrepreneurial decisions and legal issues in early venture stages: Advice that shouldn’t be ignored
➢ About: decisions entrepreneurs have to make, where they typically go off of the price to evaluate
o Lack time | constraints: cash flow, time and knowledge | 3 with big impact: entity formation,
founders’ agreements & other contracts and IP | reliance on professionals/seek help
Reading: Introduction to Law – Chapter 1: sources of law
➢ About: why law is there, the history of law, the families of law and bodies of law
o Legal rules: Positive law (& why beneficial) | Law history (Customary Tribal (precedent
decisions), codification, Common & civil law (equity)) | Westphalian duo & Transnational law
Reading: Introduction to Law – Chapter 2: legal reasoning
➢ About: constructing legal reasons & how lawyers do this
o Syllogism & classification of facts | Ratio decidendi & Obiter dicta | 4 consequences of
juridical acts | product legislation can conflict in rules 3 principles
Reading: Introduction to Law – Chapter 3: basic concepts of law
➢ About: the functional fields of law, the structure of rules, duties & rights
o Public & private law | Substantive and procedural law | Conditional structure | Duties (&
obligations), immunity and rights | Property & fundamental rights

Lecture 1: Introduction to (business) law and legal systems
➢ About: what law is, where to find it, the resources, the construction, categories & concepts
o Definition of law | Sources of law (web) | Map of families of law | legal categories & concepts
Tutorial 1: Introduction to (business) law and legal systems
➢ About: legal reasoning with premises, types of law, details about when a rule is a rule
o Fields of law (spider web) | when is a rule a rule | legal syllogism | IRAC for legal reasoning

Case: Warner Bros. v. Am. Broadcasting Companies
➢ About: Warner Bros sued ABC over a character (Ralph Hinkley), but they ruled it as different
o IP/copyright | significantly different | minimis rule & fair use doctrine
Case: Shell
➢ About: Shell having a high impact on climate change, which ‘torts’ people and violates human rights
o Tort law | International & national public law about the climate

Business formation & the law
Reading: The anatomy of corporate law – Chapter 1: What is corporate law?
➢ About: what law means in corporations, the types of law and what it entails for stakeholders
o Entity shielding/limited liability | Transferable shares & Investor ownership |
Board/management structure | Corporate law definition | Law and contract
Reading: Form and function in business organizations
➢ About: why we have standard form firms, what the rationale behind it is and some types
o Standard form firms | Why do people form firms | Corporation, LLC & Partnership

Lecture 2: Business formation & the law
➢ About: business forms, the AoA and 2 out of 5 characteristics of companies, Tort
o Corporations, partnerships & sole proprietorship | European law | Articles of Associations &
shareholder agreements | Legal personality & limited liability (asset partitioning) | Tort
Tutorial 2: Business formation & the law
➢ About: types of corporations and veil piercing
o US Delaware | the 3 types of firms | Veil piercing

Case: Salomon vs. A. Salomon & Co
➢ About: how someone bought their own sole proprietorship with an LLC and was not found liable after
o Type of business | Liability in corporations/limited liability | Claims from debtors
Case: Prest vs. Petrodel Resources Limited
➢ About: houses being held under a corporation but actually belonging to the husband
o Piercing the corporate veil

,Business organization & the law
Reading: The Social responsibility of business is to increase its profits
➢ About: the CSR of corporations, their actual duties, the doctrine
o CSR | the duty is to increase profits | employees of the shareholders | doctrine

Reading: The anatomy of corporate law – Chapter 2: Agency problems and legal strategies
➢ About: agency problems that occur and how law can help
o Functions of corporate law | 3 agency problems & law strategies in reducing them | entry &
exit | Initiators of enforcement

Lecture 3: Business organization & the law
➢ About: Last 3 out of 5 characteristics of companies
o Transferability of shares & capital terminology | boards (1 & 2 tier) | shareholders | CSR
purpose & stakeholder theory | agency problems & legal strategies

Case: Adidas AoA
➢ About: the articles of association at Adidas
o Articles of Association | Board structure
Case: Aberdeen Railway Co v Blaikie Brothers
➢ About: Blaikie Bros having a contract with Aberdeen Railway, but chairman was Thomas Blaikie
o Contracts | Conflict of interest | Fiduciary duty

, Reading: Entrepreneurial decisions and legal issues in early venture stages: Advice that
shouldn’t be ignored
Abstract
Entrepreneurs have to make numerous business decisions a day, many of which have significant legal
implications. Due to a lack of time and knowledge, they often make decisions on only a few factors
(one of which cost), focusing on the short term.
➢ With better understanding of legal implications, entrepreneurs can reduce mistakes and
improve their chances at success.

No time to think; no time to learn
Entrepreneurs are likely to prioritize their time and energy toward more interesting and creative
aspects. The constraints are cash flow, time and knowledge.
➢ Our cognitive resources are limited, so these individuals often make decisions based on a few
easily accessible decision factors.
➢ Cost is concrete and simple to understand & measure (comparing). It involves tangible
numbers. Using it manages all 3 constraints: cash flow, time and knowledge.
o Cash is saved by opting for the lower filing amount; time is saved by quickly utilizing
a concrete variable (cost) as opposed to researching more fluid ones; and knowledge
is ‘saved’ by easily comparing numbers against each other.

3 immediate legal issues impacted by short-term decisions
Business entity formation
➢ Personal assets need to be protected from the liabilities of the business, tax implications,
attractiveness to investors and lenders, costs associated.
o May choose an easier and less expensive form (putting them at personal risk)

Founders’ agreements and other contracts
➢ Usually entrepreneurs negotiate and sign contracts without assistance of legal counsel due to
cost and time involved. Often, they are asked to sign it themselves early on, but a legal
counsel should check the clauses (arbitration clause).
o The founders’ agreements state the portion of equity owned, should include a
buyback clause, as well as clauses regarding non-competition, confidentiality, non-
solicitation of employees and time commitments.

Intellectual Property
➢ To protect ideas (to benefit from it as opposed to others benefiting from it). Can be
registered (trademarks, patents, copyrights) and unregistered (trade secret).
o Costs are high, but it is a valuable asset and should be protected for the long term.

A team-based approach to professional advice
Early start-up decisions are complex & confusing, making it crucial to seek professional advice and
education. They should work with multiple, to have different views on things.
➢ Under-reliance on professionals
o Entrepreneurs do not compare the fees with the value of the service
o Focusing on risk management is considered preventative law (even though costly,
likely cheaper than when dealing with the potential legal issues)
➢ Over-reliance on one investor
o Should not rely on 1 professional (are all concerned with something else/focus area)

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller timoverkade. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $8.05. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

72841 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling

Recently viewed by you


$8.05  3x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart