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April 1, 2020Calvin H. Johnson
Out-of-State Privileges for Internet Sales after Wayfair
In South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court overruled its prior decisions in Quill and Bella Hess to allow a state to collect sales tax on internet sales even though the vendor has no “brick and mortar” store, warehouse or other physical presence in the state. Texas has been losing an estimated $1.1 billion a year in tax collections from the old physical-presence requirement. Texas needs to exploit the new rule now. So do other states. The money would be well spent for the highest-priority state needs. The revenue would also just come from actually collecting tax from people who are supposed to be paying tax already, but don’t. In-state Texas merchants who have been withholding sales tax will love the new level-playing field.
April 1, 2020Gabriel F. Alonzo
Partner's Duty of Care -- Whether a Partner's Statutory Duty of Care Can Be Disclaimed
In Shannon Med Ctr v Triad Holdings III, LLC. ____S.W.3d ____, No. 14-18-00638-CV, 2019 WL 6606406 (Tex. App. -- Houston (14th Dist)), the Court of Appeals, citing Texas Business Organizations Code (Secs 152.206 and 152.002(b)(3)), held that while a partnership agreement may authorize contracts between a partnership and partners or their affiliates, but a partner entering into those contracts must still comply with the duty of care charged by statute.
May 22, 2009Byron F. Egan
Director Duties in Troubles Times: Process and Proof
The conduct of corporate directors and officers in Texas is subject to particular scrutiny in the context of executive compensation and other affiliated party transactions, business combinations, whether friendly or hostile, and when the corporation is charged with illegal conduct. The high profile stories of how much corporations are paying their chief executive officer (“CEO”) and other executives, corporate scandals, bankruptcies and related developments have further focused attention on how directors and officers discharge their duties, and have caused much reexamination of how corporations are governed and how they relate to their shareholders. The individuals who serve in leadership roles for corporations are fiduciaries in relation to the corporation and its owners. These troubled times make it appropriate to focus upon the fiduciary and other duties of directors and officers, including their duties of care, loyalty and oversight. Increasingly the courts are applying principals articulated in cases involving mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) to cases involving executive compensation, perhaps because both areas often involve conflicts of interest and self-dealing or because in Delaware, where many of the cases are tried, the same judges are writing significant opinions in both areas. Director and officer fiduciary duties are generally owed to the corporation and its shareholders, but when the corporation is on the penumbra of insolvency, the beneficiaries of those duties may begin to expand to include the creditors.
February 15, 2014Byron F. Egan
How Recent Fiduciary Duty Cases Affect Advice to Directors and Officers of Delaware and Texas Corporations
The conduct of corporate directors and officers is subject to particular scrutiny in the context of business combinations (whether friendly or hostile), executive compensation and other affiliated party transactions, allegations of illegal or improper corporate conduct, and corporate insolvency. The individuals who serve in leadership roles for corporations are fiduciaries in relation to the corporation and its owners. Increasingly the courts are applying principals articulated in cases involving mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) to cases involving executive compensation, perhaps because both areas often involve conflicts of interest and self-dealing or because in Delaware, where many of the cases are tried, the same judges are writing significant opinions in both areas. Director and officer fiduciary duties are generally owed to the corporation and its shareholders, but when the corporation is insolvent, the constituencies claiming to be beneficiaries of those duties expand to include the entity’s creditors.