Directors' Duties in Failing Firms
Have you ever wondered whether directors have different duties when their firms become insolvent or approach insolvency? Such as duties to creditors? You would be entitled to be confused, given all the conflicting dicta in the cases.
But fortunately, relief is at hand. It's all explained in my paper with Kelli Alces, Directors' Duties in Failing Firms. Here's the abstract:
Despite many cases with seemingly contrary dicta, corporate directors of failing firms do not have special duties to creditors. This follows from the nature of fiduciary duties and of the business judgment rule. Under the business judgment rule, the directors have broad discretion to decide what to do and in whose interests to act. There is some authority for a limited creditor right to sue on behalf of the corporation to enforce this duty. However, any such right does not make the duty one owed to creditors. The creditors individually may sue the corporation for breach of specific contractual, tort and statutory duties, particularly on account of fraudulent conveyances. But the creditors are not owed general fiduciary protection even if they are subject to a special risk of abuse in failing firms.
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