Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2021
Abstract
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how corporate rights jurisprudence helped to shape the corporate form in the United States during the nineteenth century. It argues that as the corporate form became popular because of the way it facilitated capital lock-in, perpetual succession, and provided other favorable characteristics related to legal personality that separated the corporation from its participants, the Supreme Court provided crucial reinforcement of these entity features by recognizing corporations as rights-bearing legal persons separate from the government. Although the legal personality of corporations is a distinct concept from their constitutional treatment, the Court’s nineteenth-century rulings bolstered key features created by corporate law and simultaneously situated the corporation as subordinate to the state in a system of federalism. And, finally, the Article suggests that the balance of power struck in the first century of Supreme Court jurisprudence on corporate rights has been eroded in the modern era. The Supreme Court’s failure to develop a consistent approach to corporate rights questions and its tendency to reason based on views of corporations as associations of persons have exposed a significant flaw in the Court’s evolving corporate personhood jurisprudence: it lacks a limiting principle.
Keywords
Corporation law, personhood, legal persons, asset partitioning, capital lock-in, corporate governance, Supreme Court, SCOTUS, Bank of the United States, Dartmouth College, Fourteenth Amendment
Publication Title
Vanderbilt Law Review
Repository Citation
Pollman, Elizabeth, "Corporate Personhood and Limited Sovereignty" (2021). All Faculty Scholarship. 2774.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/2774
Included in
Business Organizations Law Commons, Constitutional Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Legal History Commons, Supreme Court of the United States Commons
Publication Citation
74 Vand. L. Rev. 1727 (2021)