Deals

Course Information

Course Number
L7035
Curriculum Level
Upperclass
Areas of Study
Corporate Law and Transactions, Lawyering, Taxation
Type
Seminar
Additional Attributes
Executive LLM

Section 001 Information

Instructor

David Schizer portrait David M. Schizer Harvey R. Miller Professor of Law and Economics and Dean Emeritus

Section Description

***This class is for ELLM students only*** This course trains students in the insights and skills that add value in sophisticated transactions. Specifically, lawyers constantly need to address two types of issues in these transactions.

First, although transactions vary in their details, every transaction involves problems of information and incentives that can discourage parties from entering into what otherwise would be value-maximizing arrangements. For example, the seller of an asset almost always has better information about it than the buyer does. This reality — combined with the fact that the seller is willing to sell — can cause buyers to be skeptical about the asset’s quality, and might even persuade them not to purchase it. A central responsibility of lawyers in transactions, then, is to help overcome these information and incentive problems. They do so with a range of contractual and organizational responses, such as due diligence, covenants, contingent purchase price, staged financing, and incentive compensation.

Second, legal and regulatory regimes sometimes are imperfectly drafted and conceptualized, so that economically similar arrangements are treated differently. These differences create possibilities for legal arbitrage, so that a change in the way the transaction is structured can yield dramatically better (or worse) treatment for the parties. More generally, sophisticated transactional lawyers must help their clients navigate regulatory hurdles, and the nature of the relevant regulations -- and the parties’ responses to them –- can determine whether a potentially promising business venture succeeds or fails.

This course develops these themes in a number of contexts, including mergers of & acquisitions, venture capital, real estate, derivatives, publishing, motion pictures, and nonprofits.

School Year & Semester
Summer 2024
Location
TBA TBA
Schedule
Class meets on
  • Monday
  • Tuesday
  • Wednesday
  • Thursday
1:00 pm - 3:10 pm
Points
3
Method of Evaluation
Exam
J.D Writing Credit?
No

Course Limitations

Instructor Pre-requisites
None
Instructor Co-Requisites
None
Recommended Courses
None
Other Limitations
None