Cross-Border Mergers in Europe – Company Law is catching up! – Commentary on the ECJ's Decision in SEVIC Systems AG
Abstract
In the much-anticipated decision of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in the SEVIC case, given 13 December 2005, the German rules governing (national) mergers were held incompatible with the fundamental freedoms. Some weeks earlier the European legislator adopted the 10th company law directive on cross-border mergers. Whereas the Regulation on the European Company (SE) provides for cross-border mergers of public limited liability companies since late 2004, the 10th directive extends this privilege to private limited liability companies. Until the national implementation of the latter, however, the fundamental freedoms might grant such right to private limited liability companies. Similar questions come up as regards to the outbound scenario, since the SEVIC case dealt with an inbound merger.
© Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- The Duty of Good Faith in American Corporate Law
- Towards a Simpler and More Flexible Law of Private Companies: A New Approach and the Dutch Experience
- Theoretical Reflections on Derivative Actions in English Law: The Representative Problem
- Cross-Border Mergers in Europe – Company Law is catching up! – Commentary on the ECJ's Decision in SEVIC Systems AG
Articles in the same Issue
- The Duty of Good Faith in American Corporate Law
- Towards a Simpler and More Flexible Law of Private Companies: A New Approach and the Dutch Experience
- Theoretical Reflections on Derivative Actions in English Law: The Representative Problem
- Cross-Border Mergers in Europe – Company Law is catching up! – Commentary on the ECJ's Decision in SEVIC Systems AG