Law School

Corporations and Business Associations Part Six: Limited Liability, Creditor Protection, and the Boundaries of the Corporate Form

14 snips
Feb 7, 2026
A clear walkthrough of limited liability, separate corporate personality, and why shielding shareholders matters. A lively look at veil piercing: the unity of interest test, undercapitalization, commingling, and when courts disregard the corporate form. Coverage of parent-subsidiary separateness, alternatives like fraudulent transfer and equitable subordination, plus practical exam strategy and policy debates.
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INSIGHT

Separate Legal Personality Explained

  • The corporation is a separate legal person that can own assets and incur debts independent of shareholders.
  • Shareholders' losses generally cap at their investment regardless of control level.
INSIGHT

The Trade-Off Behind Limited Liability

  • Limited liability reallocates risk from investors to creditors, tort victims, and the public to encourage capital aggregation.
  • This trade-off creates liquidity and enables diversified investing but also introduces moral hazard.
ADVICE

Use Piercing Only As A Last Resort

  • Treat veil piercing as an extraordinary equitable remedy, not a standalone claim.
  • First obtain a judgment against the corporation, then ask a court to pierce the veil if the corporation is judgment-proof.
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