Business Law - Loren Brown UHD
Disparagement
A business tort in which damaging false statements are made about the quality of a product or the character of a business person; specific loss of customers or sales must be shown
Multinational corporation (enterprise)
Use of the term is limited by the United Nations to corporations whose parent corporation has more than one national identity.
Transnational corporation
Use of the terms is limited by the United Nations to corporations with international production facilities.
Arbitration:
familiar in domestic contracts, (international contracts). Resolve a contractual dispute before the filing of any lawsuit.
State-of-the-art defense
"The product was manufactured using the best and latest technology available." A defense for product liability cases based on negligence, but not allowed in cases based on strict liability.
Name the 4 types of direct investment by an IBE.
() portfolio investment, (2) branch offices, (3) subsidiaries, (4) joint ventures
Name the 5 elements of negligence
(1) Duty (2) Breach of duty (3) Breach of duty was the actual cause of damage (4) Breach of duty was the proximate cause of damage (5) Damage (or injury)
Name the 3 elements the plaintiff must prove to establish negligence per se.
(1) Plaintiff is within the class of persons protected by the statute (2) Plaintiff suffered the type of injury that the statute intended to protect against (3) Defendant's violation of the statute caused the plaintiff's injury.
Name the 3 classifications of negligence
(1) Slight negligence (2) ordinary negligence (3) gross negligence
Name the 2 requirements for establishing assumption of the risk.
(1) The plaintiff knew of the risks associated with a particular activity (2) The plaintiff voluntarily assumed those risks
Name the 4 things a plaintiff must prove under 402A Restatement (Second) of Torts in a product liability case based on strict liability.
(1) The product was defective (2) the defect caused the product to be unreasonably dangerous (3) the product has not been modified by the plaintiff, and (4) the plaintiff suffered damages using the product
Name the 4 categories of invasion of privacy
(1) appropriating the name or picture of a person (2) intruding on a person's physical solitude (3) making public a private fact (4) placing a person in a false light
Name the 4 categories of slander that do not require the plaintiff to prove actual damages.
(1) statements that the plaintiff committed a crime of moral turpitude (2) statements that the plaintiff has a loathsome disease (3) statements that the plaintiff is unfit to practice his or her profession or trade (4) statements that a female is unchaste
Name the 4 elements plaintiff must prove in a defamation case.
(1) the defendant made a false statement of fact (2) the statement was communicated to a third party (3) plaintiff's reputation was harmed by the false statement (4) plaintiff suffered damages because of the harm to his or her reputation
Information/Liaison Office
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Name 7 provisions in a well-drafted international contract.
1)Choice of language clause, (2) choice of forum clause, (3) choice of law clause, (4) terms of payment clause, (5) force majeure clause, (6) government approval clause, (7) arbitration clause clause
The _____Amendment protects against illegal searches and seizures.
4th
The _____Amendment contains a due process clause requiring that all procedures in a criminal case be fundamentally fair
5th
The _____Amendment protects a person from being tried for the same crime more than once.
5th
The _____Amendment protects against compulsory self incrimination.
5th
The _____Amendment entitles a criminal defendant to a speedy and public trial
6th
The _____Amendment gives criminal defendants the right to be represented by counsel.
6th
The ______Amendment protects against cruel and unusual punishment
8th
The ______Amendment protects against excessive bail.
8th
Entrapment
A defense to criminal liability; accused admits to performing the criminal action, but claims that the intent to commit the crime originated with the police.
Modified comparative fault negligence
A defense to negligence that is also known as the 50% Rule. A plaintiff who contributes to his or her own injuries can still collect damages from the negligent defendant so long as the plaintiff's contribution to the injuries is not greater than the defendant's contribution.
Pure comparative fault negligence
A defense to negligence. A negligent plaintiff can collect damages from a negligent defendant even if the plaintiff's negligence caused more harm than the defendant's. Example: a plaintiff who is responsible for 75% of the injury can recover 25% in damages from the defendant.
Contributory negligence
A defense to negligence. A plaintiff who contributes in any way to his or her own injury can collect nothing from the defendant, even if the defendant's negligence was the major cause of the injury.
Creeping expropriation
A gradual form of nationalization in which the host country enacts so many laws and restrictions that it, in practice, takes control of the business.
Duty
A legal obligation imposed by general law or voluntarily imposed by the creation of a binding promise
General license
A license to export goods requiring no special procedures
Validated license
A license to export goods restricted by the product being sold and the ultimate destination of the product; Sellers must provide an end-user's certification
Joint Venture
A partnership between the IBE and a corporation of a foreign country or between the IBE and the government of a foreign country; set up for a specific purpose and for a limited time.
Foreseeability
A requirement for proximate cause; proximate cause requires that the injury be a natural, probable, and thus foreseeable, consequence of the negligent act or omission.
Malice
A requirement that public figures and celebrity plaintiffs must prove in libel cases because of the constitutional protection given the press in the First Amendment; malice means that the defendant knew the statements were false, or acted with reckless disregard for whether they were true or false..
Compensatory damages
A sum of money the court imposes on a defendant as compensation for the plaintiff because the defendant has injured the plaintiff by breach of a legal duty
The Durham Rule
A test for insanity used by some states in criminal cases; the accused is not criminally liable if the criminal act was the product of a mental disease or defect
Chattel
A very broad term, derived from the word cattle and includes every kind of property that is not real property
Tort
A wrongful act committed by one person against another person or his or her property ? the breach of a legal duty imposed by law other than by contract
Superseding cause
Also known as an intervening cause; an event, unrelated to the defendant's conduct, that breaks the direct sequence between the defendant's negligent act and the plaintiff's injury.
Countervailing duties
Also known as anti-dumping duties; duties imposed by the U.S. on foreign goods that are being sold below their fair value to reestablish a competitive market.
White collar crimes
Also known as business crimes; crimes are committed through deceit and concealment, rather than force and violence, usually with the intent of getting money or of getting goods or services without paying for them.
Strict liability
Also known as liability without fault; the legal theory that holds a person liable in tort for damages to another even if there was no wrongful intent or negligence.
Public torts
Also known as petty offenses; usually prosecuted before a city magistrate and punishable by fines or jail . Examples: violations of traffic ordinances and building codes
Distributorship agreement
An IBE sells goods to a business in a foreign country, which then resells the goods in the country; ownership of the goods passes to the foreign distributor and the IBE has no presence in the country.
Conspiracy
An agreement by two or more persons to commit a crime
Branch office
An entity that is not separate from the IBE; creates a presence of the IBE in the foreign country
Subsidiary
An entity that is separate from the IBE; often a corporation incorporated in the foreign country with the IBE owning a majority of the stock; may constitute the IBE's presence in the foreign country.
Slander
An oral utterance of a false statement that injures the reputation of another.
Exemplary damages
Another term for punitive damages
International Business Entity (IBE)
Any business entity with relationships that transcend national boundaries; may be organized as a sole proprietorship, partnership or corporation.
Extraterritoriality
Application of U.S. laws to the activities of an American IBE that take place outside the U.S.
Strict liability crimes
Criminal liability is imposed without fault or criminal intent, usually for reasons of social policy. Example: selling alcohol to a minor
Punitive damages
Damages by way of punishment that are allowed by the court as the result of an injury caused by a wrong that is willful and malicious
The duty of a landowner to a business visitor
Duty to protect from both known dangers and dangers that an exercise of reasonable care would reveal; landowners owe the highest duty of care to business visitors
Negligence
Failure to do that which an ordinary, reasonable, prudent person would do, or the doing of some act that an ordinary, prudent person would not do
Gross negligence
Failure to exercise even slight care; sometimes called willful and wanton misconduct, or conscious disregard for the safety of others
Slight negligence
Failure to exercise great care
Ordinary negligence
Failure to exercise ordinary care
Dumping
Foreign goods sold in the U.S. at below fair value with the purpose of capturing a large share of the market
Immunity
Freedom from the legal duties and penalties imposed on others (multiple ppl one crime).
GATT
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade: multinational treaty whose purpose is to reduce trade barriers, such as tariffs and quantity restrictions, between member nations
Nuisance
Generally, any continuous or continued conduct that causes annoyance, inconvenience, or damage to person or property, nuisance usually applies to unreasonable, wrongful use of property, causing material discomfort, hurt, and damage to the person or property of another
Host country regulations
Host country regulations
International regulations
Includes both public international law and private international law, such as the Convention on International Sale of Goods
Interference with contractual relations
Inducing a party to a contract to breach it or interfering with the performance of a contract
Methods of Conducting International Business
Information/Liaison Office Distributorships, Sales Representatives and sales agents Import/Export Licensing Direct Investment (four types)
Wrongful appropriation
Infringing goodwill, patents, trademarks, copyrights and other business interests
Conversion
Interference with a person's chattel to the extent that the wrongdoer ought to pay for the chattel. Examples: purchasing stolen goods; destroying the chattel; delivering the chattel to someone other than the owner
Multinational Enterprise -
International Uniform Commercial Code WTO seeks to reduce or eliminate trade barriers• Codes of conducts for IBEs have an impact on behavior through the process of negotiating these codes, rather than through direct enforcement. • Convention applies to sales transactions btwn 2 parties in diff countries if both have ratified./does not apply to consumers • GATT ) Gen Agreement on Tariffs and Trade: reduce/eliminate trade barriers liberalizing INT trade policies o Principles of reciprocity and nondiscrimination • Tripartite Dec of Principles Concerning Multi-National Enterprises and Social Policies - labor relations working conditions, training and employment, social policy
Regional regulations
Laws created by groups of nations that have banded together for a particular purpose. Example: European Union regulations
Home country regulations
Laws of the country where an IBE is incorporate or has its principal place of business.
Design defect
May be a basis for liability in product liability cases; the risk of harm could have been reduced or avoided by using a reasonable alternative plan for a product
Confiscation
Nationalization or taking of property by the government that is not recognized as legal under international law
Expropriation
Nationalization or taking of property by the government that is recognized as legal
Malpractice
Negligence committed by professionals, such as doctors, lawyers, accountants, etc., in the practice of their professions; expert testimony is required to determine the standard of care within the profession.
Negligence per se
Negligence is shown through the violation of a statute or ordinance
The duty of a landowner to a trespasser
Not to entrap or willfully harm the trespasser
Vicarious liability crimes
One party who is without fault is held liable for the criminal conduct of another, usually because of a special relationship between the two parties. Example: corporations have vicarious liability for the criminal activity of directors and officers.
Assumption of the Risk
Plaintiff voluntarily assumes a known risk of harm
Special damages
Plaintiffs in slander cases must show the actual, specific damages they suffered because of the false statement
Conventional on International Sale of Goods
Private International law; applies to sales contracts between businesses located in different countries if (1) each country ratified the Convention and (2) the parties do not agree not to be bound by the Convention.
Trade secrets
Proprietary information about customers, manufacturing processes and business plans that is protected by tort law
Due care
Reasonable conduct under the circumstances
Just compensation
Required for a legal taking of business property by a government; the U.S. defines just compensation as "prompt, effective and adequate compensation."
End-user's certification
Required for a validated license; the exporter must certify the country of destination and who the ultimate user of the product will be; designed to thwart the sale of products or technology to non-approved countries
True bill
Returned by a grand jury when it indicts an accused, having found probable cause to believe that the accused committed the offense
Exclusionary rule
Rule created by the Supreme Court that makes any evidence gathered in violation of the accused's 4th,5th or 6th Amendment rights inadmissible at trial (prevents its use at trial improper use of search warrant)
Import/Export
Simplest form of business. Import regulation & quotas/goods and prod cross national boundaries; does not constitute a presence as a basis of jurisdiction in the foreign country.
Respondeat superior
The legal theory that holds employers (masters) liable for the torts committed by employees (servants) while the employees are doing their jobs.
IBE
Standard designation for an international business entity
Family purpose doctrine
The legal theory that holds parent-owners liable for damages caused by their children or other family members while operating the family vehicle.
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977
The Act (1) imposes record keeping requirements on U.S. IBE's and (2) forbids businesses from giving anything of value to a foreign official to influence a discretionary decision.
Grease payment exception
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act allows U.S. based IBE's to pay an official of a foreign government to expedite a matter that does not involve a discretionary decision. Examples: expediting the stamping or processing of papers.
International law
The body of rules, regulations, treaties, and conventions that govern the relationship between nations
Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Company (1928)
The case that established that the reasonable person has a duty of care only for risks that are foreseeable
Strict liability
The doctrine under which a party may be required to respond in tort damages, without regard to that party's fault
Embezzlement
The fraudulent appropriation by one person, acting in a fiduciary capacity, of the money or property of another
Proximate Cause
The negligent action that is close to the resulting injury or damage
Right
The phrase legal right is a correlative of the phrase legal duty. A person has a legal right if, upon the breach of the corresponding legal duty, that person can secure a remedy in a judicial proceeding
Libel
The publication of a falsehood about a person by printing, writing, signs, or pictures for the purpose of injuring the reputation and good name of such person
Publication
The requirement in defamation cases that the false statement was made to at least one third party
Information/Liaison Office
The simplest way to do international business; an office is set up in the host country that does not sell goods or services, but merely distributes information and answers questions; does not constitute a presence in the foreign country.
Beyond a reasonable doubt
The standard of proof the prosecution must meet in a criminal trial
Nationalization
The taking of property or control of a private enterprise by the government
The reasonable person test
The test used to determine the duty of care in the particular set of circumstances; the reasonable person takes appropriate precautions to ward off the foreseeable risks in any situation; experts, because they are more knowledgeable, are held to higher standards than non-experts
Res ipsa loquitur
The thing speaks for itself, rebuttable presumption that a defendant was negligent
The duty of a landowner to a guest
To warn of known dangers
Joint and several
Two or more persons have an obligation that binds them individually as well as jointly. The obligation can be enforced either by joint action against all of them or by separate actions against one or more
Calvo doctrine
Used by many non-United States countries to define a legal taking of business property by a government: the taking is legal if the foreign business is treated in the same way as businesses of the host country
Force majeure clause
Used in international contracts to excuse non-performance under specific circumstances, usually acts of God, outbreak of war, and strikes.
Administrative crimes
Violations of a rule or regulation of a federal or state agency
Portfolio investment
When an IBE invests in the securities ( stocks and bonds) of a foreign country.
Mental distress
Wrongful interference with a person's peace of mind by insults, indignities, or outrageous conduct; conduct must be so extreme that it goes beyond the bounds of decency
False Imprisonment
Wrongful restraint of a person's freedom of movement; businesses must be careful when detaining suspected shoplifters not to commit false imprisonment
Interference with a prospective advantage
Wrongfully interfering with a prospective business benefit, such as making a sale or entering into an employment contract.
Witnesses who testify during trials cannot be sued for defamation because their testimony has a ____________privilege.
absolute
Distributorships, Sales Representatives and sales agents
complex export transaction - sell goods in the host country. o Distributorships: sale of goods to an individual or sales org that, in turn, resells the product in the foreign country ex. IBE and distributors is governed by a contract typically known as a distributorship agreement. o Sales Representatives: person who takes orders for the product and then transmits these orders to the manufacturer/does not take title to the goods, cannot bind the manufacturer/ is not an employee of the manufacturer./commission based on the value of the goods shipped. o Sales Agents: employee of the IBE in the foreign country/sales agent can bind the IBE contractually and be sued in the foreign country on behalf of the IBE/doesn't constitute a presence in the foreign country/foreign country can exercise jurisdiction over the IBE through the sales agent.
Licensing
contract to use another's intellectual property. The contract gives permission to use the IBE's patents, trademarks, and/or copyrights in that foreign country. Contracts allow the foreign firm to manufacture and sell the IBE's good in that country for a royalty payment. Royalties are payments made in exchange for permission to use someone's intellectual properties. A licensing arrangement allows the IBE to enter a foreign market without substantial investments and without creating a presence and a basis for jurisdiction. Patents, copyrights, or trademarks, as in the US and some countries even restrict the amount that can be paid to the IBE as royalties.
Terms of payments:
currency to be used in payment as well as the location of payment
The earliest applications of strict liability were to hold owners liable for damages caused by _______and ___________. dangerous animals and abnormally dangerous activities
dangerous animals and abnormally dangerous activities
Information
docu used to inform of charges
Contract clauses:
o Contract clauses: choice of language, terms of payments, force majeure, government approval, arbitration clause, choice of forum, and choice of law.
Direct Investment (four types)
o Portfolio investment - investment of money in the securities of a foreign country. Regulations may include restricting the ability to repatriate profits or transfer currency into and out of that country. o Branch - entity in the host country whose identity is not separate from the IBE. A branch is merely an arm of the IBE, completely owned IBE. May perform the same services, manufacture similar products, or sell the same goods as the company in the home country. o Subsidiary - entity whose identity is separate from the IBE. A subsidiary takes the form of doing business specified by the laws of the foreign country. Corporation incorporated under the laws of FC. IBE own 51% of subsidiary if the IBE has effective control over the subsidiary. Effective control - controlling the day2day operation of the subsidiary or providing the materials needed in manufacturing the product. Constitute the presence of the IBE in the foreign jurisdiction. o Joint Venture - partnership btwn 2 corporation. Setup for a specific purpose of function and for a limited period of time. Separate and apart from either of the participants, it may not constitute a presence, IBE be bound by a contract entered into by the joint venture.
Nationalization can be expropriation, which is a legal taking or a confiscation, when compensation not received.
o Regulations vary from country to country. o Host country sets the conditions o Capital movement - currency brought in and out o Tax leg - tax conditions o Disclosure leg - information of the company (hirers, future plans, secret processes) etc. o Nationalization - taking prop/control of a priv. enterprise by the gvt Expropriation - legal nationalization Confiscate - illegal nationalization Compensation - US prompt, effective and adequate compensation; other refer as Calvo doctrine stated not differ bet foreign firm than nationals o Complaint with the State Dept. due to nationalization (political process) Appeal/firms behalf via Foreign Claims SC (EVIDENCE) Creeping Expropriation seeking approval at every turn (purchases, sells) slowly take over
Tripartite Dec of Principles Concerning Multi-National Enterprises and Social Policies
o Restrictive Business Practices Code - protect competition as well as social welfare and consumer interests, price fixing, refusals to deal, mergers and trademark o Technology code coming soon o Org Eco Cooperation and Dev. Guidelines for Int Investment and Multinational Enterprises - taxation, financing, employment, trade unions o United National Commission - Human rights disclosing info, human rights, corrupt prac, consumer, environmental and transfer of technology - BROADEST & MOST COMPREHENSIVE CODE.
Choice of Language:
official language that will be used for the contract doc.
Force majeure:
part of international business contracts. Clause excuses nonperformance under specified circumstances. A force majeure clause may designate natural disasters.
Law
particular country's laws will apply to any dispute arising out of the contract.
A citizen who reports a suspected crime to the police cannot be sued for defamation because the statement has a ___________privilege.
qualified
Government Approval:
responsible for getting the necessary licenses, permits govrnt permission for the transaction.
Forum
where a lawsuit will be brought in the case of a contract dispute.
Import Controls
• Dumping prac. - selling goods in the US at unfairly low prices • Goods sold at below production cost or below home market price and injury to industry • Countervailing duties/antidumping - after finding of unfair gvt subsidies. (Dept. of Commerce)
International Contracts
• International Business transactions often involve a variety of contracts: Leasing of office space, employment contracts, purchase of raw materials, and sale of finished products. Joint Ventures and contracts for the purchase or sale of goods btwn a branch, a subsidiary, and the parent company.
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
• Prohibits giving anything of value to a foreign gvt official to influence a discretionary decision. • Requirements to any issuer of securities, even if its not engaged in INT business o 1977 amendment of SEA 1934: o Anything of value - money, gifts, particular culture o Foreign gvt official - ind acting in official capacity decisions with in function o Discretionary decisions - obtaining and retaining bus o Grease payment exceptions - make payment to expedite a function that does not require a disc decision • Regulate conduct that takes place outside the boundaries of the US
Host Country Regulations
• Restricting movements of capital, tax legislation, disclosure and merger. • Nationalization can be expropriation, which is a legal taking or a confiscation, when compensation not received.