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With the case for withdrawal remedies made and critical comparative analysis of several jurisdictional variants conducted earlier in the book, Chapter VIII integrates insights from the theoretical and comparative analyses into a jurisdiction-neutral model withdrawal solution. This ‘Model Remedy’ gives effect to private ordering arrangements and offers judicially administered solutions where contract is absent or otherwise defective. Chapter VIII also explains the Model Remedy’s key features: a trichotomous classification of withdrawal grounds (fault, non-fault, and at will), and a combination of mandatory, sticky default, and default rules and standards differentiated by the grounds involved. Drawing on and improving upon existing legal regimes, the Model Remedy provides practical guidance on the design and implementation of calibrated withdrawal solutions responsive to a broad range of scenarios. It will be useful for legislators and judges seeking to address intracorporate conflicts in close corporations, and for legal practitioners drafting close corporation constitutions and shareholder agreements.
Chapter III centres on the jurisdiction-neutral analytical framework applied in Chapters IV–VII, the target jurisdiction-specific chapters. The analysis covers the history, grounds, scope of protection, applicable parties, and the mandatory/default nature of each jurisdiction’s withdrawal remedy. Key findings from each jurisdictional chapter are summarised and compared, with salient similarities and differences, such as the fault/non-fault distinction, between the jurisdictions in these aspects highlighted. Observations about the legal actors (judges, legislators, scholars) involved in the creation and development of withdrawal regimes, and other themes emerging from this, are made. Further, this Chapter identifies the phenomenon of ‘spontaneous functional convergence’ of the four jurisdictions towards two distinct conceptual models of withdrawal (‘corrective’ and ‘insurance’ models), situating this contribution within the broader corporate law convergence and divergence debate. The comparative findings and insights from the four target jurisdictional studies in this Chapter form the basis of a model withdrawal remedy that is presented in Chapter VIII.
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