Добавил:
Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
!!Экзамен зачет 2023 год / Micheler._Property_in_Securities._A_Comparative_Study_[2007].pdf
Скачиваний:
0
Добавлен:
15.05.2023
Размер:
1.81 Mб
Скачать

96 E N G L I S H L A W

transferee. Under the standard terms, a contractually relevant statement would have to be read into a document which provides for an administrative procedure and is not concerned with committing the company to legally classifying the transfers. It is difficult to see how, in the circumstances, such an analysis could be adopted.

Moreover, whereas in the case of a credit card transaction there will be agreements between all parties concerned, in the case of a securities transfer there is no underlying agreement between the company and the transferee. When the company was first set up, the number of potential transferees was unlimited and would continue to be so throughout the company’s existence. Credit card transactions will, in contrast, occur only between customers and retailers who have agreed to join a particular credit card scheme. Securities transfers occur between transferors who are currently members or creditors of the company and transferees who have no prior relationship with the issuer. It is therefore difficult to apply to share transfers the analysis adopted in relation to credit card transactions.

Finally, and perhaps most promisingly, the classification of the transfer process as novation could be upheld on the basis that the company is prominently involved in the verification of the transfer documents. Even if the issuer does not explicitly admit the transferee as a new member it nevertheless examines the transfer documents and compares the information contained in them with the data on the register. This involves a decision-making process on the part of the company which involves an act of will and has contractual elements.

5.2.3 Novation as a fiction

Notwithstanding these difficulties, the current orthodox view seems to be that transfers of transferable securities continue to involve a novation of contractual rights.6

In the light of modern transfer practice, however, this analysis has become fictitious. The fiction is that the issuer accepts the offer of the transferee, agreeing to enter into a new membership or debt contract with her and, at the same time, terminates the contract with the transferor.

An unease with the continued application of the novation analysis seems to be reflected in academic writing by the ominous silence as to the classification of securities transfers under modern conditions. Both

6Robert Pennington, Company Law, 8th edn. (London: Butterworths, 2001) 398–399; Joanna Benjamin, Interests in Securities (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001) 3.05.