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Instruction in Corporation Law Expanded
The Michigan Alumnus 717
Instruction in Corporation Law Expanded
By HENRY M. BATES, ‘90
Professor of Law and Dean of the Law School
During the year 1929-1930 the Law School began an important expansion in the instruction in corporation law. Professor Laylin K. James, who had had several years of practical experience in the most modern type of corporation work with one of the most widely known corporation law firms in New York City, and who had also taught the subject for three years, took over the general course in Cor poration Law. Professor James began at once the assembling of a library of modern corporation docu ments of all kinds, particularly those relating to the corporate set-up and to the many and varied types of corporation securities. During the same year Mr. John E. Tracy, one of the leading corporation experts of Chicago, gave a course of lec tures in the School, called "Corporation Practice."
These developments are the fore- runners of a much more elaborate expansion of the work for next year. Mr. Tracy found such keen interest and pleasure in his work here that he has decided to give up his law practice and has accepted a professorship in the Law School. He and Mr. James together will deal with the entire field of corporation law and of business associations in general. For this purpose the courses in Partnership and Agency, and possibly certain topics from other courses, as, for ex ample, Corporate Mortgages, will be turned over to them for harmonious and integral development .
In addition, the subject treated by Mr. Tracy in his lectures last year, and the cognate subjects dealt with by Mr. James, will be developed into courses in advanced corporation work. The library of corporate documents is being rapidly added to, and with this and other materials, Professors James and Tracy will con duct seminar courses for graduate students and selected seniors, in the study of modern corporation developments, including the varied and complicated forms of corporations, trusts, holding companies, and investment trusts. Processes of or ganization, reorganization, merger, management and control, will be in tensively studied.
Mr. Tracy, the new member of the faculty, was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin, September 2, 1880, mov ing at the age of eight to Tennessee with his parents where he attended public school and prepared for col lege under his father.
Having received an A.B. degree from Maryville College, Tennessee, he continued his legal education at the University of Wisconsin, after which he practiced law for many years as a member of the firm of Miller, Tracy and Eldredge of Mar quette, Michigan. A. E. Miller, '83, with whom Mr. Tracy was associ ated, is now President of the 11th District of the Alumni Association.
While serving as Assistant Director of the Bureau of Exports in Washington during the war, Mr. Tracy was sent on a special mission to Mexico. Since the close of the war he has been in New York and Chicago, specializing in corporation law, particu larly corporate financing and reorganizations. He has also written a textbook, "Corporate Foreclosures, Re ceiverships and Reorganizations," besides articles for legal magazines.
The degree of LL.D. was conferred on him in 1921 by Maryville College.