Corporations Flashcards

1
Q

Who is liable for pre-incorporation transactions?

A

Promoters (they are fiduciaries) unless a later novation.

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2
Q

The articles of incorporation must include

A
  • Names, agents, addresses, purpose, shares

the name, the agents, names and addresses of incorporates, duration, the purpose (usually any lawful activity) and authorized shares

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3
Q

When is the corporation incorporated?

A

When the secretary of state accepts the fee and files the articles

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4
Q

If by laws and articles of incorporation conflict, which wins?

A

Articles
* the articles are the constitution of the corporation

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5
Q

What is the de facto corporation rule and corporation by estoppel?

A
  1. When a corporation isn’t properly formed but acts as a corp, it will be treated as a corp if there was a good faith attempt to incorporate and there was no actual knowledge of the faulty corporate status.
    1. If a 3rd party enters into a contract with corporation it can’t later get out of the K by asserting the corporation failed to form (estoppel).
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6
Q

What are the three factors to pierce the corporate veil, and what is meant by the term?

A

Generally, shareholders are not personally liable for corporate acts. However, a court may pierce the veil and reach shareholder assets if the corporate form is being misused (usually to avoid liabilities). The courts consider a totality of circumstances, including:

Alter ego (self-dealing or disregard of formalities) , undercapitilization, fraud… other shady jazz.

* look for only a few shareholders, and a general failure to respect or treat the corporate form as separate (fail to keep minutes, intermingling funds, etc). It’s harder to pull this off in a diffuse SH situation. Usually only a few SH.

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7
Q

What are issued shares?

A

Number of authorized shares actually sold

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8
Q

What are outstanding shares?

A

Shares that were once issued and remain in the possession of shareholders

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9
Q

What are treasury shares?

A

Shares one issued but subsequently reacquired by the corporation

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10
Q

Par value is?

A

The minimum value to sell a share at (it is not required)
* think golf. Except, in this case, it’s bad to go “under par.”

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11
Q

Watered stock is?

A

Stock sold for less than the par value. Shareholders who buy watered stock are liable to creditors of the corp.

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12
Q

How long is a stock subscription irrevocable for pre-incorporation?

A

six months— we don’t want people withdrawing their investments at the last minute. Need to line up investors.

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13
Q

Preemptive rights allow what

A

The person to maintain their percentage of ownership when new shares issue

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14
Q

Who can authorize dividends?

A

Directors unless would cause insolvency

* note that this is not a SH right so can’t be demanded by SH

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15
Q

Must every corp hold an annual meeting?

A

Yes.

And adequate notice must be given to SHs

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16
Q

Special meetings are for?

A

Voting on fundamental changes

17
Q

Notice for meetings must occur?

A

no fewer than 10 days and no more than 60 days before the meeting

10-60 days before the meeting. Sufficient notice to warn, but not so much that everyone forgets about it.

18
Q

Directors must set a record date when?

A

no fewer than 10 days before the meeting and no more than 70 days before the meeting

10–70 days before

19
Q

A proxy must be?

A

In writing, signed by the shareholder as of the record date, sent to the secretary, state that it authorizes another to vote, and cannot be valid for more than 11 mos

20
Q

Quorum of shareholders is?

A

A majority of the outstanding shares, not shareholders

21
Q

Necessary vote of shareholders is?

A

A majority vote of those shareholders present (assuming a quorum was obtained)

22
Q

Shareholders can inspect corp records so long as they?

A

State a proper purpose

* can’t be arbitrary or meant to harass.

23
Q

Shareholders can sue

A

Directly or derivatively (on behalf of the corp)

24
Q

Derivative lawsuits require

A

Claim made in corp name, stock ownership at time of suit, was a shareholder at time of harm, fairly represents interests of the corp, and made a demand to board unless it would have been futile

* these are lawsuits on behalf of the corporation.

25
Q

A controlling shareholder may owe a duty to a minority shareholder if

A
controlling SHs (50+% or disproportionate owners of stock) have a duty to minority shareholders **not to abuse their power** or disadvantage minority SHs. 
\* this is a quasi fiduciary duty--- look for dealing with outsiders, selling their stock for cheap, etc.
26
Q

For directors, a quorum is

A

A majority of the total number of directors

Ex: 4 of 7 total is sufficient. Only 3 of 4 would need to approve.

27
Q

Directors may dissent and avoid liability by

A

Entering dissent in minutes of the meeting, filing a written dissent before the meeting adjourns, or provide a written dissent to the secretary

28
Q

Directors and officers owe what to the corporation?

A

Fiduciary duties of care and loyalty.

Care/Prudence: Directors must act as an ordinarily prudent person, but may rely on outside reports and experts. This requires a duty to investigate before making important decisions. Must also apply any special skills or knowledge that they possess (legal/financial, etc).

Loyalty: Directors must act in the best interets of the corporation, and must avoid self-dealing. This means avoiding self-dealing and not usurping business opportunities.

* Safe Harbor : A transaction that might otherwise const. self dealing can be protected if: all material facts are disclosed (to disinterested sh

29
Q

The business judgment rule is?

A

Absent fraud, illegality or self dealing, courts will not disturb good-faith business decisions

* this is a rebuttable presumption that the director reasonably believed his actions were in the best interests of the corporation. However, this presumption may be overcome if director: (1) was not acting in good faith; (2) was not reasonably informed; (3) acted out of self-interest (lacked objectivity); (4) failed to timely investigate; (5) other failures of prudence.

30
Q

A self-interested transaction may be upheld if?

A

It is ratified by a majority of disinterested directors or shareholders.

31
Q

Fundamental changes require approval of?

A

Both shareholders and directors

32
Q

Merger is

A

when two or more corps combine and one survives assuming the assets and liabilities of the others

33
Q

Consolidation is

A

the combination of two or more corps when neither survives and a new one is created assuming the assets and liabilities

34
Q

Involuntary dissolution can occur by?

A

Creditors showing a corp is not paying its debts, shareholders show the corp is wasting assets, the directors are committing fraud, or the directors and shareholders deadlock

  • failure to pay debts, or breach of fiduciary duty, or waste
35
Q

Appraisal rights are?

A

When a shareholder dissents from a fundamental change he can demand his shares to be purchased by the corp for FAIR MARKET VALUE

36
Q

LLCs require filing ___ and its owners are called ____ instead of shareholders?

A

An operating agreement; Members.

37
Q

Discuss liability of LLCs

A

In order to be an LLC, articles of organization must be filed. . Generally, members are not liable for LLC obligations, but there is a possibility that the corporate veil will be pierced.
* don’t forget that in all partnerships, including LLCs members owe fiduciary duties of care and loyalty.
** can’t compete, usurp, and must act reasonably⇢subject to the business judgment rule

38
Q

what are the 3 safe harbor defenses for breach of fiduciary duty

A

1-2: approval by disinterested shareholders or directors; “fairness” (3)