Corporations Flashcards

1
Q

Who is liable for pre-incorporation transactions?

A

Promoters (they are fiduciaries) are personally liable, even if the corporation adopts the contract once formed, unless the three parties execute a novation.

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2
Q

The articles of incorporation must include

A

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

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5
Q

What is the de facto corporation rule?

A

When a corporation isn’t properly formed but exercises corporate privileges, 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.

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6
Q

When can a court pierce the veil?

A

SHs have abused privilege of incorporating and fairness must require holding them liable.

Three common situations where courts pierce the veil: Alter ego (SHs ignore corporate formalities and treat corp as alter ego or mere instrumentality), undercapitilization (at the time of formation & insufficient to reasonably cover prospective liabilities), and fraud (e.g., where SH uses entity to avoid existing personal obligations).

More commonly done in tort cases.

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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)

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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 when made pre-incorporation?

A

Six months

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13
Q

Preemptive rights allow what

A

The person to maintain their percentage of ownership when new shares issue. Must be stated in articles of incorporation.

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14
Q

Who can authorize distributions?

A

Directors unless would cause insolvency

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15
Q

Must every corp hold an annual shareholder meeting?

A

Yes.

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16
Q

Special shareholder meetings are for?

A

Voting on fundamental changes. Purpose of meeting must be stated in notice.

Can be called by BOD, president, holders of at least 10% of shares, or anything else authorized to do so under articles or bylaws. Must be for proper SH purpose.

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17
Q

Notice for shareholder meetings must occur?

A

No fewer than 10 days and no more than 60 days before the meeting. Notice for special meetings must include purpose. Meeting without notice is void or voidable unless notice defect was expressly waived in writing & signed or implied by attendance and lack of objection.

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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

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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. Revocable unless expressly stated and coupled with an interest given to proxy.

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20
Q

Quorum of shareholders is?

A

A majority of the outstanding shares, not shareholders

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21
Q

Necessary vote of shareholders is?

A

If not at meeting, require unanimous written consent.

At meetings:
Election of director: Plurality
Fundamental corporate change/removal of director: Some require majority of all shares entitled to vote. Some require only majority of shares that actually vote, as long as quorum is present.
Other matters: When more of the votes of a shareholder quorum for the proposal exceed the votes against.

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22
Q

Shareholders can inspect corp records so long as they?

A

Make a written demand at least 5 business days in advance. Unqualified right, regardless of purpose, for articles and bylaws, board resolution, SH meeting minutes, SH communications, list of current directors and officers, most recent annual report.

Qualified right, requiring proper purpose, for more controversial things, e.g., board meeting minutes, corp accounting records, SH records.

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23
Q

Shareholders can sue

A

Directly or derivatively (on behalf of the corp)

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24
Q

Derivative law suits require

A

Claim made in corp name, contemporaneous stock ownership, was a shareholder at time of harm, fairly represents interests of the corp, and made a demand to board 90 days before bringing suit unless it would have been futile. Corp must be joined as defendant.

Corporation gets money judgment and may indemnify SH for attorneys’ fees and costs if they won.

Corp can move to dismiss on grounds that the suit is not in corp’s best interest (based on independent investigation).

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25
Q

Controlling shareholder duty to a minority shareholder

A

Controlling shareholders cannot use their power to benefit at the expense of minority shareholders in a closely held corp. If there is oppression of minority SHs, they can sue the controlling SHs for breach of fiduciary duty (because oppression thwarts legitimate investing goals and they have no way out).

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26
Q

For directors, a quorum is

A

A majority of the total number of directors. Quorum is lost if directors leave during the meeting.

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27
Q

Directors may avoid liability by

A

Dissenting or abstaining in writing, e.g., entering dissent in minutes of the meeting, filing a written dissent before the meeting adjourns, or provide a written dissent to the secretary. Cannot dissent if they voted for the resolution at the meeting. If there is no dissent or abstention, the director is presumed to concur with board actions.

28
Q

Directors and officers owe what to the corporation?

A

A fiduciary duty (duty of care and duty of loyalty). And a duty to disclose material corporate information to other members of the board.

Duty of care: director must use the care that a person in like position would reasonably believe appropriate under the circumstances.

Duty of loyalty: A director must discharge her duties in good faith and with the reasonable belief that her actions are in the best interest of the corporation.

29
Q

The business judgment rule is?

A

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

Does not apply to duty of loyalty cases.

A director may rely on corporate officers or employees that they reasonably believe are reliable & competent, legal counsel, accountants, or other persons as to matters the director reasonably believes are within the person’s professional competence, or a committee of the board of which the director is not a member and reasonably believes that the committee merits confidence.

30
Q

A self-interested transaction may be upheld if?

A

It is ratified by a majority of disinterested directors or shareholders, and the director disclosed all material facts to the board/shareholders, OR it was fair to the corporation in the circumstances at the time of the transaction.

31
Q

Fundamental changes require approval of?

A

Both shareholders and directors. And must deliver document to Secretary of State for most of the changes.

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

Action by AG on ground that corp fraudulently obtained articles or is exceeding or abusing authority;

OR action by SHs showing that: corp is wasting assets, director abuse, misconduct, or fraud, director deadlock threatening irreparable injury to corp, shareholder deadlock and fail to elect one or more directors for period including 2 annual meetings, or corp has abandoned business and failed to dissolve within reasonable time;

OR action by creditors showing a corp is not paying its debts.

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 FMV. Only triggered in close corps when merging or consolidating, transferring substantially all assets, stock being acquired in share exchange, or converting to another form of business. SH must perfect right of appraisal by filing written notice of objection and intent to demand payment before the SH vote, voting against or abstaining at the meeting, and make written demand within time set by corp after the vote if approved.

36
Q

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

A

An operating agreement; Members.

37
Q

How do you create a corporation?

A

To create a de jure corporation, you need a person (incorporator), paper (articles of incorporation), and act (file articles with secretary of state). If the articles don’t name the initial directors, the incorporators must hold an organizational meeting to adopt bylaws and appoint officers.

38
Q

What is a benefit corporation?

A

A corporation formed for profit and to pursue some benefit to a broader social policy cause. Decisionmakers have to consider impact on shareholders and on community/environment.

39
Q

What is a benefit corporation?

A

A corporation formed for profit and to pursue some benefit to a broader social policy cause. Decisionmakers have to consider impact on shareholders and on community/environment.

40
Q

What is corporation by estoppel?

A

Persons who have contracted with an entity and acted as if it were a corporation will be estopped from denying the corporation’s existence. Insulates against personal liability in contract.

41
Q

What is the effect of the creation of a corporation on liability?

A

Shareholders are only liable to pay for their stock, not for corporate debts. Directors and officers are also not liable for corporate debts.

42
Q

How long is a stock subscription irrevocable for when made post-incorporation?

A

Revocable until accepted by the corporation.

43
Q

How long is a stock subscription irrevocable for when made post-incorporation?

A

Revocable until accepted by the corporation.

44
Q

Who elects and removes directors?

A

Shareholders.

45
Q

Who appoints and removes officers?

A

Directors.

46
Q

What is required for a Board of Directors to act?

A

Unanimous agreement in writing or majority of the quorum at a meeting.

47
Q

What is required for a Board of Directors to act?

A

Unanimous agreement in writing or majority of the quorum at a meeting.

48
Q

What is required for Board of Directors meetings?

A

No notice for regular meetings; at least two days written notice of date, time, and place for special meetings. Failure to give notice makes any decision at the special meeting void or voidable unless lack of notice is waived in writing or by attending the meeting and not objecting.

49
Q

What is required for Board of Directors meetings?

A

No notice for regular meetings; at least two days written notice of date, time, and place for special meetings.

50
Q

Can personal liability of directors be limited by the articles?

A

Yes, the articles may eliminate or limit directors’ personal liability for money damages to corp or SHs for actions taken or for failure to take action. But they cannot limit or eliminate liability for financial benefits received by the director to which she is not entitled, an intentionally inflicted harm on the corp or SHs, unlawful corporate distributions, or an intentional violation of criminal law.

51
Q

Can personal liability of directors be limited by the articles?

A

Yes, the articles may eliminate or limit directors’ personal liability for money damages to corp or SHs for actions taken or for failure to take action. But they cannot limit or eliminate liability for financial benefits received by the director to which she is not entitled, an intentionally inflicted harm on the corp or SHs, unlawful corporate distributions, or an intentional violation of criminal law.

52
Q

When must the corporation indemnify a director?

A

When the director or officer was successful in defending a proceeding on the merits or otherwise. Must indemnify reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ fees.

53
Q

When can a corporation NOT indemnify a director?

A

When they were held liable to the corporation or held to have received an improper benefit.

54
Q

When may a corporation indemnify a director?

A

For reasonable litigation expenses incurred in unsuccessfully defending a suit brought against a director on account of the director’s position if the director acted in good faith and believed their conduct to be in the best interests of the corporation. Determination made by a disinterested majority of the board.

55
Q

What is a close corporation?

A

Few shareholders, stock not publicly traded, can be managed by the shareholders, directors, or managers. SHs owe a fiduciary duty to other SHs. Courts can only pierce the corporate veil of close corporations.

56
Q

What is a professional corporation?

A

A corporation that exclusively has SHs, directors, and officers that are licensed professionals.

57
Q

What is a professional corporation?

A

A corporation that exclusively has SHs, directors, and officers that are licensed professionals.

58
Q

Voting Trust

A

Written trust agreement controlling how shares will be voted, copy of agreement given to corporation, legal title of shares is transferred to trustee, and original shareholders receive trust certificates and retain all other SH rights. Trustee votes the shares and distributes dividends. Generally 15-year max, but renewable.

59
Q

Voting agreement

A

Agreement in writing and signed, providing for how the SHs will vote their shares. Generally 15-year max, but renewable.

60
Q

Can a corporation restrict stock transfer?

A

Restrictions are valid If they are not an undue restraint on alienation. Rights of first refusal (requiring SH to offer the stock to corp first before selling) are valid. Valid restriction can be enforced against 3rd party purchaser if the restriction was conspicuously noted on stock certificate or they had actual knowledge of the restriction at the time of purchase.

61
Q

Can a corporation restrict stock transfer?

A

Restrictions are valid If they are not an undue restraint on alienation. Rights of first refusal (requiring SH to offer the stock to corp first before selling) are valid. Valid restriction can be enforced against 3rd party purchaser if the restriction was conspicuously noted on stock certificate or they had actual knowledge of the restriction at the time of purchase.

62
Q

What are fundamental corporate changes?

A

Amending articles (unless merely housekeeping), merging/consolidating into another company (unless articles won’t change, number of shares won’t change, voting power of newly issued shared won’t be more than 20% of pre-merger voting power of shares; OR in short form merger where parent corp owned at least 90% of outstanding shares), transferring substantially all assets (rule of thumb is 75%; fundamental change is for selling corp only), converting to another form of business, and dissolving.

63
Q

Voluntary dissolution

A

If shares have not been issued or business not commenced –> by majority of incorporators or directors

Corporate act w/ board & SH approval

May be revoked by same procedure used to approve dissolution.

Must file notice of intent to dissolve with Secretary of State.

Must notify creditors.

64
Q

Administrative dissolution

A

Action brought by state to dissolve corp for failure to pay fees or penalties, file annual report, or maintain registered agent in the state.

65
Q

Steps for winding up

A

Written notice to creditors and publication of notice of dissolution in newspaper in county of PPOB, gather all assets, convert assets to cash, pay creditors, and distribute any remaining sums to shareholders (pro rata by shares unless there is a liquidation preference).