Comprehensive Volume, 18 th Edition Chapter 46: Introduction to Corporation Law.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Comprehensive Volume, 18 th Edition Chapter 45: Partnerships, Limited Partnerships and Limited Liability Companies.
Advertisements

Corporation Created by law Legal entity
Chapter 38 Corporations: Formation and Financing McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Fifteen Corporate Variations. Close Corporation statutory close corporation Corporation whose shares are held by a small group that is active.
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 34: Nature and Formation of Corporations By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts.
Corporations Chapter 34.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Limited Liability Companies and Limited Liability Partnerships.
Shrine Treasurers Association
Basic Business Organizations Class 7
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Chapter 15: Business Entities
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning 1 Chapter 41 Limited Liability Companies and Limited Partnerships Chapter 41 Limited.
Corporation A legal entity that is separate and distinct from its owners. Corporations enjoy most of the rights and responsibilities that an individual.
The American Private Enterprise System. Part VI Investor- Owned Corporations and Limited Liability Companies.
Basic Business Forms Corporations Class 6. Forming a Business The first question: The first question: What form should the business take? What form should.
Copyright © 2004 by Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany BUSINESS LAW E-Commerce and Digital Law International Law and Ethics.
Nature of Corporations
Slides developed by Les Wiletzky Wiletzky and Associates Copyright © 2006 by Pearson Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany.
Copyright © 2009 by Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany CONTEMPORARY BUSINESS AND ONLINE COMMERCE LAW 6 th Edition.
Chapter 33 Limited Liability Companies and Special Business Forms
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
P A R T P A R T Corporations History & Nature of Corporations Organizational and Financial Structure of Corporations Management of Corporations 10 McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
COPYRIGHT © 2010 South-Western/Cengage Learning..
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 44 Corporation Formation Twomey Jennings Anderson’s Business.
Forms of Business Organization in the USA
Business Entities Dr. John Abraham Professor University of Texas Pan American.
Introduction to Corporations Pre-incorporation, Formation and Powers
CHAPTER 32 FORMATION OF A BUSINESS DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.)
Business Entities under the General Corporation Law of Delaware 1 Civil Service Bureau Reform & Development Department
Types of Business Ownership Vocabulary
Business Law 5.01 Vocabulary. Alien Corporation nationstate A corporation chartered in another nation doing business in the state.
© 2011 South-Western | Cengage Learning GOALS LESSON 5.1 SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS Distinguish the fundamental differences in the basic business forms Explain.
COPYRIGHT © 2010 South-Western/Cengage Learning..
Corporations.  90% of all businesses in the U.S. are set up as Corporations  Corporation is a body formed & authorized by law to act as a single person,
Business Organizations. Types of Business Organization  Sole Proprietorship - an individual carrying on business alone  Partnership - two or more people.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 5E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 16 Corporate.
Corporations: Formation and Organization
Corporations Organization (Formation) And Financial Structure.
Corporation – Nature and Formation
S ESSION 6 A NDREA M ADIGAN U.S. EPA R EGION 8. I NTRODUCTION CERCLA Section 107(a) identifies four classes of liable persons. Section 101(21) defines.
Limited Liability Companies Chapter 44 Tools & Techniques of Estate Planning Copyright 2011, The National Underwriter Company1 Combines limited liability.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 4E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 16 Domestic.
Chapter Seven Introduction to Corporations. Corporation Corporation: Corporation: A legal entity created by a state to carry out business (if a for-profit.
Chapter 45 Introduction to Corporation Law Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
Other Organizational Forms for Small Business Chapter 31.
Corporate Formation and Financing Chapter 32. The Nature and Classification of Corporations A corporation is a creature of statute, an artificial “person.”
Understanding Business and Personal Law The Partnership Section 27.2 Sole Proprietorship and Partnership Partnership law is largely found in the Uniform.
Chapter 35 Franchises and Special Business Forms.
Corporations Section Understanding Business and Personal Law Corporations Section 28.1 Forming and Financing a Corporation What You’ll Learn How.
@ 2012, Cengage Learning Corporations: Organization, Stock Transactions, and Dividends LO 1 – Understanding the Nature of a Corporation.
Forms of Business Organization Business Law Chapters 26 & 27.
Chapter 44 Partnerships, Limited Partnerships, and Limited Liability Companies Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
31.1 Law for Business, 17e, by Ashcroft and Ashcroft, © 2011 Cengage Learning Law for Business, 17e by Ashcroft and Ashcroft Chapter 31: Introduction to.
SOLE Proprietorships A Business owned and managed by one individual. The oldest and most common form of private business ownership in the US is the sole.
Forms of Business Ownership 5-2. Goals Understand the three major forms of business ownership. Determine when each form of business ownership is most.
Chapter 7 Legal Consequences of Incorporation
CHAPTER ONE DEFINITION AND NATURE OF COMPANY
Chapter 31: Other Organizational Forms for Small Businesses
Chapter 39: Corporate Formation and Financing
Customized by Professor Ludlum October 31, 2016
Chapter 39: Special Business Forms and Private Franchises
Corporations: Formation and Financing
Understand marketing and business management
Forms of Business Ownership
How Should I do Business?
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman
Corporations and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Section 28.1.
Slide Set Eight Corporations II Shareholder Rights
© 2013 Delmar Cengage Learning
Presentation transcript:

Comprehensive Volume, 18 th Edition Chapter 46: Introduction to Corporation Law

Formation of a Corporation A corporation is an artificial person created by government action. It exists as a separate and distinct entity possessing certain powers. In most states, the corporation comes into existence when the secretary of state issues a certificate of incorporation.

Types of Corporations The most common forms of corporations are: Private business corporations whose stock is sold to the public (publicly held) and Close corporations, which are business firms whose shares are not traded publicly. Corporations may be formed for purposes other than conducting a business. For example, there are nonprofit corporations, municipal corporations, and public authorities for governmental purposes.

Corporations Domestic Corporation Special Service Corporation Public Corporation Close Corporation Private Corporation Professional Corporation Quasi-Public Corporation Nonprofit Corporation Public Authority “S” Corporation Foreign Corporation Classifications of Corporations

Promoters A promoter is a person who brings together the persons interested in the enterprise and sets in motion all that must be done to form a corporation. The promoter is personally liable for contracts made for the corporation before its existence. The corporation is not liable on these contracts unless it adopts them. A promoter stands in a fiduciary relation to the corporation and stockholders.

Liability During Formation

Procedures The procedures for incorporation are set forth in the statutes of each state. In most states, the corporation comes into existence upon compliance with requirements and the issuance of the certificate of incorporation. When all requirements have been satisfied, the corporation becomes a corporation de jure, meaning corporation by virtue of law.

Defective Formation When there is compliance with some but not all requirements for incorporation, but the corporation is functioning already, it may be declared to be a de facto corporation (existing in fact). When sufficient compliance even for a de facto corporation does not exist, there is no corporation. However, in some jurisdictions a third person may be estopped from denying the legal existence of such a “corporation” after they did business with it. It then becomes a corporation by estoppel.

Piercing the Corporate Veil Ordinarily each corporation will be treated as a separate person, even if two corporations have the same shareholders. However, when a corporation is formed to perpetrate a fraud, a court will ignore the corporate form, or “pierce the corporate veil.” The corporate form will also be ignored to prevent injustice or because of the functional reality that the two corporations in question are one.

Duration and Rights A corporation has the power to continue as an entity forever or for a stated period of time regardless of changes in the ownership of the stock or the death of a shareholder. It may make contracts, issue stocks and bonds, borrow money, execute commercial paper, transfer and acquire property, acquire its own stock if it is solvent and the purchase does not impair capital, and make charitable contributions.

Corporate Rights Subject to limitations, a corporation has the power to do business in other states. A corporation also may participate in a business enterprise to the same extent as an individual. That is, it may be a partner in a partnership, or it may enter a joint venture or other enterprise.

Particular Corporate Powers Perpetual Succession Issuing Stock Issuing bonds Doing Business in Another State Making Contracts Transferring Property Participating in Enterprises Corporate Seal Executing Commercial Paper Acquiring Property (Investments & Holding companies) Paying Employee Benefits Making Bylaws Buying Back Stock Making Charitable Contributions Corporate Name Borrowing Money

Limitations on Rights Special service corporations, such as banks, insurance companies, and railroads, are subject to separate statutes with regard to their organization and powers. An ultra vires act occurs when a corporation acts beyond the scope of the powers given it. Because states now grant broad powers to corporations, it is unlikely that a modern corporation would act beyond the scope of its powers.

Combinations Two or more corporations may be combined to form a new enterprise. This combination may be a consolidation, with a new corporation coming into existence, or a merger, in which one corporation absorbs the other.

Consolidation Corporation A Corporation B New Corporation C (A & B Disappear) Consolidation Transaction

Corporation A Corporation B (Survivor) Corporation A (Corporation B Disappears) Merger Transaction Merger