CT Corporation Handbook 2016
CT Corporation Handbook 2016
CT Corporation Handbook 2016
2016 Edition
CTcorporation.com
©2016 C T Corporation System and its affiliates and/or licensors. All rights reserved.
CT
AN INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATIONS
FOR THE LEGAL PROFESSIONAL
2016 EDITION
Introduction _________________________________________ 1
1
CHAPTER 1
FORMS OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS
Sole Proprietorship
3
Chapter 1 — Forms of Business Organizations
General Partnerships
4
Chapter 1 — Forms of Business Organizations
5
Chapter 1 — Forms of Business Organizations
Limited Partnership
6
Chapter 1 — Forms of Business Organizations
Business Corporations
7
Chapter 1 — Forms of Business Organizations
8
CHAPTER 2
NATURE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF
A CORPORATION
Statutory Creation
9
Chapter 2 — Nature and Characteristics of a Corporation
Perpetual Existence
Centralized Management
10
Chapter 2 — Nature and Characteristics of a Corporation
Corporate Powers
11
CHAPTER 3
FORMATION OF CORPORATIONS
13
Chapter 3 — Formation of Corporations
One of the first steps in the formation process is selecting the corpora-
tion’s name. This may not be as easy as it seems because all states
have statutory provisions affecting the selection.
Every state places restrictions on the words that can be used in a
corporate name. Many states provide that a corporate name cannot
contain any word or phrase that is prohibited by law for such corpora-
tion or that indicates or implies that it is organized for any purpose
other than that contained in its articles of incorporation. Many states
have restrictions on the use of specific words, such as “bank”, “trust”,
“cooperative”, “insurance”, “savings”, etc. In addition, almost all
states require a “corporate indicator” in the name. The corporate indi-
cator is a word, such as “corporation”, “incorporated”, “limited”,
“company”, etc., or an abbreviation of such a word, that indicates that
the named business organization is a corporation.
In addition to requiring and prohibiting certain words, the states
also provide that the name of a corporation being organized must not
be the same as, or deceptively similar to, or must be distinguishable
upon the records of the Secretary of State from, the names of other
corporations organized or qualified in the state, or registered or re-
served in the state. In many states the name must also differ from the
names of nonprofit corporations, limited liability companies, limited
partnerships and other business entities required to register with the
state.
If a corporation is going to qualify to do business in states outside
of its state of incorporation, its name will have to meet the statutory
requirements of the foreign states as well. Under most corporation
laws, a foreign corporation’s name must meet the same statutory re-
quirements as the state’s domestic corporations. If a corporation finds
that the name it has incorporated under cannot be used in a state in
which it will qualify, it will generally be required to adopt an ac-
ceptable fictitious name for use in the state.
Once the potential corporate name or names have been settled on,
they may be checked with the corporation departments of the states
14
Chapter 3 — Formation of Corporations
15
Chapter 3 — Formation of Corporations
Articles Of Incorporation
16
Chapter 3 — Formation of Corporations
Bylaws
17
Chapter 3 — Formation of Corporations
Organizational Meetings
18
CHAPTER 4
CORPORATE FINANCE
Obtaining Capital
Equity Interests
19
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
Issuance Of Shares
Reacquired Shares
20
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
21
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
Share Certificates
Share Classifications
Corporations may have more than one class of shares. In turn, each
class may be divided into more than one series. The articles of incor-
poration govern the division of a corporation’s authorized shares into
classes and series of classes.
There are two major classifications into which shares are fre-
quently divided. They are common shares and preferred shares.
Common shares are the ordinary shares of a corporation. They
have no special features and give no greater rights than any other
shares. All common shareholders enjoy an equal right to dividends
and to the corporate assets upon dissolution. Common shareholders
frequently have the exclusive or broadest right to vote. Common
shares may be further divided into more than one class. Usually this
classification involves the voting rights of the classes.
22
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
Debt Financing
23
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
Debt Securities
24
Chapter 4 — Corporate Finance
25
CHAPTER 5
SHAREHOLDERS
Shareholder Status
The term shareholder refers to one who holds or owns shares of stock
in a corporation. Shareholders are the owners of a corporation. As
owners they are entitled to certain rights. However, shareholders do
not have the same ownership rights as the owners of sole proprietor-
ships or partnerships. For example, shareholders are generally not
entitled to control the corporation’s business affairs and they do not
own the corporation’s property.
Shareholders also do not have the same liabilities as the owners
of sole proprietorships or partnerships. Shareholders are not liable for
the corporation’s acts or debts. Unless the corporation’s articles of
incorporation provide for greater liability, a shareholder’s only obli-
gation is to pay for his or her shares.
Right To Vote
27
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
Preemptive Rights
28
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
Cumulative Voting
All corporation laws give shareholders the right to inspect and copy
various corporate books and records. The corporation cannot deny
shareholders this right in its articles or bylaws.
29
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
Dissenter’s Rights
30
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
31
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
32
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
Shareholders’ Meetings
Notice Of Meetings
33
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
34
Chapter 5 — Shareholders
Proxies
35
CHAPTER 6
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
37
Chapter 6 — Directors and Officers
or the remaining directors. The bylaws may provide for the exact
method of filling vacancies.
Directors may resign at any time. They may also be removed by
the shareholders for cause or for no cause unless the corporation pro-
vides in its articles that shareholders can remove directors for cause
only.
Directors’ Powers
Directors’ Duties
38
Chapter 6 — Directors and Officers
of loyalty. This duty mandates that the best interests of the corpora-
tion take precedence over any personal interests a director may have.
For example, directors cannot compete with the corporation or usurp
a corporate opportunity for personal gain.
Most states have adopted a statutory standard of conduct that di-
rectors must abide by. These statutes generally provide that a director
must discharge his or her duties as a director in good faith, with the
care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise
under similar circumstances, and in a manner he or she reasonably
believes to be in the best interests of the corporation.
In discharging his or her duties, a director is entitled to rely on
information, opinions, reports, or statements prepared or presented
by: (1) officers or employees whom the director reasonably believes
to be reliable and competent, (2) lawyers, accountants, or other per-
sons as to matters the director reasonably believes are within the per-
son’s professional or expert competence, and (3) a committee of di-
rectors if the director reasonably believes that the committee merits
confidence.
Directors’ Liabilities
A director is not liable for any action taken as a director, or any fail-
ure to take any action, if the director performed the duties of his or
her office in compliance with the statutory standard of conduct or in
compliance with his or her fiduciary duties. However, a director who
does not act within the statutory standard or who breaches his or her
fiduciary duties can be held liable, to the corporation, for the damages
those actions caused.
In addition, a director who votes for a dividend, distribution, or
stock purchase made in violation of law or the articles of incorpora-
tion, is liable, with all other directors, to the corporation for the
amount of the payment that exceeds what could have been paid with-
out violating the law or the articles.
Corporations may eliminate or limit their directors’ liability for a
breach of fiduciary duty by so providing in their articles of incorpora-
tion. However, in general, they cannot eliminate or limit liability for a
breach of the duty of loyalty, for acts made in bad faith or which in-
volve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law, for ap-
proving unlawful dividends, distributions or stock purchases, or for
39
Chapter 6 — Directors and Officers
Committees
40
Chapter 6 — Directors and Officers
Officers
The officers of a corporation are the agents through which the board
of directors acts. The board makes the decisions and designates the
officers to execute them.
As a rule, the duties of each officer are set forth in the bylaws or,
to the extent consistent with the bylaws, are prescribed by the board
of directors. Usually, the bylaws will provide for several corporate
officers. The most common are the president, vice president, secretary
and treasurer. The president usually makes decisions of corporate pol-
icy and operations. The vice president assumes the president’s func-
tions in his or her absence. A vice president will also often be respon-
sible for running part of the corporation’s business or operations.
The secretary makes and keeps the corporate books and records.
This includes keeping the records of directors’ and shareholders’
meetings and the corporation’s stock record book. The secretary also
has the authority to send out notices of corporate meetings and to
keep a register of the names and addresses of the shareholders. The
secretary also keeps the corporate seal if there is one. Some states
provide that the offices of president and secretary cannot be occupied
by the same person. The treasurer receives and keeps the corpora-
tion’s money and is responsible for taxes, financial reports, etc.
Officers’ Liabilities
41
Chapter 6 — Directors and Officers
Indemnification
Corporate directors and officers may be sued for actions they took
during the course of their employment. Indemnification provides fi-
nancial protection by the corporation for those directors and officers
against the expenses and liabilities they incurred because of those
lawsuits.
Every state has a statutory provision providing for indemnifica-
tion. In addition, a corporation may have a provision in its articles of
incorporation or bylaws establishing the scope of the indemnification
it will provide to its personnel.
The statutory provisions typically require a corporation to indem-
nify directors or officers who were wholly successful in defending
themselves. Voluntary indemnification may be made if the corpora-
tion determines that the directors or officers acted in good faith and
reasonably believed that their conduct was in the best interests of the
corporation. However, indemnification may not be made to directors
or officers who were found to be liable in a suit brought by or on be-
half of the corporation, or who were found to have received an im-
proper personal benefit as a result of their conduct.
The statutes also generally provide that a corporation may make
advances for expenses incurred by a director or officer before the pro-
ceeding is completed and may purchase insurance on a director or
officer's behalf against any liability regardless of whether the corpora-
tion would have the power to indemnify him or her.
42
CHAPTER 7
CHANGES IN CORPORATE
STRUCTURE
43
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
44
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
mation the articles must contain. Generally, the articles must either
contain the plan of merger, consolidation, or share exchange or state
that the plan is being kept at an office of the survivor and include the
address and a statement that it will be made available to shareholders
of the constituents. The articles also generally include the number of
shares entitled to vote, and the number of votes cast for and against
the plan.
Parent-Subsidiary Mergers
State corporation laws have a special provision for when a parent cor-
poration that owns all or almost all of the shares of a subsidiary, de-
cides to merge that subsidiary into itself. In such a case, the parent
may enter into the merger without the approval of either corporations’
shareholders. This is called a short-form merger. Generally, the parent
will have to own at least 90% of the subsidiary’s stock to enter into a
short-form merger.
In a short-form merger, the plan of merger only has to be adopted
and approved by the board of directors of the parent corporation.
Approval of the merger by the subsidiary’s shareholders is considered
unnecessary because the parent’s share ownership is sufficient to en-
sure that it will be approved. Approval by the parent’s shareholders is
also unnecessary because the merger does not materially change their
rights.
Conversion
45
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
Domestication
Asset Sales
46
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
only. These lists generally provide that a corporation may change its
name, its period of duration, its purposes and the number of its au-
thorized shares. It may also change the number of par value shares,
change par value shares to no par value shares and no par value to par
value shares, change the designations, preferences, limitations or oth-
er rights of its shares, create or eliminate classes or series of shares,
increase or restrict its directors’ authority, etc.
Effecting Amendments
47
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
save money when the corporation has to order certified copies of its
articles and all amendments thereto.
A corporation’s board of directors may restate its articles of in-
corporation without shareholder approval as long as the restatement
does not include any substantive amendments. If the restatement in-
cludes one or more amendments, then shareholder approval will have
to be obtained. For the restatement to be effective, the corporation
must file articles of restatement with the state.
Dissolution
Voluntary Dissolution
48
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
may not be filed until all of the corporation’s debts, liabilities and
obligations have been taken care of and its remaining assets have
been distributed to its shareholders.
However, other states provide that articles of dissolution may be
filed at any time after dissolution was authorized. No notice of intent
is required. These states provide that a dissolved corporation contin-
ues its corporate existence but may not carry on any business except
that appropriate to wind up and liquidate its business and affairs.
Administrative Dissolution
Judicial Dissolution
49
Chapter 7 — Changes in Corporate Structure
50
CHAPTER 8
TAX AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
A corporation generally has to file returns and pay taxes to the federal
government, to its state of incorporation, and to those states and local-
ities in which it transacts business. Corporations may also be respon-
sible for collecting certain taxes paid by others and for remitting the
amounts collected to the government. Failure to comply with report-
ing or taxation requirements can result in penalties ranging from in-
terest and fines to the loss of the corporation’s right to exist or do
business in the state imposing the requirement.
There are many different tax and reporting requirements a corpo-
ration may be subject to, including the following:
There are two types of corporations for federal income tax purposes
—“Subchapter C” or “C corporations” and “Subchapter S” or “S
corporations.” A C corporation must file a federal tax return and pay
federal taxes on income it earned. A C corporation is subject to dou-
ble taxation as not only is the income received by the corpora-
tion taxed at the corporate level, any profit that is distributed to the
shareholders in the form of dividends is taxed again as personal in-
come.
An S corporation does not have to pay corporate income taxes.
Instead, its income and expenses are divided among and passed
through to its shareholders, who must then report the income and
expenses on their own tax returns.
In order to qualify as an S corporation, a corporation has to meet
various restrictions found in the tax law. The election of S corporation
status is made by filing a form with the Internal Revenue Service. All
of the corporation’s shareholders must consent to the election.
51
Chapter 8 — Tax and Reporting Requirements
Franchise Tax
52
Chapter 8 — Tax and Reporting Requirements
mine the extent of the corporation’s business in the state, and on that
basis, determine the state’s constitutionally taxable share.
The failure to pay a state’s franchise tax in a timely manner may
subject the corporation to severe penalties including the loss of its
right to exist or do business in the state.
Property Tax
53
Chapter 8 — Tax and Reporting Requirements
Most states have sales and use taxes. These are taxes imposed upon
the gross amount involved in certain transactions. Sales taxes are pri-
marily imposed on the retail sale of various types of tangible personal
property. Several states also impose sales taxes on rentals, sales of
services, admissions to sporting or entertainment events, and other
transactions.
Use taxes are imposed upon the use, storage, or consumption of
tangible personal property not subject to the sales tax. The use tax rate
is always the same as the sales tax rate.
Sales and use taxes must be paid by the consumer. However, it is
the retailer’s responsibility to collect the tax and remit the amount
collected to the state. Retailers are generally required to obtain a li-
cense or permit before doing business in the state.
54
Chapter 8 — Tax and Reporting Requirements
55
CHAPTER 9
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
Transacting Business
57
Chapter 9 — Foreign Corporations
Name
Qualification
58
Chapter 9 — Foreign Corporations
Post-Qualification Transactions
59
Chapter 9 — Foreign Corporations
Withdrawal
Revocation Of Authority
60
Chapter 9 — Foreign Corporations
61
CHAPTER 10
GOING PUBLIC; FEDERAL SECURITIES
LAWS
63
Chapter 10 — Going Public; Federal Securities Laws
The Securities Act of 1933 applies primarily to the initial issue of se-
curities. The ‘33 Act provides that no security may be offered or sold
64
Chapter 10 — Going Public; Federal Securities Laws
65
Chapter 10 — Going Public; Federal Securities Laws
ties. The ‘34 Act, on the other hand, deals primarily with subsequent
trading. Thus, provisions of the ‘34 Act apply to the corporation that
issues the securities, the exchanges where they are traded, and the
people who buy and sell them.
The ‘34 Act requires every corporation that issues securities reg-
istered with the SEC to file periodic reports. These reports include
Form 10-K, an annual report containing broad disclosures about the
corporation’s business and finances, Form 10-Q, a quarterly report
containing information about the corporation’s finances, and Form 8-
K, a report which the corporation must file shortly after certain events
including a change in control, an asset sale or purchase, a bankruptcy,
a change in accountants, a change in financial information, or a resig-
nation of directors.
The ‘34 Act also contains extensive antifraud provisions. Section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5 make it unlawful to make any untrue statement
of fact or to omit to state a material fact in connection with the pur-
chase or sale of a security. Actions against “insider trading” are based
upon the failure to disclose a material fact required by Rule 10b-5.
Section 14 and the rules promulgated thereunder govern the na-
ture of the disclosure required when proxies are solicited. For exam-
ple, Section 14(a) requires anyone soliciting a proxy to disclose to the
shareholder all of the material information about the issues being vot-
ed on. Rule 14(a)-9 prohibits the solicitation of proxies containing
any false or misleading statements of material fact.
Another antifraud provision, Section 16(b), is known as the
“short-swing rule.” This rule prohibits any officer, director, or 10%
shareholder of a corporation from profiting from the purchase and
sale of that corporation’s securities within a six-month period. The
corporation is entitled to recover the profits.
66
Chapter 10 — Going Public; Federal Securities Laws
67
GLOSSARY
69
Glossary
Assumed Name—A name other than the true name, under which a
corporation or other business organization conducts business. Al-
so referred to as a fictitious name or a trade name.
Blue Sky Law—A term used to describe state laws and regulations
governing the issuance and sale of securities to residents of the
state and the licensing and regulation of securities brokers and
dealers.
70
Glossary
71
Glossary
72
Glossary
73
Glossary
Par Value—A minimum price of a share below which the share can-
not be issued, as designated in the articles of incorporation.
74
Glossary
75
Glossary
76
Glossary
77
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