Indiana Corporations Law – Flashcards

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question
Where does the regulation for corporations come from?
answer
The Indiana business corporation law
question
What is a requirement for the formation of a corporation?
answer
(i) People (ii) Paper (iii) Act
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Who are the people needed to form a corporation?
answer
A corporation only needs an incorporator(s) who sign and file the articles and call first meeting of shareholders
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What papers are needed for the formation of a corporation?
answer
(i) Articles of incorporation; (ii)Statement of purpose and duration; (iii) Capital structure or stock
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What information is included in the articles of incorporation?
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(i) Corporate name, which must be distinguishable from other corporations and contain the words: (a) Corporate, (b) Incorporation, (c) Limited, (d)company; (ii) Corporate address;(iii) Names and address of incorporators; (iv) Address of a registered office in Indiana; (v) Name of a registered agent in Indiana at that office
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What is the purpose of the articles of incorporation?
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(i) Creates a contract between the corporation and shareholders; (ii) Creates a contract between the corporation and the state
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If a corporation does not have a statement of purpose, what is its default purpose?
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In Indiana every corporation has the purpose of engaging in any lawful business, unless a more limited purpose is stated in the articles
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What is the ultra vires rule?
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Typically if a corporation has a specific statement of purpose they must abide by the purpose. If they choose to go beyond the statement of purpose they are committing an ultra vires act, or an act beyond the scope of the articles The corporation could void the contract as beyond its capacity, however it is mostly dead now
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What stock information must a corporation include when it incorporates?
answer
The corporation must include: (i) # of authorized shares; (ii) Information on # of stocks; (iii) Voting rts;(iv) Preferences if sep. classes of stock exist; (v) Must designate one or more classes of stock with unltd voting rights; (vi) Must designate one or more classes entitled to receive the asset on dissolution
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What is issued stock?
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The number of shares the corporation actually sells
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What is outstanding stock?
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Shares that have been issued and not reacquired by the corporation
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What acts are required to create a corporation?
answer
The incorporator must file articles with the sec. of state. Acceptance by the sec of state is conclusive proof of valid formation and corp existence begins when the articles are file. Subscribers hold org meetings, where bd of directors are elected, the bd selects officers and adopts any bylaws and conducts other appropriate bus
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What governs the corporations?
answer
Corporations are creatures of statute and are governed by the laws of the state, or the Indiana business corporation law
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What is the liability of a corporation?
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A corporation is a separate legal person and can be sued and can sue. The officers and directors are generally not personally liable for debts or torts of the corporation
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What are the liabilities of shareholders in a corporation?
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Shareholders are not personally liable for debts or torts of the corporation, or they have limited liability and are generally only liable to the extent of their investment into the corporation
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What is the relationship between the corporation and its shareholders?
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The corporation and its shareholders have a contract relationship in which the articles, bylaws, provisions of stock certificates and the IBCL are embodied
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What other circumstances may a corporation be found even if it fails to properly file?
answer
i. De facto corporation ii. Corporation by estoppels
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What is a de facto corporation?
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In order to be a de facto corporation one must: i. Have a relevant incorporation statute (IBCL) ii. The parties made a bona fide attempt to comply with it; and iii. Some exercise of corporate power
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What is a corporation by estoppels?
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If an entity deals with a business as a corporation, relying only on the credit of the corporation, the entity is stopped from denying the business's corporate status.
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What is the liability for acting as a corporation when none exists?
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The persons purporting to act as a corporation knowing that no corporation exists are jointly and severally liable for all resulting liabilities
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What are important factors about a corporations bylaws?
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(i) corp formation does not require adoption of bylaws; (ii) Incorporators or bd of directors are the ppl who adopt the initial bylaws; (iii) Only bd of directors can repeal or amend the bylaws; (iv) article controls in conflicts b/w bylaw and artciles; (v) Bylaws can contain any provision consistent with the IBCL; (vi) Bylaws are part of the k between corp and SH
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When will courts interfere with internal management?
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Typically courts will not interfere with the internal management contained in a corporation's bylaws unless personal liberty or property rights are jeopardized
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What is a promoter?
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A promoter is a person acting on behalf of a corporation not yet formed, and undertakes to bring about the existence of the corporation
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What is the liability of a corporation on preincorporation contracts?
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A corporation is not liable on pre-incorporation contracts until it accepts the contract by adoption or ratification (this can be express or implied)
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What liability does the promoter have on pre-incorporation contracts?
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Unless the contract clearly provides otherwise, the promoter remains liable on pre-incorporation contracts until there has been an agreement of the promoter, corporation and the other contracting party that the corporation will replace the promoter under the contract (this is considered novation)
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What relationship does the promoter have to the pre-incorporated entity?
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A fid relationship to the corp to be created, and its SHs:(i) If a promoter sells property to the corp which was acq'd pre-promoter, entitled to FMV;(ii) If the promoter sells property to the corp which was acq'd post-promoter, entitled to purchase price;(iii) A corp is not liable to the promoter for compensation unless it is expressly agreed
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What is a foreign corporation?
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A corporation that is incorporated outside of Indiana, and transacting business means the regular course of intrastate business activity, not occasional or sporadic activity
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What is required to transact business in Indiana?
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i. Must obtain a certificate of authority from secretary of state and ii. appoint a registered agent and maintain a registered office in Indiana
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What happens if a foreign corporation transact business in Indiana without qualifying?
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There are civil fines up to $10,000 and the corporation cannot sue in state, but can be sued
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What is issuance of stock?
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Issuance of stock occurs when the corporation sells or trades its own stock, as a way to raise capital for the corporation
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What are subscriptions?
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A subscription is a written offer to buy stock from a corporation
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What is a subscriber?
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A subscriber is a person who agrees in writing to purchase shares of stock either before or after incorporation
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What is the revocability of a subscription?
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Generally, subscriptions are irrevocable for six months unless provided otherwise
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When is a subscriber obligated under a subscription agreement?
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A subscriber is obligated by the subscription agreement only when the board accepts the subscription
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What kind of consideration must the corporation receive when it issues stock?
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The board of directors have broad discretion to issue shares in exchange for any tangible or intangible or benefit If the stock is issued for a promise to render services or a promissory note, then it must be reported to shareholders
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What occurs once the shares are issued?
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The shares are considered fully paid and non assessable and the shareholder is only liable for the payment of any consideration
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What are preemptive rights in stocks?
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Preemptive right is the right of an existing shareholder to maintain its percentage of ownership by buying stock whenever there is a new issuance of stock in the corporation
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When do preemptive rights exist?
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Preemptive rights only exist if it is provided for by articles, the bylaws, or by contract
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What is required to issue stocks properly?
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Shares of corporate stock may, but need not, be represented by certificates. If no certificates are issued, the shareholder must be given written information stating number, name and class of stock
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What other classes of stock are available?
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i. Fractional shares - these only have voting rights ii. Scrip - these are non-voting fractional shares that may be accumulated to make a whole share
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When is a corporation required to have a board of directors?
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In general, a corporation must always have a board of directors; however, a corporation of 50 or fewer shareholders may dispense with the board
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How many members of the board of directors is required for a corporation?
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One or more adult natural persons with the number specified in or fixed in accordance with the articles or bylaws
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How are directors elected and how long are their terms?
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The shareholders elect the directors at the annual meeting. Directors hold office until their term expires and their successor is elected. Unless otherwise provided in the bylaws, directors are elected by a plurality of the votes
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Who selects the person who fills a vacancy on the board?
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The board of directors selects the person to fill the vacancy, if less than quorum is available then it is by majority vote, unless otherwise provided
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May director terms be staggered?
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Yes, the articles of incorporation may, but need not, authorize staggered terms by dividing directors into two or three groups
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What ways may the board take valid action?
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i. Unanimous written consent to act without a meeting; or ii. A meeting at which a quorum is present NOTE: conference calls qualify as a meeting if all directors can hear each other simultaneously, as being present
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What notice is required for a director's meeting?
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The notice requirement may be defined in the bylaws, but at least 48 hours notice is required for special meetings, failure to give can be waived in writing or by attending without objection
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How many board members is required to create a quorum?
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A quorum requires a majority of all directors to do business unless a different percentage is required by the by laws, however, this can never be less than 1/3. If a quorum is present, however, passing a resolution requires only a majority vote of those present
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When can directors be removed from the board?
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Directors can be removed with or without cause by the board of directors, or as otherwise provided in the articles or bylaws
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What is the role of the board of directors?
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All corporate authority must be exercised by or under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the corporation must be managed by, the board of directors
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What can't the board delegate to a committee?
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i. Amending articles or bylaws ii. Fill vacancies on the board iii. Declare distributions to shareholders iv. Recommend fundamental corporate changes v. Issue shares vi. Change share rights
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What is proper board of director compensation and how is it determined?
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The board may fix its own compensation, but it must be reasonably proportioned to the services and the corporations ability to pay - if not, waste of corporate assets and breach of duty of loyalty might be brought against the board
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What duty of care does the board have to the corporation?
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Directors must discharge their duties in good faith, with the care an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under similar circumstances, and in a manner the director reasonably believes to be in the corporation's best interest
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What is the business judgment rule?
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Directors are not liable for any action taken, or any failure to act, unless director failed to perform to the standard of an ordinarily prudent person and the failure constitutes willful misconduct or recklessness
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Who can directors rely on for reasonable investigations? (5)
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i. Officers ii. Employees iii. Legal counsel iv. Accountants v. Committees of the board
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What may the board take into account when determining the best interest of the corporation? (6)
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i. Shareholders ii. Employees iii. Suppliers iv. Customers v. Communities where facilities are located vi. And other pertinent factors
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What is the duty of loyalty required by the board of directors?
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Directors of a corporation act in a fiduciary capacity. They must act in good faith and with a reasonable belief that what they do is in the best interest of the corporation
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What is the standard when a director is part of an interested transaction with the corporation?
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The interested director transaction is voidable unless the director shows: (i)The deal was fair to the corporation when entered; or; (ii) Director's interest and relevant facts were disclosed or known and the deal was approved by: (a) The board of directors; or (b) Shareholders NOTE: interested directors count towards quorum, but approval requires majority of directors without interest
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May a director compete with a corporation he is director of?
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No, however if a director does, the corporation has the remedy of a constructive trust of profits of competing venture
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What is the corporate opportunity doctrine?
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A director cannot usurp corporate opportunity for personal profit, unless the corporation is unable or unwilling to ttake it
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What is required for an opportunity to be a corporate opportunity?
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The opportunity must be within the corporate business line, else it is not a corporate opportunity. If it is a corporate opportunity, then financial inability is generally not a defense and the corporate has a remedy of constructive trust of any profits earned
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What directors are liable for the breach of loyalty?
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A director is presumed to have concurred with board action unless the director: i. Objects at the beginning of the meeting ii. Enters his or her dissent or abstention in the minutes; or iii. Delivers his or her written notice of dissent or abstention at the meeting
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When can directors not be liable for a passed resolution?
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i. The director is absent from the meeting ii. There was good faith reliance on a. Book value of assets; or b. Opinion of a competent employee, officer, professional, or committee of which the director relying was not a member; or c. Financial statements by auditors
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What are the requirements for officers of a corporation?
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i. Officers are agents of the corporation iii. The corporation must have at least one person serving as an officer iv. The corporation must delegate to one of the corporate officers the duties of secretary of the corporation
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How are officers selected and removed from office?
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i. Officers are selected and removed by the board of directors ii. An officer may resign at any time by delivering notice
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What are the outcomes when an officer or director seeks indemnification for costs, attorneys' fees or fines ?
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i. No indemnification when the board is held liable to court or received benefits ii. Mandatory indemnification when the defendant is wholly successful in defending the action
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Under what actions is it permissible for a corporation to indemnify the officer or director?
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i. When there is a situation that might lead to settlement ii. When the individual acted in good faith and with the reasonable belief that actions were in the company's best interest, or if criminal, reasonably believed conduct was lawful
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Who determines if a person is indemnified in a permissive situation?
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The disinterested board of directors or disinterested committee of two or more, or special legal counsel
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When will courts pierce the corporate veil?
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Courts are reluctant to disregard corporate existence, but will pierce the veil where the corporate form is so ignored, controlled or manipulated that it is the mere instrumentality of another, and the misuse constitutes fraud or injustice
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What factors do the court look at when analyzing whether to pierce the corporate veil or not?
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(i) Public or closed corporation; (ii) Under capitalization; (iii) Formalities of corporation has been disregarded; (iv) Fraudulent misrepresentation; (v) Identity of shareholders, officers, directors; (vi) Co-mingling of funds; (vii) Absence of corporate records; (viii) Payment of individual obligations
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When do shareholders manage the corporation, instead of directors?
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Shareholders may manage the corporation directly if there are 50 or fewer shareholders. The shareholders can eliminate the board and run the corporation
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What duty do managing shareholders have to the corporation?
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The shareholders owe a duty of care and loyalty. Shareholders in a closed corporation owe each other fiduciary duties under the standard of utmost good faith and loyalty
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What is a derivative suit?
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A derivative suit is an action for an injury to the corporation, where the shareholder is suing to enforce the corporation's claim NOTE: always ask if the corporation could have brought the suit?
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What are the policy reasons behind derivative suits?
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i. Avoid multiple suits for the same issue ii. Protects creditors iii. Protects all shareholders iv. Adequately compensates all shareholders
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What are the implications of a derivative suit?
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i. If the shareholder is successful, then they can receive costs and attorney fees from the corporation ii. If the shareholder is unsuccessful, they will not be able to recover costs' and attorneys' fees and might be liable to the corporation for their costs' and attorneys' fees
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What is required for a shareholder to bring a derivative suit?
answer
(i). SH adequately & fairly rep int of SHs (ii) person owned stock @ T claim arose or got by operation of law from someone who did, & own stock throughout the litigation (iii) person files verified complaint; (iv) person makes written demand on bd that corp bring suit, unless futile
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What must directors do when a demand for action is made by a shareholder?
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The bd may est a committee of 3 or more disinterested directors to review if the claim should be pursued: (i) determination of committee is binding unless, not disinterested no good faith; (ii) If suit is brought, will be dismissed if committee of disinterested directors determined in good faith not to pursue
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When is settlement permitted in a derivative suit?
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Settlement or dismissal is not permitted without court approval
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When can a shareholder bring a direct action against a corporation?
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This is limited to closed corporations and requires: i. There will not be exposure to multiple suits ii. There is not material prejudice to creditors; and iii. It will not interfere with a fair distribution among all parties
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Who can vote at a shareholder meeting?
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The record shareholder as of the record date has the right to vote
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Who is the record shareholder?
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The record shareholder is the person shown as the owner in the corporate records.
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What is the record date?
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The record date is a voter eligibility cut-off, upon death the shareholder's executor can vote for the shares, and the shareholder may vote by proxy
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What is a proxy?
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A proxy is a: i. Writing ii. Signed by record shareholder iii. Directed to secretary of corporation iv. Authorizing another to vote the shares
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What is required for a voting trust?
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(i) Written trust agreement controlling how the shares will be voted; (ii) Copy to corp w/ a beneficiary list; (iii) Xfer legal title of shares to the voting trustee; (iv) Orig SHs receive trust cert & retain all SH rights except for voting; (v) irrevocable for max of 10 years, unless coupled with an interest
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What is required for voting agreements?
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A written agreement under IBCL, enforceable among participants only
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When must shareholder meetings be held?
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An annual meeting must be held to elect directors. If it is not held, a shareholder can petition the court to order one after six months from end of fiscal year or 15 months from last meeting
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How are special shareholder meetings called?
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i. The board ii. Person designated in the articles or bylaws iii. Holders of at least 25% of the voting shares if corporation has 50 or fewer shareholders
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What is required in the notice for a shareholder meeting?
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i. When the meeting will take place ii. Where the meeting will take place iii. Purpose of the meeting
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What happens if notice is not given to all shareholders?
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The action taken at the meeting is void unless those not sent notice waived the notice effect
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What ways can shareholders take a valid corporate act?
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i. Unanimous written consent of the holders of all voting shares; or ii. A meeting at which a quorum is present a. Quorum is decided by the # of shares represented not the # of SHs, and req a majority of shares unless provided otherwise
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When may shareholders use cumulative voting?
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Cumulative voting is only available in voting for directors and only if provided for in the articles and bylaws. Cumulative voting is a device to give small shareholders a better chance of electing someone to the board
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How does cumulative voting work?
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Multiply the number of shares owned times the number of directors to be elected to decide the number of votes
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What is the rule for stock transfer restrictions?
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Stock transfer restrictions will be upheld provided that they are reasonable under circumstances, which means they are not an undue restraint on alienation
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What is required to make a stock transfer restriction valid?
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i. The restriction must be conspicuously noted on the certificate ii. The transferee has actual knowledge of the restriction
question
What records must be delivered for inspection when requested by a shareholder?
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(i) Articles and amendments; (ii) Bylaws and amendments; (iii) Communications to shareholders for last three years; (iv) Directors and officers names and addresses; (v) Every shareholder minute for three years and directors minutes that affect stock rights; (vi) Financial statements for last three years; (vii) Secretary of state biennial report
question
What must be delivered if a request is in good faith and with a proper purpose is made by a shareholder?
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i. Accounting records ii. Back shareholder minutes, all of them iii. Committee records iv. Director minutes, all of them v. Shareholder list, alphabetized by class
question
Where must the records on request and the records for good faith and proper purpose request be maintained?
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i. Records that must be provided upon request must be maintained at the corporation's principal office ii. The records that must be provided if good faith and a proper request are made must be maintained at any reasonable location
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When and how must the demand and inspection be made?
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The inspection must be made in writing at least five days before inspection, and the inspection must take place at the principal offices or any reasonable location
question
What happens if a corporation fails to provide the records on request?
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The demander is allowed attorney fees and court order for inspection
question
What is a distribution?
answer
Any payment to shareholders other than salary - can be cash or stock dividend, stock redemption or any other transfer of property for the benefit of shareholders
question
Who has the power to make distributions?
answer
The power to make distributions is within the board of directors
question
How can someone win an action to compel declaration of distribution?
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This is tough to win and requires: i. A very strong showing of abuse of discretion established by bad faith. Or ii. illegal conduct
question
What are classes of stock for dividend distribution purposes?
answer
i. Preferred (these get predefined amount before common shareholders get a cut) ii. Participating (they get preferred amount and participate equally in common share dividends) iii. Cumulative (continue to accrue dividends year to year until they are paid) iv. common
question
How does the board make determination for dividends?
answer
i. Board must determine the financial soundness of the corporation ii. A distribution may not be made, if the corporation is not able to pay its debts in due course, or total assets are less than sum of liabilities plus preferred shareholders' dissolution rights
question
What happens if the board makes dividend payments in violation of the solvency rule?
answer
The directors are personally liable to the corporation for the excess amount
question
What is the date of distribution of dividends?
answer
The board may fix a record date, declaration date and payment date for distributions. The record date is the date set for determining eligible shareholders. If no record date is set, then the date the board authorizes the distribution is used
question
Where may the source of distributions come from?
answer
Dividends are to be paid from unreserved and unrestricted earned surplus, and cannot be paid out of capital except in dissolution Dividends constitute the debt of corporation on par with general unsecured creditors
question
What is a fundamental corporate change?
answer
It is a change of extraordinary occurrences, that they generally require a board resolution to pass and approval by shareholders of the shares entitled to vote
question
What is the dissenter's rights of appraisal?
answer
The dissenting shareholder right of appraisal is the right of a shareholder to force the corporation to buy shares back at fair value
question
When will a shareholder have dissenting shareholder rights of appraisal?
answer
(i) Sale of sub assets in the ord course of biz (ii) Merger or consolidation of 2 or more corps (iii) Xfer of shares in a share exchange if the SHs corp is being acq'd; (iv) acq'r accorded voting rights and owns a maj of voting shares; (v) article or bylaws auth any other Xaction for which dissenter's rts are triggered
question
What actions must the shareholder take to perfect their dissenter's rights?
answer
(i) SH entitled to vote on event (ii) B4 SH vote, SH file w/ corp written notice of objection & intent demand payment; (iii) abstain or vote against change (iv) After receipt of dissenter's notice, make written demand to be bought out & deposit certs as req'd by notice; (v) The corp closely held
question
What is considered fair value for shares?
answer
The fair value is the value of shares immediately before the event occurs, or highest price paid in control share acquisition
question
What is required for a merger?
answer
(i) Bd of directors must approve of plan of merger, and submit it to SHs; (ii) SHs must approve the merger, from both corps; (iii) If approved, the articles of merger must be filed with sec of state; (iv) The surviving corp succeeds to all rts and liabilities of the constituent corps
question
When is shareholder approval not required for merger?
answer
No shareholder approval is required in short-form merger, where a 90% or more owned subsidiary is merged into a parent corporation, or where surviving corporation shareholders have same proportionate ownership and no more than 20% more issuable shares is created
question
What is required for transfer of all or substantially all of the assets not in the ordinary course of business?
answer
(i) Bd of directors resolution from both corps, & submittal to selling corp's SHs; (ii) Approval by selling corps SHs; (iii) File articles of exchange in share exchange; (iv) Acq'ing corp generally is not liable for debts of the acq'd corp unless the deal says otherwise or corp purchasing assets is merely a continuation of the selling corp
question
When does the control share acquisition rule apply?
answer
The rule applies only to non-publicly traded corps with: (i) 100 or more SHs; and (ii) Principal office or substantial assets in IN; and (iii) Either, [a] > than 10% of SHs in IN; or [b] > than 10% of share in IN; or, [c] 10,000 SHs in IN
question
What is the triggering event for control share acquisition?
answer
If a shareholder attempts to acquire shares in the corporation in any 90 day period which puts the shareholder over one fifth, one third or one half ownership interest, the shares acquired during the 90-day period are called control shares
question
What happens to control shares?
answer
Control shares are statutorily stripped of voting rights unless voting rights are restored by a vote of disinterested shareholders
question
What is a business combination?
answer
It is broadly defined to include any kind of transaction which would allow a potential acquirer to use the corporation's assets to finance an acquisition (leveraged buyout) There are no dissenter's rights for this
question
When does the business combination apply?
answer
i. Applies only to publicly traded corporations and is designed to prevent two tier or bust up takeovers ii. Applies to Indiana corporations with more than 100 shareholders that own a class of voting shares registered with the SEC
question
Who has the right to amend articles of incorporation?
answer
Generally the share holders
question
When may the board of directors amend the articles of incorporation without shareholder approval?
answer
Unless the article provides otherwise: i. Extend duration of the corporation ii. Delete initial directors iii. Delete the initial registered agent or office iv. Make minor name changes v. Cancel treasury shares vi. Increase common shares if percentage ownership remains the same
question
Do shareholders have dissenters rights?
answer
No, but if an amendment harms a class of stock, the amendment must be approved by the shares of that class itself as well as by the overall majority of all shares entitled to vote
question
What ways may a corporation dissolve?
answer
i. Voluntary ii. Involuntary iii. Administratively
question
How can a corporation voluntarily dissolve?
answer
i. If the corporation has not commenced business, a majority of the incorporators or the board of directors may dissolve ii. After business beings, corporation can dissolve upon recommendation of board and a majority vote of the shareholders
question
How may a corporation involuntarily dissolve?
answer
(i) SHs petition b/c (a) Bd deadlock harms corp or prevents conduct of biz (b) SH deadlock & failure to fill a vacant bd position for 2 terms (ii) corp insolvent & creditor has unsatisfied judgment against corp or corp commits debt in writing & corp insolvent; (iii) AG petition, if corp received articles by fraud or abused auth
question
How might a corporation be administratively dissolved?
answer
This must be done by the secretary of state for: i. Failure to deliver biennial report ii. Failure to pay taxes or penalties
question
After filing articles of dissolution, what are the wind up steps?
answer
i. Gather all assets ii. Convert them to cash iii. Pay creditors iv. Distribute remainder to shareholders pro rata by share unless there is a dissolution preference
question
How does a dissolved corporation dispose of claims prior to the SoL?
answer
i. Known claims - written notice to creditor stating amount of claim, if no objection within time set, the claim is fixed (must sue within 90 days) ii. Unknown claims - publishes notice in general circulation paper, claims are barred after 2 years from publicatioin
question
What is the order of distribution upon dissolution?
answer
i. First pay secured creditors ii. Second pay unsecured creditors (including unpaid dividends to shareholders) iii. Third pay preferred shareholders iv. Finally common shareholders
question
Where do rules for an LLC come from?
answer
The Indiana business flexibility act of 1993
question
What is the advantage of an LLC?
answer
i. Members get limited liability ii. It is a pass through tax treatment like a partnership or S Corp
question
How does one form an LLC?
answer
i. File articles of organization, have registered agent and location ii. Name must contain the phrase LLC, or limited liability company iii. May have one or more members
question
How is the management structured in an LLC?
answer
Management can be like a partnership or a corporation, members runs LLC in proportion to capital contributions unless otherwise provided in the operating agreement
question
What is the liability of an LLC?
answer
i. Profits/losses are split per the operating agreement, otherwise by proportion to capital contribution ii. Members get limited liability for all obligations, except their own torts iii. The LLC is vicariously liable under agency principals
question
How should one analyze a corporation question?
answer
(i) Legal func of the corp?; (ii) Doctrine of ltd liability ; (iii) Piercing corp veil (PUFFICAP); (iv) Records for SH inspection (ABCDEFS, ABCDS); (v) Fid duties of officers, directors and SH in closed corps; (vi) Derivative actions; (vii) SH dissenters rts available?; (viii) Parties bring action for dissolution; (ix) Differences between different business orgs
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