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Articles of association

In corporate governance, a company's articles of association (AoA, called articles of incorporation in some jurisdictions) is a document which, along with the memorandum of association (in cases where it exists) form the company's constitution, and defines the responsibilities of the directors, the kind of business to be undertaken, and the means by which the shareholders exert control over the board of directors.

The 1870 articles of incorporation for the Standard Oil Company

Articles of association are very critical documents to corporate operations, as they may regulate both internal and external affairs.[1]

Articles of incorporation, also referred to as the certificate of incorporation or the corporate charter, is a document or charter that establishes the existence of a corporation in the United States and Canada. They generally are filed with the Secretary of State in the U.S. State where the company is incorporated, or other company registrar. An equivalent term for limited liability companies (LLCs) in the United States is articles of organization.

Contents

The articles can cover a medley of topics, not all of which is required in a country's law. Although all terms are not discussed, they may cover:

  • The issuing of shares (also called stock) and the classes of shares, such as preferred stock and common stock
  • The dividend policy and the transferability of shares
  • Valuation of intellectual rights
  • How the day-to-day operations of the company are conducted, such as by a board of directors.
  • The appointments of directors, which shows whether a shareholder dominates or shares equality with all of the contributors
  • Special voting rights of the Chairperson and their mode of election
  • Directors meetings, including the quorum number and the percentage of vote needed to pass a motion
  • Confidentiality and the founders' agreement with penalties for disclosure
  • First right of refusal for purchase rights and counter-bids by a founder.
  • Drag-along provisions, or when the majority shareholders force a sale on the other shareholders.
  • Determinations for the price paid for shares transferred following cessation of directorship or employment.[2]

Directors

A company is run by the directors, who are appointed by the shareholders. Usually, the shareholders elect a board of directors (BOD) at the annual general meeting (AGM), which may be statutory (e.g. India and the UK).

The number of directors depends on the size of the company and statutory requirements. The chairperson is generally a well-known outsider but they may be a working executive of the company, typically of an American company. The directors may, or may not, be employees of the company.

Shareholders

In present countries there are usually a few major shareholders who come together to form the company. Each usually holds the right to nominate, without objection of the other, a certain number of Directors who become nominees for the election by the shareholder body at the AGM. Shareholders may also elect Independent Directors (from the public). The Chair would be a person not associated with the promoters of the company, a person is generally a well-known outsider. Once elected, the BOD manages the company. The shareholders play no part till the next AGM/EGM.

Memorandum of association

The Objectives and the purpose of the company are determined in advance by the shareholders and the Memorandum of Association (MOA), if separate, which denotes the name of the company, its Head-Office, street address, and (founding) Directors and the main purposes of the company for public access. It cannot be changed except at an AGM or Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) and statutory allowance. The MOA is generally filed with a Registrar of Companies who is an appointee of the Government of the country. For their assurance, the shareholders are permit of the Memorandum of Association. Any matter in the Articles of Association not within the scope of the Memorandum of Association of the company is void.

Board meetings

The Board meets several times each year. At each meeting there is an 'agenda' before it. A minimum number of Directors (a quorum) is required to meet. This is either determined by the by-laws or is a statutory requirement. It is presided over by the Chairperson, or in their absence, by the Vice-Chair. The Directors survey their area of responsibility. They may determine to make a 'Resolution' at the next AGM or if it is an urgent matter, at an EGM. The Directors who are the electives of one major shareholder, may present their view but this is not necessarily so - they may have to view the Objectives of the company and competitive position. The Chair may have to break the vote if there is a tie. At the AGM, the various Resolutions are put to vote.

Annual general meeting

The AGM is called with a notice sent to all shareholders with a clear interval. A certain quorum of shareholders is required to meet. If the quorum requirement is not met, it is cancelled and another Meeting called. If it at that too a quorum is not met, a Third Meeting may be called and the members present, unlimited by the quorum, take all decisions. There are variations to this among companies and countries.

Decisions are taken by a show of hands; the Chair is always present. Where decisions are made by a show of hands is challenged, it is met by a count of votes. Voting can be taken in person or by marking the paper sent by the company. A person who is not a shareholder of the company can vote if they has the 'proxy', an authorization from the shareholder. Each share carries the number of votes attached to it. Some votes may be for the decision, others not.

Resolutions

There are two types of resolutions, known as an Ordinary Resolution and a Special Resolution.

A Special Resolution can be tabled at a Director's Meeting. The Ordinary Resolution requires the endorsement by a majority vote, sometimes easily met by partners' vote. The Special Resolution requires a 60, 70 or 80% of the vote as stipulated by the constitution of the company. Shareholders other than partners may vote. The matters which require the Ordinary and Special Resolution to be passed are enumerated in company or Corporate Law. Special Resolutions covering some topics may be a statutory requirement.

Various countries

The articles of association of a company, or articles of incorporation, of an American or Canadian company, are often simply referred to as articles (and are often capitalized as an abbreviation for the full term). The Articles are a requirement for the establishment of a company under the law of India, the United Kingdom, Nigeria, Pakistan and many other countries. In 1955, Together with the memorandum of association, they are the constitution of a company. The equivalent term for an LLC is articles of organization. Roughly equivalent terms operate in other countries, such as Gesellschaftsvertrag in Germany, statuts in France, statut in Poland,[3] Ukrainian: статут (Romanization: statut) in Ukraine, and Jeong-gwan in South Korea.

In South Africa, from the new Companies Act 2008 which commenced in 2011, articles and memoranda of association have been replaced by a "memorandum of incorporation" or "MoI". The MoI gives considerably more scope to vary how to the company is governed than the previous arrangement.[4][5]

Canada

Articles of Incorporation are appended to a Certificate of Incorporation and become the legal document that governs the corporation. In Canada, the process of incorporation can be done either at the federal or provincial level. Companies which incorporate with the federal government will generally need to register extra-provincially in the province that they elect to do business. Similarly, a provincial corporation may need to register extra-provincially if they are to have offices outside of their home province. Incorporated Canadian companies can generally use either Corp., Corporation, Inc., Incorporated, Incorporée, Limited, Limitée, Ltd., Ltée, Société par actions de régime fédéral, S.A.R.F, in their name, but this may vary from province to province.

The following information is required upon filing Articles of Incorporation in Canada:[6]

  • Name of Business (Numbered and Named)
  • Head Office
  • Names and Residencies of Incorporators
  • Proof of Canadian Citizenship
  • Corporate Share Structure
  • Anticipated Business Restrictions

United Kingdom

Model articles of associations (A.O.A.)

In the United Kingdom, model articles of association, known as Table A have been published since 1865.[7] The articles of association of most companies incorporated prior to 1 October 2009 – particularly small companies – are Table A, or closely derived from it. However, a company is free to incorporate under different articles of association, or to amend its articles of association at any time by a special resolution of its shareholders, provided that they meet the requirements and restrictions of the Companies Acts. Such requirements tend to be more onerous for public companies than for private ones. In Hong Kong, the Companies Registry provides four samples of model Articles of Association,[8] and they are known as Sample A, B, C, and D respectively.[9][10][11][12] Sample A and B are both designed for a private company (the most common company type), Sample C for a public company, and Sample D for a company limited by guarantee.

Companies Act 2006

The Companies Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 8 November 2006 and was fully implemented on 1 October 2009. It provides a new form of Model Articles for companies incorporated in the United Kingdom. Under the new legislation, the articles of association will become the single constitutional document for a UK company, and will subsume the majority of the role previously filled by the separate memorandum of association.[13]

United States

History of corporations in the United States

After fighting the American Revolution with Great Britain, the founders of the United States had a healthy fear of corporations after being exploited for years by those in England.[14] As a result, they limited the role of corporations by only granting select corporate charters, mainly to those that were beneficial to society as a whole.[14] For the better part of the first one hundred years of United States history, the power of corporations was severely limited as owners could not own any stock or property, make financial donations to a political party, and legislators could dissolve a corporation at any time relatively easily.[14] Corporations did not have the same corporate veil of protection that are enjoyed today.

The shift towards corporations gaining more power and control happened as the United States progressed towards industrialization. The American Civil War wildly enriched corporations and with this new wealth came bribes to legislators and courts that allowed for increased liability protection and other corporate protections.[14] The 1886 Supreme Court case Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad set the important legal precedent that corporations were “natural people” and as a result were protected under the 14th Amendment.[14]

General information

The articles of incorporation outline the governance of a corporation along with the corporate bylaws and the corporate statutes in the state where articles of incorporation are filed. To amend a corporate charter, the amendment must usually be approved by the company's board of directors and voted on by the company's shareholders.[15]: 10 

The articles of incorporation typically include the name of the corporation, the type of corporate structure (e.g. profit corporation, nonprofit corporation, benefit corporation, professional corporation), the registered agent, the number of authorized shares, the effective date, the duration (perpetual by default), and the names and signatures of the incorporators.[16]

The state fee to file articles of incorporation to incorporate a profit corporation range from $50 - $300, and to incorporate a nonprofit corporation range from $0 -$125.[17]

How to file

The first step in filing articles of incorporation is for the owners to decide which state to incorporate the business in. Once the state has been chosen, the documents with all the corporation’s information have to be filled out, whether physically or virtually. Once completed, these documents will be reviewed by the secretary of state’s office, and upon approval from the state government and payment of a filing fee, the company has officially become a legal corporation.[16]

The following information is required upon filing Articles of Incorporation in the United States:[16]

  • Name of the Business
  • Location of Business
  • Whether or not the Corporation is for profit
  • Names and Addresses of Incorporators
  • Names and Address of who will receive mail and where
  • Names and Addresses of Officers
  • A statement that summarizes the core purpose of the business
  • The number of authorized shares of stock
  • Other information may be required upon filing but this varies from state to state

Where to file

Many corporations file in the state in which they are doing business, although this is not required by law. Corporations doing business in multiple states often file articles in the particular state that is the most lenient on corporations. A majority of public corporations in the United States file in Delaware or Nevada, although Wyoming is a popular choice as well.

  • Delaware: Over 60% of Fortune 500 companies and 75% of new corporations every year are incorporated in the state of Delaware due to the state’s favorable corporate treatment.[18] The state’s unique court, the Court of Chancery, allows corporate disputes to be heard without a jury within a reasonable time compared to non-corporate disputes.[18] State corporate laws are very modern and specifically detail what a corporation is allowed to do, and as a result other states often try to emulate Delaware’s legal corporate model. There is even further protection for corporations via the Delaware Asset Protection Trust in which personal assets are protected in the event of litigation.[19] In order to abide by securities laws, some companies are even required to incorporate in Delaware.
  • Nevada: Despite having the highest registration fee in the United States and a negative stigma, Nevada is a very popular state for incorporation. The main reason for this is that the corporation does not have to pay any of the numerous state taxes.[20] Similar to Delaware, some companies are mandated to incorporate in the state in order to be in compliance with securities law. Filing in Nevada also affords the corporate owners privacy as the state does not require names to do so.[20] Unlike many other states, the corporation does not have to do business nor do any of the owners have to be a resident in the state to incorporate there.[20]
  • Wyoming: The standard filing fees owed in the process of incorporating are zero in Wyoming, and the only fee owed is minimal compared to other states.[19] Other favorable corporate laws include asset protection for owners as well as confidential information protection through requiring the usage of private data servers.[19] Being a United States citizen is not a prerequisite for incorporating in the state, although there are countries of origin where businesses are ineligible.[19] The state is one of the best in terms of fiscal health, and as a result corporation owners do not have to file personal income taxes.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Articles of Association".
  2. ^ "Memorandum and articles of association for UK limited companies". Quality Formations Blog. 24 April 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  3. ^ Articles of Agreement Law & Legal Definition
  4. ^ Delport, Piet "The New Companies Act Manual" (Lexis Nexis)
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 October 2016. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  6. ^ Government of Canada, Industry Canada. "How to incorporate a business". www.ic.gc.ca. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  7. ^ Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 - Table B
  8. ^ "Companies Registry - FAQ - Local Limited Companies - Incorporation".
  9. ^ http://www.cr.gov.hk/en/companies_ordinance/docs/AA_Sample_A.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ http://www.cr.gov.hk/en/companies_ordinance/docs/AA_Sample_B.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  11. ^ http://www.cr.gov.hk/en/companies_ordinance/docs/AA_Sample_C.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  12. ^ http://www.cr.gov.hk/en/companies_ordinance/docs/AA_Sample_D.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ Under the law prior to the 2006 Act, in the event of any inconsistency between the memorandum and the articles, the memorandum usually prevailed: see Ashbury v Watson (1885) 30 Ch D 376.
  14. ^ a b c d e "Our Hidden History of Corporations in the United States". Reclaim Democracy!. 1 February 2000. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  15. ^ Hirst, Scott (1 January 2017). "Frozen Charters". The Harvard Law School Program on Corporate Governance Discussion Paper. No. 2016-01.
  16. ^ a b c "What are Articles of Incorporation? | Harbor Compliance". www.harborcompliance.com. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  17. ^ Entity formation fees [1].
  18. ^ a b "Why do so many corporations choose to incorporate in Delaware?". WHYY. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  19. ^ a b c d e Giacopelli, James. "Council Post: The Benefits And Pitfalls Of Incorporating In Delaware, Nevada And Wyoming". Forbes. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  20. ^ a b c "Top 3 Best States to Incorporate a Business | LegalNature". www.legalnature.com. Retrieved 18 December 2020.

External links

  • Legislation.gov.uk
  • Companies House (for England, Wales and Scotland)
  • (Table A)

articles, association, articles, adopted, first, continental, congress, 1774, continental, association, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, t. For the articles adopted by the First Continental Congress in 1774 see Continental Association This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Articles of association news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In corporate governance a company s articles of association AoA called articles of incorporation in some jurisdictions is a document which along with the memorandum of association in cases where it exists form the company s constitution and defines the responsibilities of the directors the kind of business to be undertaken and the means by which the shareholders exert control over the board of directors The 1870 articles of incorporation for the Standard Oil Company Articles of association are very critical documents to corporate operations as they may regulate both internal and external affairs 1 Articles of incorporation also referred to as the certificate of incorporation or the corporate charter is a document or charter that establishes the existence of a corporation in the United States and Canada They generally are filed with the Secretary of State in the U S State where the company is incorporated or other company registrar An equivalent term for limited liability companies LLCs in the United States is articles of organization Contents 1 Contents 2 Directors 3 Shareholders 4 Memorandum of association 5 Board meetings 6 Annual general meeting 7 Resolutions 8 Various countries 8 1 Canada 8 2 United Kingdom 8 2 1 Model articles of associations A O A 8 2 2 Companies Act 2006 8 3 United States 8 3 1 History of corporations in the United States 8 3 2 General information 8 3 3 How to file 8 3 4 Where to file 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksContents EditThe articles can cover a medley of topics not all of which is required in a country s law Although all terms are not discussed they may cover The issuing of shares also called stock and the classes of shares such as preferred stock and common stock The dividend policy and the transferability of shares Valuation of intellectual rights How the day to day operations of the company are conducted such as by a board of directors The appointments of directors which shows whether a shareholder dominates or shares equality with all of the contributors Special voting rights of the Chairperson and their mode of election Directors meetings including the quorum number and the percentage of vote needed to pass a motion Confidentiality and the founders agreement with penalties for disclosure First right of refusal for purchase rights and counter bids by a founder Drag along provisions or when the majority shareholders force a sale on the other shareholders Determinations for the price paid for shares transferred following cessation of directorship or employment 2 Directors EditA company is run by the directors who are appointed by the shareholders Usually the shareholders elect a board of directors BOD at the annual general meeting AGM which may be statutory e g India and the UK The number of directors depends on the size of the company and statutory requirements The chairperson is generally a well known outsider but they may be a working executive of the company typically of an American company The directors may or may not be employees of the company Shareholders EditIn present countries there are usually a few major shareholders who come together to form the company Each usually holds the right to nominate without objection of the other a certain number of Directors who become nominees for the election by the shareholder body at the AGM Shareholders may also elect Independent Directors from the public The Chair would be a person not associated with the promoters of the company a person is generally a well known outsider Once elected the BOD manages the company The shareholders play no part till the next AGM EGM Memorandum of association EditThe Objectives and the purpose of the company are determined in advance by the shareholders and the Memorandum of Association MOA if separate which denotes the name of the company its Head Office street address and founding Directors and the main purposes of the company for public access It cannot be changed except at an AGM or Extraordinary General Meeting EGM and statutory allowance The MOA is generally filed with a Registrar of Companies who is an appointee of the Government of the country For their assurance the shareholders are permit of the Memorandum of Association Any matter in the Articles of Association not within the scope of the Memorandum of Association of the company is void Board meetings EditThe Board meets several times each year At each meeting there is an agenda before it A minimum number of Directors a quorum is required to meet This is either determined by the by laws or is a statutory requirement It is presided over by the Chairperson or in their absence by the Vice Chair The Directors survey their area of responsibility They may determine to make a Resolution at the next AGM or if it is an urgent matter at an EGM The Directors who are the electives of one major shareholder may present their view but this is not necessarily so they may have to view the Objectives of the company and competitive position The Chair may have to break the vote if there is a tie At the AGM the various Resolutions are put to vote Annual general meeting EditThe AGM is called with a notice sent to all shareholders with a clear interval A certain quorum of shareholders is required to meet If the quorum requirement is not met it is cancelled and another Meeting called If it at that too a quorum is not met a Third Meeting may be called and the members present unlimited by the quorum take all decisions There are variations to this among companies and countries Decisions are taken by a show of hands the Chair is always present Where decisions are made by a show of hands is challenged it is met by a count of votes Voting can be taken in person or by marking the paper sent by the company A person who is not a shareholder of the company can vote if they has the proxy an authorization from the shareholder Each share carries the number of votes attached to it Some votes may be for the decision others not Resolutions EditThere are two types of resolutions known as an Ordinary Resolution and a Special Resolution A Special Resolution can be tabled at a Director s Meeting The Ordinary Resolution requires the endorsement by a majority vote sometimes easily met by partners vote The Special Resolution requires a 60 70 or 80 of the vote as stipulated by the constitution of the company Shareholders other than partners may vote The matters which require the Ordinary and Special Resolution to be passed are enumerated in company or Corporate Law Special Resolutions covering some topics may be a statutory requirement Various countries EditThe articles of association of a company or articles of incorporation of an American or Canadian company are often simply referred to as articles and are often capitalized as an abbreviation for the full term The Articles are a requirement for the establishment of a company under the law of India the United Kingdom Nigeria Pakistan and many other countries In 1955 Together with the memorandum of association they are the constitution of a company The equivalent term for an LLC is articles of organization Roughly equivalent terms operate in other countries such as Gesellschaftsvertrag in Germany statuts in France statut in Poland 3 Ukrainian statut Romanization statut in Ukraine and Jeong gwan in South Korea In South Africa from the new Companies Act 2008 which commenced in 2011 articles and memoranda of association have been replaced by a memorandum of incorporation or MoI The MoI gives considerably more scope to vary how to the company is governed than the previous arrangement 4 5 Canada Edit Articles of Incorporation are appended to a Certificate of Incorporation and become the legal document that governs the corporation In Canada the process of incorporation can be done either at the federal or provincial level Companies which incorporate with the federal government will generally need to register extra provincially in the province that they elect to do business Similarly a provincial corporation may need to register extra provincially if they are to have offices outside of their home province Incorporated Canadian companies can generally use either Corp Corporation Inc Incorporated Incorporee Limited Limitee Ltd Ltee Societe par actions de regime federal S A R F in their name but this may vary from province to province The following information is required upon filing Articles of Incorporation in Canada 6 Name of Business Numbered and Named Head Office Names and Residencies of Incorporators Proof of Canadian Citizenship Corporate Share Structure Anticipated Business RestrictionsUnited Kingdom Edit Model articles of associations A O A Edit In the United Kingdom model articles of association known as Table A have been published since 1865 7 The articles of association of most companies incorporated prior to 1 October 2009 particularly small companies are Table A or closely derived from it However a company is free to incorporate under different articles of association or to amend its articles of association at any time by a special resolution of its shareholders provided that they meet the requirements and restrictions of the Companies Acts Such requirements tend to be more onerous for public companies than for private ones In Hong Kong the Companies Registry provides four samples of model Articles of Association 8 and they are known as Sample A B C and D respectively 9 10 11 12 Sample A and B are both designed for a private company the most common company type Sample C for a public company and Sample D for a company limited by guarantee Companies Act 2006 Edit The Companies Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 8 November 2006 and was fully implemented on 1 October 2009 It provides a new form of Model Articles for companies incorporated in the United Kingdom Under the new legislation the articles of association will become the single constitutional document for a UK company and will subsume the majority of the role previously filled by the separate memorandum of association 13 United States Edit History of corporations in the United States Edit After fighting the American Revolution with Great Britain the founders of the United States had a healthy fear of corporations after being exploited for years by those in England 14 As a result they limited the role of corporations by only granting select corporate charters mainly to those that were beneficial to society as a whole 14 For the better part of the first one hundred years of United States history the power of corporations was severely limited as owners could not own any stock or property make financial donations to a political party and legislators could dissolve a corporation at any time relatively easily 14 Corporations did not have the same corporate veil of protection that are enjoyed today The shift towards corporations gaining more power and control happened as the United States progressed towards industrialization The American Civil War wildly enriched corporations and with this new wealth came bribes to legislators and courts that allowed for increased liability protection and other corporate protections 14 The 1886 Supreme Court case Santa Clara County v Southern Pacific Railroad set the important legal precedent that corporations were natural people and as a result were protected under the 14th Amendment 14 General information Edit The articles of incorporation outline the governance of a corporation along with the corporate bylaws and the corporate statutes in the state where articles of incorporation are filed To amend a corporate charter the amendment must usually be approved by the company s board of directors and voted on by the company s shareholders 15 10 The articles of incorporation typically include the name of the corporation the type of corporate structure e g profit corporation nonprofit corporation benefit corporation professional corporation the registered agent the number of authorized shares the effective date the duration perpetual by default and the names and signatures of the incorporators 16 The state fee to file articles of incorporation to incorporate a profit corporation range from 50 300 and to incorporate a nonprofit corporation range from 0 125 17 How to file Edit The first step in filing articles of incorporation is for the owners to decide which state to incorporate the business in Once the state has been chosen the documents with all the corporation s information have to be filled out whether physically or virtually Once completed these documents will be reviewed by the secretary of state s office and upon approval from the state government and payment of a filing fee the company has officially become a legal corporation 16 The following information is required upon filing Articles of Incorporation in the United States 16 Name of the Business Location of Business Whether or not the Corporation is for profit Names and Addresses of Incorporators Names and Address of who will receive mail and where Names and Addresses of Officers A statement that summarizes the core purpose of the business The number of authorized shares of stock Other information may be required upon filing but this varies from state to stateWhere to file Edit Many corporations file in the state in which they are doing business although this is not required by law Corporations doing business in multiple states often file articles in the particular state that is the most lenient on corporations A majority of public corporations in the United States file in Delaware or Nevada although Wyoming is a popular choice as well Delaware Over 60 of Fortune 500 companies and 75 of new corporations every year are incorporated in the state of Delaware due to the state s favorable corporate treatment 18 The state s unique court the Court of Chancery allows corporate disputes to be heard without a jury within a reasonable time compared to non corporate disputes 18 State corporate laws are very modern and specifically detail what a corporation is allowed to do and as a result other states often try to emulate Delaware s legal corporate model There is even further protection for corporations via the Delaware Asset Protection Trust in which personal assets are protected in the event of litigation 19 In order to abide by securities laws some companies are even required to incorporate in Delaware Nevada Despite having the highest registration fee in the United States and a negative stigma Nevada is a very popular state for incorporation The main reason for this is that the corporation does not have to pay any of the numerous state taxes 20 Similar to Delaware some companies are mandated to incorporate in the state in order to be in compliance with securities law Filing in Nevada also affords the corporate owners privacy as the state does not require names to do so 20 Unlike many other states the corporation does not have to do business nor do any of the owners have to be a resident in the state to incorporate there 20 Wyoming The standard filing fees owed in the process of incorporating are zero in Wyoming and the only fee owed is minimal compared to other states 19 Other favorable corporate laws include asset protection for owners as well as confidential information protection through requiring the usage of private data servers 19 Being a United States citizen is not a prerequisite for incorporating in the state although there are countries of origin where businesses are ineligible 19 The state is one of the best in terms of fiscal health and as a result corporation owners do not have to file personal income taxes 19 See also EditBylaws List of company registers Articles of organization Certificate of incorporation Charter Collegium ancient Rome The Companies Model Articles Regulations 2008 Congressional charter Government sponsored enterprise Royal charter Mission statement Operating agreementNotes Edit Articles of Association Memorandum and articles of association for UK limited companies Quality Formations Blog 24 April 2017 Retrieved 22 November 2020 Articles of Agreement Law amp Legal Definition Delport Piet The New Companies Act Manual Lexis Nexis How to make your MOI mooi Archived from the original on 2 October 2016 Retrieved 26 August 2016 Government of Canada Industry Canada How to incorporate a business www ic gc ca Retrieved 18 December 2020 Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 Table B Companies Registry FAQ Local Limited Companies Incorporation http www cr gov hk en companies ordinance docs AA Sample A pdf bare URL PDF http www cr gov hk en companies ordinance docs AA Sample B pdf bare URL PDF http www cr gov hk en companies ordinance docs AA Sample C pdf bare URL PDF http www cr gov hk en companies ordinance docs AA Sample D pdf bare URL PDF Under the law prior to the 2006 Act in the event of any inconsistency between the memorandum and the articles the memorandum usually prevailed see Ashbury v Watson 1885 30 Ch D 376 a b c d e Our Hidden History of Corporations in the United States Reclaim Democracy 1 February 2000 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Hirst Scott 1 January 2017 Frozen Charters The Harvard Law School Program on Corporate Governance Discussion Paper No 2016 01 a b c What are Articles of Incorporation Harbor Compliance www harborcompliance com Retrieved 15 November 2020 Entity formation fees 1 a b Why do so many corporations choose to incorporate in Delaware WHYY Retrieved 18 December 2020 a b c d e Giacopelli James Council Post The Benefits And Pitfalls Of Incorporating In Delaware Nevada And Wyoming Forbes Retrieved 18 December 2020 a b c Top 3 Best States to Incorporate a Business LegalNature www legalnature com Retrieved 18 December 2020 External links EditLegislation gov uk Companies House for England Wales and Scotland Articles of Association Table A Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Articles of association amp oldid 1140262472, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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