Shareholders Flashcards

1
Q

Close Corporation

A

A close corporation is a corporation that has few shareholders and that is not publicly traded.

⇒ Close corporations are often S Corporations: (1) Fewer than 100 shareholder; (2) all shareholders are U.S. citizens or residents; (3) not publicly traded.

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2
Q

Shareholder Management Agreement

A

In general, shareholders do not manage the corporation; the board does. However, shareholders in a close corporation may enter into a shareholder management agreement to set up an alternative management scheme. There are two ways to do this:

  1. The shareholder management agreement is contained in the articles of incorporation and unanimously approved by shareholders;
  2. By a unanimous written shareholder agreement.
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3
Q

If a shareholder agreement applies to a close corporation, who owes fiduciary duties?

A

Whoever manages the corporation owes duties.

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4
Q

Do shareholders owe each other fiduciary duties?

A

In general, shareholders don’t owe each other fiduciary duties. However, some states impose fiduciary duties on shareholders in a close corporation. In this case, a shareholder may sue other shareholders for oppression.

⇒ Notice that this is only available in a close corporation because shares are not publicly traded. Thus, oppressed shareholders can’t simply sell to free themselves of the situation.

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5
Q

Are shareholders liable for corporate obligations?

A

In general, shareholders are not liable for corporate obligations. They may be liable if the corporation is a close corporation and the plaintiff succeeds in piercing the corporate veil.

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6
Q

Piercing the Corporate Veil

A

A plaintiff may pierce the corporate veil and hold the shareholders of a close corporation liable for corporate obligations if:

  1. The shareholders abused the privilege of incorporation; and
  2. Fairness requires holding the shareholders liable.

Courts are more likely to pierce the corporate veil in favor of a tort victim than to enforce a contract.

⇒ Courts may pierce the corporate veil when the corporation is an alter ego for the shareholders or when the shareholder undercapitalize the corporation when formed.

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7
Q

Derivative Suit

A

A derivative suit is a suit brought by a shareholder to enforce a corporate claim.

  • If the shareholder wins, the corporation takes the money from the judgment, although the shareholder takes reasonable litigation costs.
  • If the shareholder loses, the shareholder is not entitled to reimbursement by the corporation for litigation expenses.
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8
Q

Requirements for Shareholder Derivative Suit

A

In order to bring a shareholder derivative suit:

  1. The shareholder must have owned stock when the claim arose;
  2. The shareholder must adequately represent the corporation’s interests;
  3. The shareholder must make written demand on the corporation, unless demand would be futile, such as when the derivative suit is against the directors;
  4. The corporation is joined as a defendant​.
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9
Q

How may a corporation respond to a derivative suit?

A

If a shareholder files a derivative suit, independent directors may conduct an independent investigation to determine whether the suit is in the corporations best interests.

If the “special litigation committee” concludes that the suit isn’t in the corporation’s best interest, they may dismiss the suit. The court will approve if (1) those recommending are truly independent and (2) they made a reasonable investigation.

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10
Q

Which shareholders are entitled to vote?

A

A shareholder is entitled to vote if they own outstanding stock on the record date.

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11
Q

Requirements for a Valid Proxy

A

To be valid, a proxy must be:

  1. In writing;
  2. Signed by the record shareholder (note that an email is sufficient);
  3. Directed to the secretary of the corporation;
  4. Authorize another person to vote the shares.
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12
Q

How long is a proxy valid for?

A

11 months.

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13
Q

How may a proxy be revoked?

A

A proxy may be revoked:

  1. In writing to the corporation’s secretary;
  2. By attending the shareholder meeting and voting.
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14
Q

How can a shareholder create an irrevocable proxy?

A

A shareholder may create an irrevocable proxy by:

  1. Satisfying the requirements for a valid proxy;
  2. Specifying that the proxy is irrevocable;
  3. Ensuring that the proxy-holder has an interest other than voting in the share, such as an option to purchase the shares.
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15
Q

Requirement for a Valid Pooling Agreement

A

A pooling agreement is valid if it is (1) in writing and (2) signed.

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16
Q

Annual Shareholder Meeting

A

An annual shareholder meeting must take place within 15 months of the previous annual shareholder meeting.

17
Q

Special Shareholder Meeting

A

A special shareholder meeting may be called by:

  1. The board;
  2. The president;
  3. The holders of 10 percent of outstanding shares;
  4. Anyone authorized by the bylaws.

Notice: Notice must be given to shareholders 10-60 days before the vote. A shareholder may waive a violation expressly or by attending the meeting without objecting at the outset.

18
Q

What do shareholders vote on?

A

Shareholders vote to elect directors, to remove directors, and on fundamental corporate changes recommended by the board.

19
Q

Quorum Requirement at Shareholder Meeting

A

At a shareholder meeting, quorum is a majority of outstanding shares. Unlike a director meeting, quorum is not broken if shareholders leave during a meeting.

20
Q

Voting Requirements:

  1. Elect a director?
  2. Remove a director?
  3. Other matters?
A
  1. Directors are elected by plurality.
  2. Directors are removed by a majority of the shares entitled to vote.
  3. Other matters are controlled by a majority of the shares that actually vote.
21
Q

Cumulative Voting

A

In a cumulative voting scheme, shareholders are entitled to votes equal to the number of shares they hold multiplied by the number of directors the shareholders will elect. Shareholders may allocate their votes however they please. The directors are ranked according to the number of votes they recieved and alloted places as directors accordingly.

22
Q

When may a restriction on stock transfers be enforced?

A

A restriction on stock transfer may be enforced if it is:

  1. Not an undue restriction on alienation;
  2. It is prominently noted on the stock certificate, or the shareholder has actual knowledge of the restriction.

Rights of first refusal are generally okay.

23
Q

Types of Distributions

A
  1. Dividends;
  2. Repurchase shareholder’s stock;
  3. Redeem stock at the price set in the articles of incorporation.
24
Q

When do distributions occur?

A

Distributions occur at the board’s discretion. Shareholders may force a distribution only if they can make a very strong showing of abuse of discretion.

25
Q

Which shareholders recieve a distribution?

A

Preferred shareholders are paid first according to the terms of their preferrence. Common stock is paid the remainder proportionally.

26
Q

What funds may be used to make a distribution?

A

A corporation may not make a distribution if it is insolvent or if making a distribution would render the corporation insolvent.

A corporation is insolved if it is unable to pay its debts or its liabilities exceed its assets.

27
Q

Who is liable for an improper distribution?

A

Directors are jointly and severally liable for an improper distribution.