Law On Corporation
Law On Corporation
Law On Corporation
3. Unless otherwise provided (continuing in nature) in the proxy, it shall be valid only for
the meeting for which it is intended; AND
4. No proxy shall be valid and effective for a period longer than 5 years at any one time.
Voting Trust - It is an agreement whereby one or more stockholders transfer their shares
of stocks to a trustee, who thereby acquires for a period of time the voting rights (and/or
any other rights) over such shares; and in return, trust certificates are given to the
stockholder/s, which are transferable like stock certificates, subject, to the trust
agreement.
Cases when stockholders’ action is required -
i. By a Two-Thirds Vote
Corporate Act: Denial of pre-emptive
Salient Points: 1. Only if the AOI or amendment thereto denies
pre-emptive right
2. extends to shares issued in good faith in exchange for property
needed for corporate purposes
Corporate Act: Delegation of the power to Amend, Repeal or Adopt New
By-Laws
Salient Points: 1. Can be revoked by majority OCS
2. Non-voting shares cannot vote
Corporate Act: Removal of Directors/Trustees
ii. By a majority vote
Corporate Act: Fixing of compensations of directors
Salient Points: 1. Reasonable per diems
2. By-Laws may provide compensation
3. not more than 10% of the net income before income tax
Corporate Act: Adoption of By-Laws
Salient Points: Non-voting shares can vote
Corporate Act: Election of Directors/Trustees
Salient Points: 1. The highest number of votes get elected
2. cumulative voting
3. non-voting shares cannot vote
Corporate Act: Issued Price of No-Par value shares
Salient Points: Stockholders/Members shall vote BOD/BOT are not
authorized by the articles of incorporation and the by-laws to fix to fix the
price
iii. By cumulative vote
Corporate Act: Fixing the issued Price of No-Par value shares
If BOD is not authorized by the AOI
Corporate Act: Amendment or repeal of By-Laws or adoption of new
By-Laws
Salient Points: may be made by the Board only after due delegation by
the Stockholders
Corporate Act: Management Contract
Majority vote of BOD of both managing and managed.
Majority of OCS/members both managing and some cases 2/3 of
OCS
3. Proprietary Rights
a. Right to Dividends - That he is a STOCKHOLDER
1. Cash Dividends- declared the pro rata shares
2. Stock Dividends- may be rescind at any time before the actual
issuance of stock.
b. Right to Appraisal - Demand payment of the fair value of shares, dissenting from
a proposed corporate action
c. Right to Inspect
1. Director, trustee, stockholder or member
2. Voting trust certificate holder
3. Stockholder of a sequestered company
d. Pre-emptive right - share proportionately in any new issues of stock of the same
class
e. Right to vote
f. Right to first refusal - A stockholder who may wish to sell or assign his shares
must first offer the shares to the corporation or to the other existing stockholders
of the corporation, under terms and considerations which are reasonable, and
only when the corporation or the other stockholders do not or fail to exercise their
option, is the offering stockholder at liberty to dispose of his shares to third
parties.
4. Remedial Rights
a. Individual Sui - A suit instituted by a shareholder for his own
behalf against the corporation.
b. Representative Suit - A suit filed by a shareholder in his behalf and in behalf likewise of
other stockholders similarly situated and with a common cause against the corporation.
c. Derivative Suit - A suit filed in behalf of the corporation by its shareholders (not creditors
whose remedies are merely subsidiary such as in accion subrogatoria or in accion
pauliana) upon a cause of action belonging to the corporation, but not duly pursued by it,
against any person or against the directors, officers and/or controlling shareholders of the
corporation. If the suit is filed against a third person, the case is not infra-corporated in
nature. A derivative suit is a remedy designed by equity and has been the principal
defense of the minority stockholders against abuses by the majority. The real
party-in-interest in a derivative action is the corporation itself, not the shareholders who
have actually instituted it.
5. Obligations of a Stockholder
1. Liability to the corporation for unpaid subscription; (Secs. 67-70)
2. Liability to the corporation for interest on unpaid subscription if so required by the
by-laws; (Sec. 66)
3. Liability to the creditors of the corporation for unpaid subscription; (Sec. 60)
4. Liability for watered stock; (Sec. 65)
5. Liability for dividends unlawfully paid; (Sec. 43)
6. Liability for failure to create corporation. (Sec. 10)
6. Meetings
a. Regular/ Special
1. Regular- annually on a date fixed in the by-laws, any date in April
2. Special- any time deemed necessary or as provided in the by-laws
- When
1. Regular meeting- at least 2 weeks before the meeting
2. Special Meeting- at least one week.
- Notice
1. Issued by one who has authority to issue it
2. in writing
3. date, time and place unless otherwise provided in By-Laws
4. state business
5. at a certain time before scheduled
*Even if the meeting be improperly held or called, valid if within the
powers or authority of the corporation, all the stockholders or members of
the corporation are present or duly represented at the meeting.
b. Who calls the meetings - President of the corporation has authority to preside at all
meetings of stockholders
c. Quorum - Number of the membership of a collective body competent to transact its
business (Stockholders representing a majority of the outstanding capital stock)
d. Minutes of the Meeting - Keep and carefully preserve at its principal office a record of all
business transactions and minutes of all meetings of stockholders or members, board of
directors or trustees, set forth in detail, time and space of holding the meeting, how
authorized, the notice given, regular or special, every act done or ordered done at the
meeting.