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Corporate Law
What is
business or corporate law?
Business law
encompasses rules, statutes, codes, and
regulations that are established which govern
commercial relationships and provide a legal
framework within which businesses may be
conducted and managed. It is highly diverse
and includes areas such as:
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Banking and
finance law,
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Business formation and
organization,
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Business negotiations,
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Business planning,
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Transactional business
law,
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Acquisition,
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Merger,
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Divestiture,
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Sale of businesses, and
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Business litigation.
What is
involved in properly setting up and
maintaining your business as a corporation?
You should contact an experienced business
attorney at Hatch, Little & Bunn, LLP and a certified public accountant to be sure
that corporate formation and maintenance are
handled properly. The attorney will draw up
articles of organization with language to
protect you from personal liability.
What is a
Limited Liability Company and how is it set
up?
Your business may have the flexibility of
a partnership and the legal protection of a
corporation if it is a limited liability
company ("LLC"). The LLC uses an
operating agreement, similar to a partnership
agreement, to control business, financial and
tax provisions. The operating agreement may be
oral, although it should be in writing and
signed by all the LLC's members. Through its
provisions, the operating agreement determines
whether the LLC is taxed as a partnership or
corporation.
What are the possible consequences of being
personally liable for business debts and obligations?
Personal liability opens the individual to
claims for a wide range of business
obligations. Most people realize that personal
liability may extend to business losses, but
other obligations may also reach individuals,
including:
- Damage awards in lawsuits,
- Tax deficiencies and penalties, and
- Back
wages and benefit payments.
The limited
liability offered by incorporation shelters
business owners from personal liability. Some
insurance can also help cover business owners,
directors, and officers. However, if an owner
or director performs certain personal acts,
behaves illegally, or fails to uphold
statutory requirements for corporate status,
he or she may face personal liability despite
the corporate shelter.
How often
should a corporation hold meetings and update
its minutes?
Any time a corporation undertakes
a major change or transaction, it should be
reflected in its minutes. In addition,
meetings of shareholders and directors should
take place at least annually if for no other
reason than to elect new officers and
directors. Failure to adhere to the formality
of regular meetings can jeopardize the
corporation's ability to shield its officers,
directors and shareholders from personal
liability for the corporation's actions.
Is it a good
idea to have a Buy-Sell Agreement for a
corporation?
If a corporation has more than
one shareholder, a buy-sell agreement is
recommended. A shareholder's death, divorce,
disability or termination of employment can
create serious problems for a corporation and
its other shareholders. A buy-sell agreement
can help minimize these problems by describing
what will happen in those events. Similar
provisions are recommended for partnership
agreements and operating agreements for
limited liability companies.
Can
corporations avoid consumer class actions?
Corporations often use arbitration clauses in
consumer sales agreements in order to limit
the types of dispute resolution available
should difficulties arise. Such a clause
requires that the parties to the agreement
resolve any disputes through arbitration.
Since a class action lawsuit involves direct
judicial oversight, arbitration clauses thwart
the development of a consumer class. Instead,
each individual consumer must pursue his or
her own arbitration procedure against the
contracting business.
What is a
breach of contract and what damages can I
recover in the event of a breach of contract?
Failure to perform as specified in a contract,
or provisions of a contract, without legal
excuse is a breach of contract. The following
damages can be recovered in the event of
breach of contract:
- Compensatory Damages -
money to reimburse you for costs to compensate
for your loss.
- Consequential and Incidental
Damages - money for losses caused by the
breach that were foreseeable.
- Attorney fees
and costs - only recoverable if expressly
provided for in the contract.
- Liquidated
Damages - these are damages specified in the
contract that would be payable if there is a
fraud.
- Specific Performance - a court order
requiring performance exactly as specified in
the contract.
- Punitive Damages - this is
money given to punish a person who acted in an
offensive manner in an effort to deter the
person and others from repeated occurrences of
the wrongdoing.
- Rescission - the contract
is canceled and both sides are excused from
further performance and any money advanced is
returned.
- Reformation - the terms of the
contract are changed to reflect what the
parties actually intended.
What types of
legal procedures should corporations maintain?
Once incorporated, an ongoing business's
obligations include:
- Obtain federal and
state tax identification numbers, and file tax
returns annually,
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If a public company, issue shares of stock
as mandated by the articles of incorporation
and securities laws of the business,
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Establish and maintain corporate records,
including accounting ledgers, shareholder
records, and corporate minute books,
- Initial meeting of the board
of directors to discuss business plans, and
- Maintain annual registration with the state
government as required by law.
Do
shareholders have any legal responsibility to
one another?
The traditional legal view states
that shareholders have no special
responsibilities to one another. In closely
held businesses, however, majority
shareholders can damage the interests of small
shareholders. Since most investors do not want
to buy closely held shares, minority
shareholders have few options when their
interests are compromised. In response, courts
developed fiduciary duties among shareholders
of closely held businesses. Contact at
Hatch, Little & Bunn, LLP to discuss your
shareholder responsibilities.
How do I
terminate my LLC?
Limited liability companies
are more fragile than corporate business
organizations. As with partnerships, an
outside occurrence can signal the end of a
limited liability company's existence. A
limited liability company formally terminates
if an owner experiences:
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Death,
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Retirement from the company,
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Resignation
from the company,
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Personal bankruptcy, or
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Expulsion from the company by the other
owners.
Once
dissolution is brought on by one of these
events, the remaining members typically must
wrap up the company's remaining obligations
and terminate the organization. However, if
two or more members remain, they can avoid
termination by agreeing to continue the
business.
How do two
corporations merge to form one company?
Generally, the board of directors for each
corporation must pass a resolution adopting a
plan of merger that specifies:
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The names of
the corporations that are involved,
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The
name of the proposed merged company,
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The
manner of converting shares of both
corporations, and
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Any other legal
provisions to which the corporations agree.
Each
corporation notifies all of its shareholders
that a meeting will be held to approve the
merger. If the proper number of shareholders
approves the plan, the directors sign the
papers and file them with the state. The
secretary of state issues a certificate of
merger to authorize the new corporation.
Do I need a
lawyer to create a partnership agreement?
A
partnership agreement allows you to structure
your relationship with your partners in a way
that suits your business. You and your
partners can establish the shares of profits
(or losses) each partner will take, the
responsibilities of each partner, what will
happen to the business if a partner leaves and
other important guidelines. If you and your
partners do not spell out your rights and
responsibilities in a written partnership
agreement, you will be ill equipped to settle
conflicts when they arise, and minor
misunderstandings may erupt into full-blown
disputes. Hiring an experienced Hatch, Little & Bunn, LLP
attorney to handle the
drafting of your partnership agreement is
advisable. We can help you understand the
legal jargon and solve disagreements. Contact
us today.
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