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COMPANY LAW
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A company
is a form of business organization.
A company is a
corporation or, less commonly, an association,
partnership, or union that carries on an industrial
enterprise." Generally, a company may be a "corporation,
partnership, association, joint-stock company, trust,
fund, or organized group of persons, whether incorporated
or not, and (in an official capacity) any receiver,
trustee in bankruptcy, or similar official, or liquidating
agent, for any of the foregoing".
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In English law, and
therefore in the Commonwealth realms, a company is a form
of body corporate or corporation, generally registered
under the Companies Acts or similar legislation. It does
not include a partnership or any other unincorporated
group of persons.
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MEANING AND ETYMOLOGY
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A company can be defined as
an "artificial person", with a discrete legal entity,
perpetual succession and a common seal. It is not affected
by the death, insanity or insolvency of an individual
member.
The English word company
has its origins in the Old French military term compaignie
(first recorded in 1150), meaning a "body of soldiers",
originally taken from the Late Latin word companio
"companion, one who eats bread with you", first attested
in the Lex Salica as a calque of the Germanic expression
*gahlaibo (literally, "with bread"), related to Old High
German galeipo "companion" and Gothic gahlaiba "messmate".
By 1303, the word referred to trade guilds. Usage of
company to mean "business association" was first recorded
in 1553 and the abbreviation "co." dates from 1769.
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HISTORY
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According to one source,
"it may be formed by Act of Parliament, by Royal Charter,
or by registration under company law (referred to as a
limited liability or joint-stock company)." In the United
Kingdom, the main regulating laws are the Companies Act
1985 and the Companies Act 2006. Reportedly, "a company
registered under this Act has limited liability: its
owners (the shareholders) have no financial liability in
the event of winding up the affairs of the company, but
they might lose the money already invested in it". In the
USA, companies are registered in a particular
state Delaware being especially favoured and become
Incorporated (Inc).
In North America, two of
the earliest companies were The London Company (also
called the Charter of the Virginia Company of London) an
English joint stock company established by royal charter
by James I of England on April 10, 1606 with the purpose
of establishing colonial settlements in North America and
Plymouth Company that was granted an identical charter as
part of the Virginia Company. The London Company was
responsible for establishing the Jamestown Settlement, the
first permanent English settlement in the present United
States in 1607, and in the process of sending additional
supplies, inadvertently settled the Somers Isles, alias
Bermuda, the oldest-remaining English colony, in 1609.
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TYPES
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There are various types of
company that can be formed in different jurisdictions, but
the most common forms of company (generally formed by
registration under applicable companies legislation) are:
A company limited
by guarantee. Commonly used where companies are
formed for non-commercial purposes, such as clubs or
charities. The members guarantee the payment of certain
(usually nominal) amounts if the company goes into
insolvent liquidation, but otherwise they have no economic
rights in relation to the company. This type of company is
common in England.
A company limited
by shares. The most common form of company used
for business ventures. Specifically, a limited company is
a "company in which the liability of each shareholder is
limited to the amount individually invested" with
corporations being "the most common example of a limited
company." This type of company is common in England.
A company limited
by guarantee with a share capital. A hybrid
entity, usually used where the company is formed for
non-commercial purposes, but the activities of the company
are partly funded by investors who expect a return. This
type of company may no longer be formed in the UK,
although provisions still exist in law for them to exist.
A
limited-liability company. "A
company statutorily authorized in certain states that is
characterized by limited liability, management by members
or managers, and limitations on ownership transfer", i.e.,
L.L.C.
An unlimited
company with or without a share capital. A
hybrid entity, a company where the liability of members or
shareholders for the debts (if any) of the company are not
limited.
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LESS COMMONLY SEEN TYPES OF COMPANIES ARE
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Companies formed
by letters patent. Most corporations by letters
patent are corporations sole and not companies as the term
is commonly understood today.
Charter
corporations. Before the passing of modern
company s legislation, these were the only types of
companies. Now they are relatively rare, except for very
old companies that still survive (of which there are still
many, particularly many British banks), or modern
societies that fulfill a quasi regulatory function (for
example, the Bank of England is a corporation formed by a
modern charter).
Statutory
Companies. Relatively rare today, certain
companies have been formed by a private statute passed in
the relevant jurisdiction.
Note that "Ltd after the
company's name signifies limited company, and PLC (public
limited company) indicates that its shares are widely
held".
In legal parlance, the
owners of a company are normally referred to as the
"members". In a company limited or unlimited by shares
(formed or incorporated with a share capital), this will
be the shareholders. In a company limited by guarantee,
this will be the guarantors. Some offshore jurisdictions
have created special forms of offshore company in a bid to
attract business for their jurisdictions. Examples include
"segregated portfolio companies" and restricted purpose
companies.
There are however, many,
many sub-categories of types of company that can be formed
in various jurisdictions in the world.
Companies are also
sometimes distinguished for legal and regulatory purposes
between public companies and private
companies. Public companies are companies whose
shares can be publicly traded, often (although not always)
on a regulated stock exchange. Private companies do not
have publicly traded shares, and often contain
restrictions on transfers of shares. In some
jurisdictions, private companies have maximum numbers of
shareholders.
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