Title: Corporate Management Structure
1Corporate Management Structure
2Shareholders
- Collectively own the corporation
- Indirect methods of control
- Elect Directors
- Approve amendments to articles
- Approve fundamental changes
- Amend by-laws
- Annual shareholder meeting
- Special Meetings
- may be called by the Board or holders of at
least 1/10 outstanding voting shares - Record date for eligibility to vote may not be
more than 70 days prior to a meeting - Voting list must be compiled at least 10 days
before the shareholders meeting
3Proxy
- Authorization by a shareholder for someone else
to vote on his/her behalf. - Must be in writing
- Effective up to 11 months
- Proxy may be revoked unless coupled with an
interest and states its irrevocable - General or limited proxies
- Proxy Solicitations
4Quorum
- A majority of the outstanding shares entitled to
vote (i.e, no treasury shares) represented either
in person or by proxy - Articles may provide for no less than 1/3 quorum,
or provide for a super-majority quorum, when
permitted by state law.
5Voting Rights
- CUMULATIVE VOTING
- Allows minority shareholders to accumulate his
votes and cast them all on one candidate. - of voting shares X of Ds to be elected,
equals Total of votes that can be cast - EX 100 shares owned X 3 Ds to be
elected, shareholder may cast 300 votes for any
one director, or divide in any proportion.
- STRAIGHT VOTING - One share, one vote majority
wins. - EX - 100 shareholders, 60 votes for A, 40 votes
for B, A wins. - A majority shareholder can elect an entire Board.
6Voting Example
- At the annual shareholder meeting, 3 Directors
will be elected from a choice of 6 candidates
(U,V,W,X,Y, and Z). A, the minority shareholder,
owns 100 shares B owns 150 shares. A likes U,
V, and W B likes X, Y, and Z. - Under straight voting, A may cast 100 votes
towards any one Director, but will always lose by
50 votes to Bs candidates. - If cumulative, A has 300 votes B has 450. To
defeat As candidates, B will need 301 votes,
leaving only 149 left. Therefore, B might cast
his votes as follows 301 for X, 148 for Y and 1
for Z OR 250 for X and 200 for Y, 0 for Z, etc.
A might cast all 300 votes for U, which would
enable at least one of the minority shareholders
candidates to be elected.
7Formula to Determine How Many Votes are Necessary
to Elect a D, or a Given of Ds
- X TS X ND___ 1
- TD 1
- X is the desired quotient, the minimum number
of shares needed to elect 1 Director - TS (total shares voting at the meeting)
- ND (number of directors desired by shareholder to
be elected) - TD (total of Directors to be elected)
8How Many Shares are Needed to Elect a Director?
- B owns 600 shares, C owns 400 shares. There are
a total of 1000 shares. There are 6 Board
vacancies and 12 candidates. - C has a possible 2400 votes B has 3600.
- How many shares does C need to elect a director?
How many directors may she elect with her 400
votes? - C needs 144 votes to elect each Director. At
most, C can elect 2 of her favorite Director
candidates, using 288 votes. - 1000(1) 1 1000 1 143 1 144
- 6 1 7
9- Voting Trusts - Concentrates voting control in a
trustee. - Irrevocable a writing is required.
- A copy must be available for inspection
- Shareholder gets a voting trust certificate from
the trustee. Trustee becomes the record holder
and pays dividends over to holders of trust
certificate. - Limited in duration, up to a maximum of 10 years.
- Shareholder Agreements - A contract by
shareholders as to how they will not only vote
their shares, but manage the business. May be
perpetual. - Used in close corporations.
- Agreements may relate to
- Eliminating or restricting the powers of the
directors - Governing the making of distributions
- Establishing who shall be directors or officers
of the corporation - Governing the exercise or division of voting
power. - Establishing terms for the transfer or use of any
property or services - Subject to specific performance
10Shareholders Right to Inspect Corporate Records
- Shareholders have a right to inspect and copy
corporate records in good faith and for any
proper purpose. - To determine corps financial condition, value of
stock, names of shareholders, propriety of
dividends - NOT to harass management, discover trade
secrets, gain a competitive edge or develop and
sell a mailing list of shareholders - Must give notice of demand
11Shareholder Suits
- An individual shareholder may sue a corporation
to preclude ultra vires acts and enforce
shareholder rights. - Direct Suit - Shareholders may sue directly
either individually or as members of a class. In
a class action, the plaintiffs represent not only
themselves but all others similarly situated. - Shareholder Derivative Suit - To recover for a
wrong done to the corporation. The action is for
the benefit of the corporation and any recovery
belongs to the corporation, not the shareholders.
The corporation is the real plaintiff. - Demand must be made on Board of Directors
- Directors refuse to sue
- Shareholder must own shares at time of
wrongdoing. - Shareholder can recover reasonable litigation
expenses but no compensation for his time.
12Board of Directors
- Duty to act socially responsible
- May rely on others (accountants, committees) for
information - Fiduciary duties
- To be informed, loyalty, obedience, diligence
due care, Board cant usurp a corporate
opportunity - Business Judgment rule
- Avoid conflicts of interest
- May be removed with or without cause
- Inside and Outside Directors
- Determine capital structure
Elected by shareholders Need at least 1, over the
age of 18 If corporation has less than 35
shareholders, dont need a Board of
Directors Terms may be staggered Initial Board
named in Articles Main objective is to maximize
profits manage business A Director is not an
agent
13Business Judgment Rule
- Directors should be protected if they
- Act in good faith
- Are not motivated by fraud and illegality
- Are not grossly negligent
- Indemnification for liability
- Liability limitation statutes
14Shareholder Approval of Board Actions
- No Shareholder Approval Needed
- General power to manage
- Declare dividends
- Issue stock
- Set share prices
- Some mergers (if they dont fundamentally alter
business character, i.e, short form merger)
- Shareholder Approval Needed
- Fundamental corporate changes,i.e., mergers,
consolidations - Amending the articles
- Dissolution
- Sale of all or of substantially all assets
15Board Approval of Actions
- Full Board Approval Needed
- Declaring dividends
- Filing Board vacancies
- Adopting/amending by-laws
- Approving share issuance
- Repurchase of corporate shares
- Approval Needed by only some Board
Members/Committee Work - Choosing management slate
- audit committee
- shareholder litigation committee
- compensation committee
16Officers
- Officers are agents of the corporation
- express, implied, apparent authority
- May bind the corporation in the ordinary course
of business, not extraordinary actions - Fiduciaries
- May be removed with or without cause
- Held to a reasonably prudent person standard,
which may be higher if they possess special
skills
Run the day to day operations Elected or
appointed by the Board