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A
Accumulated
Earnings
The
accumulation of taxable earnings within a corporation. A corporation which
has excess accumulated earnings can be assessed a separate tax by the IRS
unless there is a justification for the buildup, such as to cover the
company's repurchase liability. The purpose of this tax is to penalize those
corporations which the IRS believes are limiting their dividend declaration
in order to reduce the stockholders' declared income. |
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Acquisition
Obtaining
control of another corporation by purchasing all or a majority of its
outstanding shares, or by purchasing its assets. |
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Administrative
Dissolution
An involuntary
dissolution of a corporation by an act of the Secretary of State or similar
state authority, caused by the corporation's failure to comply with certain
statutory requirements; especially the failure to file an annual report, to
pay franchise taxes or maintain a valid Registered Agent. |
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Advisory Board
of Directors
An advisory
board of directors are individuals appointed to advise an elected board of
directors. This board is not bound by the duties imposed upon elected board
members, and the corporation is not required to follow their
recommendations. |
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Agent
Anyone who is
authorized to act on the behalf of another. A corporation acts only through
its agents; therefore, it is important to define what actions an agent is
authorized to perform. |
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Agent
for Service of Process (aka "resident agent" or "registered agent")
An
agent, required to be appointed by a corporation, whose authority is limited
to receiving process issued against the corporation. Also known as a
Registered Agent or a Resident Agent. |
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Alter
Ego
A
doctrine of law which disregards the principle of limited liability enjoyed
by a corporate entity when it is proven that, in fact, no separate identity
of the individual and corporation exists. The alter ego principle may also
apply to relationships between corporate entities and their subsidiaries. |
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Amended Certificate of Authority
A
document issued by a state to a foreign corporation evidencing that the
corporation has amended its original certificate of authority. |
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Amendment
An
addition to, deletion from, or a change of existing provisions of the
articles of incorporation of a domestic corporation or articles of
organization for a limited-liability company. An amendment is necessary to
formally change the name of an entity or to change the capital stock
structure. |
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Annual Meeting
A
yearly meeting of shareholders at which directors are elected and other
general business of the corporation is conducted. |
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Annual Report
A
required annual filing in a state, usually listing directors, officers and
financial information. Also, an annual statement of business and affairs
furnished by a corporation to its shareholders. |
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Apostille
Official
government authentication of a document, usually by the State Department,
Justice Ministry or Foreign Ministry, which legalizes it for use in another
country. This service is included in The Company Corporation's international
package. |
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Application for Certificate of Authority
The
form filed in many states to qualify a corporation to transact business as a
foreign corporation |
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Arm's
Length Relationship
An
arm's length relationship is a term used to describe a type of business
relationship a corporation should have with a close associate to avoid a
conflict of interest. For example, when you negotiate with your banker or
your supplier, any agreement which results will likely reflect market value
and commercially reasonable terms and conditions. When you loan money to
your son or daughter, you may be inclined to provide much more favorable
terms and conditions. The first example would be considered to be an arm's
length relationship, while the second example would not. When your
corporation does business with or makes loans to corporate officers and
directors, the relationship must be at arm's length to avoid conflicts of
interest. |
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Articles of Incorporation
The
title of the document filed in many states to create a corporation. Also
known as the certificate of incorporation or corporate charter. |
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Articles of Organization
The
title of the document filed in many states to register a limited liability
company (LLC) with the state. Also known as articles of formation. |
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Assumed Name ("DBA")
A
name other than the true name, under which a corporation or other business
organization conducts business. Also referred to as a fictitious name, a
trade name or "doing business as" ("DBA"). |
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Attorney's Opinion
A
lawyer's written statement that a certain matter or particular action
complies with applicable legal requirements and/or is duly authorized or
binding. |
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Authorized Shares
The
maximum number of shares that a corporation may issue pursuant to its
articles of incorporation. |
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Basis
Basis, a tax and accounting term, is the measuring rod against which gain or
loss is measured. With stock, basis is what you pay for stock or the fair
market value of property you contribute in exchange for the stock. |
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Bearer Instrument
An
instrument is payable to its bearer when by its terms it is payable to 1) a
bearer or the order of a bearer; 2) a specified person or bearer; or 3)
"cash" or the order "cash," or any other indication that does not purport to
designate a specific payee. Bearer shares are a common example of a bearer
instrument. |
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Blue
Sky Law
A
term used to describe state laws and regulations governing the issuance and
sale of securities to residents of a state and the licensing and regulation
of securities brokers and dealers as well as anti-fraud provisions. These
laws protect the public from deceptive securities transactions and vary from
state to state. |
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Blue
Sky Laws
See "Blue Sky Law" |
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Board
of Directors
The
governing body of a corporation who is elected by shareholders. The
directors are responsible for selecting the officers and the supervision and
general control of the corporation. |
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Bond
A
long-term debt secured by a mortgage on real property or a lien on other
fixed assets. A certificate evidencing indebtedness. It is a legal contract
sold by an issuer promising to pay the holder its face value plus amounts of
interest at future dates. |
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Business Corporation Act
A
business corporation act is the collection of laws in each state that
governs corporations. |
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Business Judgment Rule
A
judicial doctrine which shields corporate officers and directors from
personal liability for actions taken in good faith and with reasonable care. |
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Buy-Sell Agreement
An
agreement between shareholders of a privately held corporation and the
corporation itself, made to govern the operations of the corporation and to
define how shares of stock will be transferred. In small corporations, such
an agreement can be used to set estate tax value of stock, define what
happens if a shareholder is disabled, restrict the transfer of stock to
outsiders and other conditions. It can also protect the corporation against
a disqualifying act and provide other mechanisms for maintaining and ending
S corporation status. |
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Bylaws
The
regulations of a corporation that, subject to statutory law and the articles
of incorporation, provide the basic rules for the conduct of the
corporation's business and affairs. |
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C
Corporation
The
most common corporate structure, also known as a general corporation. A C
corporation may have an unlimited number of stockholders. Consequently, it
is usually chosen by those companies planning to have more than 30
stockholders or large public stock offerings. A C corporation pays tax on
its own income under the general rules of Subchapter C of the Internal
Revenue Code. |
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Calendar Year
An
accounting period that ends each December 31, which is the period most S
corporation must adopt as a permitted year. |
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Capital Gains Tax
The
tax imposed on the capital gains of a taxpayer. The tax treatment of capital
gains and losses depends on whether the gains and losses are long-term or
short-term, and on whether the taxpayer is a corporation or not. The
long-term and short-term capital gains of corporations are taxable at the
same rates as their ordinary income. For non-corporations, the maximum tax
rate on net long-term capital gains is lower than the top rate on ordinary
income. |
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Capital Stock
The
outstanding shares of a joint-stock company considered as an aggregate. |
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Carry
Forward
To
offset for tax purposes one period's loss against a subsequent period's net
income. Losses which are unused may generally carry over to another year.
Such tax benefits may enhance the value of a target to a buyer burdened with
high taxes. |
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Carryback
For
federal income tax purposes, the portion of a net operating loss deductable
from net income of the prior three years. This amount is absorbed and the
remainder carried forward to offset future years net income. |
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Certificate of Authority
Formal evidence of qualification issued by a state to a foreign corporation. |
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Certificate of Existence
See
Certificate of Good Standing |
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Certificate of Good Standing
A
certificate issued by a state official as conclusive evidence that a
corporation is in existence or authorized to transact business in the state.
The certificate generally sets forth the corporation's name; that it is duly
incorporated or authorized to transact business; that all fees, taxes and
penalties owed the state have been paid; that its most recent annual report
has been filed; and, that articles of dissolution have not been filed. Also
known as a certificate of existence or certificate of authorization. |
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Certificate of Incorporation
The
title of the document filed in many states to create a corporation. Also
known as the articles of incorporation or corporate charter. |
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Close
Corporation
A
corporation that elects in its articles of incorporation to be registered
under the close corporation statutes of their state of incorporation and
whose stock is not publicly traded and held by only a few persons (such as
those in management). The organizational structure of this type of
corporation must comply with strict statutory requirements and limitations.
Some state
close corporation statutes provide for a maximum number of shareholders. In
addition, close corporation statutes may eliminate or limit the powers of
the board of directors, prescribe preemptive rights to the shareholders or
relax the corporate formalities. Exact specifications vary by jurisdiction.
Not all state statutes provide for a close corporation provision. |
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Closely Held Corporation
A
closely held corporation is any corporation in which the stock is held by a
relatively small group of people, entities, investors, management, founders
and/or their families. Stock of a closely held corporation is not publicly
traded on any stock exchange. |
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Commingle
Commingling, is the sharing and pooling of personal and corporate assets.
For example, rather than maintain separate corporate and personal bank
accounts, you choose to use one account for personal and corporate purposes.
This is considered commingling and an easy way to become personally liable
for corporate acts. |
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Common Shares
A
class of shares that has no special features and possesses no greater rights
than any other shares except for Preferred Shares. All capital stock except
for preferred stock is considered Common Shares. |
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Common Stock
See
"Common Shares" |
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Compliant
As
used throughout the Compliance WatchSM suite of services, this term refers
to a level of completion of a legal entity's responsibilities to maintain
the formalities of corporate existence under the laws of the jurisdiction in
which it is formed. The term is not intended to mean or imply conformity
with all of the federal and state regulatory or tax requirements which may
exist for operating your business. |
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Consent Resolution
A
consent resolution is any resolution signed by all of the directors or
shareholders, which authorizes a particular action. This act eliminates the
need for face-to-face meetings of directors and shareholders. |
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Consideration
Relating to forming an incorporation in the state of Illinois. (1) Something
of value, such as money or personal services, given by one party to another
in exchange for an act or promise. For example, amount paid for stock in a
corporation. (2) Something promised, given, or done that has the effect of
making an agreement a legally enforceable contract. |
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Consolidation
The
statutory combination of two or more corporations to create a new
corporation. |
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Constituent
A
party to a transaction; a corporation involved in a merger, consolidation or
share exchange. |
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Contract Creditors
Contract creditors are people or businesses which you owe money or property
to because of a written or verbal contractual agreement. If you buy 30
widgets from Widget World, Widget World becomes a contract creditor. |
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Contribution to Capital
A
contribution of cash or other property that a shareholder makes to a
corporation that increases the corporation's paid-in capital but for which
the shareholder does not receive stock. The contribution increases that
shareholder's basis in stock. |
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Controlled Group
A
group of corporations which are grouped together for one tax purpose or
another. Control may be through parent-subsidiary relationships or common
control such as a brother-sister controlled group. Control means ownership
of a certain percentage (generally, either at least 80%, or less frequently,
at least 50% of the total combined voting power of all classes of voting
stock or of the total value of shares. |
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Convertible Security
A
security that may be exchanged by the holder for another type of security. |
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Corporate Charter
See
Articles of Incorporation. |
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Corporate Indicator
A
word or an abbreviation of a word that must be included in a corporation's
name to indicate that the named entity is a corporation. Valid corporate
indicators include: incorporated, corporation, limited, company, inc.,
corp., ltd. and co. The list of acceptable corporate indicators will vary
depending upon the jurisdiction in which the corporation is registered. |
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Corporate Kit
A
binder usually containing essential items for the routine maintenance and
administration of a corporation or limited liability company. Corporate kits
provided by The Company Corporation include sample minutes and bylaws, stock
certificates, a corporate seal and stock ledger. |
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Corporate Seal
A
corporate seal is a device made to either emboss or imprint certain company
information onto documents. This information usually includes the company's
name and date and state of formation. Corporate seals are often required
when opening corporate or LLC bank accounts, distributing stock or
membership certificates or conducting other corporate business. The Company
Corporation includes custom-made corporate seals as part of the Corporate
Kit. |
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Corporation
An
entity formed and authorized by, created under and governed by the laws of
the state of incorporation to act as a single person even though it is
constituted by one or more persons and legally endowed with various rights
and duties including the capacity of succession. |
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Corporation Law
The
statutory provisions of a state relating to domestic and foreign
corporations. |
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Cumulative voting
A
procedure used for electing directors in which shareholders are entitled to
multiply the number of votes they are entitled to cast by the number of
directors for whom they are entitled to vote and cast the product for a
single candidate or distribute the product among two or more candidates. |
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DBA
Doing
business as; see Fictitious Name. |
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Debenture
A
long-term debt issued mainly to evidence an unsecured corporate debt. |
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Debt
Financing
A
method of raising capital in which a corporation borrows money. |
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Derivative Suit
A
lawsuit brought by a shareholder on behalf of a corporation to protect the
corporation from wrongs committed against it. |
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Directors
The
individuals who, acting as a group known as the board of directors, manage
the business and affairs of a corporation. |
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Disqualifying Act
An
act by the corporation or shareholder that causes the corporation to cease
to be an eligible corporation and that generally results in termination of S
corporation status. |
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Dissenters Right
A
right granted to shareholders that entitles them to have their shares
appraised and purchased by the corporation if the corporation enters into
certain transactions that the shareholders do not approve of. |
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Dissolution
The
statutory procedure that terminates the existence of a domestic corporation. |
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Distribution
A
transfer of money or other property made by a corporation to a shareholder
in respect of the corporation's shares. |
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Dividend
A
distribution of a corporation's earnings to its shareholders. |
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Double Taxation
Taxation by the federal government of corporate earnings once at the
corporate level and again at the shareholder level upon distribution of
dividends.
When a corporation must pay taxes on its earnings and individual
shareholders must also pay taxes on any dividends that are distributed. |
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Duration
How
long a business will be recognized as a corporate entity. A company with a
perpetual duration will last forever unless the state dissolves the company.
A 30-year duration means that the company will automatically dissolve on
it's 30th anniversary of existence. |
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Employment Agreement
An
employment agreement is a contract between your corporation and an employee.
These agreements can be written or verbal; although all employment
agreements should be in writing. Employers are more likely to have
employment agreements with key employees. The terms and conditions of an
employment agreement should be consistent with statutes, articles, bylaws,
and any existing shareholder agreements. |
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Equity Financing
A
method of raising capital in which a corporation sells shares of stock. |
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Equity Interest
An
ownership interest; the interest of a shareholder as distinguished from that
of a creditor. |
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Fictitious Name
A
name other than the true name, under which a corporation or other business
organization conducts business. Also referred to as an assumed name, a trade
name or "doing business as" ("DBA"). |
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Fiduciary Relationship
A
relationship in which one party (the fiduciary) must act in good faith and
with due regard to the best interests of the other party or parties. |
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Fiscal Year
An
accounting year that ends on a date other than December 31. C corporations
may elect to use a fiscal year. S corporations may generally use a fiscal
year if it is a natural business year. |
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Foreign Corporation
A
term applied to a corporation doing business in a state other than its state
of incorporation. |
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Foreign Filing
See
"Foreign Corporation" |
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Fractional Share
Ownership in a corporation in an amount less than a full share. |
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Franchise Tax
A tax
or fee usually levied annually upon a corporation, limited liability company
or similar business entity for the right to exist or do business in a
particular state. Failure to pay the franchise tax or similar fees may
result in the administration dissolution of the company and forfeiture of
the charter. |
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Fraudulent Conveyance
A
contractual misrepresentation of the nature, quantity, or existence of
transferred assets. Also, a term denoting potential risk for sellers and
lenders. |
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Fringe Benefits
Employee benefits and perquisites, other than qualified retirement plans. |
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Going
Public
The
process by which a corporation first sells its shares to the public. |
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Good
Standing
A
corporation is said to be in good standing when it has remained current with
the necessary reports and fees required by the regulatory jurisdictions
under which it operates. |
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Hague
Convention
Since
October 5, 1961, abolished the requirement of legalization for foreign
public documents, and established a basic certification, of public
documents, outside their country of origination. Member countries have
adopted a standard of the authenticity of public documents, called an
Apostille. |
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Hostile Takeover
A
takeover that occurs without the approval of the target corporation's board
of directors. |
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Incorporation
The
act of creating or organizing a corporation under the laws of a specific
jurisdiction. |
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Incorporator
The
person(s) who perform the act of incorporation and who sign the articles of
incorporation and deliver them for filing. |
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Indemnification
Financial protection provided by a corporation to its directors, officers,
and employees against expenses and liabilities incurred by them in lawsuits
alleging that they breached some duty in their service to or on behalf of
the corporation. |
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Involuntary Dissolution
The
termination of a corporation's legal existence pursuant to an administrative
or judicial proceeding; dissolution forced upon a corporation rather than
decided upon by the corporation. |
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Judicial Dissolution
Involuntary dissolution of a corporation by a court at the request of the
state attorney general, a shareholder or a creditor. |
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Jurat
Specific notary language citing, under oath, that a signature has been
witnessed. |
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Legal
Opinion
See
"Attorney's Opinion" |
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Legalization of Certified Documents
Needed for companies (overseas) that are not part of the Hague Convention.
Companies in a country that is not part of the Hague
will not benefit from an Apostille. (1) To make legal or lawful; authorize
or sanction by law. |
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Limited Liability
Liability (as a stockholder or shipowner) limited by statute or treaty. |
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Limited Partnership
A
statutory form of partnership consisting of one or more general partners who
manage the business and are liable for its debts, and one or more limited
partners who invest in the business and have limited personal liability. |
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Limited Personal Liability
The
protection generally afforded a corporate shareholder, limited partner or a
member of a limited liability company from the debts of and claims against
the company. |
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Limited-Liability Company (LLC)
An
artificial entity created under and governed by the laws of the jurisdiction
in which it was formed. Limited liability companies are generally able to
provide the limited personal liability of corporations and the pass-through
taxation of partnerships or S corporations. |
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Majority
More
than 50 percent; commonly used as the percentage of votes required to
approve certain corporate actions. |
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Management
The
board of directors and executive officers of a corporation, limited
liability company or similar business entity. |
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Managers
The
individuals who are responsible for the maintenance, administration and
management of the affairs of a limited liability company (LLC). In most
states, the managers serve a particular term and report to and serve at the
discretion of the members. Specific duties of the managers may be detailed
in the articles of organization or the operating agreement of the LLC. In
some states, the members of an LLC may also serve as the managers. |
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Members
The
owner(s) of a limited liability company (LLC). Unless the articles of
organization or operating agreement provide otherwise, management of an LLC
is vested in the members in proportion to their ownership interest in the
company. |
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Membership Certificates
Evidence of ownership of and membership in a limited liability company. |
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Merger
The
statutory combination of two or more corporations in which one of the
corporations survives and the other corporations cease to exist. |
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Minutes
The
corporate minutes are the written record of transactions taken or authorized
by the board of directors or shareholders. These are usually kept in the
corporate minute book in diary fashion. |
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Name
Registration
The
filing of a document in a foreign state to protect the corporate name, often
in anticipation of qualification in the state. |
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Name
Reservation
A
procedure that allows a corporation to obtain exclusive use of a corporate
name for a specified period of time. |
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Natural Business Year
A
fiscal year that is permitted for an S corporation because the corporation
can show that 25 percent of gross receipts have been realized in the last
two months of such a year for the last three years. |
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No
Par Value Shares
Shares for which the articles of incorporation do not fix a par value and
that may be issued for any consideration determined by the board of
directors. |
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Not-for-Profit Corporation
A
not-for-profit corporation is generally organized for some socially
beneficial purpose, rather than for the direct monetary benefit of the
directors or members. Not all not-for-profit corporations are tax exempt and
some make a profit. However, the profit is not distributed to the members or
directors. Also known as a non-profit corporation. |
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Notice of Litigation
See
Notice of Service of Process |
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Notice of Service of Process
Official notification of an action or proceeding by the delivery of a legal
or court document, with a request to answer in a specific period of time. |
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Officers
Individuals appointed by the board of directors who are responsible for
carrying out the board's policies and for making day-to-day decisions. |
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Operating Agreement
A
contract among the members of a limited liability company governing the
membership, management, operation and distribution of income of the company. |
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Organizational Meetings
Meetings of
incorporators or initial directors that are held after the filing of the
articles of incorporation to complete the organization of the corporation |
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Organizer
The
person(s) who perform the act of forming a limited liability company. |
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Par
Value
A
minimum price of a share below which the share cannot be issued, as
designated in the articles of incorporation. |
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Parent Corporation
A
corporation that owns a controlling interest in another corporation. |
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Partnership
A
business organization in which two or more persons agree to do business
together. |
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Passive Income
Income to certain taxpayers (including S corporation shareholders) that is
subject to the passive activity loss (PAL) rules because the taxpayer does
not materially participate in the business activity producing the income.
Generally includes receipts from royalties, rents, dividends, interest,
annuities, and the sale and exchange of stock and securities. |
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Pass-Through Taxation
Rather than tax the income of the entity, taxation is “passed through” to
the individual shareholders in S corporations (and LLCs). Income or losses
are declared on their individual tax returns. |
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Perpetual Existence
Unlimited term of existence; characteristics of most business corporations. |
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Piercing the Corporate Veil
Piercing the corporate veil is a legal theory sometimes used to impose
personal liability on shareholders, officers, and directors for corporate
acts. This theory permits a court to disregard the separate identity of the
corporation. |
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Preemptive Rights
Giving a stockholder first option to purchase (subscribe to) new stock in an
amount proportionate to his or her existing holdings. |
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Preferred Shares
A
class of shares that entitles the holders to preferences over the holders of
common shares, usually with regard to dividends and distributions of assets
upon dissolution or liquidation. |
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Preferred Stock
See
"Preferred Shares" |
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Professional Corporation
A corporation whose
purposes are limited to professional services, such as those performed by
doctors, dentists and attorneys. A professional corporation is formed under
special state laws that stipulate exactly which professionals are required
to incorporate under this status |
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Promoter
A written authorization
given by a person to another party directing the party to vote on behalf of
him/her |
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Qualification
The
filing of required documents by a corporation to secure a certificate of
authority to conduct its business in a state other than the one in which it
was incorporated. Limited liability companies or similar business entities
may also conduct this process. |
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Qualified Retirement Plan
A
pension or profit sharing plan that qualifies under the Internal Revenue
Code for deductible contributions by an employer that are not included in
employee income until plan distributions are made. |
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Quorum
The
percentage or proportion of voting shares required to be represented in
person or by proxy to constitute a valid shareholders meeting, or the number
of directors required to be present for a valid meeting of the board. |
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Record Date
The
date for determining the shareholders entitled to vote at a meeting, receive
dividends, or participate in any corporate action. |
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Redeemable Shares
Shares subject to purchase by the corporation on terms set forth in the
articles of incorporation. |
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Registered Agent
A
person or entity designated to receive important tax and legal documents on
behalf of the corporation. The Registered Agent must be located and
available at a legal address within the specified jurisdiction at all times.
Failure to maintain a Registered Agent in the jurisdiction in which the
corporation is registered, may result in the forfeiture of the corporate
status. Also known as a Resident Agent. |
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Registered Office
The
statutory address of a corporation. In states requiring the appointment of a
Registered Agent, it is usually the address of the Registered Agent. |
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Regulations
Regulations are
administrative rules which have the force and effect of laws. Government
agencies promulgate rules. If you don't comply, you are subject to the
possibility of fines or revocation of the corporate charter |
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Reinstatement
Returning a corporation that has been administratively dissolved or had its
certificate of authority revoked, to good standing on a state's records. |
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Resident Agent
See
"Registered Agent" |
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Resolution
A
formal statement of any item of business that has been voted upon. |
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Restated Articles of Incorporation
A
document that combines all currently operative provisions of a corporation's
articles of incorporation and amendments thereto. |
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A
model corporation statute compiled by the American Bar Association that has
been adopted in whole or in part by, or has influenced the statutes of many
states. |
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S
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S
Corporation
A
corporation that is eligible, and does elect to be taxed under Subchapter S
of the Internal Revenue Code. A corporation granted a special tax status as
specified under the Internal Revenue Code. The code is very explicit on how
and when this election is made and the number of shareholders this type of
corporation can have. Since this type of corporation pays no income tax, all
gains and losses of the corporation pass through to the individual
shareholders in proportion to their holdings. Basically, shareholders pay
tax on the corporation's income by reporting their pro-rata shares of
pass-through items on their own individual tax returns. |
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S
Corporation Termination
A
cessation of S corporation status by operation of statute because the
corporation either fails to continue to meet the requirements for S
corporation status, or has C corporation earnings and profits plus excess
passive investment income for three consecutive years. |
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Scrip
A
form used to represent ownership of fractional shares in lieu of issuing
share certificates. |
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Securities Laws
State
and federal laws that govern the issuance, sale and transfer of stocks and
bonds. |
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Security
A
contract between a business and an investor whereby the investor supplies
money and experts to profit from his or her investment. |
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Service of Process
See
Notice of Service of Process |
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Share
The unit into which the
ownership interest in a corporation is divided |
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Share
Exchange
A
statutory form of business combination in which some or all of the shares of
one corporation are exchanged for some or all of the shares of another
corporation and neither corporation ceases to exist. |
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Shareholders
Shareholders are the owners of a corporation based on their holdings. They
own an interest in the corporation rather than specific corporate property.
Also known as stockholders. |
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Shareholder's Basis in Loans
The
measure of loans made directly by a shareholder to an S corporation, which
can be used to provide additional basis for the deduction of losses after
the shareholder's basis in stock is exhausted. It is calculated using the
initial amount of the loan, adjusted to reflect S corporation pass-through
items. |
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Shareholder's Basis in Stock
The
measure of a shareholder's equity investment in a corporation, which is used
to measure the gain or loss when the stock is sold. |
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Short-Form Merger
The
statutory merger of a subsidiary into its parent corporation in which
shareholder approval is not required. |
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Sole
Proprietorship
An
unincorporated business with a sole owner in which the owner may be
personally liable for business debts and claims against the business. |
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Special Meeting
A
shareholder meeting called so that the shareholders may act on the specific
matters stated in the notice of the meeting. |
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Statutes
Statutes are laws passed by the state legislature or U.S. Congress. Business
corporation laws are statutes. Statutes often authorize an administrative
agency to declare regulations which are used to supplement the statute. In
the event of a conflict, statutes control over regulations. |
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Stock
Stock
represents ownership in a corporation. It may be represented by a
certificate and can be common or preferred, voting or non-voting,
redeemable, convertible, etc.. The classifications and special designations,
if any, of the stock are set forth in the articles of incorporation. |
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Stock
Certificate
An
instrument providing evidence of ownership of one or more shares of the
capital stock of a corporation. May also be referred to as a share
certificate. |
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Stock
Option
A
right granted by a corporation to officers or employees as a form of
compensation that allows purchase of corporate stock at a fixed price at a
specified time with reimbursement derived from the difference between
purchase and market prices. |
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Stock
Purchase Agreement
A
stock purchase agreement is an agreement between the shareholders and the
corporation. It provides a mechanism to regulate the transfer and sale of
corporate stock. Often, a stock purchase agreement will provide a right of
first refusal in favor of the corporation or remaining shareholders in the
event of a proposed sale of stock by a shareholder. A stock purchase
agreement can also provide for a purchase upon the death, disability,
retirement, discharge, resignation, or bankruptcy of a shareholder. |
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Stock
Split
A division of corporate
stock by the issuance to existing shareholders of a specified number of new
shares with a corresponding lowering of par value for each outstanding
share. |
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Stockholders
Stockholders are the owners of a corporation based on their holdings. They
own an interest in the corporation rather than specific corporate property.
Also known as shareholders. |
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Stockholders
See
"Shareholders" |
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Subscribers
Persons who agree under specific conditions to purchase shares in a
corporation.
Subscription |
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Subscription
The agreement executed
by a subscriber |
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Subsidiary
A
corporation that is either wholly owned or controlled through ownership of a
majority of its voting shares, by another corporation or business entity. |
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T
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Takeover
A
merger, acquisition or other change in the controlling interest of a
corporation. |
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Target
A
corporation that is the focus of a takeover attempt. |
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Tax-Exempt Organization
Any
organization that is determined by the Internal Revenue Service to be exempt
from federal taxation of income. A tax-exempt may be required to operate
exclusively for charitable, religious, literary, educational or similar
types of purposes. |
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Tort
A tort is any act or
failure to act (if there was a duty to act) which causes harm or damage.
Examples of torts include assault, battery, fraud, misrepresentation,
defamation, libel, slander, invasion of privacy, and negligence. If there is
a claim against your corporation, other than a claim by the government, it
will likely be based in contract or tort. |
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Trademark
A
word or mark that distinctly indicates the ownership of a product or
service, and that is legally reserved for the exclusive use of that owner. |
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Treasury Shares
Shares of a corporation reacquired by a corporation. |
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Underwriter
A
company that purchases shares of a corporation and arranges for their sale
to the general public. |
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Voluntary Dissolution
Action by shareholders, incorporators or initial directors to dissolve a
corporation. |
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Voting or Pooling Agreement
A
voting or pooling agreement is an agreement, preferably in writing, of two
or more shareholders to vote their shares in a certain manner. The most
common use of this agreement would be to pool voting strength for the
election of directors. |
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Voting Rights
Rights of shareholders to vote their shares pursuant to provisions of
statutes, the articles of incorporation and the bylaws. |
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Voting Trust
A
voting trust is a trust formed through an agreement among the shareholders
of the corporation. Under a voting trust, shareholders transfer their shares
of stock to a trustee in exchange for voting trust certificates. The trustee
votes the shares in the manner directed in the voting trust agreement.
Voting trusts are often used to preserve control of the corporation. Can be
an eligible shareholer of an S corporation. |
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W
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Watered Shares
Shares that have been issued for a consideration less than the par or stated
value of the shares. |
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Winding Up
The
discharging of a corporation's liabilities and the distributing of its
remaining assets to its shareholders in connection with its dissolution. |
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Withdrawal
The statutory procedure
whereby a foreign corporation obtains the consent of a state to terminate
its authority to transact business there. |
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