Ch 30: Corporate Directors, Officers, and Shareholders
election of directors
first board of directors usually appointed by the incorporators thereafter directors are elected by the shareholders.
quorum requirements
vary from state to state, majority of directors
rights of shareholders
voting rights inspect corporate records transfer shares share corporate assets when corporation is dissolved sue on behalf of corp obtain a dividend
shareholder voting requirements
1) a quorum must be present 2) majority vote 3) must prepare voting list prior to meeting 4) cumulative voting may or may not be permitted
director' committees
board of directors may delegate responsibilities to them
director's qualifications
can be a shareholder. responsible for all policy-making decisions necessary to the management of all corporate affairs
liability of directors and officers
corporate directors and officers are personally liable for their own torts and crimes
duty of loyalty
have a fiduciary duty to subordinate their own interests to those of the corp in matters relating to the corporation
board of director's meetings
hold formal meetings with recorded minutes
shareholders' powers
include the approval of all fundamental changes affecting the corporation and the election of the board of directors
corporate officers and execs
normally hired by board of directors and the rights are in employment contracts. duties of corporate officers are the same as those of directors
duty of care
obligated to act in good faith, use good business judgment and act in corp's best interests
shareholders' meetings
occur annually. can vote by proxy(authorizing someone else to vote for you), may submit proposals to be brought up in meeting
conflicts of interest
to fulfill their duty of loyalty directors and officers must make a full disclosure of any potential conflicts between their personal interests and those of the corporation