Shareholders\u2019 meetings<\/strong><\/h4>\nA corporation\u2019s bylaws generally provide reasonable provisions for the calling and conducting of shareholders\u2019 meetings. These may specify, inter-alia<\/em>, who is authorized to call and conduct the meeting; the means by which its order of business may be established; the procedures and requirements involved in the nomination of directors; the procedures respecting proposals being put forward by the shareholders; and the procedures governing the meeting\u2019s adjournment.<\/p>\nConvening of meetings<\/strong><\/h4>\nAnnual meeting <\/em>– For the purposes of electing directors and transacting other business, the shareholders are obligated to hold an annual meeting annually. The date for doing so will be fixed by or under the bylaws.<\/p>\nSpecial meeting <\/em>– The board or those authorized to do so for the election of directors may call a special meeting.<\/p>\nSpecial meeting: electing directors <\/em>– The board of directors must call a special meeting for the election of directors if there has been a failure to elect a sufficient number of them to carry out the corporation\u2019s business activities for either a period exceeding one month from the date fixed for the annual meeting or 13 months from the last annual meeting have been held or the company having been formed.<\/p>\nMeeting place<\/strong><\/h4>\nThe shareholders may choose to hold the meeting anywhere which is fixed under the corporation\u2019s bylaws, either in or out of state. The office of the corporation in New York constitutes the default setting for the location of the meeting in the absence of another place having been designated.<\/p>\n
Why is notice important?<\/strong><\/h4>\nAll shareholders entitled to vote must be provided written notice of the meeting between 10 and 60 days prior to its occurrence. Every notice must contain details of the meeting\u2019s date, time and location, although a special meeting has further requirements. Notice of a special meeting must state that the issuance of notice is by or at the direction of the one calling for the meeting and the purpose of the special meeting being convened. The business which may be transacted is circumscribed solely to that which is set forth in the notice.<\/p>\n
Method of supplying notice<\/strong><\/h4>\nEach shareholder eligible to vote must be supplied a copy of the notice either personally or via mail. The date of deposit is deemed the date notice was given if mailed.<\/p>\n
Can notice be waived?<\/strong><\/h4>\nA shareholder who has submitted a signed waiver of receiving notice need not have it supplied. The waiver can be signed, in person or by proxy, by the shareholder entitled to receipt of notice either prior to or subsequent to the meeting. Should the shareholder, in person or by proxy, attend the meeting and refrain from protesting his failure to receive notice by its conclusion, this act would constitute a waiver of the need to supply him notice. Notice or waiver is of critical importance. The court has made clear that the failure to supply notice, in the absence of a waiver, would void the actions taken at the meeting.<\/p>\n
Who is eligible to vote?<\/strong><\/h4>\nRecord holders <\/em>– Absent a clause in the certificate of incorporation denying, circumscribing or otherwise defining the voting rights of any class of shares or series, every shareholder is entitled to one vote for each share evidenced in the record.<\/p>\nProxies<\/em> – A shareholder who is entitled to vote at a meeting may authorize a proxy to do so on his behalf.<\/p>\nWhat are the mechanics of voting?<\/strong><\/h4>\nIrrespective of class, every outstanding share is entitled to a single vote, except to the extent that the certificate of incorporation may deny, limit or otherwise define the voting rights of any class or series.<\/p>\n
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What are shareholders\u2019 rights and powers when it comes to managing a corporation? While corporation shareholders in New York own the corporation as a collective, they lack nearly any direct managerial power of its day to day corporate affairs. Management of the corporation falls to the board of directors. This said, there are certain indirect…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":22,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[630],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-81515","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-new-york-corporate-law"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
Corporation shareholders in New York \u2013 Decker, Pex, Levi, Rosenberg & Co.<\/title>\n\n\n\n\t\n\t\n\t\n