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A comparison of capital rules governing financial assistance by a company in South African and English company lawAndargie, Abyote Abebe 28 October 2013 (has links)
The Companies Act of 71 of 2008 makes a number of important changes to the rules relating to
capital maintenance. In line with the objectives of the Companies Act of 71 of 2008, section 44
of the Act has removed the prohibition on the provision of financial assistance by a company
which was contained under the previous section 38 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973. Despite the
repeal of the prohibition, a transaction which involves the provision of financial assistance by a
company for the acquisition of or subscription of its own securities still needs to be effected in
accordance with the requirements and conditions that are provided under the Act and
Memorandum of Incorporation. To explore the new developments, within this study, the
provision of financial assistance in terms of section 44 of the Companies Act of 2008 is,
therefore, analysed in detail.
On the other hand, the UK Companies Act of 2006 repealed the prohibition on the giving of
financial assistance by private companies in most circumstances. It, however, retained the
prohibition to public companies only because of the requirements of the Second Company Law
Directive (77/91/EEC). This study also explores the rules of financial assistance by a company
under the UK Companies Acts in detail.
Though the source of financial assistance by a company both in South Africa and in English
Company laws is rooted in the English decision of the Trevor v Whitworth case, currently these
countries have adopted what is deemed appropriate and significant in their own countries. This
study, therefore, examines and compares the rules governing the provision of financial assistance
by a company in the company laws of these two countries. / Mercantile Law / LL.M. (Commercial law)
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Recognition of various stakeholder interests in company managementEsser, Irene-Marié 30 June 2008 (has links)
Good corporate governance should be the cornerstone of all company management. Directors ought to know in whose interests the company should be managed. This thesis attempts to answer the following question: whose interests must be granted primacy in the management of a company?
In chapter 1 it is stated that shareholders' interests are traditionally granted primacy in the management of a company. There has, however, been a shift in public opinion towards recognition of a wider variety of interests that should be considered than only those of the shareholders. These interests include, inter alia, environmental interests and those of the investors, employees and consumers. This thesis thus focuses on the primary stakeholders, namely individual shareholders, creditors, employees, consumers and suppliers.
In chapter 2 a theoretical foundation is provided on the nature of a company. The different theories on the nature of a company, emphasising either shareholder primacy or stakeholder protection, are discussed. A combined new theory is proposed. It is suggested that the confusion relating to the meaning of "the company" needs to be eliminated.
Chapters 3, 4 and 5 provide an international comparison of the company law in Botswana, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The focus falls, firstly, on directors' duties, secondly, on the question in whose interests directors should manage a company and, thirdly, on the codification of their duties.
In chapter 6 the South African position is evaluated. First, the possible stakeholders are identified and the protection currently afforded them is explained. The reports of the King Committee on Corporate Governance, the Policy Document on company law reform as well as the Companies Bill of 2007 are discussed. Draft clauses are recommended to be incorporated in new company legislation to provide directors with clarity on what is expected of them.
It is the aim of this thesis to provide clarity on whose interests should receive primacy when directors manage a company. The outcome of this research should provide a clear indication to South African directors of what is expected of them and who the beneficiaries of their fiduciary duties are. / Law / LL.D.
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The corporate opportunity rule: a comparative studyKleynhans, Stefan Anton 25 May 2017 (has links)
Company directors, being human, may be tempted to promote their own interests rather than those of the companies on whose boards they serve. Directors are subject to a number of legal duties.
A director has a fiduciary duty to act in good faith and in the best interests of the company. A number of other duties flow from this duty such as the duty to avoid a conflict of interests. The duty of a director not to appropriate a corporate opportunity belonging to the company of which he or she is a director, also flows from the duty to avoid a conflict of interests.
The common-law duties of directors which have their origins in English law, have developed over a number of years. Because of the difficulty that directors had in establishing what their duties were, a number of jurisdictions embarked on a process of codifying or partially codifying these duties. South Africa, Australia and England are three countries that have promulgated legislation which has resulted in the codification or partial codification of directors’ duties. The purpose of the codification or partial codification of directors’ duties was firstly to clarify the duties of directors, and secondly to make the duties more accessible to those affected by them – the directors of companies.
In South Africa the Companies Act 71 of 2008 has partially codified the duties of directors. Because directors’ duties have only been partially codified there is uncertainty regarding their scope. This dissertation will focus on the possible effect of the 2008 Companies Act on the duty of a director not to take a corporate opportunity falling to the company.
In this dissertation I address two issues involving the effect of the 2008 Companies Act on the duty of a director not to appropriate a corporate opportunity belonging to the company. Firstly, I consider whether the partially codified directors’ duties are wide enough to cover issues involving the appropriation of corporate opportunities. Secondly, I consider the appropriate common-law test or tests to be applied in determining whether, in the specific circumstances, an opportunity should be classified as a corporate opportunity.
In considering whether the partially codified duties of directors are wide enough to include the corporate-opportunity rule, I compare the approach to corporate opportunities and the corporate-opportunity rule in South Africa, Australia and England. / Mercantile Law / LL.M. (Corporation Law)
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Aspects of the regulation of share capital and distributions to shareholdersVan der Linde, Kathleen 30 June 2008 (has links)
It is in the area of the regulation of a company's share capital and distributions to
shareholders that the inherent conflict between creditors and shareholders, and
the fragile balance among shareholders internally, intersect. The share capital of
a company underlies its corporate structure and represents not only its initial own
funds from which creditors can be paid, but also the relative equity interests of
the shareholders.
The balance between shareholders can be disturbed by capital
reorganisations through increase, reduction or variation of share capital or
through disproportionate contributions by, or distributions to, shareholders. Share
repurchases are particularly risky in this regard. Creditor interests are affected
when their prior right to payment is endangered by distributions to shareholders.
This study analyses the South African Law relating to share capital and
distributions against the background of a comparative study of the laws of
England, New Zealand, Delaware and California, as well as the provisions of the
American Model Business Corporations Act.
Two main approaches to creditor protection are evident. The capital
maintenance doctrine, which is followed in England and Delaware, protects
creditors by emphasising the notional share capital of the company as a limit on
distributions. In contrast, the solvency and liquidity approach focuses on the net
assets of the company and on its ability to pay its debts. New Zealand, California
and the Model Business Corporations Act represent this approach.
Regulatory responses to shareholder protection range from insistence on
compliance with procedural requirements to minimal statutory intervention in the
internal affairs of companies, instead relying on general principles of fairness and
good faith. There is little correlation between a particular system's approach to
creditor protection on the one hand, and to shareholder protection on the other.
England, New Zealand and South Africa prescribe specific formalities, while the
American approach is more relaxed.
South Africa is a hybrid system. Its transition from capital maintenance to
solvency and liquidity has been incomplete and its protection of equity interests is
relatively unsophisticated. A number of recommendations are made for an
effective and coherent approach that will safeguard the interests of creditors and
shareholders alike. / School: Law / LL.D.
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Remedies for dissenting shareholders : a comparison of the current option of personal action and the proposed appraisal remedy under the companies bill of 2008Adebanjo, Adetoun Teslimat 11 1900 (has links)
Thesis / The Companies Bill B61-2008 proposes to introduce appraisal rights into South African law. Appraisal entitles a shareholder to demand payment from the corporate issuer of his shares at a fair cash value in certain instances where major transactions which would change the company's direction have been proposed. It allows a cash exit rather than being coerced into supporting the majority's decision. Arriving at a fair share value is a challenge to appraisal. Presently, under the Personal action, a shareholder who opines that the company's act or omission is unfairly prejudicial or that its affairs are conducted in an unfairly prejudicial manner, may apply to court for an appropriate order. It enables the minority to challenge the majority's decision. Both remedies will be available to dissenting shareholders under the new dispensation and a shareholder must decide which remedy best suits his purposes. Appraisal should be seen as a last resort. / Law / LL.M. (Corporate Law)
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A company's share capital and the aquisition of its own shares : a critical comparison between the relevant provisions of the companies and act 71 of 1973 and the companies act 71 of 2008Heapy, Stephanie Claire 11 1900 (has links)
The Companies Act 71 of 2008 (“2008 Companies Act”) will have far reaching effects on the manner in which a company is formed and operated under South African company law and in particular entrenches the procedure that must be followed by a company when acquiring its own shares. The radical amendment of the capital maintenance rules by the introduction of the solvency and liquidity tests to the Companies Act 61 of 1973 has been carried forward under the 2008 Companies Act. These tests impose an obligation on a company to ensure that the company is both solvent and liquid at the time of the acquisition of its own shares and for a stated period thereafter. The 2008 Companies Act further brings the duties and liabilities of the directors in line with their current fiduciary duties in terms of common law. / Mercantile Law / LLM
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A comparison of capital rules governing financial assistance by a company in South African and English company lawAndargie, Abyote Abebe 28 October 2013 (has links)
The Companies Act of 71 of 2008 makes a number of important changes to the rules relating to
capital maintenance. In line with the objectives of the Companies Act of 71 of 2008, section 44
of the Act has removed the prohibition on the provision of financial assistance by a company
which was contained under the previous section 38 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973. Despite the
repeal of the prohibition, a transaction which involves the provision of financial assistance by a
company for the acquisition of or subscription of its own securities still needs to be effected in
accordance with the requirements and conditions that are provided under the Act and
Memorandum of Incorporation. To explore the new developments, within this study, the
provision of financial assistance in terms of section 44 of the Companies Act of 2008 is,
therefore, analysed in detail.
On the other hand, the UK Companies Act of 2006 repealed the prohibition on the giving of
financial assistance by private companies in most circumstances. It, however, retained the
prohibition to public companies only because of the requirements of the Second Company Law
Directive (77/91/EEC). This study also explores the rules of financial assistance by a company
under the UK Companies Acts in detail.
Though the source of financial assistance by a company both in South Africa and in English
Company laws is rooted in the English decision of the Trevor v Whitworth case, currently these
countries have adopted what is deemed appropriate and significant in their own countries. This
study, therefore, examines and compares the rules governing the provision of financial assistance
by a company in the company laws of these two countries. / Mercantile Law / LL.M. (Commercial law)
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Legal aspects of the regulation of mergers and acquisitionsOberholzer, Cornelius Christiaan 11 1900 (has links)
One of the objectives of the Securities Regulation Code on Takeovers and Mergers ("the
Code") was to achieve neutrality of treatment of minority shareholders in takeover situations
irrespective of the method employed to effect the takeover. This objective has not yet been
achieved despite the inclusion of Rule 29 in the Code. Different levels of minority protection
apply depending on the method used to effect a takeover. Asset takeovers are also
excluded from the ambit of the Code. It is suggested that capital reductions and security
conversions be prohibited to effect a takeover unless the Code is applicable to the
transaction. The scheme of arrangement procedure, with certain suggested amendments,
should be retained as a takeover method. It is further suggested that section 228 of the
Companies Act be amended to ensure greater minority shareholder protection but that
asset takeovers not be included within the ambit of the Code at this stage. / Private Law / LL.M.
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The liability of companies and that of directors in their personal capacities, in relation to legal warrantiesCatterson, Michelle Karen 28 October 2019 (has links)
This research looks at the need and enforceability of legal warranties that companies include in contracts and/or public displays/notices to limit the company’s liability exposure to third parties. It also discusses the liability incurred by a company and that of its directors in their personal capacities (if any) should the legal warranty implemented be found to be unenforceable. The liability that may be incurred by the company and/or its director/s is dependent on whether the legal warranty which it implemented is enforceable or not and therefore it is important to establish what would constitute an enforceable legal warranty. In order to determine what is likely to constitute an enforceable legal warranty the study looks back at what has previously been deemed to constitute an unenforceable legal warranty. This is done by analysing the common law principles of contract, being the freedom to contract and the sanctity of contract, and its development in accordance with our constitutional dispensation through case law precedents. The provisions of the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 that apply to legal warranties are also analysed in order to determine the anticipated outcome of future case law where the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 may be applicable to a dispute involving legal warranties. Once what constitutes an unenforceable legal warranty is established, the study will discuss the legal position of a third party, and that of the company, where a third party has suffered damages as a result of the company’s acts or omissions and the company is unable to raise a legal warranty as a defence against such liability, as the legal warranty is found to be unenforceable. Thereafter the study will discuss the measures available to the company where the company is found liable to the third party for the aforementioned damages and the company wishes to mitigate its losses in this regard. Such measures shall include director insurance as well as the recovery of such liability against a director, in the director’s personal capacity, where the company either does not have director insurance or is unable to enforce the director insurance due to the actions of a director. In order to determine the director’s accountability to the company in this regard an assessment is made of the duties imposed on a director in terms of the common law and Companies Act 71 of 2008 to establish whether such duties are wide enough to include a duty on the director to ensure legal warranties he/she plays a part in implementing are enforceable. / Mercantile Law / LL. M. (Corporate Law)
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A critical analysis of the removal of directors by the board of directors and the judiciary under the Companies Act 71 of 2008Cassim, Rehana 04 1900 (has links)
Section 71(3) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 has introduced into South African company
law a provision which for the first time permits the board of directors to remove another director
from office in certain specific instances. A further significant innovation in the Companies Act
71 of 2008 is contained in section 162, which empowers a court to make an order declaring a
director delinquent or placing him under probation in specific instances. The effect of section
162 is that a court is empowered to remove a director from the board of directors. The focus of
this thesis is the removal of directors from office by the board of directors and by the judiciary.
The thesis explores the underpinning philosophy of the statutory provisions relating to the
removal of directors from office. It also examines the impact of the power given to the board
of directors and to the courts to remove a director from office. The grounds and the procedures
for the removal of directors by the board of directors and the judiciary are examined. The
fiduciary duties applicable to directors in removing a director from the board of directors are
also explored. In addition, this thesis examines the removal of directors holding multiple
positions or capacities in relation to a company, such as an employee or a shareholder with
loaded voting rights. The remedies which may be relied on by a director who has been removed
from office by the board of directors are examined. Recommendations are made to strengthen
and improve the provisions in the Companies Act 71 of 2008 relating to the removal of directors
from office by the board of directors and the judiciary. Amendments to the Companies Act 71
of 2008 are suggested to remove ambiguities; to guard against the abuse of sections 71(3) and
162; to improve the grounds and procedures for the removal of directors by the board of
directors and the judiciary, and to enhance the remedies that may be relied on by a director who
has been removed from office by the board of directors. / Artikel 71(3) van die Maatskappywet 71 van 2008 het ’n bepaling tot Suid-Afrikaanse
maatskappyreg toegevoeg wat die direksie vir die eerste keer in staat stel om ’n ander direkteur
in sekere spesifieke gevalle uit sy of haar amp te verwyder. ’n Verdere belangrike vernuwing
in die Maatskappywet 71 van 2008 word in artikel 162 vervat, wat ’n hof magtig om ’n bevel
uit te vaardig wat ’n direkteur misdadig verklaar of hom of haar in spesifieke gevalle aan ’n
proeftydperk onderwerp. Die effek van artikel 162 is dat ’n hof by magte is om ’n direkteur
uit die direksie te verwyder. Die fokus van hierdie tesis is die verwydering van direkteure uit
hul ampte deur die direksie en die regbank. Die tesis verken die onderliggende filosofie van
die statutêre bepalings wat met die verwydering van direkteure uit hul ampte verband hou. Dit
ondersoek ook die impak van die bevoegdheid wat aan die direksie en die howe verleen word
om ’n direkteur uit sy of haar amp te verwyder. Die gronde en prosedures vir die verwydering
van direkteure deur die direksie en die regbank word ondersoek. Die fidusiêre pligte van
toepassing op direkteure by die verwydering van ’n direkteur uit die direksie word ook verken.
Daarbenewens ondersoek hierdie tesis die verwydering van direkteure wat veelvuldige posisies
of hoedanighede met betrekking tot ’n maatskappy beklee, soos ʼn werknemer of aandeelhouer
met gelaaide stemregte. Die regsmiddele waarop ’n direkteur, wat deur die direksie uit sy of
haar amp verwyder is, kan steun, word ondersoek. Aanbevelings word gemaak om die
bepalings in die Maatskappywet 71 van 2008, wat met die verwydering van direkteure uit hul
ampte deur die direksie en regbank verband hou, te versterk en te verbeter. Wysigings aan die
Maatskappywet 71 van 2008 word voorgestel om dubbelsinnighede uit te skakel; om teen die
misbruik van artikels 71(3) en 162 te waak; om die gronde en prosedures vir die verwydering
van direkteure deur die direksie en die regbank te verbeter, en om die regsmiddele waarop ’n
direkteur wat deur die direksie uit sy of haar amp verwyder is kan steun, te versterk. / ISigaba 71(3) Somthetho weZinkampani 71 ka 2008 sewuze wangenisa emithethweni
yezinkampani zaseNingizimu Afrika, umthetho ongowokuqala ovumela ibhodi labaqondisi
ukuthi libe namandla wokugudluza omunye umqondisi esikhundleni sakhe ngaphansi kwezimo
ezithile. Olunye ushintsho olusha kuMthetho wama-71 weZinkampani ka 2008 uqukethwe
yiSigaba 162, wona ugunyaza inkantolo ukuthi ikhiphe umyalelo owazisa umqondisi ngokuthi
unecala noma obeka umqondisi ngaphansi kophenyo, phecelezi “probation” ngesinye
isikhathi. Inhloso yeSigaba 162 wukunikeza inkantolo igunya lokugudluza umqondisi
kwibhodi labaqondisi. Impokophelo yale thisisi wukugudluzwa kwabaqondisi, bagudluzwe
yibhodi labaqondisi kanye nomthetho/nobulungisa. Ithisisi ihlola ifilosofi yemithetho
ekhishiwe emayelana nokugudluzwa kwabaqondisi ezikhundleni zabo, Kanti futhi ihlola
umthelela wamandla anikezwe ibhodi labaqondisi kanye nezinkantolo ukuthi zigudluze
umqondisi esikhundleni. Izizathu kanye nengqubo elandelwayo mayelana nokugudluzwa
kwabaqondisi yibhodi labaqondisi kanye nomthetho nazo ziyahlolwa. Imisebenzi emayelana
nokuthembeka eyenziwa ngabaqondisi ukugudluza umqondisi kwibhodi labaqondisi nayo
iyacwaningwa Ngaphezu kwalokhu, le thisisi .iphenya ukugudluzwa kwabaqondisi abaqokwe
ezikhundleni eziningi noma abanegunya elithize ngokwengqubo yenkampani,
enjengesisebenzi, phecelezi “employee” noma umabelwa-mashezi onamalungelo amaningi
okuvota, phecelezi, “loaded with voting rights”. Izeluleko ezingasetshenziswa wumqondisi
ogudluzwe esikhundleni sakhe yibhodi labaqondisi nazo ziyahlolwa. Izincomo nazo ziyenziwa
ngenhloso yokuqinisa kanye nokuthuthukiswa kwamandla oMthetho we-71 weZinkampani ka
2008, mayelana nokugudluzwa kwabaqondisi ezikhundleni yibhodi labaqondisi kanye
nomthetho. Izinguquko zoMthetho wama-71 weZinkampani ka 2008 ziqonde ukususa
izixakaxaka, ukulwa nokudlelezelwa kweSigaba 71(3) kanye no 162, ukuthuthukisa izizathu
kanye nezingqubo zokugudluzwa kwabaqondisi yibhodi labaqondisi kanye nomthetho,
ukuqinisa izindlela zokulungisa ezingasetshenziswa wumqondisi osegudluziwe esikhundleni
yibhodi labaqondisi. / Mercantile Law / LL. D.
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