aThe regulations contained in Table “A” in the Fourth Schedule to the Companies Act, Chapter 50 of Singapore, shall not apply to the Company, but the following shall subject to repeal, addition and alteration as provided by the Act or these Articles be the regulations of the Company 在表...
A company is a business entity registered under the Singapore Companies Act, Chapter 50. Unlike a business firm such as a sole proprietorship or partnership, it has a legal personality i.e. it has rights to own properties, can sue or be sued. It usually has the words 'Pte Ltd' or 'Lt...
1 The regulations in Table A in the Fourth Schedule to the Companies Act, Chapter 50 (as amended) shall not apply to the Company 2 In these Articles (if not inconsistent with the subject or context) the words and expressions set out in the first column below shall bear the meanings...
The registration of thiscompany typeis done in accordance with the regulations of theCompanies Act, Chapter 50, which can be detailed byour team of company formation agents in Singapore. All companies, including LLCs, have to be registered with theAccounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA...
(3) A new provision is added to provide that where directors and senior management cause harm to others while carrying out their duties, the company is responsible for compensation to the affected parties, where the directo...
The Chapter on Groups of Companies of the European Model Company Act (EMCA)EUROPEAN Union membershipCORPORATION lawMINORITY stockholdersNo abstract is available for this item.doi:10.1515/ecfr-2016-0301ConacPierre-HenriEuropean Company and Financial Law Review...
This chapter strengthens government oversight over SOEs and governs the organizational structure of SOEs. First, the draft amendments to the Company Law codify the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) over SOEs, and states that the CCP can “research and discuss major business management...
(Insolvency Act 1986, Section 122(1)(g)). Sixthly, an individual will be liable to make contributions to the company’s assets where, upon the winding-up of the company, it appears that the company was used with the intent to defraud creditors of the company or has been used for fraud...
(Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986, Section 15). Fifthly, if an individual petitions the court for the winding-up of a company on the grounds that it would be just and equitable to do so, the court may lift the corporate veil in order to assess the factual basis of these ground...
33 of the 1974 Act. The Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 was also used to disqualify Mobile Sweepers (Reading) Limited’s sole director from being a company director or otherwise being involved in the management of any company for five years (the 1986 Act is considered inChapter 13)...