The corporate constitution as a statutory contract: Artifice or anachronism?
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Harris, JasonAbstract
A company’s constitution provides the legal foundation for the relationship between a company and its directors and members. That relationship is deemed by statute to have effect as a contract between the company and the directors and between the company and its members, and amongst ...
See moreA company’s constitution provides the legal foundation for the relationship between a company and its directors and members. That relationship is deemed by statute to have effect as a contract between the company and the directors and between the company and its members, and amongst members between themselves. This statutory deeming of the constitution as a contract has been a feature of company law across the common law world since the 1850s, but the application of contract law to the construction and operation of the constitution raises difficult conceptual problems. In this article, it is argued that the deeming of the constitution as a contract is an anachronism based on a 19th century conception of a company as the embodiment of a group of incorporators. It is argued that changes in 1998 in Australia have removed this conceptual foundation and now formally recognise the company as a distinct legal entity arising from registration, rather than the legal embodiment of the collective members. It is argued that the constitution should be recognised as having statutory force, rather than continuing to deem it to have contractual force.
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See moreA company’s constitution provides the legal foundation for the relationship between a company and its directors and members. That relationship is deemed by statute to have effect as a contract between the company and the directors and between the company and its members, and amongst members between themselves. This statutory deeming of the constitution as a contract has been a feature of company law across the common law world since the 1850s, but the application of contract law to the construction and operation of the constitution raises difficult conceptual problems. In this article, it is argued that the deeming of the constitution as a contract is an anachronism based on a 19th century conception of a company as the embodiment of a group of incorporators. It is argued that changes in 1998 in Australia have removed this conceptual foundation and now formally recognise the company as a distinct legal entity arising from registration, rather than the legal embodiment of the collective members. It is argued that the constitution should be recognised as having statutory force, rather than continuing to deem it to have contractual force.
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Date
2020Source title
Australian Journal of Corporate LawVolume
36Issue
1Publisher
LexisNexisLicence
Copyright All Rights ReservedRights statement
This article was published by LexisNexis and should be cited as: Harris, J. (2020). The corporate constitution as a statutory contract: Artifice or anachronism? Australian Journal of Corporate Law, 36(1), 25–48.Faculty/School
The University of Sydney Law SchoolShare