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The agreement of the members of a company is required to make certain changes to a company, such as amending its constitution, name or share capital, or for the company to carry out certain actions, such as entering into a substantial property transaction with a director or making a political donation.
Three forms of resolutions are available: ordinary resolution, special resolution and unanimous resolution. There is no concept of special resolution in board meetings and very few unanimous resolutions are also required. However, all three are covered in the case of general meetings.
Board directors and shareholders are the only members of the company that can make company resolutions. When the board of directors make a formal decision, it is referred to as a board resolution, whereas when the company shareholders make a formal decision, it is referred to as a shareholder resolution.
A corporate resolution refers to either a decision of the shareholders at a shareholders' meeting or a decision of the board of directors at a directors' meeting.
A meeting of all the shareholders or members of the company is called a Shareholders' Meeting. A meeting of all the Directors of the company is called a Board Meeting. Frequency of meeting depends on the type of meeting.
You do not always need to have a meeting to pass a resolution. If enough shareholders or directors have told you they agree, you can usually confirm the resolution in writing. You must write to all shareholders letting them know about the outcome of a resolution.
A board resolution is a document that formalises important decisions made by the board of directors and the actions relating to them. It is legally binding and functions as a compliance record to provide evidence of decisions made by the board regarding pivotal company matters.
Typically, decisions that must made by ordinary resolution of the shareholders include: Paying dividends. Appointing and removing directors. Approving directors' service contracts. Approving directors' loans. Allotting new shares.
Since they are used for major decisions, corporate resolutions are common, especially when first starting a business: Approving officers and board members; Setting up a corporate bank account; Buying or selling real estate; Approving initial bylaws; Merging with another business or entering into a joint venture;