Mesa Arizona Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation

State:
Multi-State
City:
Mesa
Control #:
US-0853BG
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

Most companies' corporate bylaws or articles of incorporation contain indemnification and advancement provisions. While these provisions provide important protection for corporate executives if the individuals become the target of claims relating to their action undertaken in their corporate capacities, these provisions alone may not be provide sufficient protection. The provisions in the corporate documents may not address all of the issues that can arise and may not provide sufficient protection for the individuals when there are indemnification or advancement disputes and may not protect individuals from changes to corporate bylaws after the individuals have left the company. For these and many other reasons, well-advised corporate executives will want to have their rights memorialized in a separate, written indemnification and advancement agreement with the company.
The most important reason for individuals to seek to put a written indemnification agreement in place is that written agreements typically provide more comprehensive protection than corporate bylaws or statutory provisions. Most bylaws, for example, provide for permissive indemnification, whereas most written agreements are written on a mandatory basis. Moreover, the rights enumerated in the agreement are enforceable obligations that cannot be amended or terminated without the individual executive's agreement.
Another reason that directors and officers will seek to put contractual indemnification agreements in place is so that if the individuals are the target of claims after they have left the company, they can assert their rights of indemnification notwithstanding the arrival of new management. The contractual indemnification provides them an extra measure of protection and some level of assurance that their rights will be protected if claims arise after they have left the company.
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  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation
  • Preview Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation

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FAQ

Mesa (/?me?s?/ MAY-s?) is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States. It is the third-most populous city in Arizona, after Phoenix and Tucson, the 36th-most populous city in the U.S., and the most populous city that is not a county seat.

Mesas are formed by erosion, when water washes smaller and softer types of rocks away from the top of a hill. The strong, durable rock that remains on top of a mesa is called caprock. A mesa is usually wider than it is tall. Mesas are usually found in dry regions where rock layers are horizontal.

Best Suburbs Near Phoenix, Arizona Chandler. Population: 257,165. Median Home Value: $285,000. Paradise Valley. Population: 14,502. ... Scottsdale. Population: 255,310. ... Gilbert. Population: 248,279. ... Mesa. Population: 518,012. ... Fountain Hills. Population: 24,987. ... Peoria. Population: 172,259. ... Goodyear. Population: 82,835. ...

The city of Mesa Arizona is located about 20 miles east of Phoenix Arizona. Mesa Arizona is one of the larger suburbs of Phoenix.

Mesa, (Spanish: ?table?), flat-topped tableland with one or more steep sides, common in the Colorado Plateau regions of the United States; a butte is similar but smaller.

Mesas are isolated, broad flat-topped mountains with at least one steep side. Mesas are abundant in the southwestern states of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Arizona. Buttes are smaller flat topped mountains or hills with steep slopes on all sides.

Mesa, city, Maricopa county, south-central Arizona, U.S. The name is Spanish for ?tabletop? or ?tableland.? A southeastern suburb of Phoenix, the site was settled and founded in 1878 by Mormons who used ancient Hohokam canals for irrigation.

The core part of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area is the Phoenix?Mesa, Arizona Urban Area, which is far smaller than the Metropolitan Statistical Area.

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Mesa Arizona Director's indemnification Agreement Regarding a Publicly Held Corporation