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1. Explain the term 'Promotion and describe his legal status vis a vis the company.
28
Answers
Answer:
The idea of carrying on a business which can be profitably undertaken is conceived either by a person or by a group of persons who are called promoters. After the idea is conceived, the promoters make detailed investigations to find out the weaknesses and strong points of the idea, to determine the amount of capital required and to estimate the operating expenses and probable income.
The term ‘promoter’ is a term of business and not of law. It has not been defined anywhere in the Act, but a number of judicial decisions have attempted to explain it.
A person cannot be held as promoter merely because he has signed at the foot of the Memorandum or that he has provided money for the payment of formation expenses.
Legal Position of a Promoter:
The promoter is neither a trustee nor an agent of the company because there is no company yet in existence. The correct way to describe his legal position is that he stands in a fiduciary position towards the company about to be formed.
From the fiduciary position of promoters, the two important results follow:
(1) A promoter cannot be allowed to make any secret profits. If it is found that in any particular transaction of the company, he has obtained a secret profit for himself, he will be bound to refund the same to the company.
(2) The promoter is not allowed to derive a profit from the sale of his own property to the company unless all material facts are disclosed. If he contracts to sell his own property to the company without making a full disclosure, the company may either repudiate/rescind the sale or affirm the contract and recover the profit made out of it by the promoter.
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Explanation:
The idea of carrying on a business which can be profitably undertaken is conceived either by a person or by a group of persons who are called promoters. After the idea is conceived, the promoters make detailed investigations to find out the weaknesses and strong points of the idea, to determine the amount of capital required and to estimate the operating expenses and probable income.
The term ‘promoter’ is a term of business and not of law. It has not been defined anywhere in the Act, but a number of judicial decisions have attempted to explain it.
A person cannot be held as promoter merely because he has signed at the foot of the Memorandum or that he has provided money for the payment of formation expenses.
Legal Position of a Promoter:
The promoter is neither a trustee nor an agent of the company because there is no company yet in existence. The correct way to describe his legal position is that he stands in a fiduciary position towards the company about to be formed.
From the fiduciary position of promoters, the two important results follow:
(1) A promoter cannot be allowed to make any secret profits. If it is found that in any particular transaction of the company, he has obtained a secret profit for himself, he will be bound to refund the same to the company.
(2) The promoter is not allowed to derive a profit from the sale of his own property to the company unless all material facts are disclosed. If he contracts to sell his own property to the company without making a full disclosure, the company may either repudiate/rescind the sale or affirm the contract and recover the profit made out of it by the promoter.