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PUBLIC LAWS OF MAINE
Second Regular Session of the 120th

CHAPTER 640
H.P. 283 - L.D. 361

An Act to Adopt the Model Business Corporation Act in Maine

Be it enacted by the People of the State of Maine as follows:

PART A

     Sec. A-1. 13-A MRSA, as amended, is repealed.

     Sec. A-2. 13-C MRSA is enacted to read:

TITLE 13-C
MAINE BUSINESS CORPORATION ACT
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
SUBCHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS

§101. Short title

     This Act may be known and cited as the "Maine Business Corporation Act."

§102. Definitions

     As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Articles of incorporation. "Articles of incorporation" means the original or restated articles of incorporation and all amendments thereto. "Articles of incorporation" includes articles of merger, articles of consolidation, articles of domestication, articles of conversion, a certificate of incorporation and what has previously been designated as "articles of agreement" for a corporation and certificate of organization. "Articles of incorporation" also includes special acts of the Legislature chartering corporations that could not be organized under general acts. If any document filed under this Act restates the articles of incorporation in their entirety, the articles do not include any prior documents.

     2. Authorized shares. "Authorized shares" means the shares of all classes that a domestic or foreign corporation is authorized to issue.

     3. Conspicuous. "Conspicuous" means so written that a reasonable person against whom the writing is to operate should have noticed it. Words that are printed in italics or boldface or contrasting color or typed in capitals or underlined are conspicuous.

     4. Corporation; domestic corporation; domestic business corporation. "Corporation," "domestic corporation" or "domestic business corporation" means a corporation for profit or with shares, that is not a foreign corporation, incorporated under or subject to the provisions of this Act.

     5. Deliver; delivery. "Deliver" or "delivery" means any method of delivery used in conventional commercial practice, including delivery by hand, mail, commercial delivery and electronic transmission.

     6. Distribution. "Distribution" means a direct or indirect transfer of money or other property, except a corporation's own shares, or incurrence of indebtedness by a corporation to or for the benefit of its shareholders in respect of any of its shares. A distribution may be in the form of a declaration or payment of a dividend; a purchase, redemption or other acquisition of shares; a distribution of indebtedness; or otherwise.

     7. Domestic unincorporated entity. "Domestic unincorporated entity" means an unincorporated entity whose internal affairs are governed by the laws of this State.

     8. Effective date of notice. "Effective date of notice" has the meaning set forth in section 103.

     9. Electronic transmission; electronically transmitted. "Electronic transmission" or "electronically transmitted" means any process of communication not directly involving the physical transfer of paper that is suitable for the retention, retrieval and reproduction of information by the recipient.

     10. Employee. "Employee" includes an officer of a domestic or foreign corporation but does not include a director. A director may accept duties that make that director also an employee.

     11. Entity. "Entity" includes a domestic or foreign business corporation; a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation; an estate; a partnership; a trust; 2 or more persons having a joint or common economic interest; a domestic or foreign unincorporated entity; a state; the United States; and a foreign government.

     12. Filing entity. "Filing entity" means an unincorporated entity that is created by filing a public organic document.

     13. Foreign corporation; foreign business corporation. "Foreign corporation" or "foreign business corporation" means a corporation incorporated for profit under a law other than the law of this State that would be a business corporation if incorporated under the laws of this State.

     14. Foreign nonprofit corporation. "Foreign nonprofit corporation" means a corporation incorporated under a law other than the law of this State that would be a nonprofit corporation if incorporated under the laws of this State.

     15. Foreign unincorporated entity. "Foreign unincorporated entity" means an unincorporated entity whose internal affairs are governed by an organic law of a jurisdiction other than this State.

     16. Governmental subdivision. "Governmental subdivision" includes an authority, county, district and municipality.

     17. Includes. "Includes" denotes a partial definition.

     18. Individual. "Individual" means a natural person. "Individual" includes the estate of an incompetent or deceased individual.

     19. Interests in an unincorporated entity. "Interests in an unincorporated entity" means:

     20. Means. "Means" denotes an exhaustive definition.

     21. Membership. "Membership" means the rights of a member in a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation.

     22. Nonfiling entity. "Nonfiling entity" means an unincorporated entity that is not created by filing a public organic document.

     23. Nonprofit corporation; domestic nonprofit corporation. "Nonprofit corporation" or "domestic nonprofit corporation" means a corporation incorporated under the laws of this State and subject to the provisions of the Maine Nonprofit Corporation Act.

     24. Notice. "Notice" has the meaning set forth in section 103.

     25. Organic document. "Organic document" means a public organic document or a private organic document.

     26. Organic law. "Organic law" means the statute governing the internal affairs of a domestic or foreign business or nonprofit corporation or unincorporated entity.

     27. Owner liability. "Owner liability" means personal liability for a debt, obligation or liability of a domestic or foreign business or nonprofit corporation or unincorporated entity that is imposed on a person:

     28. Person. "Person" includes an individual and an entity.

     29. Principal office. "Principal office" means the office so designated in the annual report where the principal executive offices of a domestic or foreign corporation are located.

     30. Private organic document. "Private organic document" means any document other than the public organic document, if any, that determines the internal governance of an unincorporated entity. When a private organic document has been amended or restated, "private organic document" means the private organic document as last amended or restated.

     31. Public organic document. "Public organic document" means the document, if any, that is filed as a public record to create an unincorporated entity. When a public organic document has been amended or restated, "public organic document" means the public organic document as last amended or restated.

     32. Proceeding. "Proceeding" includes a civil suit and criminal, administrative and investigatory action.

     33. Record date. "Record date" means the date established under chapter 6 or 7 on which a corporation determines the identity of its shareholders and their shareholdings for purposes of this Act. The determinations must be made as of the close of business on the record date unless another time for doing so is specified when the record date is fixed.

     34. Shareholder. "Shareholder" means the person in whose name shares are registered in the records of a corporation or the beneficial owner of shares to the extent of the rights granted by a nominee certificate on file with a corporation.

     35. Shares. "Shares" means the units into which the proprietary interests in a corporation are divided.

     36. Sign; signature. "Sign" or "signature" includes any manual, facsimile, conformed or electronic signature.

     37. State. "State," when referring to a part of the United States, includes a state or commonwealth and its agencies and governmental subdivisions and a territory or insular possession of the United States and its agencies and governmental subdivisions.

     38. Subscriber. "Subscriber" means a person who subscribes for shares in a corporation, whether before or after incorporation.

     39. Unincorporated entity. "Unincorporated entity" means an organization or artificial legal person that either has a separate legal existence or has the power to acquire an estate in real property in its own name and that is not any of the following: a domestic or foreign business or nonprofit corporation; an estate; a trust; a state; the United States; or a foreign government. "Unincorporated entity" includes, but is not limited to, a general partnership, limited liability company, limited partnership, business trust, joint stock association and unincorporated nonprofit association.

     40. United States. "United States" includes a district, authority, bureau, commission, department and any other agency of the United States.

     41. Voting group. "Voting group" means all shares of one or more classes or series that under the articles of incorporation or this Act are entitled to vote and be counted together collectively on a matter at a meeting of shareholders. All shares entitled by the articles of incorporation or this Act to vote generally on a matter are for that purpose a single voting group.

     42. Voting power. "Voting power" means the current power to vote in the election of directors.

§103. Notice

     1. Written notice required unless oral notice reasonable. Notice under this Act must be in writing unless oral notice is reasonable under the circumstances. Notice by electronic transmission constitutes written notice.

     2. Methods of communicating notice. Notice may be communicated in person; by mail or other method of delivery; or by telephone, voice mail or other electronic means. If these forms of personal notice are impracticable, notice may be communicated by a newspaper of general circulation in the area where published, or by radio, television or other form of public broadcast communication.

     3. Written notice by corporation; when effective. Written notice by a domestic or foreign corporation to a shareholder, if in a comprehensible form, takes effect:

     4. Written notice to corporation; when effective. Written notice to a domestic or foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State may be addressed to its clerk or registered agent at its registered office or to the corporation at its principal office shown in its most recent annual report or, in the case of a foreign corporation that has not yet delivered an annual report, in its application for a certificate of authority pursuant to section 130. Except as provided in subsection 3, written notice, if in a comprehensible form, is effective at the earliest of the following:

     5. Oral notice; when effective. Oral notice is effective when communicated, if communicated in a comprehensible manner.

     6. Specific notice requirements govern. If this Act prescribes notice requirements for particular circumstances, those requirements govern. If articles of incorporation or bylaws prescribe notice requirements not inconsistent with this section or other provisions of this Act, those requirements govern.

     7. Computation of time for notice purposes. In computing the time for the giving of any notice required or permitted under this Act, or under the articles or bylaws of a corporation, or a resolution of its shareholders or directors, the day on which the notice is given is excluded in the computation of time and the day when the act for which notice is given is to be done is included in the computation of time, unless the instrument calling for notice specifically provides otherwise.

§104. Number of shareholders

     1. Identified as one shareholder. For purposes of this Act, the following identified as a shareholder in a corporation's current record of shareholders constitutes one shareholder:

     2. Registered in substantially similar names. For purposes of this Act, shareholdings registered in substantially similar names constitute one shareholder if it is reasonable to believe that the names represent the same person.

§105. Reservation of power

     The Legislature of this State has the power to amend or repeal all or part of this Act at any time, and all domestic and foreign corporations subject to this Act are governed by the amendment or repeal.

SUBCHAPTER 2
FILING DOCUMENTS

§121. Filing requirements

     To be entitled to filing with the office of the Secretary of State, a document must satisfy the following requirements and the requirements of any other section of this Act.

     1. Filing in office of Secretary of State. Filing of the document in office of the Secretary of State must be permitted or required by this Act.

     2. Information. The document must contain the information required by this Act.

     3. Form; format. The document must be typewritten or printed or, if electronically transmitted, it must be in a format that can be retrieved or reproduced in typewritten or printed form.

     4. English language. The document must be in the English language, except that:

     5. Executed. The document must be executed and dated:

     6. Signature; corporate seal. The person executing the document shall sign it and state beneath or opposite that signature the person's name and the capacity in which the person signs. The document may but need not contain a corporate seal, attestation, acknowledgment or verification.

     7. Prescribed form. If the Secretary of State has prescribed a mandatory form for the document under section 122, the document must be in or on the prescribed form.

     8. Delivery. The document must be delivered to the office of the Secretary of State for filing. Delivery may be made by electronic transmission if and to the extent permitted by the Secretary of State.

     9. Fee. At the time of delivery, the correct filing fee and any reinstatement fee or penalty must be paid or provision for payment made in a manner permitted by the Secretary of State.

§122. Forms

     The Secretary of State may prescribe and furnish on request forms for any documents required or permitted to be filed by this Act. If the Secretary of State so requires, use of these forms is mandatory.

§123. Filing, service and copying fees

     1. Filing fees. The following fees must be paid to the Secretary of State.

     2. Process fee. The Secretary of State shall collect a fee of $20 each time process is served on the Secretary of State under this Act. The party to a proceeding causing service of process is entitled to recover this fee as costs if that party prevails in the proceeding.

     3. Copying and certifying fees. The Secretary of State shall charge the following fees for copying and certifying the copy of any filed document relating to a domestic or foreign corporation.

§124. Expedited service

     The Secretary of State may provide expedited service for the processing of documents in accordance with this Act. The Secretary of State shall establish a fee schedule and adopt rules to set forth the procedures governing this expedited service. All fees collected as provided by this section must be deposited into a fund for use by the Secretary of State in providing improved filing service.

§125. Effective time and date of document

     Except as provided in section 126, subsection 3, a document accepted for filing takes effect on the date and at the time of filing, as evidenced by such means as the Secretary of State may use for the purpose of recording the date and time of filing, except that:

     1. Time specified in document. If the document specifies a time as to its effective time on the date filed, then the document takes effect on the date filed and at the time specified; and

     2. Delayed effective date; time. If the document specifies a delayed effective time and date, the document takes effect on the time and date specified, as long as the delayed effective date for the document is not later than the 90th day after the date it is filed. If the document specifies a delayed effective date but does not specify a time, the document is effective at the close of business on the specified date.

§126. Correcting filed document

     1. Correction authorized. A domestic or foreign corporation may correct a document filed by the Secretary of State if:

     2. Method of correcting documents. A domestic or foreign corporation may correct a document by preparing articles of correction that:

The domestic or foreign corporation shall deliver the articles of correction to the Secretary of State for filing.

     3. Effective date of correction. Articles of correction take effect on the effective date of the document they correct except that, as to persons relying on the uncorrected document and adversely affected by the correction, articles of correction take effect when filed.

§127. Filing duty of Secretary of State

     1. Duty to file. If a document delivered to the office of the Secretary of State for filing pursuant to this Act satisfies the requirements of section 121, the Secretary of State shall file the document.

     2. Recording as filed; acknowledgment. The Secretary of State files a document pursuant to subsection 1 by recording it as filed on the date of receipt. After filing a document, the Secretary of State shall deliver to the domestic or foreign corporation or its representative a copy of the document with an acknowledgement of the date of filing. If the person delivering the document for filing so requests, the acknowledgment must further include the hour and minute of filing.

     3. Refusal to file; written explanation. If the Secretary of State refuses to file a document, the Secretary of State shall return it to the domestic or foreign corporation or its representative within 5 days after the document was delivered, together with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.

     4. Ministerial. The Secretary of State's duty to file a document under this section is ministerial, and the filing or refusal to file a document does not:

§128.   Appeal Secretary of State's refusal to file document

     1. Commencing an appeal. If the Secretary of State refuses to file a document delivered to the Secretary of State's office for filing, the domestic or foreign corporation within 30 days after the return of the document may appeal the refusal to the Superior Court of the county where the corporation's principal office is located or, if there is not a principal office in this State, of Kennebec County. The appeal is commenced by petitioning the court to compel filing of the document and by attaching to the petition the document and the Secretary of State's explanation of the refusal to file.

     2. Court order. Upon the receipt of a petition filed under subsection 1, the court may summarily order the Secretary of State to file a document or take other action the court considers appropriate.

     3. Appeal court's decision. The court's final decision may be appealed as in other civil proceedings.

§129. Evidentiary effect of copy of filed document

     A certificate from the Secretary of State delivered with a copy of a document filed by the Secretary of State pursuant to section 127 is conclusive evidence that the original document is on file with the Secretary of State.

§130.   Certificate of existence; certificate of authority

     1. Application. Any person may apply to the Secretary of State to furnish a certificate of existence for a domestic corporation or a certificate of authority for a foreign corporation.

     2. Contents. A certificate of existence or certificate of authority sets forth:

     3. Evidence of existence or authority. Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a certificate of existence or certificate of authority issued by the Secretary of State may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the domestic or foreign corporation is in existence or is authorized to transact business in this State.

§131. Penalty for signing false document

     A person commits a Class E crime if that person signs a document pursuant to this Act knowing it is false in any material respect with intent that the document be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing.

SUBCHAPTER 3
Secretary of State

§141. Powers

     The Secretary of State has the power reasonably necessary to perform the duties required of the Secretary of State by this Act, including the power to make rules not inconsistent with this Act. Rules adopted pursuant to this Act are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter II-A.

CHAPTER 2
INCORPORATION

§201. Incorporators

     One or more persons may serve as the incorporator or incorporators of a corporation by delivering articles of incorporation to the Secretary of State for filing.

§202. Articles of incorporation

     1. Required elements. The articles of incorporation of a corporation must set forth:

     2. Optional elements. The articles of incorporation of a corporation may set forth:

     3. Enumeration of corporate powers unnecessary. The articles of incorporation of a corporation need not set forth any of the corporate powers enumerated in this Act.

     4. Incorporation prior to effective date of Act. If a corporation was incorporated in this State before the effective date of this Act, the corporation's articles of incorporation as of the effective date of this Act are deemed to include a provision eliminating monetary liability of directors to the fullest extent permitted by subsection 2, paragraph D. The corporation may, by later amendment approved in accordance with section 1002 or 1003, repeal or restrict this limitation of liability with regard to conduct of a director that occurs subsequent to that amendment.

     5. Filing of clerk's signed acceptance required. The signed acceptance of the clerk of a corporation must be filed either with or as part of the articles of incorporation.

§203. Incorporation

     1. Beginning of corporate existence. Unless a later effective date is specified, the corporate existence of a corporation begins when its articles of incorporation are filed.

     2. Filing constitutes proof of satisfaction of conditions. The Secretary of State's filing of the articles of incorporation is conclusive proof that the incorporators satisfied all conditions precedent to incorporation except in a proceeding by the State to cancel or revoke the incorporation or involuntarily dissolve the corporation.

§204. Liability for preincorporation transactions

     All persons purporting to act as or on behalf of a corporation, knowing there was no incorporation under this Act, are jointly and severally liable for all liabilities created while so acting.

§205. Organization of corporation

     1. Organizational meeting. An organizational meeting must be held before or after incorporation in accordance with this subsection.

     2. Action permitted without organizational meeting. Action required or permitted by this section to be taken by incorporators at an organizational meeting may be taken without a meeting if the action taken is evidenced by one or more written consents describing the action taken and signed by each incorporator.

     3. Location of organizational meeting. An organizational meeting may be held in or out of this State.

§206. Bylaws

     1. Adoption of bylaws. The incorporators or board of directors of a corporation shall adopt initial bylaws for the corporation.

     2. Contents of bylaws. The bylaws of a corporation may contain any provision for managing the business and regulating the affairs of the corporation that is not inconsistent with law or its articles of incorporation.

§207. Emergency bylaws

     1. Emergency defined. For purposes of this section, an emergency exists if a quorum of the corporation's directors can not readily be assembled because of some catastrophic event.

     2. Emergency bylaws authorized. Unless the articles of incorporation provide otherwise, the board of directors of a corporation may adopt bylaws to be effective only in an emergency. The emergency bylaws, which are subject to amendment or repeal by the shareholders, may make all provisions necessary for managing the corporation during an emergency, including:

     3. Effect of nonemergency bylaws. All provisions of the regular bylaws that are consistent with the emergency bylaws remain effective during an emergency. The emergency bylaws are not effective after the emergency ends.

     4. Effect of corporate action in accord with emergency bylaws. Corporate action taken in good faith in accordance with the emergency bylaws:

CHAPTER 3
PURPOSES AND POWERS

§301. Corporate purposes

     1. Purpose of engaging in lawful business. A corporation incorporated under this Act has the purpose of engaging in any lawful business unless a more limited purpose is set forth in the articles of incorporation.

     2. Subject to other regulation by this State. A corporation engaging in a business that is subject to regulation under another statute of this State may incorporate under this Act only if permitted by, and subject to all limitations of, the other statute.

§302. General powers

     Unless its articles of incorporation provide otherwise, a corporation has perpetual duration and succession in its corporate name and has the same powers as an individual to do all things necessary or convenient to carry out its business and affairs, including, without limitation, power to:

     1. Suit. Sue and be sued, complain and defend in its corporate name;

     2. Corporate seal. Have a corporate seal, which may be altered at will, and to use it, or a facsimile of it, by impressing or affixing it or in any other manner reproducing it;

     3. Bylaws. Make and amend bylaws, not inconsistent with its articles of incorporation or with the laws of this State, for managing the business and regulating the affairs of the corporation;

     4. Acquire property. Purchase, receive, lease or otherwise acquire, and own, hold, improve, use and otherwise deal with, real or personal property or any legal or equitable interest in property, wherever located;

     5. Dispose of property. Sell, convey, mortgage, pledge, lease, exchange and otherwise dispose of all or any part of its property;

     6. Interest in obligations of other entity. Purchase, receive, subscribe for or otherwise acquire; own, hold, vote, use, sell, mortgage, lend, pledge or otherwise dispose of; and deal in and with shares or other interests in, or obligations of, any other entity;

     7. Incur obligations. Make contracts and guarantees; incur liabilities; borrow money; issue its notes, bonds and other obligations, which may be convertible into or include the option to purchase other securities of the corporation; and secure any of its obligations by mortgage or pledge of any of its property, franchises or income;

     8. Use of funds. Lend money, invest and reinvest its funds and receive and hold real and personal property as security for repayment;

     9. Partnership; joint venture. Be a promoter, partner, member, associate or manager of any partnership, joint venture, trust or other entity;

     10. Conduct business. Conduct its business, locate offices and exercise the powers granted by this Act within or without this State;

     11. Directors, officers, employees, agents. Elect directors and appoint officers, employees and agents of the corporation, define their duties, fix their compensation and lend them money and credit;

     12. Establish benefit or incentive plans. Pay pensions and establish pension plans, pension trusts, profit-sharing plans, share-bonus plans, share-option plans and benefit or incentive plans for any or all of its current or former directors, officers, employees and agents;

     13. Make donations. Make donations for the public welfare or for charitable, scientific or educational purposes;

     14. Transact business. Transact any lawful business that will aid governmental policy;

     15. Actions in futherance of corporation. Make payments or donations or do any other lawful act that furthers the business and affairs of the corporation;

     16. Cease activity. Cease its corporate activities and surrender its corporate franchise;

     17. Other corporations. Form or acquire control of other corporations;

     18. Life insurance. Provide, for its benefit, insurance on the life of any of its directors, officers or employees, or on the life of any shareholder;

     19. Litigation expenses. Reimburse and indemnify litigation expenses of directors, officers and employees, as provided in chapter 8, subchapter V; and

     20. Acquire and dispose of own shares. Purchase and otherwise acquire and dispose of its own shares.

§303. Emergency powers

     1. Emergency defined. For the purposes of this section, an emergency exists if a quorum of the corporation's directors can not readily be assembled because of some catastrophic event.

     2. Authorized powers in event of emergency. In anticipation of or during an emergency, the board of directors of a corporation may:

     3. Notice of meeting; quorum. During an emergency, unless emergency bylaws pursuant to chapter 2 provide otherwise:

     4. Effect of corporate action taken during emergency. Corporate action taken in good faith during an emergency under this section to further the ordinary business affairs of the corporation:

§304. Ultra vires

     1. Corporate action not subject to challenge. Except as provided in subsection 2, the validity of corporate action may not be challenged on the ground that the corporation lacks or lacked power to act.

     2. Corporate action subject to challenge. A corporation's power to act may be challenged:

     3. Available remedies in proceeding by shareholder. In a shareholder's proceeding under subsection 2, paragraph A to enjoin an unauthorized corporate act, the court may enjoin or set aside the act, if equitable and if all affected persons are parties to the proceeding, and may award damages for loss, other than anticipated profits, suffered by the corporation or another party because of enjoining the unauthorized act.

CHAPTER 4
NAME

§401. Corporate name

     1. Prohibition. A corporate name may not contain language stating or implying that the corporation is organized for a purpose other than that permitted by section 301 and the corporation's articles of incorporation.

     2. Distinguishable name. Except as authorized by subsections 3 and 4, a corporate name must be distinguishable on the records of the Secretary of State from:

     3. Refuse to file name. The Secretary of State, in the Secretary of State's discretion, may refuse to file a name that:

     4. Authorization to use name. A corporation may apply to the Secretary of State for authorization to use a name that is not distinguishable on the records of the Secretary of State from one or more of the names described in subsection 2. The Secretary of State shall authorize use of the name applied for if:

     5. Use of another corporation's name. A corporation may use the name, including the assumed or fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign corporation that is used in this State if the other corporation is incorporated or authorized to transact business in this State and the corporation proposing to use the name:

     6. Determining distinguishability. In determining whether names are "distinguishable on the records," the Secretary of State shall disregard the following:

§402. Reserved name

     1. Reserve use of name. A person may reserve the exclusive use of a corporate name, including an assumed or fictitious name, by delivering for filing an application to the Secretary of State. The application must set forth the name and address of the applicant and the name proposed to be reserved. If the Secretary of State finds that the corporate name applied for is available, the Secretary of State shall reserve the name for the applicant's exclusive use for a nonrenewable period of 120 days.

     2. Transfer of reservation. The owner of a reserved corporate name under subsection 1 may transfer the reservation to another person by delivering to the Secretary of State a notice of the transfer, signed by the transferor, that states the name and address of the transferee.

§403. Registered name of foreign corporation

     1. Register corporate name. A foreign corporation may register its corporate name if the name is distinguishable on the records of the Secretary of State pursuant to section 401.

     2. Application. To register its corporate name a foreign corporation must deliver to the Secretary of State for filing an application that:

     3. Applicant's exclusive use. The corporate name is registered for the foreign corporation's exclusive use upon the effective date of the application until the end of the calendar year in which the application was filed.

     4. Renewal of registered name. A foreign corporation whose registration is effective may renew it for a successive year by delivering for filing to the Secretary of State a renewal application that complies with the requirements of subsection 2 between October 1st and December 31st. The renewal application, when filed, renews the registration for the following calendar year.

     5. Qualify as foreign corporation. A foreign corporation whose registration is effective may, after the registration is effective, qualify as a foreign corporation under the registered name or may consent in writing to the use of that name by a corporation incorporated under this Act or by another foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State. The registration terminates when the domestic corporation is incorporated or the foreign corporation qualifies or consents to the qualification of another foreign corporation under the registered name.

§404. Assumed or fictitious name of corporation

     1. Assumed name; defined. As used in this section, "assumed name" includes a trade name, the name of a division not separately incorporated and not used in conjunction with the true corporate name and any name other than the true name of a corporation, except a fictitious name.

     2. Fictitious name; defined. As used in this section, "fictitious name" is a name adopted by a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State because its real name is unavailable pursuant to section 401.

     3. Authorized to transact business. Upon complying with this section, a domestic or foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State may transact its business in this State under one or more assumed or fictitious names.

     4. File statement indicating use of assumed or fictitious name. Prior to transacting business in this State under an assumed or fictitious name, a corporation shall execute and deliver for filing, in accordance with section 121, a statement setting forth:

A separate statement must be executed and delivered for filing with respect to each assumed or fictitious name that the corporation proposes to use.

     5. Compliance required. Each assumed or fictitious name must comply with the requirements of section 401.

     6. Enjoin use of assumed or fictitious name. If a corporation uses an assumed or fictitious name without complying with the requirements of this section, the continued use of the assumed or fictitious name may be enjoined upon suit by the Attorney General or by any person adversely affected by the use of the assumed or fictitious name.

     7. Enjoin use despite compliance. Notwithstanding its compliance with the requirements of this section, the use of an assumed or fictitious name may be enjoined upon suit of the Attorney General or of any person adversely affected by such use if:

The mere filing of a statement pursuant to subsection 4 does not constitute actual use of the assumed or fictitious name set out in that statement for purposes of determining priority of rights.

     8. Terminate use of assumed or fictitious name. A corporation may terminate an assumed or fictitious name by executing and delivering, in accordance with section 121, a statement setting forth:

CHAPTER 5
OFFICE AND CLERK

§501. Registered office and clerk

     1. Clerk. Each domestic corporation to which this Act applies shall maintain in this State a clerk, who is a natural person resident in this State. The clerk may be, but is not required to be, one of the directors or officers of the corporation, or the clerk may be a person holding no other position with the corporation. The clerk of a corporation is not an officer but performs the functions provided in this Act.

     2. Registered office. The clerk shall maintain a registered office at some fixed place within this State, which may be, but need not be, the corporation's place of business. The clerk shall perform those duties required of the clerk elsewhere in this Act.

     3. Acceptance of appointment. Unless the clerk signed the document making the appointment, the appointment of a clerk or a successor clerk on whom process may be served is not effective until the clerk delivers a written statement to the Secretary of State accepting the appointment.

     4. Change of clerk. A corporation may change its clerk by executing and delivering for filing as provided by section 121 a statement setting forth:

     5. Resignation of clerk. The clerk of a corporation may resign upon filing a written notice of the resignation with the Secretary of State and by mailing a copy of the notice to the president or treasurer of the corporation or, if both of those offices are vacant, to any of the corporation's directors. The notice filed with the Secretary of State must recite that a copy of the notice has been mailed to the corporate officer designated in this subsection and must specify the corporate officer's name and corporate office. The resignation takes effect upon the filing of the resignation by the Secretary of State.

     6. Appointment of new clerk. If a clerk dies, becomes incapacitated, resigns or otherwise is unable to perform the clerk's duties, the corporation shall promptly appoint another clerk and shall execute and file with the Secretary of State a written statement of the appointment of the new clerk, as provided in subsection 4.

     7. Name or address change. If the name or address of the registered office of the clerk of one or more corporations changes from the name or address of the registered office appearing on the record in the office of the Secretary of State, the clerk shall execute and deliver for filing, in accordance with section 121, a statement setting forth:

In lieu of the bulk filing, the clerk may file for each such corporation a separate statement containing the information.

     8. Statement of change. Filing by a corporation of a statement of a change of its clerk, as provided in subsection 4, constitutes both an appointment of the new clerk named in the statement of change and a termination of the appointment of its former clerk.

     9. Clerk named in articles of incorporation. The initial clerk of a corporation must be named in the articles of incorporation for that corporation. A clerk continues in office until a successor is chosen and qualifies and the statement required by subsection 4 is filed or until the resignation notice required by subsection 5 is filed.

The articles of incorporation or bylaws may provide that changes in the clerk and election of a new clerk must be by vote of the shareholders. Unless the articles or bylaws expressly so provide, changes in the clerk and election of a new clerk must be by resolution of the board of directors.

     10. Document filed to change clerk. Any document to be filed by the Secretary of State, the effect of which is to change the clerk, must be signed by the person designated in the document as the new clerk or in accordance with section 121, subsection 5, paragraph A, B or C.

§502. Service on corporation

     1. Service of process; agent. A corporation's clerk is the corporation's agent for service of process, notice or demand required or permitted by law to be served on the corporation.

     2. Service by mail. If a corporation has no clerk, or the clerk can not with reasonable diligence be served, the corporation may be served by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the president of the corporation at its principal office. Service is perfected under this subsection at the earliest of:

     3. Service on corporation not limited. This section does not prescribe the only means or necessarily the required means of serving a corporation.

CHAPTER 6
SHARES AND DISTRIBUTIONS
SUBCHAPTER I
SHARES

§601. Authorized shares

     1. Classes and number of shares authorized. A corporation's articles of incorporation must prescribe the classes of shares and the number of shares of each class that the corporation is authorized to issue. If more than one class of shares is authorized, the articles of incorporation must prescribe a distinguishing designation for each class and, prior to the issuance of shares of a class, the preferences, limitations and relative rights of that class must be described in the articles of incorporation. All shares of a class must have preferences, limitations and relative rights identical with those of other shares of the same class, except to the extent otherwise permitted by section 602.

     2. Voting rights authorized. A corporation's articles of incorporation must authorize one or more classes of shares that together have unlimited voting rights and one or more classes of shares, which may be the same class or classes as those with voting rights, that together are entitled to receive the net assets of the corporation upon dissolution.

     3. Designations, preferences, limitations and relative rights. A corporation's articles of incorporation may authorize one or more classes of shares that:

The description of the designations, preferences, limitations, and relative rights of share classes in this subsection is not exhaustive.

     4. Rules of construction for preferred shares. Unless otherwise provided by this Act or by a corporation's articles of incorporation or by resolution of the board of directors in the case of shares whose terms may be fixed as provided by section 602:

This subsection does not apply to shares already issued or authorized on December 31, 1971.
§602.   Terms of class or series determined by board of directors

     1. Determination by board of directors. If a corporation's articles of incorporation provide, the board of directors may determine, in whole or part, the preferences, limitations and relative rights within the limits set forth in section 601 of any class of shares before the issuance of any shares of that class or one or more series within a class before the issuance of any shares of that series.

     2. Series must have distinguishing designation. Each series of a class must be given a distinguishing designation.

     3. Identical terms. A share of a series must have preferences, limitations and relative rights identical with those of all other shares of the same series and, except to the extent otherwise provided in the description of the series, with those of other series of the same class.

     4. Filing articles of amendment. Before issuing any shares of a class or series created under this section, the corporation shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing articles of amendment, which are effective without shareholder action, that set forth:

§603. Issued and outstanding shares

     1. Issue number of shares authorized. A corporation may issue the number of shares of each class or series authorized by its articles of incorporation. Shares that are issued are outstanding shares until they are reacquired, redeemed, converted or cancelled.

     2. Limitations on reacquisition, redemption or conversion. The reacquisition, redemption or conversion of outstanding shares is subject to the limitations of subsection 3 and to section 6.40.

     3. Requirement. At all times that shares of the corporation are outstanding, there must be outstanding:

§604. Fractional shares

     1. Authorization. A corporation may:

     2. Scrip. Each certificate representing scrip must be conspicuously labeled "scrip" and must contain the information required by section 626, subsection 2.

     3. Rights. The holder of a fractional share is entitled to exercise the rights of a shareholder, including the right to vote, to receive dividends and to participate in the assets of the corporation upon liquidation. The holder of scrip is not entitled to any of these rights unless the scrip provides for them.

     4. Conditions. The board of directors may authorize the issuance of scrip subject to any condition it considers desirable, including:

SUBCHAPTER II
ISSUANCE OF SHARES

§621. Subscription for shares before incorporation

     1. Revocability. A subscription for shares entered into before incorporation is irrevocable for 6 months unless the subscription agreement provides a longer or shorter period or all the subscribers agree to revocation.

     2. Payment terms. The board of directors of a corporation may determine the payment terms of a subscription for shares that was entered into before incorporation, unless the subscription agreement specifies the payment terms. A call for payment by the board of directors must be uniform as far as practicable as to all shares of the same class or series, unless the subscription agreement specifies otherwise.

     3. Receipt of consideration. Shares issued pursuant to subscriptions entered into before incorporation are fully paid and nonassessable when the corporation receives the consideration specified in the subscription agreement.

     4. Default; rescission. If a subscriber defaults in payment of money or property under a subscription agreement entered into before incorporation, the corporation may collect the amount owed as any other debt. Alternatively, unless the subscription agreement provides otherwise, the corporation may rescind the agreement and may sell the shares if the debt remains unpaid for more than 20 days after the corporation sends written demand for payment to the subscriber.

     5. Contract. A subscription agreement entered into after incorporation is a contract between the subscriber and the corporation subject to section 622.

§622. Issuance of shares

     1. Reservation of powers. The powers granted in this section to the board of directors of a corporation may be reserved to the shareholders by the articles of incorporation.

     2. Consideration. The board of directors of a corporation may authorize shares to be issued for consideration consisting of any tangible or intangible property or benefit to the corporation, including cash, promissory notes, services performed, contracts for services to be performed or other securities of the corporation.

     3. Determination of adequate consideration. Before the corporation issues shares, its board of directors must determine that the consideration received or to be received for shares to be issued is adequate. The determination by the board of directors is conclusive insofar as the adequacy of consideration for the issuance of shares relates to whether the shares are validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable.

     4. Fully paid; nonassessable. When the corporation receives the consideration for which its board of directors authorized the issuance of shares under subsection 3, those shares issued are fully paid and nonassessable.

     5. Escrow. The corporation may place in escrow shares issued for a contract for future services or benefits or for a promissory note or may make other arrangements to restrict the transfer of the shares and may credit distributions in respect of the shares against their purchase price until the services are performed, the note is paid or the benefits received. If the services are not performed, the note is not paid or the benefits are not received, the shares escrowed or restricted and the distributions credited may be cancelled in whole or part.

§623. Liability of shareholders

     1. Liability for paying consideration. A purchaser from a corporation of that corporation's own shares is not liable to the corporation or its creditors with respect to the shares except to pay the consideration for which the shares were authorized to be issued or specified in the subscription agreement.

     2. Personal liability. Unless otherwise provided in a corporation's articles of incorporation, a shareholder of a corporation is not personally liable for the acts or debts of the corporation except that the shareholder may become personally liable by reason of the shareholder's acts or conduct.

§624. Share dividends

     1. Pro rata shares. Unless a corporation's articles of incorporation provide otherwise, shares may be issued pro rata and without consideration to the corporation's shareholders or to the shareholders of one or more classes or series of shares. An issuance of shares under this subsection is a share dividend.

     2. Shares of different classes. Shares of one class or series may not be issued as a share dividend in respect of shares of another class or series unless:

     3. Record date. If a corporation's board of directors does not fix the record date for determining shareholders entitled to a share dividend, the record date is the date the board of directors authorizes the share dividend.

§625. Share options

     A corporation may issue rights, options or warrants for the purchase of shares of the corporation. Its board of directors shall determine the terms upon which the rights, options or warrants are issued, their form and content and the consideration for which the shares are to be issued.

§626. Form and content of certificates

     1. Certificate not required. Shares may but need not be represented by certificates. Unless this Act or another law expressly provides otherwise, whether the shares are represented by certificates or not does not affect the rights and obligations of shareholders.

     2. Content of certificate. At a minimum each share certificate must state on its face:

     3. Classes. If the issuing corporation is authorized to issue different classes of shares or different series within a class, the designations, relative rights, preferences and limitations applicable to each class and the variations in rights, preferences and limitations determined for each series and the authority of its board of directors to determine variations for future series must be summarized on the front or back of each certificate. Alternatively, each certificate may state conspicuously on its front or back that the corporation will furnish the shareholder this information on request in writing and without charge.

     4. Signatures. Each share certificate must be signed, either manually or in facsimile, by:

A share certificate may bear the corporate seal or its facsimile.

     5. Signatory no longer holds office. If the person who signed a share certificate pursuant to subsection 4 no longer holds office when the certificate is issued, the certificate is nevertheless valid.

§627. Shares without certificates

     1. Authorization. Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, the board of directors of a corporation may authorize the issue of some or all of the shares of any or all of its classes or series of shares without certificates. The authorization does not affect shares already represented by certificates until they are surrendered to the corporation.

     2. Written statement. Within a reasonable time after the issue or transfer of shares without certificates, the corporation shall send the shareholder a written statement of the information required on certificates by section 626, subsections 2 and 3 and, if applicable, section 628.

§628.   Restriction on transfer of shares and other securities

     1. Share includes. For purposes of this section, "share" includes a security convertible into or carrying a right to subscribe for or acquire shares.

     2. Imposition of restrictions. A corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws, an agreement among shareholders or an agreement between shareholders and the corporation may impose restrictions on the transfer or registration of transfer of shares of the corporation. A restriction does not affect shares issued before the restriction was adopted unless the holders of the shares are parties to the restriction agreement or voted in favor of the restriction.

     3. Existence of restriction must be made known. A restriction on the transfer or registration of transfer of shares is valid and enforceable against the holder or a transferee of the holder if the restriction is authorized by this section and its existence is noted conspicuously on the front or back of the certificate or is contained in the information statement required by section 627, subsection 2. Unless so noted, a restriction is not enforceable against a person who has no knowledge of the restriction.

     4. Purpose of restriction. A restriction on the transfer or registration of transfer of shares is authorized:

     5. Authorized restrictions. A restriction on the transfer or registration of transfer of shares may:

§629. Expense of issue

     A corporation may pay the expenses of selling or underwriting its shares and of organizing or reorganizing the corporation from the consideration received for shares.

SUBCHAPTER III
SUBSEQUENT ACQUISITION OF SHARES BY SHAREHOLDERS AND CORPORATION

§641. Shareholders' preemptive rights

     1. Share includes. For purposes of this section, "share" includes a security convertible into or carrying a right to subscribe for or acquire shares.

     2. No preemptive right absent statement in articles of incorporation. The shareholders of a corporation do not have a preemptive right to acquire the corporation's unissued shares except to the extent the articles of incorporation provide.

     3. Statement. A statement included in the articles of incorporation that "the corporation elects to have preemptive rights," or containing words of similar import, means that the principles set out in paragraphs A to F apply except to the extent the articles of incorporation expressly provide otherwise.

§642. Corporation's acquisition of its own shares

     1. Acquisition. A corporation may acquire its own shares. Shares so acquired constitute authorized but unissued shares.

     2. Prohibition on reissuance. If a corporation's articles of incorporation prohibit the reissue of the acquired shares, the number of authorized shares is reduced by the number of shares acquired.

SUBCHAPTER IV
DISTRIBUTIONS

§651. Distributions to shareholders

     1. Distributions. A board of directors of a corporation may authorize and the corporation may make distributions to its shareholders subject to restriction by the articles of incorporation and the limitation in subsection 3.

     2. Record date. If the board of directors of a corporation does not fix the record date for determining shareholders entitled to a distribution, other than one involving a purchase, redemption or other acquisition of the corporation's shares, then the record date is the date the board of directors authorizes the distribution.

     3. Distribution prohibited. A distribution may not be made if, after giving the distribution effect:

     4. Basis for determination. The board of directors of a corporation may base a determination that a distribution is not prohibited under subsection 3 either on financial statements prepared on the basis of accounting practices and principles that are reasonable in the circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is reasonable in the circumstances.

     5. Effect measured. Except as provided in subsection 7, the effect of a distribution under subsection 3 is measured:

     6. Indebtedness to shareholder. A corporation's indebtedness to a shareholder incurred by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this section is at parity with the corporation's indebtedness to its general, unsecured creditors except to the extent subordinated by agreement.

     7. Indebtedness issued as a distribution. Indebtedness of a corporation, including indebtedness issued as a distribution, is not considered a liability for purposes of determinations under subsection 3 if the terms of the indebtedness provide that payment of principal and interest are made only if and to the extent that payment of a distribution to shareholders could then be made under this section. If the indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of principal or interest is treated as a distribution, the effect of which is measured on the date the payment is actually made.

     8. Application. This section does not apply to distributions in liquidation under chapter 14.

CHAPTER 7
SHAREHOLDERS
SUBCHAPTER I
MEETINGS

§701. Annual meeting

     1. Timing of meeting. A corporation shall hold a meeting of shareholders annually at a time stated in or fixed in accordance with its bylaws.

     2. Place. Annual shareholders' meetings may be held in or out of the State at the place stated in or fixed in accordance with a corporation's bylaws. If no place is stated in or fixed in accordance with the bylaws, annual meetings must be held at the corporation's principal office.

     3. Failure to hold meeting. The failure to hold an annual meeting at the time stated in or fixed in accordance with a corporation's bylaws does not affect the validity of any corporate action.

§702. Special meeting

     1. Special meeting required. A corporation shall hold a special meeting of its shareholders:

     2. Record date for determining entitlement to special meeting. If not otherwise fixed under section 703 or 707, the record date for determining shareholders entitled to demand a special meeting is the date the first shareholder signs the demand.

     3. Place of special meetings. Special meetings may be held in or out of this State at the place stated in or fixed in accordance with the corporation's bylaws. If no place is stated or fixed in accordance with the bylaws, special meetings must be held at the corporation's principal office.

     4. Scope of special meeting. Only business within the purpose or purposes described in the meeting notice required by section 705, subsection 3 may be conducted at a special meeting.

§703. Court-ordered meeting

     1. Shareholder application. The Superior Court of the county in which a corporation's principal office is located, or, if the principal office is not located in this State, in which its registered office is located, may summarily order a meeting to be held:

     2. Court may prescribe specifics. The Superior Court may fix the time and place of a meeting ordered pursuant to this section, determine the shares entitled to participate in the meeting, specify a record date for determining shareholders entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting, prescribe the form and content of the meeting notice, fix the quorum required for specific matters to be considered at the meeting or direct that the votes represented at the meeting constitute a quorum for action on those matters and enter other orders necessary to accomplish the purpose or purposes of the meeting.

§704. Action without meeting

     1. Permissible action without meeting. Action required or permitted by this Act to be taken at a shareholders' meeting may be taken without a meeting if the action is taken by all the shareholders entitled to vote on the action. The action must be evidenced by one or more written consents bearing the date of signature and describing the action taken, signed by all the shareholders entitled to vote on the action and delivered to the corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the corporate records.

     2. Record date. If not otherwise fixed under section 703 or 707, the record date for determining shareholders entitled to take action without a meeting is the date the first shareholder signs the consent under subsection 1. Written consent is not effective to take the corporate action referred to in the consent unless, within 60 days of the earliest date appearing on a consent delivered to the corporation in the manner required by this section, written consents signed by all shareholders entitled to vote on the action are received by the corporation. A written consent may be revoked by a writing to that effect received by the corporation prior to receipt by the corporation of unrevoked written consents sufficient in number to take corporate action.

     3. Effect of signed consent. A consent signed under this section has the effect of a meeting vote and may be described as such in any document.

     4. Notice to nonvoting shareholders. If this Act requires that notice of a proposed action be given to nonvoting shareholders and the action is to be taken by unanimous consent of the voting shareholders, the corporation must give its nonvoting shareholders written notice of the proposed action at least 10 days before the action is taken. The notice must contain or be accompanied by the same material that, under this Act, would have been required to be sent to nonvoting shareholders in a notice of meeting at which the proposed action would have been submitted to the shareholders for action.

§705. Notice of meeting

     1. Notification to shareholders. A corporation shall notify shareholders of the date, time and place of each annual or special shareholders' meeting no fewer than 10 days, or 3 days for close corporations, nor more than 60 days before the meeting date. Unless this Act or the corporation's articles of incorporation require otherwise, the corporation is required only to give notice to shareholders entitled to vote at the meeting.

     2. Annual meeting; description of purpose not required. Unless this Act or a corporation's articles of incorporation require otherwise, notice of an annual meeting need not include a description of the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is called.

     3. Special meeting; description of purpose required. Notice of a special meeting must include a description of the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is called.

     4. Record date. If not otherwise fixed under section 703 or 707, the record date for determining shareholders entitled to notice of and to vote at an annual or special shareholders' meeting is the day before the first notice is delivered to shareholders.

     5. Adjournment to new date, time or place. Unless a corporation's bylaws require otherwise, if an annual or special shareholders' meeting is adjourned to a different date, time or place, notice need not be given of the new date, time or place if the new date, time or place is announced at the meeting before adjournment. If a new record date for the adjourned meeting is or must be fixed under section 707, however, notice of the adjourned meeting must be given under this section to persons who are shareholders as of the new record date.

§706. Waiver of notice

     1. Shareholder may waive notice. A shareholder may waive any notice required by this Act or a corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws before or after the date and time stated in the notice. The waiver must be in writing, be signed by the shareholder entitled to the notice and be delivered to the corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the corporate records.

     2. Attendance of meeting. A shareholder's attendance at a meeting:

§707. Record date

     1. Establishment of record date. A corporation's bylaws may fix or provide the manner of fixing the record date for one or more voting groups in order to determine the shareholders entitled to notice of a shareholders' meeting, to demand a special meeting, to vote, or to take any other action. If the bylaws do not fix or provide for fixing a record date, the board of directors of the corporation may fix a future date as the record date.

     2. Limitation on date. A record date fixed under this section may not be more than 70 days before the meeting or action requiring a determination of shareholders.

     3. Determination effective. A determination of shareholders entitled to notice of or to vote at a shareholders' meeting is effective for any adjournment of the meeting unless the board of directors fixes a new record date, which it must do if the meeting is adjourned to a date more than 120 days after the date fixed for the original meeting.

     4. Court-ordered meeting. If a court orders a shareholders' meeting adjourned to a date more than 120 days after the date fixed for the original meeting, it may provide that the original record date continues in effect or it may fix a new record date.

§708. Conduct of meeting

     1. Chair presides. At each meeting of a corporation's shareholders under this chapter, a chair shall preside. The chair must be appointed as provided in the bylaws or, in the absence of such provision, by the board of directors.

     2. Order of business. The chair, unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, shall determine the order of business and has the authority to establish rules for the conduct of a meeting held pursuant to this chapter.

     3. Fairness of rules. Rules adopted for the meeting and the conduct of a meeting held pursuant to this chapter must be fair to shareholders.

     4. Announcement when polls close. The chair of a meeting held pursuant to this chapter shall announce at the meeting when the polls close for each matter voted upon. If no announcement is made, the polls are deemed to have closed upon the final adjournment of the meeting. After the polls close, no ballots, proxies or votes nor any revocations or changes thereto may be accepted.

SUBCHAPTER II
VOTING

§721. Shareholders list for meeting

     1. List of shareholders' names. After fixing a record date for a meeting called pursuant to subchapter I, a corporation shall prepare an alphabetical list of the names of all its shareholders who are entitled to notice of a shareholders' meeting. The list must be classified by voting group, and within each voting group by class or series of shares, and must show the address of and number of shares held by each shareholder. In the case of a close corporation, the requirement of a shareholders list may be satisfied by a stock transfer book or records, which need not be maintained in alphabetized order and need not contain the addresses of shareholders so long as the address of each shareholder is otherwise maintained in the records of the corporation.

     2. Available for inspection. The shareholders list must be available for inspection by any shareholder, beginning 2 business days after notice of the meeting for which the list was prepared is given, or the next business day in the case of a close corporation that has provided fewer than 10 days' notice of such meeting, and continuing through the meeting, at the corporation's principal office or at a place identified in the meeting notice in the city where the meeting will be held. A shareholder or the shareholder's agent or attorney is entitled on written demand to inspect and, subject to the requirements of section 1602, subsection 4, to copy the list, during regular business hours and at the shareholder's expense, during the period it is available for inspection.

     3. Inspection of list. The corporation shall make the shareholders list available at the meeting, and a shareholder or the shareholder's agent or attorney is entitled to inspect the list at any time during the meeting or any adjournment.

     4. Refusal by corporation. If the corporation refuses to allow a shareholder or the shareholder's agent or attorney to inspect the shareholders list before or at the meeting or copy the list as permitted by subsection 2, the Superior Court of the county where a corporation's principal office is located, or, if there is no principal office located in this State, where the corporation's registered office is located, on application of the shareholder may summarily order the inspection or copying at the corporation's expense and may postpone the meeting for which the list was prepared until the inspection or copying is complete.

     5. Effect of unavailability of shareholders list. Refusal or failure to prepare or make available the shareholders list does not affect the validity of action taken at the meeting.

§722. Voting entitlement of shares

     1. Entitlement to vote. Except as provided in subsections 2 and 4 or unless a corporation's articles of incorporation provide otherwise, each outstanding share, regardless of class, is entitled to one vote on each matter voted on at a shareholders' meeting. Only shares are entitled to vote. The articles of incorporation may grant, either absolutely or conditionally, to the holders of bonds, debentures or other obligations of the corporation the power to vote on specified matters, including the election of directors. This power may not be terminated except upon written assent of the holders of 2/3 in the aggregate face amount of such bonds, debentures or other obligations. When this power has been granted to holders of bonds, debentures or other obligations of a corporation, the term "shareholder," whenever used in this Act, includes holders of such obligations to the extent necessary to give effect to their voting power so granted.

     2. Ownership of shares by 2nd corporation. Absent special circumstances, a share of a corporation is not entitled to vote if it is owned, directly or indirectly, by a 2nd corporation, domestic or foreign, and the first corporation owns, directly or indirectly, a majority of the shares entitled to vote for directors of the 2nd corporation.

     3. Voting of shares held in fiduciary capacity. Subsection 2 does not limit the power of a corporation to vote any shares, including its own shares, held by it in a fiduciary capacity.

     4. Redeemable shares. Redeemable shares are not entitled to vote after notice of redemption is mailed to the shareholders and a sum sufficient to redeem the shares has been deposited with a bank, trust company or other financial institution under an irrevocable obligation to pay the shareholders the redemption price on surrender of the shares.

§723. Proxies

     1. Voting authorized. A shareholder may vote the shareholder's shares in person or by proxy.

     2. Appointment of proxy. A shareholder or the shareholder's agent or attorney-in-fact may appoint a proxy to vote or otherwise act for the shareholder by signing an appointment form or by an electronic transmission. An electronic transmission must contain or be accompanied by information from which one can determine that the shareholder, the shareholder's agent or the shareholder's attorney-in-fact authorized the transmission.

     3. Appointment of proxy effective. An appointment of a proxy is effective when a signed appointment form or an electronic transmission of the appointment is received by the inspector of election appointed pursuant to section 731 or the officer or agent of the corporation authorized to tabulate votes. An appointment is valid for 11 months unless a longer period is expressly provided in the appointment form.

     4. Appointment of proxy revocable. An appointment of a proxy is revocable unless the appointment form or electronic transmission states that it is irrevocable and the appointment is coupled with an interest. Appointments coupled with an interest include the appointment of:

     5. Death or incapacity of shareholder. The death or incapacity of a shareholder who appointed a proxy does not affect the right of a corporation to accept the proxy's authority unless notice of the death or incapacity is received by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized to tabulate votes before the proxy exercises the proxy's authority under the appointment.

     6. Appointment revoked when interest extinguished. An appointment made irrevocable under subsection 4 is revoked when the interest with which it is coupled is extinguished.

     7. Transfer of shares subject to irrevocable appointment. A transferee for value of shares subject to an irrevocable appointment may revoke the appointment if the transferee did not know of the existence of the irrevocable appointment when the transferee acquired the shares and the existence of the irrevocable appointment was not noted conspicuously on the certificate representing the shares or on the information statement for shares without certificates.

     8. Acceptance of proxy's vote. Subject to section 725 and to any express limitation on the proxy's authority stated in the appointment form or electronic transmission, a corporation is entitled to accept the proxy's vote or other action as that of the shareholder making the appointment.

     9. Proxies given by holders of corporation's obligations. The provisions of subsections 1 to 7 apply to proxies given by the holders of a corporation's bonds, debentures or other obligations when a right to vote is conferred upon such holders by the articles of incorporation of a corporation, as permitted by section 722, subsection 1.

§724. Shares held by nominees

     1. Recognition of beneficial owner as shareholder. A corporation may establish a procedure by which the beneficial owner of shares that are registered in the name of a nominee is recognized by the corporation as the shareholder. The extent of this recognition may be determined in the procedure.

     2. Procedure for recognition. The procedure under subsetion 1 may set forth:

§725. Corporation's acceptance of votes

     1. Corresponding name. If the name signed on a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment corresponds to the name of a shareholder, the corporation, if acting in good faith, is entitled to accept the vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment and give it effect as the act of the shareholder.

     2. Different name. If the name signed on a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment does not correspond to the name of its shareholder, the corporation, if acting in good faith, is nevertheless entitled to accept the vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment and give it effect as the act of the shareholder if:

     3. Rejection authorized. A corporation is entitled to reject a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment if the secretary or other officer or agent authorized to tabulate votes, acting in good faith, has reasonable basis for doubt about the validity of the signature on it or about the signatory's authority to sign for the shareholder.

     4. Not liable for damages. A corporation and its officer or agent who accept or reject a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment in good faith and in accordance with the standards of this section or section 723, subsection 2 are not liable in damages to the shareholder for the consequences of the acceptance or rejection.

     5. Corporate action valid. Corporate action based on the acceptance or rejection of a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment under this section is valid unless a court of competent jurisdiction determines otherwise.

§726. Shares held by minor

     If the record owner of shares is a minor and the shares are voted under this subchapter by the minor, a guardian or other legal representative of the minor or a natural or adoptive parent of the minor, the minor may not thereafter disaffirm or avoid that vote.

§727.   Quorum and voting requirements for voting groups

     1. Quorum. Shares entitled to vote as a separate voting group may take action on a matter at a meeting only if a quorum of those shares exists with respect to that matter. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or this Act provides otherwise, a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter by the voting group constitutes a quorum of that voting group for action on that matter.

     2. Share represented deemed present. Once a share is represented for any purpose at a meeting, it is deemed present for quorum purposes for the remainder of the meeting and for any adjournment of that meeting unless a new record date is or must be set for that adjourned meeting.

     3. Voting requirement. If a quorum exists, action on a matter, other than the election of directors, by a voting group is approved if the votes cast within the voting group favoring the action exceed the votes cast opposing the action unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or this Act requires a greater number of affirmative votes.

     4. Altering quorum or voting requirement. An amendment of a corporation's articles of incorporation adding, changing or deleting a quorum or voting requirement for a voting group greater than specified in subsection 1 or 3 is governed by section 729.

     5. Election of directors. The election of directors is governed by section 730.

     6. Application to mutual insurer. This section does not apply to any mutual insurer as defined in Title 24-A, section 401.

§728. Action by single and multiple voting groups

     1. Voting by single voting group. If a corporation's articles of incorporation or this Act provides for voting by a single voting group on a matter, action on that matter is taken when voted upon by that voting group as provided in section 727.

     2. Voting by multiple voting groups. If a corporation's articles of incorporation or this Act provides for voting by 2 or more voting groups on a matter, action on that matter is taken only when voted upon by each of those voting groups counted separately as provided in section 727. Action may be taken by one voting group on a matter even though no action is taken by another voting group entitled to vote on the matter.

§729. Greater quorum or voting requirements

     1. Greater number may be required. A corporation's articles of incorporation may provide for a greater quorum or voting requirement for shareholders or voting groups of shareholders than is provided for by this Act.

     2. Amendment of articles of incorporation. An amendment to a corporation's articles of incorporation that adds, changes or deletes a greater quorum or voting requirement must meet the same quorum requirement and be adopted by the same vote and voting groups required to take action under the quorum and voting requirements then in effect or proposed to be adopted, whichever is greater.

§730. Voting for directors; cumulative voting

     1. Election by plurality. Unless otherwise provided in a corporation's articles of incorporation, directors are elected by a plurality of the votes cast by the shares entitled to vote in the election at a meeting at which a quorum is present.

     2. No right to cumulate votes. Shareholders do not have a right to cumulate their votes for directors unless a corporation's articles of incorporation so provide.

     3. Cumulate votes; method. A statement included in a corporation's articles of incorporation that "all or a designated voting group of shareholders are entitled to cumulate their votes for directors," or containing words of similar import, means that the shareholders designated are entitled to multiply the number of votes they are entitled to cast by the number of directors for whom they are entitled to vote and cast the product for a single candidate or distribute the product among 2 or more candidates.

     4. Requirements. Shares otherwise entitled to vote cumulatively may not be voted cumulatively at a particular meeting unless:

§731. Inspectors of election

     1. Appointment of inspector. A corporation having any shares listed on a national securities exchange or regularly traded in a market maintained by one or more members of a national or affiliated securities association shall, and any other corporation may, appoint one or more inspectors to act at a meeting of shareholders and make a written report of the inspectors' determinations. Each inspector shall take and sign an oath faithfully to execute the duties of inspector with strict impartiality and according to the best of the inspector's ability.

     2. Duties of inspector. An inspector shall:

     3. Officer; employee. An inspector may be an officer or employee of the corporation.

SUBCHAPTER III
VOTING TRUSTS AND AGREEMENTS

§741. Voting trusts

     1. Creation of voting trust. One or more shareholders may create a voting trust, conferring on a trustee the right to vote or otherwise act for them, by signing an agreement setting out the provisions of the trust, which may include anything consistent with its purpose, and transferring their shares to the trustee. When a voting trust agreement is signed, the trustee shall prepare a list of the names and addresses of all owners of beneficial interests in the trust, together with the number and class of shares each transferred to the trust, and deliver copies of the list and agreement to the corporation's principal office.

     2. Effective date of voting trust. A voting trust becomes effective on the date the first shares subject to the trust are registered in the trustee's name. A voting trust is valid for not more than 21 years after its effective date unless extended under subsection 3.

     3. Extension authorized. All or some of the parties to a voting trust may extend it for additional terms of not more than 21 years each by signing written consent to the extension. An extension is valid for 21 years from the date the first shareholder signs the extension agreement. The voting trustee must deliver copies of the extension agreement and list of beneficial owners to the corporation's principal office. An extension agreement binds only those parties signing it.

§742. Voting agreements

     1. Creation of voting agreement. Two or more shareholders may provide for the manner in which they will vote their shares by signing an agreement for that purpose. A voting agreement created under this section is not subject to the provisions of section 741.

     2. Enforceable. A voting agreement created under this section is specifically enforceable.

     3. Rescission. Any purchaser of shares for value that are subject to a voting agreement who, at the time of purchase, did not have knowledge of the existence of the agreement is entitled to rescission of the purchase against the transferor of the shares. An action to enforce the right of rescission authorized by this subsection must be commenced within the earlier of 180 days after discovery of the existence of the agreement or 2 years after the time of purchase of the shares.

§743. Shareholder agreements

     1. Shareholder agreement effective despite inconsistency with Act. An agreement among the shareholders of a corporation that complies with this section is effective among the shareholders and the corporation even though it is inconsistent with one or more other provisions of this Act in that it:

     2. Requirements for shareholder agreement. An agreement authorized by this section must comply with each of the following paragraphs.

     3. Notation of existence of agreement required. The existence of an agreement authorized by this section must be noted conspicuously on the front or back of each certificate for outstanding shares or on the information statement required by section 627, subsection 2. If at the time of the agreement the corporation has shares outstanding represented by certificates, the corporation shall recall the outstanding certificates and issue substitute certificates that comply with this subsection. The failure to note the existence of the agreement on the certificate or information statement does not affect the validity of the agreement or any action taken pursuant to it. Any purchaser of shares who, at the time of purchase, did not have knowledge of the existence of the agreement is entitled to rescission of the purchase. A purchaser is deemed to have knowledge of the existence of the agreement if its existence is noted on the certificate or information statement for the shares in compliance with this subsection and, if the shares are not represented by a certificate, the information statement is delivered to the purchaser at or prior to the time of purchase of the shares. An action to enforce the right of rescission authorized by this subsection must be commenced within the earlier of 180 days after discovery of the existence of the agreement or 2 years after the time of purchase of the shares.

     4. Agreement ceases to be effective. An agreement authorized by this section ceases to be effective when shares of the corporation are listed on a national securities exchange or regularly traded in a market maintained by one or more members of a national or affiliated securities association. If the agreement ceases to be effective for any reason, the board of directors may, if the agreement is contained or referred to in the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws, adopt an amendment to the articles of incorporation or bylaws, without shareholder action, to delete the agreement and any references to it.

     5. Limitation on discretion or powers of directors limits liability of directors. An agreement authorized by this section that limits the discretion or powers of the board of directors relieves the directors of, and imposes upon the person or persons in whom such discretion or powers are vested, liability for acts or omissions imposed by law on directors to the extent that the discretion or powers of the directors are limited by the agreement.

     6. Personal liability on shareholder. The existence or performance of an agreement authorized by this section is not a ground for imposing personal liability on any shareholder for the acts or debts of the corporation even if the agreement or its performance treats the corporation as if it were a partnership or results in failure to observe the corporate formalities otherwise applicable to the matters governed by the agreement.

     7. Incorporators or subscribers. Incorporators or subscribers for shares may act as shareholders with respect to an agreement authorized by this section if no shares have been issued when the agreement is made.

     8. Articles of incorporation provide for elimination of board of directors. If the articles of incorporation of a corporation provide for the elimination of the board of directors, the provisions of this subsection apply, except to the extent an agreement among the shareholders of a corporation that complies with this section expressly provides otherwise.

SUBCHAPTER IV
DERIVATIVE PROCEEDINGS

§751. Definitions

     As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Derivative proceeding. "Derivative proceeding" means a civil suit in the right of a domestic corporation or, to the extent provided in section 758, in the right of a foreign corporation.

     2. Shareholder. "Shareholder" includes a beneficial owner whose shares are held in a voting trust or held by a nominee on the beneficial owner's behalf.

§752. Standing

     A shareholder may not commence or maintain a derivative proceeding unless the shareholder:

     1. Shareholder at time of act or omission. Was a shareholder of the corporation at the time of the act or omission complained of or became a shareholder through transfer by operation of law from one who was a shareholder at that time; and

     2. Represents interests. Fairly and adequately represents the interests of the corporation in enforcing the right of the corporation.

§753. Demand

     A shareholder may not commence a derivative proceeding until:

     1. Written demand. A written demand has been made upon the corporation to take suitable action; and

     2. Expiration of 90 days. Ninety days have expired from the date the demand was made, unless the shareholder has earlier been notified that the demand has been rejected by the corporation or unless irreparable injury to the corporation would result by waiting for the expiration of the 90-day period.

§754. Stay of proceedings

     If the corporation commences an inquiry into the allegations made in the complaint or demand under section 753, the court may stay any derivative proceeding for such period as the court considers appropriate.

§755. Dismissal

     1. Dismissal of proceeding. The court, on motion by the corporation, shall dismiss a derivative proceeding if one of the groups specified in paragraphs A to C determines, in good faith, after conducting a reasonable inquiry upon which its conclusions are based, that the maintenance of the derivative proceeding is not in the best interests of the corporation:

     2. Independence of director. Grounds for a director to be considered not independent for purposes of this section do not include:

     3. Complaint must allege with particularity. If a derivative proceeding is commenced after a determination has been made rejecting a demand by a shareholder, the complaint must allege with particularity facts establishing either that a majority of the board of directors did not consist of independent directors at the time the determination was made or that the requirements of subsection 1 have not been met.

     4. Burden of proof. If a majority of the board of directors does not consist of independent directors at the time the determination is made, the corporation has the burden of proving that the requirements of subsection 1 have been met. If a majority of the board of directors consists of independent directors at the time the determination is made, the plaintiff has the burden of proving that the requirements of subsection 1 have not been met.

§756. Discontinuance or settlement

     A derivative proceeding may not be discontinued or settled without the court's approval. If the court determines that a proposed discontinuance or settlement will substantially affect the interests of the corporation's shareholders or a class of shareholders, the court shall direct that notice be given to the shareholders affected.

§757. Payment of expenses

     On termination of the derivative proceeding the court may:

     1. Corporation to pay plaintiff's expenses. Order the corporation to pay the plaintiff's reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees, incurred in the proceeding if it finds that the proceeding has resulted in a substantial benefit to the corporation;

     2. Plaintiff to pay defendant's expenses. Order the plaintiff to pay any defendant's reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees, incurred in defending the proceeding if it finds that the proceeding was commenced or maintained without reasonable cause or for an improper purpose; or

     3. Improper purpose. Order a party to pay an opposing party's reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees, incurred because of the filing of a pleading, motion or other paper, if it finds after reasonable inquiry that the pleading, motion or other paper was not well grounded in fact or warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification or reversal of existing law and was interposed for an improper purpose, such as to harass or cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.

§758. Applicability to foreign corporations

     In any derivative proceeding in the right of a foreign corporation, the matters covered by this subchapter, except for sections 754, 756 and 757, are governed by the laws of the jurisdiction of incorporation of the foreign corporation.

CHAPTER 8
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
SUBCHAPTER I
BOARD OF DIRECTORS

§801. Requirement; duties of board of directors

     1. Board of directors. Except as provided in section 743, a corporation must have a board of directors.

     2. Corporate powers. All corporate powers must be exercised by or under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the corporation managed under the direction of, the corporation's board of directors, subject to any limitation set forth in an agreement authorized under section 743 or in the corporation's articles of incorporation.

§802. Qualifications of directors

     The corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws may prescribe qualifications for directors. A director need not be a resident of this State or a shareholder of the corporation unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws so prescribe.

§803. Number and election of directors

     1. Number of directors. A corporation's board of directors must consist of one or more individuals. The corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws may fix the number of directors or otherwise regulate the size of the board.

     2. Increase or decrease in number. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, the number of directors may be increased or decreased from time to time by resolution of the shareholders or the directors. A decrease in the number of directors may not have the effect of shortening the term of any incumbent director.

     3. Election. Directors are elected at the first annual shareholders' meeting and at each annual meeting thereafter unless their terms are staggered under section 806.

§804.   Election of directors by certain classes of shareholders

     If the corporation's articles of incorporation authorize dividing the shares into classes, the articles may also authorize the election of all or a specified number of directors by the holders of one or more authorized classes of shares. Each class of shares entitled to elect one or more directors is a separate voting group for purposes of the election of directors.

§805. Terms of directors

     1. Terms of initial directors. The terms of the initial directors of a corporation expire at the first shareholders' meeting at which directors are elected.

     2. Terms of subsequent directors. The terms of all other directors expire at the next annual shareholders' meeting following their election unless their terms are staggered under section 806.

     3. Decrease in number of directors. A decrease in the number of directors does not shorten an incumbent director's term.

     4. Term of director elected to fill vacancy. The term of a director elected to fill a vacancy expires at the next shareholders' meeting at which directors are elected or, in the case of staggered terms, at such other time as the corporation's articles of incorporation may provide.

     5. Continue service. Despite the expiration of a director's term, the director continues to serve until a successor is elected and qualifies or until there is a decrease in the number of directors.

§806. Staggered terms for directors

     The corporation's articles of incorporation may provide for staggering the terms of directors by dividing the total number of directors into 2 or 3 groups, with each group containing, as close as possible, 1/2 or 1/3, as the case may be, of the total. In that event, the terms of directors in the first group expire at the first annual shareholders' meeting after their election, the terms of the 2nd group expire at the 2nd annual shareholders' meeting after their election and the terms of the 3rd group, if any, expire at the 3rd annual shareholders' meeting after their election. At each annual shareholders' meeting thereafter, directors must be chosen for a term of 2 years or 3 years, as the case may be, to succeed those whose terms expire.

§807. Resignation of directors

     1. Notice of resignation. A director may resign at any time by delivering written notice to the corporation's board of directors or its chair or to the corporation.

     2. Effective. A resignation is effective when the notice is delivered unless the notice specifies a later effective date, including, but not limited to, the date on which some specified future event occurs.

§808. Removal of directors by shareholders

     The shareholders may remove one or more directors with or without cause unless the corporation's articles of incorporation provide that directors may be removed only for cause. A director may be removed by the shareholders only at a meeting called for the purpose of removing that director and the meeting notice must state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is removal of the director.

     1. Removal by voting group. If a director is elected by a voting group of shareholders, only the shareholders of that voting group may participate in the vote to remove that director.

     2. Cumulative voting. If cumulative voting is authorized, a director may not be removed if the number of votes sufficient to elect that director under cumulative voting is voted against that director's removal. If cumulative voting is not authorized, a director may be removed only by the affirmative vote of at least 2/3 of the shares entitled to vote on the removal. The corporation's articles of incorporation may require a greater or lesser vote in order to remove directors but not less than a majority of votes cast, including, but not limited to, the necessity of a unanimous vote of shareholders or relevant voting group.

§809. Removal of directors by judicial proceeding

     1. Removal by Superior Court. The Superior Court of the county where a corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office in this State, its registered office is located may remove a director of the corporation from office in a proceeding commenced by or in the right of the corporation if the court finds that:

     2. Comply with requirements. A shareholder proceeding on behalf of the corporation under subsection 1 shall comply with all of the requirements of chapter 7, subchapter IV, except section 752, subsection 1.

     3. Bar from reelection. The court, in addition to removing the director, may bar the director from reelection for a period prescribed by the court.

     4. Other relief. This section does not limit the equitable powers of the court to order other relief.

§810. Vacancy on board

     1. Vacancy. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, if a vacancy occurs on a board of directors, including a vacancy resulting from an increase in the number of directors, the vacancy may be filled:

     2. Voting group. If the vacant office was held by a director elected by a voting group of shareholders, only the holders of shares of that voting group are entitled to vote to fill the vacancy if it is filled by the shareholders.

     3. Specified date of vacancy. A vacancy that will occur at a specific later date may be filled before the vacancy occurs but the new director may not take office until the vacancy occurs.

§811. Compensation of directors

     Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, the corporation's board of directors may fix the compensation of directors.

SUBCHAPTER II
MEETINGS AND ACTION OF BOARD

§821. Meetings

     1. Location. The corporation's board of directors may hold regular or special meetings in or out of this State.

     2. Participation of directors. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, the corporation's board of directors may permit any or all directors to participate in a regular or special meeting by, or conduct the meeting through the use of, any means of communication by which all directors participating may simultaneously hear each other during the meeting. A director participating in a meeting by this means is deemed to be present in person at the meeting.

§822. Action without meeting

     1. Action without meeting. Except to the extent that the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws require that action by the corporation's board of directors be taken at a meeting, action required or permitted by this Act to be taken by a corporation's board of directors may be taken without a meeting if each director signs a consent describing the action to be taken and delivers it to the corporation.

     2. Delivery of consents; revocation. Action taken under this section is the act of the corporation's board of directors when one or more consents signed by all the directors are delivered to the corporation. The consent may specify the time at which the action taken under the consent is to be effective. A director's consent may be withdrawn by a revocation signed by the director and delivered to the corporation prior to delivery to the corporation of unrevoked written consents signed by all of the directors.

     3. Effect of signed consent. A consent signed under this section has the effect of action taken at a meeting of the corporation's board of directors and may be described as such in any document.

§823. Notice of meeting

     1. Regular meetings. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, regular meetings of the corporation's board of directors may be held without notice of the date, time, place or purpose of the meeting.

     2. Special meetings. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws provide for a longer or shorter period, special meetings of the corporation's board of directors must be preceded by at least 2 days' notice of the date, time and place of the meeting. The notice need not describe the purpose of the special meeting unless required by the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws.

     3. Calling of meeting. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws otherwise provide, special meetings of the corporation's board of directors may be called by the chair of the board, by the president or, if the president is absent or is unable to act, by any vice-president, by any 2 directors or by any other person or persons authorized by the bylaws.

     4. Notice of meeting. At the written request of any person permitted to call a special meeting of the corporation's board of directors pursuant to subsection 3, the secretary or clerk shall send notices of the meeting to all the directors or the person calling the meeting may send such notices. The person calling the special meeting shall set the time of the meeting and, unless the place of meetings is specified in the bylaws or by prior resolution of the directors, the place of the meeting.

§824. Waiver of notice

     1. Waive notice of meeting. A director may waive any notice required by this Act, the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws before or after the date and time stated in the notice. Except as provided by subsection 2, the waiver must be in writing, signed by the director entitled to the notice and filed with the minutes or corporate records.

     2. Attendance at meeting waives requirement of notice. A director's attendance at or participation in a meeting waives any required notice to that director of the meeting unless the director at the beginning of the meeting or promptly upon the director's arrival objects to holding the meeting or transacting business at the meeting and does not thereafter vote for or assent to action taken at the meeting.

     3. Objection to action taken at meeting. If a meeting otherwise valid of the corporation's board of directors is held without call or notice when a notice is required, any action taken at the meeting is deemed ratified by a director who did not attend unless, after learning of the action taken and of the impropriety of the meeting, the director makes prompt objection to the action taken.

§825. Quorum and voting

     1. Quorum. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws require a greater number or unless otherwise specifically provided in this Act, a quorum of a corporation's board of directors consists of:

     2. Fixed number of directors. The corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws may authorize a quorum of a corporation's board of directors to consist of no fewer than 1/3 of the fixed or prescribed number of directors determined under subsection 1.

     3. Majority vote. If a quorum is present when a vote is taken, the affirmative vote of a majority of directors present is the act of the corporation's board of directors unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws require the vote of a greater number of directors.

     4. Dissent; abstention. A director who is present at a meeting of the corporation's board of directors or a committee of the corporation's board of directors when corporate action is taken is deemed to have assented to the action taken unless:

§826. Committees

     1. Create committees. Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, a corporation's board of directors may create one or more committees and appoint members of the corporation's board of directors to serve on them. Each committee must have 2 or more members, who serve at the pleasure of the corporation's board of directors.

     2. Approval of committee. The creation of a committee and appointment of members to a committee must be approved by the greater of:

     3. Requirements apply to committees. Sections 821 to 825 apply to committees and their members.

     4. Authority. To the extent specified by the corporation's board of directors or in the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws, each committee may exercise the authority of the corporation's board of directors under section 801.

     5. No authority. A committee may not:

     6. Standards of conduct. The creation of, delegation of authority to or action by a committee does not alone constitute compliance by a director with the standards of conduct described in section 831.

SUBCHAPTER III
DIRECTORS

§831. Standards of conduct for directors

     1. Basic standard of conduct. Each member of the corporation's board of directors when discharging the duties of a director shall act:

     2. General standard of care. The members of the corporation's board of directors or a committee of the board, when becoming informed in connection with their decision-making function or devoting attention to their oversight function, shall discharge their duties with the care that a person in a like position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances.

     3. Permitted delegation. In discharging board or committee duties, a director who does not have knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is entitled to rely on the performance by any of the persons specified in subsection 5, paragraph A or C to whom the board may have delegated, formally or informally by course of conduct, the authority or duty to perform one or more of the board's functions that are delegable under applicable law.

     4. Information provided by others. In discharging board or committee duties, a director who does not have knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is entitled to rely on information, opinions, reports or statements, including financial statements and other financial data, prepared or presented by any of the persons specified in subsection 5.

     5. Standard for reliance. A director is entitled in accordance with subsection 3 or 4 to rely on:

     6. Interests of other constituencies. In discharging their duties, the directors and officers of the corporation may, in considering the best interests of the corporation and of its shareholders, consider the effects of any action upon employees, suppliers and customers of the corporation, communities in which offices or other establishments of the corporation are located and all other pertinent factors.

§832. Standards of liability for directors

     1. Basis for potential liability. A director of a corporation is not liable to the corporation or its shareholders for any decision to take or not to take action, or any failure to take any action, as a director, unless the party asserting liability in a proceeding establishes that:

     2. Additional elements. In addition to the burden set forth in subsection 1, the party seeking to hold the director liable:

     3. Other causes of action. This section does not:

§833. Director's liability for unlawful distributions

     1. Personal liability. A director who votes for or assents to a distribution in excess of what may be authorized and made pursuant to section 651, subsection 1 is personally liable to the corporation for the amount of the distribution that exceeds what could have been distributed without violating section 651, subsection 1 if the party asserting liability establishes that when taking the action the director did not comply with section 831.

     2. Contribution; recoupment. A director held liable under subsection 1 for an unlawful distribution is entitled to:

     3. Proceeding to enforce liability; 2-year period. A proceeding to enforce the liability of a director under subsection 1 is barred unless it is commenced within 2 years after the date on which the effect of the distribution was measured under section 651, subsection 5 or 7 or as of which the violation of section 651, subsection 1 occurred as the consequence of disregard of a restriction in the corporation's articles of incorporation.

     4. Proceeding to enforce contribution or recoupment; one-year period. A proceeding to enforce a contribution or recoupment under subsection 2 is barred unless it is commenced within one year after the liability of the claimant has been finally adjudicated under subsection 1.

SUBCHAPTER IV
OFFICERS

§841. Required officers

     1. Officers. A corporation must have the officers described in its bylaws or appointed by the corporation's board of directors in accordance with the bylaws.

     2. Officer may appoint another officer. A duly appointed officer may appoint one or more officers or assistant officers if authorized by the bylaws or the corporation's board of directors.

     3. Preparation of minutes. The bylaws or the corporation's board of directors shall delegate to one of the officers responsibility for preparing minutes of the directors' and shareholders' meetings and for authenticating records of the corporation.

     4. Multiple positions. The same individual may simultaneously hold more than one office in a corporation.

§842. Duties of officers

     1. Sources of duties. An officer has the authority and shall perform the duties set forth in the bylaws or, to the extent consistent with the bylaws, the duties prescribed by the corporation's board of directors or by direction of an officer authorized by the corporation's board of directors to prescribe the duties of other officers.

     2. President's duties. Unless otherwise provided by the bylaws, the officer designated as president has authority to institute or defend legal proceedings whenever the directors or shareholders are deadlocked. Unless they have reason to believe otherwise, persons dealing with a corporation are entitled to assume that the officer designated as president has authority to make, on the corporation's behalf, all contracts that are within the ordinary course of those businesses in which the corporation is already engaged.

§843. Standards of conduct for officers

     1. Basic standard of conduct. An officer when performing in the capacity of an officer shall act:

     2. Basis for reliance. In discharging duties under section 842, an officer who does not have knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is entitled to rely on:

     3. Basis for potential liability. An officer is not liable to the corporation or its shareholders for any decision to take or not to take action, or any failure to take any action, as an officer if the duties of the office are performed in compliance with this section. Whether an officer who does not comply with this section has liability depends on applicable law, including those principles of section 832 that have relevance.

§844. Resignation and removal of officers

     1. Resignation. An officer may resign at any time by delivering notice to the corporation. A resignation is effective when the notice is delivered unless the notice specifies a later effective time. If a resignation is made effective at a later time, including, but not limited to, the time at which some specified future event occurs and the corporation's board of directors or the appointing officer accepts the future effective time, the corporation's board of directors or the appointing officer may fill the pending vacancy before the effective time if the corporation's board of directors or the appointing officer provides that the successor does not take office until the effective time.

     2. Removal from office. An officer may be removed at any time with or without cause by:

     3. Appointing officer defined. As used in this section, "appointing officer" means the officer, including any successor to that officer, who appointed the officer resigning or being removed.

§845. Contract rights of officers

     1. No implied contract rights. The appointment of an officer does not itself create contract rights.

     2. Effect of removal or resignation on contract rights. An officer's removal does not affect the officer's contract rights, if any, with the corporation. An officer's resignation does not affect the corporation's contract rights, if any, with the officer.

§846. Clerk

     1. Clerk; appointment. The corporation's board of directors shall appoint an individual to fill the position of clerk, unless the corporation's articles of incorporation reserves appointment of the clerk to the shareholders.

     2. Duties. The clerk shall perform the functions described in sections 501 and 502. Unless otherwise provided by the bylaws, the clerk shall keep on file a list of all shareholders of the corporation and keep, in a book kept for that purpose, the records of all shareholders' meetings, including records of all votes and minutes of the meetings. These records may be kept by the clerk at the registered office or another office of the corporation to which the clerk has ready access. The clerk may certify all votes, resolutions and actions of the shareholders and may certify all votes, resolutions and actions of the corporation's board of directors and its committees.

     3. Clerk not officer. The clerk is not considered an officer of the corporation in the clerk's capacity as clerk. The duties of the clerk are ministerial only, and the clerk is not liable in that capacity for any liabilities of the corporation, including, but not limited to, debts, claims, taxes, fines or penalties.

SUBCHAPTER V
INDEMNIFICATION AND ADVANCE FOR EXPENSES

§851. Definitions

     As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Corporation. "Corporation" includes any domestic or foreign predecessor entity of a corporation in a merger.

     2. Director; officer. "Director" or "officer" means an individual who is or was a director or officer, respectively, of a corporation or who, while a director or officer of the corporation, is or was serving at the corporation's request as a director, officer, partner, trustee, employee or agent of another domestic or foreign corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other entity. A director or officer is considered to be serving an employee benefit plan at the corporation's request if the director's or officer's duties to the corporation also impose duties on, or otherwise involve services by, the director or officer to the plan or to participants in or beneficiaries of the plan. "Director" or "officer" includes, unless the context requires otherwise, the estate or personal representative of a director or officer.

     3. Disinterested director. "Disinterested director" means a director who, at the time of a vote referred to in section 854, subsection 3 or a vote or selection referred to in section 856, subsection 2 or 3, is not:

     4. Expenses. "Expenses" includes attorney's fees.

     5. Liability. "Liability" means the obligation to pay a judgment, settlement, penalty, fine, including an excise tax assessed with respect to an employee benefit plan, or reasonable expenses incurred with respect to a proceeding.

     6. Official capacity. "Official capacity" means:

"Official capacity" does not include service for any other domestic or foreign corporation or any partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other entity.

     7. Party. "Party" means an individual who was, is or is threatened to be made a defendant or respondent in a proceeding.

     8. Proceeding. "Proceeding" means any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative, arbitrative or investigative and whether formal or informal.

§852. Permissible indemnification

     1. Indemnification of director. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a corporation may indemnify an individual who is a party to a proceeding because that individual is a director of the corporation against liability incurred in the proceeding if:

     2. Employee benefit plan. The conduct of a director with respect to an employee benefit plan for a purpose the director reasonably believed to be in the interests of the participants in, and the beneficiaries of, the plan is conduct that satisfies the requirement of subsection 1, paragraph A.

     3. Termination of proceeding. The termination of a proceeding by judgment, order, settlement or conviction or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its equivalent is not of itself determinative that the director did not meet the relevant standard of conduct described in this section.

     4. Court order. Unless ordered by a court under section 855, subsection 1, paragraph C, a corporation may not indemnify one of its directors:

§853. Mandatory indemnification

     A corporation shall indemnify a director who was wholly successful, on the merits or otherwise, in the defense of any proceeding to which the director was a party because the director was a director of the corporation against reasonable expenses incurred by the director in connection with the proceeding.

§854. Advance for expenses

     1. Advance funds. A corporation may, before final disposition of a proceeding, advance funds to pay for or reimburse the reasonable expenses incurred by a director who is a party to a proceeding because the director is a director of that corporation if the director delivers to the corporation:

     2. Unlimited obligation. The undertaking required by subsection 1, paragraph B must be an unlimited general obligation of the director but need not be secured and may be accepted without reference to the financial ability of the director to make repayment.

     3. Authorization. Authorizations under this section must be made:

§855.   Court-ordered indemnification; advance for expenses

     1. Application for indemnification or advance. A director who is a party to a proceeding because that director is a director of the corporation may apply for indemnification or an advance for expenses to the court conducting the proceeding or to another court of competent jurisdiction. After receipt of an application and after giving any notice the court considers necessary, the court shall:

     2. Court determines director entitled to indemnification. If the court determines that the director is entitled to indemnification under subsection 1, paragraph A or to indemnification or an advance for expenses under subsection 1, paragraph B, the court shall also order the corporation to pay the director's reasonable expenses incurred in connection with obtaining the court-ordered indemnification or advance for expenses. If the court determines that the director is entitled to indemnification or an advance for expenses under subsection 1, paragraph C, the court may also order the corporation to pay the director's reasonable expenses to obtain the court-ordered indemnification or advance for expenses.

§856.   Determination and authorization of indemnification

     1. Indemnify. A corporation may not indemnify a director under section 852 unless authorized for a specific proceeding after a determination has been made that indemnification of the director is permissible because the director has met the relevant standard of conduct set forth in section 852.

     2. Determination of permissibility. A determination under subsection 1 that indemnification is permissible must be made:

     3. Authorization. Authorization of indemnification must be made in the same manner as the determination that indemnification is permissible, except that if there are fewer than 2 disinterested directors or if the determination is made by special legal counsel, authorization of indemnification must be made by those entitled under subsection 2, paragraph B, subparagraph (2) to select special legal counsel.

§857. Indemnification of officers

     1. Indemnify. A corporation may indemnify and advance expenses under this subchapter to an officer of the corporation who is a party to a proceeding because that officer is an officer of the corporation:

     2. Action of officer. Subsection 1, paragraph B applies to an officer who is also a director if the basis on which the officer is made a party to the proceeding is an act or omission solely as an officer.

     3. Mandatory indemnification. An officer who is not a director is entitled to mandatory indemnification under section 853 and may apply to a court under section 855 for indemnification or an advance for expenses, in each case to the same extent to which a director may be entitled to indemnification or an advance for expenses under those provisions.

§858. Insurance

     A corporation may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of an individual who is a director or officer of the corporation, or who, while a director or officer of the corporation, serves at the corporation's request as a director, officer, partner, trustee, employee or agent of another domestic or foreign corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other entity against liability asserted against or incurred by that individual in that capacity or arising from the individual's status as a director or officer, whether or not the corporation would have power to indemnify or advance expenses to the individual against the same liability under this subchapter.

§859.   Variation by corporate action; application of subchapter

     1. Obligatory provision. A corporation may, by a provision in its articles of incorporation or bylaws or in a resolution adopted or a contract approved by its board of directors or shareholders, obligate itself in advance of the act or omission giving rise to a proceeding to provide indemnification in accordance with section 852 or advance funds to pay for or reimburse expenses in accordance with section 854. Any such obligatory provision is deemed to satisfy the requirements for authorization referred to in sections 854, subsection 3 and 856, subsection 3. Any such provision that obligates the corporation to provide indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law is deemed to obligate the corporation to advance funds to pay for or reimburse expenses in accordance with section 854 to the fullest extent permitted by law, unless the provision specifically provides otherwise.

     2. Indemnify predecessor. Any provision pursuant to subsection 1 may not obligate the corporation to indemnify or advance expenses to a director of a predecessor of the corporation pertaining to conduct with respect to the predecessor unless otherwise specifically provided. Any provision for indemnification or an advance for expenses in the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws or a resolution of the corporation's board of directors or shareholders of a predecessor of the corporation in a merger or in a contract to which the predecessor is a party, existing at the time the merger takes effect, is governed by section 1107, subsection 1, paragraph D.

     3. Limit indemnification. A corporation may, by a provision in its articles of incorporation, limit any of the rights to indemnification or an advance for expenses created by or pursuant to this subchapter.

     4. Appearance as witness. This subchapter does not limit a corporation's power to pay or reimburse expenses incurred by a director or an officer in connection with the director's or officer's appearance as a witness in a proceeding at a time when the director or officer is not a party.

     5. Maintain insurance. This subchapter does not limit a corporation's power to indemnify, advance expenses to or provide or maintain insurance on behalf of an employee or agent.

§860. Exclusivity of subchapter

     A corporation may provide indemnification or advance expenses to a director or an officer only as permitted by this subchapter.

SUBCHAPTER VI
DIRECTORS' CONFLICTING-INTEREST TRANSACTIONS

§871. Definitions

     As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Conflicting interest. "Conflicting interest" with respect to a corporation means the interest a director of the corporation has respecting a transaction effected or proposed to be effected by the corporation or by a subsidiary of the corporation or any other entity in which the corporation has a controlling interest if:

     2. Director's conflicting-interest transaction. "Director's conflicting-interest transaction" with respect to a corporation means a transaction effected or proposed to be effected by the corporation or by a subsidiary of the corporation or any other entity in which the corporation has a controlling interest respecting which a director of the corporation has a conflicting interest.

     3. Related person. "Related person" means:

     4. Required disclosure. "Required disclosure" means disclosure by the director who has a conflicting interest of:

     5. Time of commitment. "Time of commitment" respecting a transaction means the time when the transaction is consummated or, if made pursuant to contract, the time when the corporation or its subsidiary or the entity in which it has a controlling interest becomes contractually obligated so that its unilateral withdrawal from the transaction would entail significant loss, liability or other damage.

§872. Judicial action

     1. Nonconflicting-interest transaction not enjoined. A transaction effected or proposed to be effected by a corporation or by a subsidiary of the corporation or any other entity in which the corporation has a controlling interest that is not a director's conflicting-interest transaction may not be enjoined, set aside or give rise to an award of damages or other sanctions in a proceeding by a shareholder or by or in the right of the corporation because a director of the corporation or any person with whom or which the director has a personal, economic or other association has an interest in the transaction.

     2. Conflicting-interest transaction not enjoined if standards met. A director's conflicting-interest transaction may not be enjoined, set aside or give rise to an award of damages or other sanctions in a proceeding by a shareholder or by or in the right of the corporation because the director or any person with whom or which the director has a personal, economic or other association has an interest in the transaction if:

§873. Directors' action

     1. Action respecting transaction. A directors' action respecting a transaction is effective for purposes of section 872, subsection 2, paragraph A if the transaction received the affirmative vote of a majority, but no fewer than 2, of those qualified directors on the corporation's board of directors or on a duly empowered committee of the board of directors who voted on the transaction after either required disclosure to them, to the extent the information was not known by them, or compliance with subsection 2, except that action by a committee is effective under this section only if:

     2. Disclosure; conflicting interest. If a director has a conflicting interest respecting a transaction, but neither the director nor a related person of the director as defined in section 871, subsection 3, paragraph A is a party to the transaction, and if the director has a duty under law or professional canon, or a duty of confidentiality to another person, respecting information relating to the transaction such that the director may not make the disclosure described in section 871, subsection 4, paragraph B, then disclosure is sufficient for purposes of subsection 1 if the director:

     3. Quorum. A majority, but no fewer than 2, of all the qualified directors on the corporation's board of directors or on a committee of the corporation's board of directors, constitutes a quorum for purposes of action that complies with this section. The directors' action that otherwise complies with this section is not affected by the presence or vote of a director who is not a qualified director.

     4. Qualified director. For purposes of this section, "qualified director" means, with respect to a director's conflicting-interest transaction, any director who does not have either:

§874. Shareholders' action

     1. Shareholders' action. Shareholders' action respecting a transaction is effective for purposes of section 872, subsection 2, paragraph B if a majority of the votes entitled to be cast by the holders of all qualified shares was cast in favor of the transaction after:

     2. Qualified shares. For purposes of this section, "qualified shares" means any shares entitled to vote with respect to the director's conflicting-interest transaction except shares that, to the knowledge, before the vote, of the secretary or other officer or agent of the corporation authorized to tabulate votes, are beneficially owned or the voting of which is controlled by a director who has a conflicting interest respecting the transaction or by a related person of the director, or both.

     3. Quorum. A majority of the votes entitled to be cast by the holders of all qualified shares constitutes a quorum for purposes of action that complies with this section. Subject to subsections 4 and 5, shareholders' action that otherwise complies with this section is not affected by the presence of holders of shares that are not qualified shares, or the voting of shares that are not qualified shares.

     4. Compliance. For purposes of compliance with subsection 1, a director who has a conflicting interest respecting the transaction shall, before the shareholders' vote, inform the secretary or other officer or agent of the corporation authorized to tabulate votes of the number and the identity of persons holding or controlling the vote of all shares that the director knows are beneficially owned or the voting of which is controlled by the director or by a related person of the director, or both.

     5. Failure to comply. If a shareholders' vote does not comply with subsection 1 solely because of a failure of a director to comply with subsection 4 and if the director establishes that the director's failure did not determine and was not intended by the director to influence the outcome of the vote, the court may, with or without further proceedings respecting section 872, subsection 2, paragraph C, take such action respecting the transaction and the director and give such effect, if any, to the shareholders' vote as it considers appropriate in the circumstances.

CHAPTER 9
DOMESTICATION AND CONVERSION
SUBCHAPTER I
DOMESTICATION

§921. Domestication

     1. Foreign business corporation may become domestic business corporation. A foreign business corporation may become a domestic business corporation only if the domestication is permitted by the organic law of the foreign corporation. The laws of this State govern the effect of domesticating in this State pursuant to this subchapter.

     2. Domestic business corporation may become foreign business corporation. A domestic business corporation may become a foreign business corporation only if the domestication is permitted by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction. Regardless of whether the laws of the foreign jurisdiction require the adoption of a plan of domestication, the domestication must be approved by the adoption by the domestic business corporation of a plan of domestication in the manner provided in this subchapter. The laws of the foreign jurisdiction govern the effect of domesticating in that jurisdiction.

     3. Plan of domestication. A domestic business corporation's plan of domestication in accordance with subsection 2 must include:

     4. Amend plan. A domestic business corporation's plan of domestication submitted in accordance with subsection 2 may also include a provision that the plan may be amended prior to the filing of the document required by the laws of this State or the other jurisdiction to consummate the domestication, except that after approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan may not be amended to change:

     5. Evidence of indebtedness. If any debt security, note or similar evidence of indebtedness for money borrowed, whether secured or unsecured, or a contract of any kind issued, incurred or executed by a domestic business corporation before July 1, 2003 contains a provision applying to a merger of the corporation and the document does not refer to a domestication of the corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to a domestication of the corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended.

§922. Action on plan of domestication

     In the case of a domestication of a domestic business corporation, in this section referred to as the "corporation," in a foreign jurisdiction:

     1. Plan adopted by directors. The plan of domestication must be adopted by the corporation's board of directors;

     2. Shareholders' approval. After adopting the plan of domestication, the corporation's board of directors shall submit the plan to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the plan, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances the board of directors should not make such a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination;

     3. Conditional submission. The corporation's board of directors may condition its submission of the plan of domestication to the shareholders on any basis;

     4. Notice of meeting. If the approval of the shareholders of the plan of domestication under subsection 2 is to be given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the plan of domestication is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the plan and must contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. The notice must include or be accompanied by a copy of the corporation's articles of incorporation as they will be in effect immediately after the domestication;

     5. Majority approval. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or its board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote, approval of the plan of domestication requires the approval of the shareholders and, if any class or series of shares is entitled to vote as a separate group on the plan, the approval of each such separate voting group by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by that voting group. The articles of incorporation may provide that the plan may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the plan but in no case less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists, for each such voting group, a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by each voting group entitled to vote on the plan;

     6. Voting groups. Separate voting by voting groups is required by each class or series of shares that:

     7. Merger provisions applicable to domestications. If any provision of the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws or of an agreement to which any of the directors or shareholders are parties, adopted or entered into before July 1, 2003, applies to a merger of the corporation and that document does not refer to a domestication of the corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to a domestication of the corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended.

§923. Articles of domestication

     1. Articles of domestication. After the domestication of a foreign business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," has been authorized as required by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction, articles of domestication must be executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles must set forth:

     2. Provisions of articles of domestication. The articles of domestication of a corporation must either contain all the provisions that section 202, subsection 1 requires to be set forth in articles of incorporation with any other desired provisions that section 202, subsection 2 permits to be included in articles of incorporation or have attached articles of incorporation. In either case, provisions that would not be required by chapter 10 to be included in restated articles of incorporation may be omitted.

     3. Delivery to Secretary of State. The articles of domestication of a corporation must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing and take effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

     4. Certificate of authority. If the corporation is authorized to transact business in this State under chapter 15, its certificate of authority is cancelled automatically on the effective date of its domestication.

§924. Surrender of charter upon domestication

     1. Articles of charter surrender. Whenever a domestic business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," has adopted and approved, in the manner required by this subchapter, a plan of domestication providing for the corporation to be domesticated in a foreign jurisdiction, articles of charter surrender must be executed on behalf of the corporation by any officer or other duly authorized representative. The articles of charter surrender must set forth:

     2. Filing of articles of charter surrender. The articles of charter surrender must be delivered by the corporation to the Secretary of State for filing. The articles of charter surrender take effect on the effective time provided in section 125.

§925. Effect of domestication

     1. Domestication of foreign business corporation. When a domestication in this State of a foreign business corporation, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," becomes effective:

     2. Domestication of domestic business corporation. When a domestication of a domestic business corporation in a foreign jurisdiction becomes effective, that foreign business corporation is deemed to:

     3. Owner liability. The owner liability of a shareholder in a foreign business corporation that is domesticated in this State, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," is as provided in this subsection.

§926. Abandonment of domestication

     1. Abandonment of domestication by domestic business corporation. Unless otherwise provided in a plan of domestication of a domestic business corporation, after the plan has been adopted and approved as required by this subchapter and at any time before the domestication has become effective, it may be abandoned by the corporation's board of directors without action by the shareholders.

If a domestication is abandoned under this subsection after articles of charter surrender have been filed with the Secretary of State but before the domestication has become effective, a statement that the domestication has been abandoned in accordance with this section, executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative or the corporation, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing prior to the effective date of the domestication. The statement takes effect upon filing, and the domestication is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

     2. Abandonment of domestication by foreign business corporation. If the domestication of a foreign business corporation in this State is abandoned in accordance with the laws of the foreign jurisdiction after articles of domestication have been filed with the Secretary of State, a statement that the domestication has been abandoned, executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing. The statement takes effect upon filing, and the domestication is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

SUBCHAPTER II
NONPROFIT CONVERSION

§931. Nonprofit conversion

     1. Domestic nonprofit corporation; nonprofit conversion plan. A domestic business corporation may become a domestic nonprofit corporation pursuant to a plan of nonprofit conversion as provided in this subchapter.

     2. Foreign nonprofit corporation; nonprofit conversion plan. A domestic business corporation may become a foreign nonprofit corporation if the nonprofit conversion is permitted by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction. Regardless of whether the laws of the foreign jurisdiction require the adoption of a plan of nonprofit conversion, the foreign nonprofit conversion must be approved by the adoption by the domestic business corporation of a plan of nonprofit conversion in the manner provided in this subchapter. The laws of the foreign jurisdiction govern the effect of the foreign nonprofit conversion.

     3. Nonprofit conversion plan. A plan of nonprofit conversion pursuant to subsection 1 or 2 must include:

     4. Amendment provision. A plan of nonprofit conversion under this section may also include a provision that the plan may be amended prior to the filing of articles of nonprofit conversion, except that after approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan may not be amended to change:

     5. Evidence of indebtedness. If any debt security, note or similar evidence of indebtedness for money borrowed, whether secured or unsecured, or a contract of any kind issued, incurred or executed by a domestic business corporation before July 1, 2003 contains a provision applying to a merger of the domestic business corporation and the document does not refer to a nonprofit conversion of the domestic business corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to a nonprofit conversion of the domestic business corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended.

§932. Action on plan of nonprofit conversion

     In the case of a conversion of a domestic business corporation to a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation:

     1. Plan adopted by directors. The plan of nonprofit conversion must be adopted by the corporation's board of directors;

     2. Shareholders' approval. After adopting the plan of nonprofit conversion, the corporation's board of directors shall submit the plan to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the plan, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances the board of directors should not make such a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination;

     3. Conditional submission. The corporation's board of directors may condition its submission of the plan of nonprofit conversion to the shareholders on any basis;

     4. Notice of meeting. If the approval of the shareholders of the plan of nonprofit conversion is to be given at a meeting, the domestic business corporation shall notify each shareholder of the meeting of shareholders at which the plan of nonprofit conversion is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the plan and must contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. The notice must include or be accompanied by a copy of the corporation's articles of incorporation as they will be in effect immediately after the nonprofit conversion;

     5. Majority approval. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or its board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote, approval of the plan of nonprofit conversion requires the approval of the shareholders by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by that voting group. The articles of incorporation may provide that the plan may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the plan but in no case less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists, for each such voting group, a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by each voting group entitled to vote on the plan;

     6. Voting groups. In addition to the vote required under subsection 5, separate voting by voting groups is also required by each class or series of shares. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or its board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be present, if the corporation has more than one class or series of shares outstanding, approval of the plan of nonprofit conversion requires the approval of each separate voting group by a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the nonprofit conversion by that voting group; and

     7. Merger of corporation. If any provision of the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws or of an agreement to which any of the directors or shareholders are parties, adopted or entered into before July 1, 2003, applies to a merger of the domestic business corporation and the document does not refer to a nonprofit conversion of the domestic business corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to a nonprofit conversion of the domestic business corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended.

§933. Articles of nonprofit conversion

     1. Articles of nonprofit conversion. After a plan of nonprofit conversion providing for the conversion of a domestic business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," to a domestic nonprofit corporation has been adopted and approved as required by this Act, articles of nonprofit conversion must be executed on behalf of the corporation by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles must set forth:

     2. Provisions of articles of nonprofit conversion. The articles of nonprofit conversion must either contain all the provisions that the Maine Nonprofit Corporation Act requires to be set forth in articles of incorporation of a domestic nonprofit corporation with any other desired provisions permitted by the Maine Nonprofit Corporation Act or have attached articles of incorporation that satisfy the requirements of the Maine Nonprofit Corporation Act. In either case, provisions that would not be required by chapter 10 to be included in restated articles of incorporation of a domestic nonprofit corporation may be omitted.

     3. Delivery to Secretary of State. The articles of nonprofit conversion must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing and take effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

§934.   Surrender of charter upon foreign nonprofit conversion

     1. Articles of charter surrender. Whenever a domestic business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," has adopted and approved, in the manner required by this subchapter, a plan of nonprofit conversion providing for the corporation to be converted to a foreign nonprofit corporation, articles of charter surrender must be executed on behalf of the corporation by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles of charter surrender must set forth:

     2. Filing of articles of charter surrender. The articles of charter surrender must be delivered by the corporation to the Secretary of State for filing. The articles of charter surrender take effect on the effective time provided in section 125.

§935. Effect of nonprofit conversion

     1. Conversion to domestic nonprofit corporation. When the conversion of a domestic business corporation to a domestic nonprofit corporation, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," becomes effective:

     2. Conversion to foreign nonprofit corporation. When the conversion of a domestic business corporation to a foreign nonprofit corporation becomes effective, that foreign nonprofit corporation is deemed to:

§936. Abandonment of nonprofit conversion

     1. Abandonment of plan. Unless otherwise provided in a plan of nonprofit conversion of a domestic business corporation, after the plan has been adopted and approved as required by this subchapter and at any time before the nonprofit conversion has become effective, the plan may be abandoned by the corporation's board of directors without action by the shareholders.

     2. Statement of abandonment. If a nonprofit conversion is abandoned under subsection 1 after articles of nonprofit conversion or articles of charter surrender have been filed with the Secretary of State but before the nonprofit conversion has become effective, a statement that the nonprofit conversion has been abandoned in accordance with this section, executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing prior to the effective date of the nonprofit conversion. The statement takes effect upon filing, and the nonprofit conversion is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

SUBCHAPTER III
FOREIGN NONPROFIT DOMESTICATION AND CONVERSION

§941.   Foreign nonprofit domestication and conversion

     A foreign nonprofit corporation may become a domestic business corporation only if the domestication and conversion is permitted by the organic law of the foreign nonprofit corporation. The laws of this State govern the effect of converting to a domestic business corporation pursuant to this subchapter.

§942. Articles of domestication and conversion

     1. Conversion to domestic business corporation. After the conversion of a foreign nonprofit corporation to a domestic business corporation, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," has been authorized as required by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction, articles of domestication and conversion must be executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles must set forth:

     2. Provision of articles of domestication and conversion. The articles of domestication and conversion executed in accordance with subsection 1 must either contain all the provisions that section 202, subsection 1 requires to be set forth in articles of incorporation with any other desired provisions that section 202, subsection 2 permits to be included in articles of incorporation or have attached articles of incorporation. In either case, provisions that would not be required by chapter 10 to be included in restated articles of incorporation may be omitted.

     3. Filing with Secretary of State. Articles of domestication and conversion executed in accordance with subsection 1 must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing and take effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

     4. Certificate of authority. If the foreign nonprofit corporation is authorized to transact business in this State under the provisions of the Maine Nonprofit Corporation Act, its certificate of authority is cancelled automatically on the effective date of its domestication and conversion.

§943.   Effect of foreign nonprofit domestication and conversion

     1. Effect of domestication and conversion. When a domestication and conversion of a foreign nonprofit corporation to a domestic business corporation, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," becomes effective:

     2. Owner liability. The owner liability of a member of a foreign nonprofit corporation that domesticates and converts to a domestic business corporation is as provided in this subsection.

§944.     Abandonment of foreign nonprofit domestication and conversion

     If the domestication and conversion of a foreign nonprofit corporation to a domestic business corporation is abandoned in accordance with the laws of the foreign jurisdiction after articles of domestication and conversion have been filed with the Secretary of State, a statement that the domestication and conversion has been abandoned, executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing. The statement takes effect upon filing, and the domestication and conversion is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

SUBCHAPTER IV
ENTITY CONVERSION

§951. Definitions

     As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Converting entity. "Converting entity" means the domestic business corporation or domestic unincorporated entity that adopts a plan of entity conversion or the foreign unincorporated entity converting to a domestic business corporation.

     2. Surviving entity. "Surviving entity" means the corporation or unincorporated entity as it continues in existence immediately after consummation of an entity conversion pursuant to this subchapter.

§952. Entity conversion authorized

     1. Domestic other entity. A domestic business corporation may become a domestic unincorporated entity pursuant to a plan of entity conversion. If the organic law of the unincorporated entity does not provide for such a conversion, section 957 governs the effect of converting to that form of unincorporated entity.

     2. Foreign unincorporated entity. A domestic business corporation may become a foreign unincorporated entity only if the entity conversion is permitted by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction. The laws of the foreign jurisdiction govern the effect of converting to an unincorporated entity in that jurisdiction.

     3. Entity conversion. A domestic unincorporated entity may become a domestic business corporation. Section 957 governs the effect of converting to a domestic business corporation. If the organic law of a domestic unincorporated entity does not provide procedures for the approval of an entity conversion, the conversion must be adopted and approved, and the entity conversion effectuated, in the same manner as a merger of the unincorporated entity, and its interest holders are entitled to appraisal rights if appraisal rights are available upon any type of merger under the organic law of the unincorporated entity. If the organic law of a domestic unincorporated entity does not provide procedures for the approval of either an entity conversion or a merger, a plan of entity conversion must be adopted and approved, the entity conversion effectuated and appraisal rights exercised in accordance with the procedures in this subchapter and chapter 13. Without limiting the provisions of this subsection, a domestic unincorporated entity whose organic law does not provide procedures for the approval of an entity conversion is subject to subsection 5 and section 954, subsection 7. For purposes of applying this subchapter and chapter 13:

     4. Authorization to become corporation. A foreign unincorporated entity may become a domestic business corporation if the organic law of the foreign unincorporated entity authorizes it to become a corporation in another jurisdiction. The laws of this State govern the effect of conversion to a domestic business corporation pursuant to this subchapter.

     5. Merger of corporation. If any debt security, note or similar evidence of indebtedness for money borrowed, whether secured or unsecured, or a contract of any kind issued, incurred or executed by a domestic business corporation before July 1, 2003, applies to a merger of the corporation and the document does not refer to an entity conversion of the corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to an entity conversion of the corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended.

§953. Plan of entity conversion

     1. Plan of entity conversion. A plan of entity conversion under section 952 must include:

     2. Amendment of plan. A plan of entity conversion may also include a provision that the plan may be amended prior to the filing of articles of entity conversion, except that after approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan may not be amended to change:

§954. Action on plan of entity conversion

     In the case of an entity conversion of a domestic business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," to a domestic or foreign unincorporated entity:

     1. Plan adopted by board. The plan of entity conversion must be adopted by the corporation's board of directors;

     2. Shareholders' approval. After adopting the plan of entity conversion, the corporation's board of directors shall submit the plan to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the plan, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances the board of directors should not make such a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination;

     3. Conditional submission. The corporation's board of directors may condition its submission of the plan of entity conversion to the shareholders on any basis;

     4. Notice of meeting. If the approval of the shareholders of the plan of entity conversion under subsection 2 is to be given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the plan of entity conversion is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the plan and must contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. The notice must include or be accompanied by a copy of the organic documents of the surviving entity as they will be in effect immediately after the entity conversion;

     5. Majority approval. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or its board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote, approval of the plan of entity conversion requires the approval of the shareholders at a meeting by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by that voting group. The articles of incorporation may provide that the plan may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the plan but in no case less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists, for each such voting group, a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by each voting group entitled to vote on the plan;

     6. Voting groups. In addition to the vote required under subsection 5, separate voting by voting groups is also required by each class or series of shares. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or the board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be present, if the corporation has more than one class or series of shares outstanding, approval of the plan of entity conversion requires the approval of each such separate voting group by a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the conversion by that voting group;

     7. Merger of corporation. If any provision of the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws or of an agreement to which any of the directors or shareholders are parties, adopted or entered into before July 1, 2003, applies to a merger of the corporation and the document does not refer to an entity conversion of the corporation, the provision is deemed to apply to an entity conversion of the corporation until such time after that date as the provision is amended; and

     8. Written consent. If as a result of an entity conversion one or more shareholders of the corporation would become subject to owner liability for the debts, obligations or liabilities of any other person or entity, approval of the plan of conversion requires the execution by each such shareholder of a separate written consent to become subject to such owner liability.

§955. Articles of entity conversion

     1. Conversion to domestic unincorporated entity. After the conversion of a domestic business corporation, referred to in this subsection as the "corporation," to a domestic unincorporated entity has been adopted and approved as required by this Act, articles of entity conversion must be executed on behalf of the corporation by an officer or other duly authorized representative. The articles must:

     2. Conversion to domestic business corporation. After the conversion of a domestic unincorporated entity to a domestic business corporation has been adopted and approved as required by the organic law of the unincorporated entity, articles of entity conversion must be executed on behalf of the unincorporated entity by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles must:

     3. Conversion by law of foreign jurisdiction. After the conversion of a foreign unincorporated entity to a domestic business corporation is authorized as required by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction, articles of entity conversion must be executed on behalf of the foreign unincorporated entity by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles must:

     3. File with Secretary of State. The articles of entity conversion must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing and take effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

     4. Certificate of authority; cancelled. If the converting entity is a foreign unincorporated entity that is authorized to transact business in this State under a provision of law similar to chapter 15, its certificate of authority or other type of foreign qualification is cancelled automatically on the effective date of its conversion.

§956. Surrender of charter upon conversion

     1. Articles of charter surrender; domestic business corporation. Whenever a domestic business corporation has adopted and approved, in the manner required by this subchapter, a plan of entity conversion providing for the domestic business corporation, referred to in this section as the "corporation," to be converted to a foreign unincorporated entity, articles of charter surrender must be executed on behalf of the corporation by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation. The articles of charter surrender must set forth:

     2. File with Secretary of State. The articles of charter surrender must be delivered by the corporation to the Secretary of State for filing. The articles of charter surrender take effect on the effective time provided in section 125.

§957. Effect of entity conversion

     1. Conversion to domestic business corporation or domestic other entity. When a conversion under this subchapter in which the surviving entity is a domestic business corporation or domestic unincorporated entity becomes effective:

     2. Conversion to a foreign other entity. When a conversion of a domestic business corporation to a foreign unincorporated entity becomes effective, the surviving entity is deemed to:

     3. Owner liability; shareholder. A shareholder who becomes subject to owner liability for some or all of the debts, obligations or liabilities of the surviving entity is personally liable only for those debts, obligations or liabilities of the surviving entity that arise after the effective time of the articles of entity conversion.

     4. Interest holder; owner liability. The owner liability of an interest holder in an unincorporated entity that converts to a domestic business corporation is as provided in this subsection.

§958. Abandonment of entity conversion

     1. Conversion abandoned by board of directors. Unless otherwise provided in a plan of entity conversion of a domestic business corporation, after the plan has been adopted and approved as required by this subchapter and at any time before the entity conversion has become effective, it may be abandoned by the corporation's board of directors without action by the shareholders.

     2. Statement of abandonment. If an entity conversion is abandoned after articles of entity conversion or articles of charter surrender have been filed with the Secretary of State but before the entity conversion has become effective, a statement that the entity conversion has been abandoned in accordance with this section, executed by an officer or other duly authorized representative of the corporation, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing prior to the effective date of the entity conversion. Upon filing, the statement takes effect and the entity conversion is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

CHAPTER 10
AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION AND BYLAWS
SUBCHAPTER I
AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

§1001. Authority to amend

     1. Generally. A corporation may amend its articles of incorporation at any time to add or change a provision that, as of the effective date of the amendment, is required or permitted in the articles of incorporation or to delete a provision that is not required to be contained in the articles of incorporation.

     2. No vested property right. A shareholder of a corporation does not have a vested property right resulting from any provision in the articles of incorporation, including provisions relating to management, control, capital structure, dividend entitlement or purpose or duration of the corporation.

     3. Organized under special Act. If a corporation was organized under a special Act of the Legislature, the corporation may amend its articles of incorporation only if:

§1002. Amendment before issuance of shares

     If a corporation has not yet issued shares, its board of directors or if it has no board of directors, its incorporators, may adopt one or more amendments to the corporation's articles of incorporation.

§1003.   Amendment by board of directors and shareholders

     If a corporation has issued shares, an amendment to the articles of incorporation must be adopted in accordance with the following.

     1. Amendment adopted by board of directors. The proposed amendment must be adopted by the board of directors.

     2. Approval by shareholders. Except as provided in sections 1005, 1007, and 1008, after adopting the proposed amendment the board of directors shall submit the amendment to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the amendment, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances it should not make such a recommendation. In that case, the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination.

     3. Condition of submission. The board of directors may condition its submission of the amendment to the shareholders on any basis.

     4. Notice of meeting. If the amendment is required to be approved by the shareholders and the approval is to be given at a meeting, the corporation must notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the amendment is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the amendment and must contain or be accompanied by a copy of the amendment.

     5. Approval by majority. Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of directors, acting pursuant to subsection 3, requires a greater vote, approval of the amendment requires the approval of the shareholders by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the amendment by the shareholders. If any class or series is entitled to vote as a separate voting group on the amendment, except as provided in section 1004, subsection 3, the amendment requires the approval of each separate voting group by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the amendment by that voting group. The articles of incorporation may provide that an amendment may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the amendment, but in no case less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists, for each such voting group, a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the amendment by each voting group entitled to vote on the amendment.

     6. Written consent. The articles of incorporation may be amended by written consent of all shareholders entitled to vote on the amendment, as provided by section 704, subsection 1; if a unanimous written consent is given, a resolution of the board of directors proposing the amendment is not necessary.

§1004. Voting on amendments by voting groups

     1. Separate voting groups. If a corporation has more than one class of shares outstanding, the holders of the outstanding shares of a class are entitled to vote as a separate voting group, if shareholder voting is otherwise required by this Act, on a proposed amendment to the articles of incorporation if the amendment would:

     2. Voting rights of series. If a proposed amendment would affect a series of a class of shares in one or more of the ways described in subsection 1, the holders of shares of that series are entitled to vote as a separate voting group on the proposed amendment.

     3. Two or more classes or series affected; vote as one group. If a proposed amendment that entitles the holders of 2 or more classes or series of shares to vote as separate voting groups under this section would affect those 2 or more classes or series in the same or a substantially similar way, the holders of shares of all the classes or series so affected must vote together as a single voting group on the proposed amendment, unless otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation or required by the board of directors.

     4. Nonvoting shares. A class or series of shares is entitled to the voting rights granted by this section even if the articles of incorporation provide that the shares are nonvoting shares.

§1005. Amendment by board of directors

     Unless the articles of incorporation provide otherwise, a corporation's board of directors may adopt amendments to the corporation's articles of incorporation without shareholder approval:

     1. Extend duration of corporation. To extend the duration of the corporation if it was incorporated at a time when limited duration was required by law;

     2. Initial directors. To delete the names and addresses of the initial directors;

     3. Initial registered agent or registered office. To delete the name and address of the initial registered agent or registered office, if a statement of change is on file with the Secretary of State;

     4. One class of shares outstanding. If the corporation has only one class of shares outstanding:

     5. Change corporate name. To change the corporate name by substituting the word "corporation," "incorporated," "company," or "limited" or the abbreviation "corp.," "inc.," "co." or "ltd." for a similar word or abbreviation in the name or by adding, deleting or changing a geographical attribution for the name;

     6. Reduction in authorized shares. To reflect a reduction in authorized shares, as a result of the operation of section 642, subsection 2, when the corporation has acquired its own shares and the articles of incorporation prohibit the reissue of the acquired shares;

     7. Delete class of shares. To delete a class of shares from the articles of incorporation, as a result of the operation of section 642, subsection 2, when there are no remaining shares of the class because the corporation has acquired all shares of the class and the articles of incorporation prohibit the reissue of the acquired shares; or

     8. Make approved changes. To make any change expressly permitted by section 602, subsection 4 to be made without shareholder approval.

§1006. Articles of amendment

     1. Content. After an amendment to the articles of incorporation has been adopted and approved in the manner required by this Act and by the articles of incorporation, the corporation shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing articles of amendment that must set forth:

§1007. Restated articles of incorporation

     1. Consolidation into single document. A corporation's board of directors may restate its articles of incorporation at any time, with or without shareholder approval, to consolidate all amendments into a single document.

     2. Inclusion of amendments requiring shareholder approval. If the restated articles of incorporation include one or more new amendments that require shareholder approval, the amendments must be adopted and approved as provided in section 1003.

     3. Filing restated articles. A corporation that restates its articles of incorporation shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing articles of restatement setting forth the name of the corporation and the text of the restated articles of incorporation together with a certificate that states that the restated articles of incorporation consolidate all amendments into a single document. If a new amendment is included in the restated articles of incorporation, the certificate must also include the statements required under section 1006.

     4. Original articles superseded. Duly adopted restated articles of incorporation supersede the original articles of incorporation and all earlier amendments to the articles of incorporation.

     5. Certification of restated articles. The Secretary of State may certify restated articles of incorporation as the articles of incorporation currently in effect without including the certificate information required by subsection 3.

§1008. Amendment pursuant to reorganization

     1. Court ordered reorganization. A corporation's articles of incorporation may be amended without action by the board of directors or shareholders to carry out a plan of reorganization ordered or decreed by a court of competent jurisdiction under the authority of a law of the United States.

     2. Individual appointed by court. The individual or individuals designated by the court pursuant to subsection 1 shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing articles of amendment setting forth:

     3. Final decree. This section does not apply after entry of a final decree in the reorganization proceeding even though the court retains jurisdiction of the proceeding for limited purposes unrelated to consummation of the reorganization plan.

§1009. Effect of amendment

     An amendment to a corporation's articles of incorporation does not affect a cause of action existing against or in favor of the corporation, a proceeding to which the corporation is a party or the existing rights of persons other than shareholders of the corporation. An amendment changing a corporation's name does not abate a proceeding brought by or against the corporation in its former name.

SUBCHAPTER II
AMENDMENT OF BYLAWS

§1020.   Amendment by board of directors or shareholders

     1. Shareholders amend; repeal bylaws. A corporation's shareholders may amend or repeal the corporation's bylaws.

     2. Board of directors amend bylaws. A corporation's board of directors may amend or repeal the corporation's bylaws, unless:

§1021.   Bylaw increasing quorum or voting requirement for directors

     1. Increase quorum or voting requirement. A bylaw that increases a quorum or voting requirement for the corporation's board of directors may be amended or repealed:

     2. Bylaw increasing quorum or voting requirement. A bylaw adopted or amended by the shareholders that increases a quorum or voting requirement for the corporation's board of directors may provide that it can be amended or repealed only by a specified vote of either the shareholders or the board of directors.

     3. Amendment quorum requirement. Action by the corporation's board of directors under subsection 1 to amend or repeal a bylaw that changes the quorum or voting requirement for the board of directors must meet the same quorum requirement and be adopted by the same vote required to take action under the quorum and voting requirement then in effect or proposed to be adopted, whichever is greater.

CHAPTER 11
MERGERS AND SHARE EXCHANGES

§1101. Definitions

     As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Eligible entity. "Eligible entity" means a domestic or foreign unincorporated entity or a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation.

     2. Eligible interests. "Eligible interests" means interests and memberships.

     3. Merger. "Merger" means a business combination pursuant to section 1102.

     4. Party to a merger or party to a share exchange. "Party to a merger" or "party to a share exchange" means any domestic or foreign corporation or eligible entity that will:

     5. Share exchange. "Share exchange" means a business combination pursuant to section 1103.

     6. Survivor. "Survivor" in a merger means the corporation or eligible entity into which one or more other corporations or eligible entities are merged. A survivor of a merger may preexist the merger or be created by the merger.

§1102. Merger

     1. General authority of domestic corporations. One or more domestic business corporations may merge with one or more domestic or foreign business or nonprofit corporations or unincorporated entities pursuant to a plan of merger under this section.

     2. Merger with foreign entities. A foreign business or nonprofit corporation or a foreign unincorporated entity may be a party to a merger with a domestic business corporation or may be created by the terms of a plan of merger under this section only if the merger is permitted by the laws under which the foreign business or nonprofit corporation or unincorporated entity is organized or by which it is governed; and

     3. Merger not contemplated in organic law. If the organic law of a domestic unincorporated entity does not provide procedures for the approval of a merger, a plan of merger may be adopted and approved, the merger effectuated, and appraisal rights exercised in accordance with the procedures in this chapter and chapter 13. For the purposes of applying this chapter and chapter 13:

     4. Plan of merger. A plan of merger must include:

     5. Plan dependent on facts. The terms of the plan of merger referred to in subsection 4, paragraphs B and C may be made dependent on facts ascertainable outside the plan of merger, as long as those facts are objectively ascertainable. For the purposes of this subsection, "facts" includes, but is not limited to, the occurrence of any event, including a determination or action by any person or body, including the corporation.

     6. Amend plan prior to filing articles of merger. The plan of merger may also include a provision that the plan may be amended prior to filing the articles of merger with the Secretary of State under section 1106, subsection 2. If the shareholders of a domestic corporation that is a party to the merger are required or permitted to vote on the plan, the plan must provide that subsequent to approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan may not be amended to:

§1103. Share exchange

     1. Share exchange. Through a share exchange:

     2. Party to share exchange. A foreign corporation or a foreign unincorporated entity may be a party to a share exchange under this section only if the share exchange is permitted by the laws under which the corporation or other entity is organized or governed.

     3. Share exchange not contemplated in organic law. If the organic law of a domestic unincorporated entity does not provide procedures for the approval of a share exchange, a plan of share exchange may be adopted and approved and the share exchange effectuated in accordance with the procedures, if any, for a merger. If the organic law of a domestic unincorporated entity does not provide procedures for the approval of either a share exchange or a merger, a plan of share exchange may be adopted and approved, the share exchange effectuated and appraisal rights exercised in accordance with the procedures in this chapter and chapter 13. For the purposes of applying this chapter and chapter 13:

     4. Plan of share exchange. A plan of share exchange must include:

     5. Provisions dependent on facts. The provisions of the plan of share exchange referred to in subsection 4, paragraphs B and C may be made dependent on facts ascertainable outside the plan of share exchange, as long as those facts are objectively ascertainable. For purposes of this subsection, "facts" includes, but is not limited to, the occurrence of any event, including a determination or action by any person or body, including the corporation.

     6. Amend plan prior to filing articles of share exchange. The plan of share exchange also may include a provision that the plan may be amended prior to filing the articles of share exchange with the Secretary of State under section 1106, subsection 2. If the shareholders of a domestic corporation that is a party to the share exchange are required or permitted to vote on the plan, the plan must provide that subsequent to approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan may not be amended to:

     This section does not limit the power of a domestic corporation to acquire shares of another corporation or interests in an other entity in a transaction other than a share exchange.

§1104. Action on plan of merger or share exchange

     In the case of a domestic corporation that is a party to a merger or share exchange under this chapter:

     1. Plan adopted by board of directors. The plan of merger or share exchange must be adopted by the corporation's board of directors;

     2. Shareholders approve plan. Except as provided in subsection 7 and in section 1105, after adopting the plan of merger or share exchange, the corporation's board of directors shall submit the plan to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors also shall transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the plan, unless the board of directors makes a determination that, because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances, the board of directors should not make that recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination;

     3. Conditional submission of plan. The corporation's board of directors may condition its submission of the plan of merger or share exchange to the shareholders on any basis;

     4. Notice of meeting. If the plan of merger or share exchange under this chapter is required by the corporation's articles of incorporation to be approved by the shareholders and if the approval is to be given at a meeting of shareholders, the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the plan is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose or one of the purposes of the meeting is to consider the plan and must contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. If the corporation is to be merged into an existing corporation or other entity, the notice also must include or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the articles of incorporation or organizational documents of that corporation or other entity. If the corporation is to be merged into a corporation or other entity that is to be created pursuant to the merger, the notice also must include or be accompanied by a copy or a summary of the articles of incorporation or organizational documents of the new corporation or other entity;

     5. Majority vote. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation, or the corporation's board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3, require a greater vote, approval of the plan of merger or share exchange requires the approval of the shareholders by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by that voting group and, if any class or series is entitled to vote as a separate voting group on the plan, the approval of each separate voting group by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by that voting group. The corporation's articles of incorporation may provide that a plan of merger or share exchange may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the plan, but in no case less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists for each such voting group a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the plan by each voting group entitled to vote on the plan;

     6. Voting groups. Separate voting by voting group is required:

     7. Approval not required. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation otherwise provide, approval by the corporation's shareholders of a plan of merger or share exchange is not required if:

For the purposes of this subsection, "participating shares" means shares that entitle their holders to participate without limitation in distributions, and "voting shares" means shares that entitle their holders to vote unconditionally in elections of directors;

     8. Personal liability; written consent. If as a result of a merger or share exchange one or more shareholders of a domestic corporation would become subject to owner liability for the debts, obligations or liabilities of any other person or entity, approval of the plan of merger or share exchange must require the execution by each such shareholder of a separate written consent to become subject to that owner liability;

     9. Participating corporation. A corporation organized under any special act of the Legislature of this State may be a participating corporation in a merger or share exchange unless the act authorizing the creation of the corporation provides to the contrary; and

     10. Unanimous written consent. A plan of merger or share exchange may be approved by written consent of all shareholders of a participating corporation, whether or not entitled to vote by the corporation's articles of incorporation, as provided in section 704, subsection 1. If the unanimous written consent is given, a resolution of the board of directors of the participating corporation approving, proposing, submitting, recommending or otherwise respecting the plan of merger or share exchange is not necessary and shareholders of the participating corporation are not entitled to receive notice of or to dissent from the plan of merger or share exchange.

§1105.   Merger between parent corporation and subsidiary corporation or between subsidiary corporations

     1. Merger of subsidiary corporations. A domestic parent corporation that owns shares of a domestic or foreign subsidiary corporation that carry at least 90% of the voting power of each class and series of the outstanding shares of the subsidiary that have voting power may merge the subsidiary into the parent corporation or another such subsidiary or may merge the parent corporation into the subsidiary without the approval of the board of directors or shareholders of the subsidiary unless the articles of incorporation of any of the corporations otherwise provide and unless, in the case of a foreign subsidiary, approval by the subsidiary's board of directors or shareholders is required by the laws under which the subsidiary is organized.

     2. Notice to shareholders. If approval of a merger by a subsidiary corporation's shareholders is not required under subsection 1, the parent corporation shall, within 10 days after the effective date of the merger, notify each of the subsidiary's shareholders that the merger has become effective.

     3. Provisions of merger. Except as provided in subsections 1 and 2, a merger between a parent corporation and a subsidiary corporation is governed by the provisions of this chapter applicable to mergers generally.

§1106. Articles of merger or share exchange

     1. Execution of plan of merger or share exchange. After a plan of merger or share exchange has been adopted and approved as required by this Act, articles of merger or share exchange must be executed on behalf of each party to the merger or share exchange by an officer or other duly authorized representative. The articles must set forth:

     2. File articles with Secretary of State. Articles of merger or share exchange must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing by the survivor of the merger or the acquiring corporation in a share exchange and take effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

§1107. Effect of merger or share exchange

     1. Merger. When a merger becomes effective:

     2. Share exchange. When a share exchange becomes effective, the shares of each domestic corporation that are to be exchanged for shares or other securities, interests, obligations, rights to acquire shares or other securities, cash or other property or any combination thereof are entitled only to the rights provided to them in the plan of share exchange or to any rights they may have under chapter 13.

     3. Shareholder's liabilities and obligations. A person who becomes subject to owner liability for some or all of the debts, liabilities or obligations of any entity as a result of a merger or share exchange has owner liability only to the extent provided in the organic law of the entity and only for those debts, liabilities and obligations that arise after the effective time of the articles of merger or share exchange.

     4. Foreign corporation. When a merger becomes effective, a foreign corporation or a foreign other entity that is the survivor of the merger is deemed to:

     5. Effect of merger or share exchange on liability. The effect of a merger or share exchange on the owner liability of a person who had owner liability for some or all of the debts, obligations or liabilities of a party to the merger or share exchange is as follows.

§1108. Abandonment of merger or share exchange

     1. Abandoned merger or share exchange prior to becoming effective. Unless otherwise provided in a plan of merger or share exchange or in the laws under which a foreign corporation or a domestic or foreign other entity that is a party to a merger or a share exchange is organized or by which it is governed, after the plan has been adopted and approved as required by this chapter, and at any time before the merger or share exchange has become effective, the merger or share exchange may be abandoned by any party to the merger or share exchange without action by the party's shareholders or owners of interests, in accordance with any procedures set forth in the plan of merger or share exchange or, if procedures are not set forth in the plan, in the manner determined by the corporation's board of directors or the managers of an other entity, subject to any contractual rights of other parties to the merger or share exchange.

     2. Abandoned merger or share exchange after articles of merger or share exchange are filed. If a merger or share exchange is abandoned under subsection 1 after articles of merger or share exchange have been filed with the Secretary of State under section 1106, subsection 2 but before the merger or share exchange has become effective, a statement that the merger or share exchange has been abandoned in accordance with this section, executed on behalf of a party to the merger or share exchange by an officer or other duly authorized representative, must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing prior to the effective date of the merger or share exchange. Upon filing, the statement takes effect and the merger or share exchange is considered abandoned and does not become effective.

§1109.   Required vote of shareholders in certain business combinations

     1. Definitions. As used in this section, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     2. Business combination. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act, except subsection 3, a domestic corporation may not engage in any business combination for a period of 5 years following an interested shareholder's share acquisition date unless that business combination is:

     3. Exemptions. This section does not apply to business combinations as provided in this subsection.

     The requirements of this section are in addition to the requirements of applicable law, including this Act, and any additional requirements contained in the articles of incorporation or bylaws of a domestic corporation with respect to business combinations as defined in this section.

§1110.   Right of shareholders to receive payment for shares following control transaction

     1. Shareholders entitled to rights; exceptions. A holder of the voting shares of a corporation that becomes the subject of a control transaction described in subsection 2 is entitled to the rights and remedies provided in this section, unless the articles of incorporation provide that this section is not applicable to the corporation.

     2. Definitions. As used in this section, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     3. Notice of control transaction to be given to shareholders. Within 15 days of the control transaction date, notice that a control transaction has occurred must be given by the controlling person to each shareholder of the corporation holding voting shares. If the controlling person so requests, the corporation shall, at the option of the corporation and at the expense of the controlling person, either furnish a list of all shareholders holding voting shares to the person or group or mail the notice to those shareholders. A copy of this section of law must be included in, or enclosed with, the notice. Any list provided by the corporation to a controlling person pursuant to this subsection may be used only for the purpose of giving the notice required by this subsection.

     4. Shareholder demand for payment. After the control transaction date, any holder of voting shares of the corporation, prior to or within 30 days after the notice required by subsection 3 is given, which time period must be specified in the notice, may make written demand on the controlling person for payment of the amount provided in subsection 5 with respect to the voting shares of the corporation held by the shareholder, and the controlling person shall pay that amount to the shareholder. The demand of the shareholder must state the number and class or series, if any, of the shares owned by the shareholder with respect to which the demand is made.

     5. Shareholder entitled to receive payment for shares. A shareholder making written demand under subsection 4 is entitled to receive cash for each of the shareholder's shares in an amount equal to the fair value of each voting share as of the day prior to the control transaction date, taking into account all relevant factors, including an increment representing a proportion of any value payable for acquisition of control of the corporation.

     6. Submission of certificates; notation. At the time the shareholder files demand for payment for shares pursuant to subsection 4, or within 20 days after filing the demand, each shareholder demanding payment with respect to certificated shares shall submit the certificate or certificates representing the shareholder's shares to the corporation or the corporation's transfer agent for notation on the certificate that the demand has been made; the certificates must be returned promptly after entry of the notation. A shareholder's failure to submit the certificates terminates, at the option of the controlling person, the shareholder's rights under this section, unless a court of competent jurisdiction, for good and sufficient cause shown, otherwise directs. If shares represented by a certificate on which notation has been so made are transferred, each new certificate issued for those shares must bear a similar notation, together with the name of the original holder of the shares who made the written demand, and a transferee of the shares does not acquire by the transfer any rights in the corporation other than those that the original demanding shareholder had after making demand for payment of the fair value of the shares.

Following a demand for payment with respect to shares without certificates, a notation that a demand for payment pursuant to subsection 4, together with the name of the original holder of the shares who made the written demand, must be included in the information statement required by section 627, subsection 2. A transferee of shares without certificates as to which a notation is included in the information statement required by section 627, subsection 2 does not acquire by the transfer any rights in the corporation other than those that the original demand-ing shareholder had after making demand for payment of the fair value of the shares.

     7. Written offer; balance sheet. Within 10 days after the expiration of the period provided in subsection 4 for making demand, the controlling person shall make a written offer to each demanding shareholder to pay for those shares at a specified price determined by the controlling person to be the fair value of those shares. The offer must be made at the same price per share to all demanding shareholders of the same class. The notice and offer must be accompanied by a balance sheet of the corporation as of the latest available date and not more than 12 months prior to the making of the offer and a profit and loss statement of the corporation for the 12-month period ending on the date of the balance sheet.

     8. Agreement on fair value; payment. If, within 30 days after the expiration of the period provided in subsection 4 for making demand, the fair value of the shares is agreed upon between any demanding shareholder and the controlling person, payment for those shares must be made within 90 days after the date on which the written offer required by subsection 7 is made, upon surrender of the certificate or certificates representing those shares, if certificated. Upon payment of the agreed value, the demanding shareholder ceases to have any interest in the shares.

     9. Failure to reach agreement on fair value of shares. If, within the additional 30-day period prescribed by subsection 8, one or more demanding shareholders and the controlling person have failed to agree as to the fair value of shares:

     10. Holding and disposal of shares acquired by payment. Shares acquired by a controlling person pursuant to payment of the agreed value for the shares or to payment of the judgment entered, as provided in this section, may be held and disposed of as authorized and issued shares.

     11. Minors. In the case of a shareholder who is a minor or otherwise legally incapacitated, the demand required by subsection 4 may be made either by the shareholder, notwithstanding the shareholder's legal incapacity, by the shareholder's guardian or by any person acting for the shareholder as next friend. The shareholder is bound by the time limitations set forth in this section, notwithstanding the shareholder's legal incapacity.

     12. Appeals. Appeals from judgments in actions brought under this section are permitted as in other civil actions in which equitable relief is sought.

     13. Compliance; shareholder rights. If a person or group of persons proposing to engage in a control transaction complies with the requirements of this section in connection with the control transaction, the effectiveness of the rights afforded in this section to shareholders may be conditioned upon the consummation of the control transaction.

The person or group of persons shall give prompt written notice of the satisfaction of any condition under this subsection to each shareholder who has made demand as provided in this section.

     14. Application. This section does not apply to:

CHAPTER 12
DISPOSITION OF ASSETS

§1201.   Disposition of assets not requiring shareholder approval

     Approval of the shareholders of a corporation is not required, unless the articles of incorporation otherwise provide, to:

     1. Usual and regular course of business. Sell, lease, exchange or otherwise dispose of any or all of the corporation's assets in the usual and regular course of business;

     2. Grants of security, etc. Mortgage, pledge, dedicate to the repayment of indebtedness, whether with or without recourse, or otherwise encumber any or all of the corporation's assets, whether or not in the usual and regular course of business;

     3. Transfers to subsidiaries. Transfer any or all of the corporation's assets to one or more corporations or other entities, all of the shares or interests of which are owned by the corporation; or

     4. Distribute assets to shareholders. Distribute assets pro rata to the holders of one or more classes or series of the corporation's shares.

§1202.   Shareholder approval of certain dispositions

     1. No significant continuing business activity. A sale, lease, exchange or other disposition of assets, other than a disposition described in section 1201, requires approval of the corporation's shareholders if the disposition would leave the corporation without a significant continuing business activity. If a corporation retains a business activity that represented at least 25% of total assets at the end of the most recently completed fiscal year, and 25% of either income from continuing operations before taxes or revenues from continuing operations for that fiscal year, in each case of the corporation and its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, the corporation has retained a significant continuing business activity.

     2. Resolution authorizing disposition. A disposition that requires approval of the shareholders under subsection 1 must be initiated by a resolution by the corporation's board of directors authorizing the disposition. After adoption of such a resolution, the board of directors shall submit the proposed disposition to the shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the proposed disposition, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances the board of directors should not make such a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination.

     3. Conditioning submission of disposition. The corporation's board of directors may condition its submission of a disposition to the shareholders under subsection 2 on any basis.

     4. Meeting notice. If a disposition is required to be approved by the shareholders under subsection 1 and if the approval is to be given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the disposition is to be submitted for approval. The notice must state that the purpose or one of the purposes of the meeting is to consider the disposition. The notice must contain a description of the disposition, including the terms and conditions of the disposition, and the consideration to be received by the corporation.

     5. Majority approval of disposition. Unless the articles of incorporation or the corporation's board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote, approval of a disposition requires the approval of the shareholders and, if any class or series is entitled to vote as a separate voting group on the disposition, the approval of each separate voting group by a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the disposition by that voting group. The articles of incorporation may provide that a disposition may be approved by a lesser vote of each voting group entitled to vote on the disposition, but in no case may a disposition be approved by less than a majority of the votes cast by that voting group at a meeting at which there exists, for each such voting group, a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the disposition by each voting group entitled to vote on the disposition.

     6. Disposition abandoned. After a disposition has been approved by the shareholders under subsection 2 and at any time before the disposition has been consummated, it may be abandoned by the corporation without action by the shareholders, subject to any contractual rights of other parties to the disposition.

     7. Disposition by dissolution. A disposition of assets in the course of dissolution under chapter 14 is not governed by this section.

     8. Consolidated subsidiary; assets. The assets of a direct or indirect consolidated subsidiary are deemed the assets of the parent corporation for the purposes of this section.

     9. Disposition; written consent. A disposition that requires approval of the corporation's shareholders under subsection 1 may be authorized by written consent of all shareholders of the corporation, whether or not the shareholders are entitled to vote by the articles of incorporation, as provided by section 704, subsection 1. If a unanimous written consent is given, a resolution of the corporation's board of directors approving, proposing, submitting, recommending or otherwise respecting the disposition is not necessary, and the shareholders of the corporation are not entitled to notice of or to dissent from the disposition.

CHAPTER 13
APPRAISAL RIGHTS
SUBCHAPTER I
APPRAISAL RIGHTS AND PAYMENT FOR SHARES

§1301. Definitions

     As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Affiliate. "Affiliate" means:

For purposes of section 1303, subsection 3, paragraphs B and C, a person is deemed to be an affiliate of its senior executives.

     2. Beneficial shareholder. "Beneficial shareholder" means a person who is the beneficial owner of shares held in a voting trust or by a nominee on the beneficial owner's behalf.

     3. Corporation. "Corporation" means the issuer of the shares held by a shareholder demanding appraisal and, for matters covered in sections 1323 to 1332, includes the surviving entity in a merger.

     4. Fair value. "Fair value" means the value of a corporation's shares determined:

     5. Interest. "Interest" means interest from the effective date of a corporate action until the date of payment, at the rate of interest on judgments in this State on the effective date of the corporate action.

     6. Preferred shares. "Preferred shares" means a class or series of shares whose holders have preference over any other class or series of shares with respect to distributions.

     7. Record shareholder. "Record shareholder" means a person in whose name shares are registered in the records of a corporation or the beneficial owner of shares to the extent of the rights granted by a nominee certificate on file with the corporation.

     8. Senior executive. "Senior executive" means a chief executive officer, chief operating officer, chief financial officer and anyone in charge of a principal business unit or function.

     9. Shareholder. "Shareholder" means both a record shareholder and a beneficial shareholder.

§1302. Appraisal rights

     A shareholder is entitled to appraisal rights and to obtain payment of the fair value of that shareholder's shares in the event of any of the following corporate actions:

     1. Merger to which corporation is party. Consummation of a merger to which a corporation is a party if:

     2. Share exchange to which corporation is party. Consummation of a share exchange to which the corporation is a party as the corporation whose shares will be acquired if the shareholder is entitled to vote on the exchange, except that appraisal rights are not available to any shareholder of the corporation with respect to any class or series of shares of the corporation that are not exchanged;

     3. Disposition of assets. Consummation of a disposition of assets pursuant to section 1202 if a shareholder is entitled to vote on the disposition;

     4. Fractional shares. An amendment of the corporation's articles of incorporation with respect to a class or series of shares that reduces the number of shares of a class or series owned by the shareholder to a fraction of a share if the corporation has the obligation or right to repurchase the fractional share so created;

     5. Other amendment. Any other amendment to the corporation's articles of incorporation, merger, share exchange or disposition of assets to the extent provided by the articles of incorporation, bylaws or a resolution of the corporation's board of directors;

     6. Domestication. Consummation of a domestication if the shareholder does not receive shares in the foreign corporation resulting from the domestication that have terms as favorable to the shareholder in all material respects and represent at least the same percentage interest of the total voting rights of the outstanding shares of the corporation as the shares held by the shareholder before the domestication;

     7. Conversion to nonprofit status. Consummation of a conversion of the corporation to nonprofit status pursuant to chapter 9, subchapter III; or

     8. Conversion to other entity. Consummation of a conversion of the corporation to a form of other entity pursuant to chapter 9, subchapter IV.

§1303. Limitations on appraisal rights

     Notwithstanding section 1302, the availability of appraisal rights under section 1302, subsections 1 to 4, 6 and 8 is limited in accordance with this section.

     1. National listing; specific market value. Appraisal rights are not available for the holders of shares of any class or series of shares that:

     2. Date of determination. The applicability of subsection 1 is determined as of:

     3. Exception. Notwithstanding subsection 1, appraisal rights are available pursuant to section 1302 to 1305 for the holders of any class or series of shares:

For the purposes of this subsection, the term "beneficial owner" means any person who, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement or understanding, other than a revocable proxy, has or shares the power to vote or to direct the voting of shares, except that a member of a national securities exchange may not be considered to be a beneficial owner of securities held directly or indirectly by the member on behalf of another person solely because that member is the record holder of such securities if the member is precluded by the rules of such exchange from voting without instruction on contested matters or matters that may affect substantially the rights or privileges of the holders of the securities to be voted. When 2 or more persons agree to act together for the purpose of voting their shares of the corporation, each member of the group formed by that agreement is considered to have acquired beneficial ownership, as of the date of such agreement, of all voting shares of the corporation beneficially owned by any member of the group.
§1304.   Limitation or elimination of appraisal rights in articles of incorporation

     Notwithstanding section 1302 or 1303, the articles of incorporation of a corporation as originally filed or any amendment thereto may limit or eliminate appraisal rights for any class or series of preferred shares, but any limitation or elimination contained in an amendment to the articles of incorporation that limits or eliminates appraisal rights for any of those shares that are outstanding immediately prior to the effective date of that amendment or that the corporation is or may be required to issue or sell after the effective date of the amendment pursuant to any conversion, exchange or other right existing immediately before the effective date of that amendment does not apply to any corporate action that becomes effective within one year of that date if that action would otherwise afford appraisal rights.

§1305. Challenge by shareholder

     A shareholder entitled to appraisal rights under this subchapter may not challenge a completed corporate action requiring appraisal rights unless the corporate action:

     1. Not authorized. Was not effectuated in accordance with the applicable provisions of chapter 9, 10, 11 or 12 or the corporation's articles of incorporation, bylaws or board of directors' resolution authorizing the corporate action; or

     2. Fraud; misrepresentation. Was procured as a result of fraud or material misrepresentation.

§1306. Assertion of appraisal rights

     1. Record shareholder assert appraisal rights. A record shareholder may assert appraisal rights as to fewer than all the shares registered in the record shareholder's name but owned by a beneficial shareholder only if the record shareholder objects with respect to all shares of the class or series owned by the beneficial shareholder and notifies the corporation in writing of the name and address of each beneficial shareholder on whose behalf appraisal rights are being asserted. The rights of a record shareholder who asserts appraisal rights for only part of the shares held of record in the record shareholder's name under this subsection must be determined as if the shares as to which the record shareholder objects and the record shareholder's other shares were registered in the names of different record shareholders.

     2. Beneficial shareholder; appraisal rights. A beneficial shareholder may assert appraisal rights as to shares of any class or series held on behalf of the shareholder only if the shareholder:

SUBCHAPTER II
PROCEDURE FOR EXERCISE OF APPRAISAL RIGHTS

§1321. Notice of appraisal rights

     1. Meeting notice. If a proposed corporate action described in section 1302 is to be submitted to a vote at a shareholders' meeting, the meeting notice must state that the corporation has concluded that shareholders are, are not or may be entitled to assert appraisal rights under this chapter. If the corporation concludes that appraisal rights are or may be available, a copy of this chapter must accompany the meeting notice sent to those record shareholders entitled to exercise appraisal rights.

     2. Notice of corporate action. In a merger pursuant to section 1105, the parent corporation shall notify in writing all record shareholders of the subsidiary who are entitled to assert appraisal rights that a corporate action became effective. The notice must be sent within 10 days after the corporate action became effective and include the materials described in section 1323.

§1322. Notice of intent to demand payment

     If a proposed corporate action requiring appraisal rights under sections 1302 to 1305 is submitted to a vote at a shareholders' meeting, a shareholder who wishes to assert appraisal rights with respect to any class or series of shares:

     1. Written notice. Shall deliver to the corporation before the vote is taken written notice of the shareholder's intent to demand payment if the proposed action is effectuated; and

     2. Not vote shares. May not vote, or cause or permit to be voted, any shares of the class or series in favor of the proposed action.

     A shareholder who does not satisfy the requirements of subsection 1 is not entitled to payment under this chapter.

§1323. Appraisal notice and form

     1. Written appraisal notice; form. If a proposed corporate action requiring appraisal rights under section 1302 becomes effective, a corporation must deliver a written appraisal notice and form required by subsection 2, paragraph A to all shareholders who satisfied the requirements of section 1322. In the case of a merger under section 1105, the parent shall deliver a written appraisal notice and form to all record shareholders who may be entitled to assert appraisal rights.

     2. Appraisal notice. The appraisal notice required by subsection 1 must be sent no earlier than the date a corporate action became effective and no later than 10 days after that date and must:

§1324. Perfection of rights; right to withdraw

     1. Perfection of rights. A shareholder who receives notice pursuant to section 1323 and who wishes to exercise appraisal rights shall certify on the form sent by the corporation whether the beneficial owner of the shares acquired beneficial ownership of the shares before the date required to be set forth in the notice pursuant to section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph A. If a shareholder fails to make this certification, the corporation may elect to treat the shareholder's shares as after-acquired shares under section 1326. A shareholder who wishes to exercise appraisal rights shall execute and return the form and, in the case of certificated shares, deposit the shareholder's certificates in accordance with the terms of the notice by the date referred to in the notice pursuant to section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph B, subparagraph (2). Once a shareholder deposits that shareholder's certificates or, in the case of uncertificated shares, returns the executed forms, that shareholder loses all rights as a shareholder, unless the shareholder withdraws pursuant to subsection 2.

     2. Withdraw from appraisal process. A shareholder who has complied with subsection 1 may nevertheless decline to exercise appraisal rights and withdraw from the appraisal process by notifying the corporation in writing by the date set forth in the appraisal notice pursuant to section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph B, subparagraph (5). A shareholder who fails to withdraw from the appraisal process may not thereafter withdraw without the corporation's written consent.

     3. Failure to execute and return form; nonpayment. A shareholder who does not execute and return the form and, in the case of certificated shares, deposit that shareholder's share certificates where required, each by the date set forth in the notice described in section 1323, subsection 2, is not entitled to payment under this chapter.

§1325. Payment

     1. Fair value. Except as provided in section 1326, within 30 days after the form required by section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph B, subparagraph (2) is due, a corporation shall pay in cash to those shareholders who complied with section 1324, subsection 1 the amount the corporation estimates to be the fair value of their shares, plus interest.

     2. Additional information. The payment to each shareholder pursuant to subsection 1 must be accompanied by:

§1326. After-acquired shares

     1. Withhold payment. A corporation may elect to withhold payment required by section 1325 from any shareholder who did not certify that beneficial ownership of all of the shareholder's shares for which appraisal rights are asserted was acquired before the date set forth in the appraisal notice sent pursuant to section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph A.

     2. Notify shareholders. If a corporation elected to withhold payment under subsection 1, the corporation shall, within 30 days after the date by which the corporation must receive the form is given as required by section 1323, subsection 2, paragraph B, subparagraph (2) is due, notify all shareholders who are described in subsection 1:

     3. Shareholders who accept offer. Within 10 days after receiving the shareholder's acceptance pursuant to subsection 2, a corporation must pay in cash the amount it offered under subsection 2, paragraph B to each shareholder who agreed to accept the corporation's offer in full satisfaction of the shareholder's demand.

     4. Shareholders deemed to accept offer; payment. Within 40 days after sending the notice described in subsection 2, a corporation shall pay in cash the amount the corporation offered to pay under subsection 2, paragraph B to each shareholder described in subsection 2, paragraph E.

§1327.   Procedure if shareholder dissatisfied with payment or offer

     1. Notification; demand. A shareholder paid pursuant to section 1325 who is dissatisfied with the amount of the payment shall notify the corporation in writing of that shareholder's estimate of the fair value of the shares and demand payment of that estimate plus interest less any payment under section 1325. A shareholder offered payment under section 1326 who is dissatisfied with that offer must reject the offer and demand payment of the shareholder's stated estimate of the fair value of the shares plus interest.

     2. Failure to notify corporation in writing. A shareholder who fails to notify a corporation in writing of that shareholder's demand to be paid the shareholder's stated estimate of the fair value plus interest under subsection 1 within 30 days after receiving the corporation's payment or offer of payment under section 1325 or 1326 waives the right to demand payment under this section and is entitled only to the payment made or offered pursuant to those sections.

SUBCHAPTER III
JUDICIAL APPRAISAL OF SHARES

§1331. Court action

     1. Commence proceeding. If a shareholder makes demand for payment under section 1327 that remains unsettled, a corporation shall commence a proceeding within 60 days after receiving the payment demand and petition the court to determine the fair value of the shares and accrued interest. If the corporation does not commence the proceeding within the 60-day period, the corporation shall pay in cash to each shareholder the amount the shareholder demanded pursuant to section 1327 plus interest.

     2. Appropriate court. A corporation shall commence the proceeding under subsection 1 in the appropriate court of the county where the corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office, its registered office in this State is located. If the corporation is a foreign corporation without a registered office in this State, the corporation shall commence the proceeding in the county in this State where the principal office or registered office of the domestic corporation merged with the foreign corporation was located at the time of the transaction.

     3. Shareholders party to proceeding. A corporation shall make all shareholders whether or not residents of this State whose demands remain unsettled parties to the proceeding as in an action against their shares, and all parties must be served with a copy of the petition. Nonresidents may be served by registered or certified mail or by publication as provided by law.

     4. Jurisdiction; appraisers. The jurisdiction of the court in which the proceeding is commenced under subsection 2 is plenary and exclusive. The court may appoint one or more persons as appraisers to receive evidence and recommend a decision on the question of fair value. The appraisers have the powers described in the order appointing them or in any amendment to the order. The shareholders demanding appraisal rights under this chapter are entitled to the same discovery rights as parties in other civil proceedings. Shareholders demanding appraisal rights under this chapter do not have a right to a jury trial.

     5. Shareholder entitled to judgment. Each shareholder made a party to the proceeding under subsection 1 is entitled to judgment for the:

§1332. Court costs and counsel fees

     1. Court costs. The court in an appraisal proceeding commenced under section 1331 shall determine all costs of the proceeding, including the reasonable compensation and expenses of appraisers appointed by the court. The court shall assess the costs against a corporation, except that the court may assess costs against all or some of the shareholders demanding appraisal, in amounts the court finds equitable, to the extent the court finds the shareholders acted arbitrarily, vexatiously or not in good faith with respect to the rights provided by this chapter.

     2. Counsel; expect fees. The court in an appraisal proceeding under section 1331 may also assess the fees and expenses of counsel and experts for the respective parties, in amounts the court finds equitable:

     3. Fees awarded from settlement. If the court in an appraisal proceeding under section 1331 finds that the services of counsel for any shareholder were of substantial benefit to other shareholders similarly situated and that the fees for those services should not be assessed against a corporation, the court may award to the counsel reasonable fees to be paid out of the amounts awarded the shareholders who were benefitted.

     4. Corporation fails to make payment. To the extent a corporation fails to make a required payment pursuant to section 1325, 1326 or 1327, a shareholder may sue directly for the amount owed and, to the extent successful, is entitled to recover from the corporation all costs and expenses of the suit, including counsel fees.

CHAPTER 14
DISSOLUTION
SUBCHAPTER I
VOLUNTARY DISSOLUTION

§1401.   Dissolution by incorporators or initial directors

     A majority of the incorporators or initial directors of a corporation that has not issued shares or has not commenced business may dissolve the corporation by delivering to the Secretary of State for filing articles of dissolution that set forth:

     1. Name. The name of the corporation;

     2. Date. The date of incorporation;

     3. Shares. That none of the corporation's shares have been issued or that the corporation has not commenced business;

     4. Debt. That no debt of the corporation remains unpaid;

     5. Net assets. That, if shares were issued, the net assets of the corporation remaining after winding up have been distributed to the shareholders; and

     6. Authorization of dissolution. That a majority of the incorporators or initial directors authorized the dissolution.

§1402.   Dissolution by board of directors and shareholders

     1. Dissolution proposal. A corporation's board of directors may propose dissolution for submission to the shareholders.

     2. Adoption of proposal of dissolution. For a proposal to dissolve to be adopted:

     3. Condition submission of proposal. A corporation's board of directors may condition the board of directors' submission of the proposal for dissolution on any basis.

     4. Notice of meeting to dissolve. A corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the proposed shareholders' meeting. The notice must also state that the purpose or one of the purposes of the meeting is to consider dissolving the corporation.

     5. Adoption of dissolution by majority. Unless the corporation's articles of incorporation or the board of directors acting pursuant to subsection 3 requires a greater vote, a greater number of shares to be present or a vote by voting group, adoption of the proposal to dissolve requires the approval of shareholders holding a majority of the votes entitled to be cast at a meeting at which a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast exists.

§1403.   Dissolution by written consent of all shareholders

     A corporation may be voluntarily dissolved by unanimous written consent of its shareholders, whether or not entitled to vote by the corporation's articles of incorporation. If a unanimous written consent is given, a resolution of the corporation's board of directors proposing the dissolution is not necessary.

§1404. Articles of dissolution

     1. File articles of dissolution with Secretary of State. At any time after dissolution is authorized, a corporation may dissolve by delivering to the Secretary of State for filing articles of dissolution setting forth:

     2. Effective date of dissolution. A corporation is dissolved upon the effective date of its articles of dissolution.

     3. Dissolved corporation. For purposes of this subchapter, "dissolved corporation" means a corporation whose articles of dissolution have become effective. "Dissolved corporation" includes a successor entity to which the remaining assets of the corporation are transferred subject to its liabilities for purposes of liquidation.

§1405. Revocation of dissolution

     1. Revoke dissolution. A corporation may revoke its dissolution within 120 days of its effective date.

     2. Authorization of revocation. Revocation of dissolution must be authorized in the same manner as the dissolution was authorized under this subchapter unless that authorization permitted revocation by action of the corporation's board of directors alone, in which event the board of directors may revoke the dissolution without shareholder action.

     3. Articles of revocation of dissolution. After the revocation of dissolution is authorized, a corporation may revoke the dissolution by delivering to the Secretary of State for filing articles of revocation of dissolution, together with a copy of its articles of dissolution, that set forth:

     4. Effective date of revocation. Revocation of dissolution is effective upon the effective date of the articles of revocation of dissolution.

     5. Resume business. When the revocation of dissolution is effective, it relates back to and takes effect as of the effective date of the dissolution, and the corporation resumes business as if dissolution had not occurred.

§1406. Effect of dissolution

     1. Extension of corporate existence. A dissolved corporation continues corporate existence for a period not exceeding 3 years from the effective date of the articles of dissolution, except that the 3-year period may be extended if the extension is approved by 2/3 vote of the shareholders of the dissolved corporation and notice of the extension is filed with the Secretary of State prior to the expiration of the 3-year period. A dissolved corporation may not carry on any business except that which is appropriate to wind up and liquidate its business and affairs, including:

     2. Dissolution; exclusions. Dissolution of a corporation does not:

     3. Abatement of action. With respect to any action, suit or proceeding begun by or against the corporation prior to the commencement of or during the 3-year period after the date of its dissolution, the action does not abate by reason of the dissolution of the corporation; the corporate existence of the dissolved corporation, solely for purposes of the action, suit or proceeding, continues beyond that period and until any judgments, orders or decrees are fully executed.

§1407.   Known claims against dissolved corporation

     1. Disposition of known claims. A dissolved corporation may dispose of the known claims against it by notifying its known claimants in writing of the dissolution at any time after the effective date of the dissolution.

     2. Written notice. The written notice required by subsection 1 must:

     3. Claim barred. A claim against the dissolved corporation, other than a liquidated claim that is known to the corporation, has fully matured and is not disputed in good faith by the corporation, is barred:

     4. Claim. For purposes of this section, "claim" does not include a contingent liability or a claim based on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution.

§1408. Other claims against dissolved corporation

     1. Publish notice of dissolution. In addition to the written notice under section 1407, a dissolved corporation may publish notice of its dissolution and request that persons with claims against the dissolved corporation present them in accordance with the notice.

     2. Content of notice. The notice under section 1 must:

     3. Claim barred. If the dissolved corporation publishes a newspaper notice in accordance with subsection 2, the claim of each of the following claimants is barred unless the claimant commences a proceeding to enforce the claim against the dissolved corporation within 3 years after the publication date of the newspaper notice:

     4. Enforcement of claim. A claim that is not barred by subsection 3 or section 1407, subsection 2 may be enforced:

§1409. Court proceedings

     1. Security provided for payment of claim. A dissolved corporation that has published a notice under section 1408 may file an application with the Superior Court of the county where the dissolved corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office in this State, its registered office is located for a determination of the amount and form of security to be provided for payment of claims that are contingent or have not been made known to the dissolved corporation or that are based on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution but that, based on the facts known to the dissolved corporation, are reasonably estimated to arise after the effective date of dissolution. Provision need not be made for any claim that is or is reasonably anticipated to be barred under section 1408, subsection 3.

     2. Notice to claimant. Within 10 days after the filing of the application under subsection 1, notice of the proceeding must be given by the dissolved corporation to each claimant holding a contingent claim whose contingent claim is shown on the records of the dissolved corporation.

     3. Guardian ad litem. The court may appoint a guardian ad litem to represent all claimants whose identities are unknown in any proceeding brought under this section. The reasonable fees and expenses of the guardian ad litem, including all reasonable expert witness fees, must be paid by the dissolved corporation.

     4. Satisfaction of obligations. Provision by the dissolved corporation for security in the amount and the form ordered by the court under subsection 1 satisfies the dissolved corporation's obligations with respect to claims that are contingent, have not been made known to the dissolved corporation or are based on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution, and such claims may not be enforced against a shareholder who received assets in liquidation.

§1410. Duties of directors

     1. Duties. Directors of a dissolved corporation shall cause the corporation to discharge or make reasonable provision for the payment of claims and make distributions of assets to shareholders after payment of or provision for claims.

     2. Liability of directors. Directors of a dissolved corporation that has disposed of claims under section 1407, 1408 or 1409 are not liable for breach of section 1410, subsection 1 with respect to claims against the dissolved corporation that are barred or satisfied under sections 1407, 1408 or 1409.

SUBCHAPTER II
ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION

§1420. Grounds for administrative dissolution

     Notwithstanding Title 4, chapter 5 and Title 5, chapter 375, the Secretary of State may commence a proceeding under section 1421 to administratively dissolve a corporation if:

     1. Nonpayment of fees, penalties. The corporation does not pay within 60 days after they are due any fees or penalties imposed by this Act or other law;

     2. Failure to file annual report. The corporation does not deliver its annual report to the Secretary of State within 60 days after it is due;

     3. Failure to pay late filing penalty. The corporation does not pay the annual report late filing penalty, if required, within 60 days after it is due;

     4. Failure to maintain clerk or registered office. The corporation is without a clerk or registered office in this State for 60 days or more;

     5. Failure to notify of change of clerk or registered office. The corporation does not notify the Secretary of State within 60 days that its clerk or registered office has been changed, that its clerk has resigned or that its registered office has been discontinued; or

     6. Filing of false information. An incorporator, director, officer or agent of the corporation signed a document with the knowledge that the document was false in a material respect and with the intent that the document be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing.

§1421.   Procedure for and effect of administrative dissolution

     1. Notice of determination to administratively dissolve corporation. If the Secretary of State determines that one or more grounds exist under section 1420 for dissolving a corporation, the Secretary of State shall serve the corporation with written notice of that determination under section 502.

     2. Administrative dissolution. If a corporation does not correct each ground for dissolution or demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the Secretary of State that each ground determined by the Secretary of State does not exist within 60 days after service of the notice is perfected under section 502, the Secretary of State shall administratively dissolve the corporation by issuing a notice of dissolution that recites the ground or grounds for dissolution and the effective date of dissolution. The Secretary of State shall use the procedures set forth in section 502 to send notice to the corporation.

     3. Effect of administrative dissolution. A corporation administratively dissolved continues its corporate existence but may not transact any business except that necessary to wind up and liquidate its business and affairs under section 1406 and notify claimants under sections 1407 and 1408.

     4. Authority of clerk. The administrative dissolution of a corporation does not terminate the authority of its clerk.

     5. Protecting corporate name after administrative dissolution. The name of a corporation remains in the Secretary of State's records of corporate names and protected for a period of 3 years following administrative dissolution.

     6. Prohibition. A corporation while administratively dissolved may not engage in business in this State.

§1422.   Reinstatement following administrative dissolution

     1. Reinstatement. A corporation administratively dissolved under section 1421 may apply to the Secretary of State for reinstatement within 6 years after the effective date of dissolution. The application must:

     2. Reinstatement after administrative dissolution. If the Secretary of State determines that the application contains the information required under subsection 1 and is accompanied by the reinstatement fee set forth in section 123, subsection 1, paragraph V and that the information is correct, the Secretary of State shall cancel the administrative dissolution and prepare a notice of reinstatement that recites that determination and the effective date of reinstatement. The Secretary of State shall use the procedures set forth in section 502 to deliver the notice to the corporation.

     3. Effect of reinstatement. When the reinstatement is effective under subsection 2, it relates back to and takes effect as of the effective date of the administrative dissolution, and the corporation resumes business as if the administrative dissolution had not occurred.

§1423. Appeal from denial of reinstatement

     1. Denial of reinstatement. If the Secretary of State denies a corporation's application for reinstatement following administrative dissolution, the Secretary of State shall serve the corporation under section 502 with a written notice that explains the reason or reasons for denial.

     2. Appeal. A corporation may appeal a denial of reinstatement under subsection 1 to the Superior Court of the county where the corporation's principal office is located or, if there is no principal office in this State, in Kennebec County within 30 days after service of the notice of denial is perfected. The corporation appeals by petitioning the court to set aside the dissolution and attaching to the petition copies of the Secretary of State's certificate of dissolution, the corporation's application for reinstatement and the Secretary of State's notice of denial.

     3. Court action. The court may summarily order the Secretary of State to reinstate an administratively dissolved corporation or may take other action the court considers appropriate.

     4. Final decision. The court's final decision in an appeal under this section may be appealed as in other civil proceedings.

SUBCHAPTER III
JUDICIAL DISSOLUTION

§1430. Grounds for judicial dissolution

     A corporation may be dissolved by a judicial dissolution in a proceeding by:

     1. Attorney General. The Attorney General if it is established that:

     2. Shareholder. A shareholder if it is established that:

     3. Creditor. A creditor if it is established that:

     4. Corporation. The corporation to have its voluntary dissolution continued under court supervision.

§1431. Procedure for judicial dissolution

     1. Venue. Venue for a proceeding by the Attorney General to dissolve a corporation lies in Kennebec County. Venue for a proceeding brought by any other party named in section 1430 lies in the county where a corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office in this State, its registered office is or was last located.

     2. Shareholders parties to proceeding. It is not necessary to make shareholders parties to a proceeding to dissolve a corporation unless relief is sought against the shareholders individually.

     3. Preserve corporate assets. A court in a proceeding brought to dissolve a corporation may issue injunctions, appoint a receiver pendente lite with all powers and duties the court directs, take other action required to preserve the corporate assets wherever located and carry on the business of the corporation until a full hearing can be held.

§1432. Receivership

     1. Appoint receivers. A court in a judicial proceeding brought to dissolve a corporation may appoint one or more receivers to manage and to wind up and liquidate the business and affairs of the corporation. The court shall hold a hearing, after notifying all parties to the proceeding and any interested persons designated by the court, before appointing a receiver. The court appointing a receiver has exclusive jurisdiction over the corporation and all of its property wherever located.

     2. Post bond. A court under subsection 1 may appoint an individual or a domestic or foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State as a receiver. The court may require the receiver to post bond, with or without sureties, in an amount the court directs.

     3. Powers; duties. A court shall describe the powers and duties of the receiver in the court's appointing order under subsection 1, which may be amended from time to time. The receiver may, in addition to other specified powers:

     4. Compensation; expenses. A court from time to time during a receivership under this section may order compensation paid and expense disbursements or reimbursements made to the receiver and the receiver's counsel from the assets of the corporation or proceeds from the sale of the assets.

§1433. Decree of dissolution

     1. Decree dissolving corporation. If after a hearing a court determines that one or more grounds for judicial dissolution described in section 1430 exist, it may enter a decree dissolving a corporation and specifying the effective date of the dissolution, and the clerk of the court shall deliver a certified copy of the decree to the Secretary of State, who shall file it.

     2. Liquidation of corporation. After entering a decree of dissolution under subsection 1, the court shall direct the winding-up and liquidation of the corporation's business and affairs in accordance with section 1406 and the notification of claimants in accordance with sections 1407 and 1408.

§1434.   Discretion of court to grant relief other than dissolution

     1. Intervention by shareholder. Any shareholder of a corporation may intervene in an action brought by another shareholder under section 1430, subsection 2 to dissolve the corporation in order to seek relief other than dissolution.

     2. Motion of court. On the application of a plaintiff or any other shareholder or on the court's own motion in any action filed by a shareholder to dissolve a corporation on any of the grounds enumerated in section 1430, subsection 2, or on the court's own motion in any other action to dissolve a corporation, the court may make an order or grant relief, other than dissolution, that in its discretion it considers appropriate, including, without limitation, an order:

     3. Protection of interests. Pursuant to this section, the court may grant relief other than dissolution as an alternative to a decree of dissolution or whenever the circumstances of the case are such that relief, but not dissolution, would be appropriate when such relief would furnish greater protection of the interests of creditors and shareholders than would dissolution.

SUBCHAPTER IV
MISCELLANEOUS

§1440. Deposit with Treasurer of State

     Assets of a dissolved corporation that should be transferred to a creditor, claimant or shareholder of the corporation who can not be found or who is not competent to receive the assets must be reduced to cash and deposited with the Treasurer of State or other appropriate state official for safekeeping in accordance with Title 33, chapter 41. When the creditor, claimant or shareholder furnishes satisfactory proof of entitlement to the amount deposited, the Treasurer of State or other appropriate state official shall pay the creditor, claimant or shareholder or that person's representative that amount.

CHAPTER 15
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
SUBCHAPTER I
AUTHORIZATION OF FOREIGN CORPORATION TO TRANSACT BUSINESS IN THIS STATE

§1501. Authority to transact business required

     1. Certificate of authority. A foreign corporation may not transact business in this State until it files an application for authority to transact business with the Secretary of State.

     2. Transacting business. Activities that do not constitute transacting business within the meaning of subsection 1 include but are not limited to:

§1502.   Consequences of transacting business without authority

     1. No court proceeding. A foreign corporation transacting business in this State without authority may not maintain a proceeding in any court in this State until it files an application for authority and pays the applicable filing fee.

     2. Successor; assignee of cause of action. The successor to a foreign corporation that transacted business in this State without authority and the assignee of a cause of action arising out of that business may not maintain a proceeding based on that cause of action in any court in this State until the foreign corporation or its successor files an application for authority.

     3. Stay proceeding. A court may stay a proceeding commenced by a foreign corporation, its successor or assignee until the court determines whether the foreign corporation or its successor requires authorization. If the court so determines, the court may further stay the proceeding until the foreign corporation or its successor files an application for authority.

     4. Civil penalty. A foreign corporation is liable for a civil penalty of $500 for each year, or portion thereof, it transacts business in this State without authority. The Attorney General may collect all penalties due under this subsection.

     5. Validity of corporate acts. Notwithstanding subsections 1 and 2, the failure of a foreign corporation to file an application for authority does not impair the validity of its corporate acts or prevent it from defending any proceeding in this State.

§1503. Application for authority

     1. Application for authority. A foreign corporation may apply for authority to transact business in this State by delivering an application to the Secretary of State for filing. The application must set forth:

     2. Certificate of existence. A foreign corporation shall deliver with the application completed pursuant to subsection 1, a certificate of existence or a document of similar import duly authenticated by the secretary of state or other official having custody of corporate records in the state or country under whose law it is incorporated. The certificate of existence must have been made not more than 90 days prior to the delivery of the application for filing.

     3. Signed acceptance. The signed acceptance of the registered agent must be filed with or as part of the Application for Authority.

§1504. Amended application for authority

     1. Amended application for authority. A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State must file an amended application for authority with the Secretary of State if the foreign corporation changes:

     2. Application for authority; requirements. The requirements of section 1503 for filing an application for authority apply to filing an amended application under this section.

§1505.   Effect of authorization to transact business in this State

     1. Authorization to transact business. Upon filing by the Secretary of State of an application for authority, a foreign corporation is authorized to transact business in this State subject to the right of this State to revoke the foreign corporation's authority to transact business in this State as provided in this Act.

     2. Same rights as domestic corporation. A foreign corporation with valid authority has the same but no greater rights and has the same but no greater privileges as a domestic corporation of like character. Except as otherwise provided by this Act, a foreign corporation with a valid certificate of authority is subject to the same duties, restrictions, penalties and liabilities now or later imposed on a domestic corporation of like character.

     3. State may not regulate affairs of foreign corporation. This Act does not authorize this State to regulate the organization or internal affairs of a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State.

§1506. Corporate name of foreign corporation

     1. Corporate name. If the corporate name of a foreign corporation does not satisfy the requirements of section 401, the foreign corporation may use a fictitious name to transact business in this State if its real name is unavailable and it delivers to the Secretary of State for filing a copy of the resolution of its board of directors, certified by its secretary, adopting the fictitious name.

     2. Name distinguishable. Except as authorized by subsections 3 and 4, the corporate name, including a fictitious name, of a foreign corporation must be distinguishable on the records of the Secretary of State from:

     3. Apply for authorization to use another corporation's name. A foreign corporation may apply to the Secretary of State for authorization to use in this State the name of another corporation incorporated or authorized to transact business in this State that is not distinguishable on the Secretary of State's records from the name applied for. The Secretary of State shall authorize use of the name applied for if:

     4. Use of another corporation's name. A foreign corporation may use in this State the name, including the fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign corporation that is used in this State if the other corporation is incorporated or authorized to transact business in this State and the foreign corporation:

     5. Change of corporate name. If a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State changes its corporate name to one that does not satisfy the requirements of section 401, it may not transact business in this State under the changed name until it adopts a name satisfying the requirements of section 401 and files an amended application for authority under section 1504.

§1507.   Registered office and registered agent of foreign corporation

     A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State must continuously maintain in this State:

     1. Registered office. A registered office that may be the same as any of its places of business; and

     2. Registered agent. A registered agent who may be:

§1508.   Change of registered office or registered agent of foreign corporation

     1. Statement of change. A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State may change its registered office or registered agent by delivering to the Secretary of State for filing a statement of change that sets forth:

     2. Change of street address. If a registered agent changes the street address of that registered agent's business office, the registered agent may change the street address of the registered office of any foreign corporation for which the registered agent is the registered agent by notifying the foreign corporation in writing of the change and signing, either manually or in facsimile, and delivering to the Secretary of State for filing a statement of change that complies with the requirements of subsection 1 and states that the foreign corporation has been notified of the change.

§1509.   Resignation of registered agent of foreign corporation

     1. Resignation of agent. The registered agent of a foreign corporation may resign upon filing a written notice thereof with the Secretary of State and by mailing a copy of the written notice to the president or treasurer of the corporation or, if both of those offices are vacant, to any of its directors. The notice filed with the Secretary of State must state that a copy of the notice has been mailed to a corporate officer in accordance with this subsection and must specify the corporate officer's name and corporate office.

     2. Agency appointment terminated. The agency appointment is terminated, and the registered office discontinued if so provided, upon the filing of the notice of resignation by the Secretary of State.

§1510. Service on foreign corporation

     1. Agent for service of process. The registered agent of a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in the State is the foreign corporation's agent for service of process, notice or demand required or permitted by law to be served on the foreign corporation.

     2. Method of service. A foreign corporation may be served by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the secretary of the foreign corporation at its principal office shown in its application for authority or in its most recent annual report if the foreign corporation:

     3. Perfection of service. Service is perfected under subsection 2 at the earliest of:

     4. Other means of service. This section does not prescribe the only means, or necessarily the required means, of serving a foreign corporation.

SUBCHAPTER II
WITHDRAWAL OR TRANSFER OF AUTHORITY

§1521. Withdrawal of foreign corporation

     1. Application of withdrawal. A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State may not withdraw from this State until it files an application of withdrawal with the Secretary of State.

     2. Application for certificate of withdrawal. A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State may file an application of withdrawal by delivering an application to the Secretary of State for filing. The application must set forth:

     3. Service of process on Secretary of State. After the withdrawal of a foreign corporation under subsection 2 is effective, service of process on the Secretary of State under this section is service on the foreign corporation. Upon receipt of process, the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of the process to the foreign corporation at the mailing address set forth under subsection 2.

§1522.   Automatic withdrawal upon certain conversions

     A foreign business corporation authorized to transact business in this State that converts to a domestic nonprofit corporation or any form of domestic filing entity is deemed to have withdrawn on the effective date of the conversion.

§1523.   Withdrawal upon conversion to a nonfiling entity

     1. Withdrawal upon conversion. A foreign business corporation authorized to transact business in this State that converts to a domestic or foreign nonfiling entity shall file an application of withdrawal by delivering an application to the Secretary of State for filing. The application must set forth:

     2. Conversion to foreign other entity; service of process. After the withdrawal under this section of a corporation that has converted to a foreign other entity is effective, service of process on the Secretary of State is service on the foreign other entity. Upon receipt of process, the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of the process to the foreign other entity at the mailing adress set forth under subsection 1, paragraph D.

     3. Conversion to domestic other entity, service of process. After the withdrawal under this section of a corporation that has converted to a domestic other entity is effective, service of process must be made on the other entity in accordance with the regular procedures for service of process on the form of other entity to which the corporation was converted.

§1524. Transfer of authority

     1. Application for transfer of authority; contents. A foreign business corporation authorized to transact business in this State that converts to a foreign nonprofit corporation or to any form of foreign other entity that is required to file an application for authority or make a similar type of filing with the Secretary of State if it transacts business in this State shall file with the Secretary of State an application for transfer of authority executed by any officer or other duly authorized representative. The application must set forth:

     2. Delivery. The application for transfer of authority must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing and takes effect at the effective time provided in section 125.

     3. Authority to transact business uninterrupted. When the application for transfer of authority takes effect, the authority of the corporation under this chapter to transact business in this State is transferred without interruption to the converted entity, which thereafter holds that authority subject to the provisions of the laws of this State applicable to that type of entity.

SUBCHAPTER III
REVOCATION OF AUTHORITY

§1531. Grounds for revocation

     The Secretary of State may commence a proceeding under section 1532 to revoke the authority of a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State if:

     1. Annual report. The foreign corporation does not deliver its annual report to the Secretary of State within 60 days after the annual report is due;

     2. Fees; penalties. The foreign corporation does not pay within 60 days after they are due any fees or penalties imposed by this Act or other law;

     3. No registered agent or office. The foreign corporation is without a registered agent or registered office in this State for 60 days or more;

     4. Notice of change of registered agent or office. The foreign corporation does not inform the Secretary of State under section 1508 or 1509 that its registered agent or registered office has changed, that its registered agent has resigned or that its registered office has been discontinued within 60 days of the change, resignation or discontinuance;

     5. False documentation. An incorporator, director, officer or agent of the foreign corporation signed a document the incorporator, director, officer or agent knew was false in any material respect with intent that the document be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing;

     6. Authenticated certificate of dissolution or merger. The Secretary of State receives a duly authenticated certificate from the secretary of state or other official having custody of corporate records in the state or country under whose law the foreign corporation is incorporated stating that the foreign corporation has been dissolved or disappeared as the result of a merger.

§1532. Procedure for and effect of revocation

     1. Notice of determination. If the Secretary of State determines that one or more grounds exist under section 1531 for the revocation of authority, the Secretary of State shall serve the foreign corporation with written notice of the Secretary of State's determination under section 1510.

     2. Correct grounds for revocation. If the foreign corporation does not correct each ground for revocation or demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the Secretary of State that each ground determined by the Secretary of State does not exist within 60 days after service of the notice is perfected under section 1510, the Secretary of State may revoke the foreign corporation's authority to transact business in this State by issuing a notice of revocation that recites the ground or grounds for revocation and its effective date. The Secretary of State shall follow the procedures set forth in section 1510 when issuing the notice of revocation.

     3. Authority to transact business ceased. The authority of a foreign corporation to transact business in this State ceases on the date of revocation of its authority.

     4. Secretary of State appointed as agent for service of process. The Secretary of State's revocation of a foreign corporation's authority appoints the Secretary of State as the foreign corporation's agent for service of process in any proceeding based on a cause of action that arose during the time the foreign corporation was authorized to transact business in this State. Service of process on the Secretary of State under this subsection is service on the foreign corporation. Upon receipt of process, the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of the process to the secretary of the foreign corporation at its principal office shown in its most recent annual report or in any subsequent communication received from the corporation stating the current mailing address of its principal office or, if no other address is on file, in its application for authority.

     5. Registered agent; not terminated. Revocation of a foreign corporation's authority to transact business in this State does not terminate the authority of the registered agent of the corporation.

     6. Authorization after revocation. A foreign corporation whose authority to transact business in this State has been revoked under section 1531 that wishes to transact business again in this State must be authorized as provided in this chapter.

§1533. Appeal from revocation

     1. Petition to appeal revocation. A foreign corporation may appeal the Secretary of State's revocation of its authority to the Kennebec County Superior Court within 30 days after service of the notice of revocation is perfected under section 1510. The foreign corporation may appeal by petitioning the court to set aside the revocation and attaching to the petition copies of its application for authority and the Secretary of State's notice of revocation.

     2. Court order. The court may summarily order the Secretary of State to reinstate the authority or may take any other action the court considers appropriate.

     3. Appeal of court's decision. The court's final decision may be appealed as in other civil proceedings.

CHAPTER 16
RECORDS AND REPORTS
SUBCHAPTER I
RECORDS

§1601. Corporate records

     1. Minutes of meetings. A corporation shall keep as permanent records minutes of all meetings of its shareholders and board of directors, a record of all actions taken by the shareholders or board of directors without a meeting and a record of all actions taken by a committee of the board of directors in place of the board of directors on behalf of the corporation.

     2. Accounting records. A corporation shall maintain appropriate accounting records.

     3. Record of shareholders. A corporation or its agent shall maintain a record of its shareholders in a form that permits preparation of a list of the names and addresses of all shareholders in alphabetical order by class of shares showing the number and class of shares held by each.

     4. Records; written. A corporation shall maintain its records in written form or in another form capable of conversion into written form within a reasonable time.

     5. Copy of records. A corporation shall keep a copy of the following records at its principal office or its registered office:

§1602. Inspection of records by shareholders

     1. Shareholder defined. For purposes of this section, "shareholder" includes a beneficial owner whose shares are held in a voting trust or by a nominee on the shareholder's behalf.

     2. Inspect; copy records. A shareholder of a corporation is entitled to inspect and copy during regular business hours at the corporation's principal office or its registered office, if the corporation keeps such records at its registered office, any of the records of the corporation described in section 1601, subsection 5 if the shareholder gives the corporation written notice of the shareholder's demand at least 5 business days before the date on which the shareholder wishes to inspect and copy, except that a shareholder's rights under this subsection are subject to any reasonable restrictions on the disclosure of financial information about the corporation that are set forth in the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws.

     3. Certain documents inspected; copied. A shareholder of a corporation is entitled to inspect and copy during regular business hours at a reasonable location specified by the corporation any of the following records of the corporation if the shareholder meets the requirements of subsection 4 and gives the corporation written notice of the shareholder's demand at least 5 business days before the date on which the shareholder wishes to inspect and copy:

     4. Requirements. A shareholder may inspect and copy the records described in subsection 3 only if:

     5. Right of inspection. The right of inspection granted by this section may not be abolished or limited by a corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws.

     6. Shareholder's rights. Nothing in this section affects:

§1603. Scope of inspection right

     1. Agent; attorney. A shareholder's agent or attorney has the same inspection and copying rights as the shareholder that the agent or attorney represents.

     2. Right to copy. The right to copy records under section 1602 includes, if reasonable, the right to receive copies made by photographic, xerographic or other means.

     3. Charge for copies. The corporation may impose a reasonable charge covering the costs of labor and material for copies of any documents provided to the shareholder. The charge may not exceed the estimated cost of production or reproduction of the records.

     4. Comply with demand. The corporation may comply with a shareholder's demand to inspect the record of shareholders under section 1602, subsection 3, paragraph C by providing the shareholder with a list of shareholders that was compiled no earlier than the date of the shareholder's demand.

§1604. Court-ordered inspection

     1. Order inspection. If a corporation does not allow a shareholder who complies with section 1602, subsection 2 to inspect and copy any records required by that subsection to be available for inspection, the Superior Court of the county where the corporation's principal office or registered office is located may summarily order inspection and copying of the records demanded at the corporation's expense upon application of the shareholder.

     2. Court order. If a corporation does not within a reasonable time allow a shareholder to inspect and copy any other record pursuant to this Act, the shareholder who complies with section 1602, subsections 3 and 4 may apply to the Superior Court in the county where the corporation's principal office or registered office is located for an order to permit inspection and copying of the records demanded. The court shall dispose of an application under this subsection on an expedited basis.

     3. Refuse inspection; good faith. If the court orders inspection and copying of the records demanded under subsection 1 or 2, the court shall also order the corporation to pay the shareholder's costs including reasonable counsel fees incurred to obtain the order unless the corporation proves that it refused inspection in good faith because it had a reasonable basis for doubt about the right of the shareholder to inspect the records demanded.

     4. Restrictions. If the court orders inspection and copying of the records demanded under subsection 1 or 2, the court may impose reasonable restrictions on the use or distribution of the records by the demanding shareholder.

§1605. Inspection of records by directors

     1. Inspect; copy records. A director of a corporation is entitled to inspect and copy the books, records and documents of the corporation at any reasonable time to the extent that the inspection or copying is reasonably related to the performance of the director's duties as a director, including duties as a member of a committee, but not for any other purpose or in any manner that would violate any duty to the corporation.

     2. Court order. The Superior Court of the county where the corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office in this State, registered office is located may order inspection and copying of the books, records and documents at the corporation's expense, upon application of a director who has been refused inspection rights under subsection 1, unless the corporation establishes that the director is not entitled to such inspection rights. The court shall dispose of an application under this subsection on an expedited basis.

     3. Provisions to protect corporation. If an order is issued under subsection 2, the court may include provisions protecting the corporation from undue burden or expense and prohibiting the director from using information obtained upon exercise of the inspection rights in a manner that would violate a duty to the corporation, and may also order the corporation to reimburse the director for the director's costs, including reasonable counsel fees, incurred in connection with the application.

§1606. Exception to notice requirement

     1. Notice. Whenever notice is required to be given under any provision of this Act to any shareholder, that notice is not required to be given if:

     2. Shareholder's address. If a shareholder to whom notice is not required pursuant to subsection 1 delivers to the corporation a written notice setting forth that shareholder's current address, the requirement that notice be given to that shareholder is reinstated.

SUBCHAPTER II
REPORTS

§1620. Financial statements for shareholders

     1. Financial statements. No later than 5 months after the close of each fiscal year, each corporation that is not a close corporation shall prepare annual financial statements, which may be consolidated or combined statements of the corporation and one or more of its subsidiaries, as appropriate, that include a balance sheet as of the end of the fiscal year, an income statement for that year, and a statement of changes in shareholders' equity for the year unless that information appears elsewhere in the financial statements. If financial statements are prepared for the corporation on the basis of generally accepted accounting principles, the annual financial statements must also be prepared on that basis.

     2. Written demand for copy of financial statement. Upon written demand of any shareholder of a corporation, the corporation shall mail to that shareholder a copy of the most recent annual financial statement prepared in accordance with subsection 1. If the annual financial statement is reported upon by a public accountant, the accountant's report must accompany it. If the annual financial statement is not reported upon by a public accountant, the statement must be accompanied by a statement of the president or the person responsible for the corporation's accounting records:

     3. Restrictions on disclosure of financial statement. The articles of incorporation or bylaws of a corporation may impose reasonable restrictions regarding the disclosure of financial information as a condition to delivery of an annual financial statement to a shareholder in accordance with this section.

§1621.   Annual report of domestic and foreign corporations; excuse

     1. Filing of annual report. Each domestic corporation, unless excused as provided in subsection 4 or excluded by subsection 6, and each foreign corporation authorized to do business in this State, shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing, within the time prescribed by this section, an annual report setting forth:

     2. Information current. The information contained in the annual report required in subsection 1 must be current as of the date the report is executed. The annual report must be executed as provided by section 121.

     3. First annual report. The first annual report required in subsection 1 must be delivered to the Secretary of State between January 1st and June 1st of the year following the calendar year in which a domestic corporation was incorporated or a foreign corporation was authorized to transact business. Subsequent annual reports must be delivered to the Secretary of State between January 1st and June 1st of the following calendar years. Proof to the satisfaction of the Secretary of State that, prior to the date when penalties become effective for late delivery of annual reports as provided in section 1622, the report was deposited in the United States mail in a sealed envelope, properly addressed, with postage prepaid, is compliance with this requirement. One copy of the report, together with the filing fee required by this Act, must be delivered for filing to the Secretary of State who shall file the report, if the Secretary of State finds that the report conforms to the requirements of this Act. If the Secretary of State finds that the report does not conform to the requirements of this Act, the Secretary of State shall promptly mail or otherwise return the report to the domestic or foreign corporation for any necessary corrections, in which case the penalties prescribed by this Act for failure to file the report within the time herein provided do not apply, as long as the report is corrected to conform to the requirements of this Act and returned to the Secretary of State within 30 days from the date on which it was mailed or otherwise returned to the domestic or foreign corporation by the Secretary of State.

     4. Certificate of excuse. The Secretary of State, upon application by any domestic corporation and satisfactory proof that it has ceased to transact business and that it is not indebted to this State for failure to file an annual report and to pay any fees or penalties accrued, shall file a certificate of the fact and shall give a duplicate certificate to the domestic corporation, after which the corporation is excused from filing annual reports with the Secretary of State, so long as the domestic corporation in fact transacts no business.

     5. Resume transaction of business. The shareholders of a domestic corporation that has been excused from filing annual reports pursuant to subsection 4 may vote to resume transacting business at a meeting duly called and held for that purpose. A certificate executed and filed as provided in section 121 setting forth that a shareholders' meeting was held, the date and location of same, and that a majority of the shareholders voted to resume transacting business authorizes that domestic corporation to transact business; and after that certificate is filed, the domestic corporation is required to file annual reports beginning with the next reporting deadline following resumption.

     6. Exempt from filing annual report. The requirement under subsection 1 does not apply to religious, charitable, educational or benevolent corporations nor to corporations organized under Title 13, chapters 81, 83, 91 and 93.

§1622.   Failure to file annual report; incorrect report; penalties

     1. Penalty. A domestic or foreign corporation required to deliver an annual report for filing as provided by section 1621 that fails to deliver its properly completed annual report to the Secretary of State shall pay, in addition to the regular annual report fee, the late filing penalty described in section 123, subsection 1, paragraph EE, as long as the report is received by the Secretary of State prior to administrative dissolution or revocation. Upon a corporation's failure to file the annual report and to pay the annual report fee or the penalty, the Secretary of State, notwithstanding Title 4, chapter 5 and Title 5, chapter 375, shall revoke a foreign corporation's authority to do business in this State and administratively dissolve a domestic corporation. The Secretary of State shall use the procedures set forth in section 1421 to administratively dissolve a corporation and the procedures set forth in section 1532 to revoke a foreign corporation's authority to do business in this State. A domestic corporation that has been administratively dissolved under this subsection may be reinstated by filing the current annual report, together with the current annual filing fee, and by paying the reinstatement fee described in section 123, subsection 1, paragraph V.

     2. Excusable neglect. If the annual report of a domestic or foreign corporation is not delivered for filing within the time specified in section 1621, the corporation is excused from the liability provided in this section and from any other penalty for failure to timely file the report if it establishes, to the satisfaction of the Secretary of State, that its failure to file was the result of excusable neglect and it furnishes the Secretary of State with a copy of the report within 30 days after it learns that the Secretary of State failed to receive the original report.

CHAPTER 17
TRANSITION PROVISIONS

§1701. Application

     1. Application. Except as provided in subsection 2, this Act applies to all domestic corporations in existence on the effective date of this Act that were incorporated under any general statute of this State providing for incorporation of corporations for profit or with shares or under any act providing for the creation of special classes of corporations and any corporation created by special act of the Legislature, if power to amend or repeal the law under which the corporation was incorporated was reserved.

     2. Exceptions. This Act does not apply to:

     3. Validity of articles or bylaws. The validity of any provision of the articles of incorporation or the bylaws of a corporation existing on July 1, 2003 must be determined with reference to the law that was in effect at the time when the provision was adopted or with reference to this Act, whichever supports the validity of such provision. A provision of a corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws that was valid under the law in existence at the time the same was adopted remains in effect, notwithstanding a contrary provision of this Act, until repealed or amended by voluntary act of the corporation, but any amendment to such a provision must be adopted by the procedures set out in this Act and must, as amended, conform to the requirements of this Act.

§1702.   Application to qualified foreign corporations

     A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State on the effective date of this Act is subject to this Act but is not required to obtain a new certificate of authority to transact business under this Act.

     Sec. A-3. Savings.

     1. Effect of repeal of Maine Revised Statutes, Title 13-A. Except as provided in subsection 2, the repeal of the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 13-A in section 1 of this Act does not affect:

     2. Reduction in penalty or punishment. Notwithstanding the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 1, section 302, if the penalty or punishment for a violation of Title 13-C is less severe than the penalty or punishment for a violation of the equivalent provision under former Title 13-A and the penalty or punishment has not yet been imposed, the penalty or punishment must be imposed in accordance with the provisions of Title 13-C.

PART B

     Sec. B-1. 13 MRSA c. 22, as amended, is repealed.

     Sec. B-2. 13 MRSA c. 22-A is enacted to read:

CHAPTER 22-A
MAINE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE CORPORATION ACT
SUBCHAPTER I
GENERAL PROVISIONS

§721. Short title

     This chapter may be known and cited as the "Maine Professional Service Corporation Act."

§722.   Application of Maine Business Corporation Act

     The Maine Business Corporation Act applies to professional corporations, both domestic and foreign, to the extent not inconsistent with this chapter.

§723. Definitions

     As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.

     1. Disqualified person. "Disqualified person" means an individual or entity that for any reason is or becomes ineligible under this chapter to be issued shares by a professional corporation.

     2. Domestic professional corporation. "Domestic professional corporation" means a professional corporation.

     3. Foreign professional corporation. "Foreign professional corporation" means a corporation or association for profit incorporated for the purpose of rendering professional services under law other than the law of this State.

     4. Professional corporation. "Professional corporation" means a corporation for profit, other than a foreign professional corporation, subject to the provisions of this chapter.

     5. Professional limited liability company. "Professional limited liability company" means a limited liability company formed to perform a professional service.

     6. Professional limited liability partnership. "Professional limited liability partnership" means a limited liability partnership formed to perform a professional service.

     7. Professional service. "Professional service" means the professional services provided by the following persons to the extent they are required to be licensed under state law:

     8. Qualified person. "Qualified person" means an individual, general partnership, professional limited liability company, professional limited liability partnership, other professional corporation that is eligible under this chapter to be issued shares by a professional corporation or any other entity that is authorized by statute to provide the same professional service provided by the professional corporation.

SUBCHAPTER II
CREATION

§731. Election of professional corporation status

     1. Mandatory coverage. A qualified person performing any professional service described in section 723, subsection 7, paragraph A desiring to form a corporation shall incorporate as a professional corporation.

     2. Optional coverage. A qualified person or persons performing any professional service described in section 723, subsection 7, paragraph B desiring to form a corporation may incorporate as a professional corporation.

     3. Filing requirement. One or more persons may incorporate a professional corporation by delivering to the Secretary of State for filing articles of incorporation that state that the corporation is a professional corporation and the corporation's purpose is to render the specified professional service.

     4. Election to be covered. A corporation incorporated under a general law of this State may elect professional corporation status by amending its articles of incorporation to comply with subsection 3 and section 736.

§732. Purposes

     1. Single profession. Except to the extent authorized by subsections 2 and 3, a corporation may elect professional corporation status under section 731 solely for the purpose of rendering professional services, including services ancillary to them, and solely within a single profession.

     2. Multiple professions. A corporation may elect professional corporation status under section 731 for the purpose of rendering professional services within 2 or more professions and for the purpose of engaging in any lawful business authorized by Title 13-C, section 301, to the extent the combination of professional purposes or of professional and business purposes is not prohibited by the licensing law of this State applicable to each profession in the combination.

     3. Accountants. Nonlicensed individuals may organize with individuals who are licensed under Title 32, chapter 113 and may become shareholders of a firm licensed to practice public accountancy under Title 32, section 12252, as long as all of the requirements for licensure under Title 32, section 12252, subsection 3 are met by the firm.

     4. Dentists and denturists. For the purposes of this chapter, a denturist licensed under Title 32, chapter 16 may organize with a dentist who is licensed under Title 32, chapter 16 and may become a shareholder of a dental practice incorporated under the corporation laws. At no time may a denturist or denturists in sum have an equal or greater ownership interest in a dental practice than the dentist or dentists have in that practice.

§733. General powers

     A professional corporation has the powers enumerated in Title 13-C, section 302.

§734. Rendering professional services

     1. License required. A domestic professional corporation or foreign professional corporation may render professional services in this State only through individuals licensed or otherwise authorized in this State to render the services.

     2. Scope. Nothing in subsection 1 may be construed to:

§735. Prohibited activities

     1. Limited activities. A professional corporation may not render any professional service or engage in any business or service other than the professional service and business authorized by its articles of incorporation and services or businesses reasonably related thereto.

     2. Investments. Nothing in subsection 1 prohibits a professional corporation from investing its funds in real estate, mortgages, securities or any other type of investment.

§736. Corporate name

     1. Words required. The name of a domestic professional corporation or of a foreign professional corporation authorized to transact business in this State, in addition to satisfying the requirements of Title 13-C, sections 401 and 1506:

     2. Assumed name. A domestic professional corporation or foreign professional corporation may render professional services and exercise its authorized powers under an assumed name, as long as the corporation has first registered the name to be so used in the manner required by Title 13-C.

SUBCHAPTER III
SHARES

§741. Issuance of shares

     1. Qualified shareholders. A professional corporation may issue shares, fractional shares and rights or options to purchase shares only to:

     2. Licensing authority jurisdiction. If a licensing authority with jurisdiction over a profession considers it necessary to prevent violation of the ethical standards of the profession, the authority may adopt rules under its general rule-making authority or other regulatory authority to restrict or condition, or revoke in part, the authority of professional corporations subject to its jurisdiction to issue shares. A rule described in this subsection does not, of itself, make a shareholder of a professional corporation at the time the rule becomes effective a disqualified person.

     3. Unlawful shares void. Shares issued in violation of this section or a rule described in subsection 2 are void.

§742. Share transfer restriction

     1. Limit to transfers. A shareholder of a professional corporation may transfer or pledge shares, fractional shares and rights or options to purchase shares of the corporation only to qualified persons.

     2. Other transfers void. A transfer of shares made in violation of subsection 1, except one made by operation of law or court judgment, is void.

§743.   Compulsory acquisition of shares after death or disqualification of shareholder

     1. Triggering events. A professional corporation must acquire or cause to be acquired by a qualified person the shares of its shareholder if:

     2. Agreements binding. If a professional corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws or a private agreement provides the terms, price and other conditions for the acquisition of the shares of a shareholder upon the occurrence of an event described in subsection 1, then that article, bylaw or private agreement is binding on the parties and is specifically enforceable.

     3. Corporate acquisition of shares. In the absence of an article provision, bylaw provision or private agreement described in subsection 2, a professional corporation shall acquire the shares in accordance with section 744; except that, if the disqualified person rejects the corporation's purchase offer, either the person or the corporation may commence a proceeding under section 745 to determine the fair value of the shares.

     4. Limited disqualification. In the absence of an article provision, bylaw provision or private agreement described in subsection 2, this section does not require the acquisition of shares in the event of a shareholder's becoming a disqualified person if the disqualification lasts no more than 5 months from the date the disqualification or the transfer of shares pursuant to subsection 1 occurs.

     5. Other benefits unaffected. Nothing in this section or section 744 prevents or relieves a professional corporation from paying pension benefits or other deferred compensation for services rendered to a former shareholder if otherwise permitted by law.

§744. Acquisition procedure

     1. Written notice. In the absence of an article provision, bylaw provision or private agreement described in section 743, subsection 2, if shares must be acquired under section 743, a professional corporation shall deliver a written notice to the executor or administrator of the estate of its deceased shareholder, or to the disqualified person or transferee, offering to purchase the shares at a price the corporation believes represents their fair value as of the date of death, disqualification or transfer. The offer notice must be accompanied by the corporation's balance sheet for a fiscal year ending not more than 16 months before the effective date of the offer notice, an income statement for that year, a statement of changes in shareholders' equity for that year and the latest available interim financial statements, if any.

     2. Option period. A disqualified person has 30 days from the effective date of the notice provided pursuant to subsection 1 to accept the professional corporation's offer or demand that the corporation commence a proceeding under section 745 to determine the fair value of that disqualified person's shares. If the disqualified person accepts the offer, the corporation shall make payment for the shares within 60 days from the effective date of the offer notice, unless a later date is agreed on, upon the disqualified person's surrender of the shares to the corporation.

     3. Termination of interest. After a professional corporation makes payment for shares in accordance with this section, a disqualified person has no further interest in those shares.

§745. Court action to appraise shares

     1. Demand for proceeding. If a disqualified person does not accept a professional corporation's offer under section 744, subsection 2 within the 30-day period, the disqualified person at any time during the 60-day period following the effective date of the notice may deliver a written notice to the corporation demanding that it commence a proceeding to determine the fair value of the shares. The corporation may commence a proceeding at any time during the 60 days following the effective date of its offer notice. If the corporation does not commence such a proceeding, the disqualified person may commence a proceeding against the corporation to determine the fair value of those shares.

     2. Court procedure. A professional corporation or disqualified person shall commence a proceeding under this section in the Superior Court of the county where the corporation's principal office or, if there is no principal office in this State, its registered office is located. The corporation shall make the disqualified person a party to the proceeding as in an action against the disqualified person's shares. The jurisdiction of the court in which the proceeding is commenced is plenary and exclusive.

     3. Appraisers. The court may appoint one or more persons as appraisers to receive evidence and recommend decision on the question of fair value. The appraisers have the power described in the order appointing them or in any amendment to it.

     4. Valuation date. A disqualified person is entitled to judgment for the fair value of the person's shares determined by the court as of the date of death, disqualification or transfer together with interest from that date at a rate found by the court to be fair and equitable.

     5. Payment installments. The court may order a judgment ordered under this section paid in installments determined by the court.

§746. Court costs and fees of experts

     1. Assessment of costs. The court in an appraisal proceeding commenced under section 745 shall determine all costs of the proceeding, including the reasonable compensation and expenses of appraisers appointed by the court, and shall assess the costs against the professional corporation; except that the court may assess costs against the disqualified person in an amount the court finds equitable if the court finds the person acted arbitrarily, vexatiously or not in good faith in refusing to accept the corporation's offer.

     2. Assessment against corporation. In addition to costs assessed under subsection 1, the court may assess the fees and expenses of counsel and experts for a disqualified person against the professional corporation and in favor of the person if the court finds that the fair value of the person's shares substantially exceeded the amount offered by the corporation or that the corporation did not make an offer.

§747. Cancellation of disqualified shares

     If the shares of a disqualified person are not acquired pursuant to section 743 within 10 months after the death of the shareholder or within 5 months after the disqualification or transfer, the professional corporation shall immediately cancel the shares on its books and the disqualified person has no further interest as a shareholder in the corporation other than the right to payment for the shares under section 743.

SUBCHAPTER IV
GOVERNANCE

§751. Directors and officers

     Not less than a majority of the directors of a professional corporation and all of its officers, except the clerk, secretary and treasurer, if any, must be qualified persons with respect to the corporation.

§752. Voting of shares

     1. Right to vote. Except as otherwise provided in this section, only a qualified person may vote the shares of a professional corporation.

     2. Proxies. Only a qualified person may be appointed a proxy to vote shares of a professional corporation.

     3. Voting trusts. A voting trust with respect to shares of a professional corporation is not valid unless all of its trustees and beneficiaries are qualified persons; except that, if a beneficiary who is a qualified person dies or becomes a disqualified person, a voting trust valid under this subsection continues to be valid for 10 months after the date of death or for 5 months after the disqualification occurred.

     4. Limited voting right. Any shares transferred to a disqualified person by reason of the death of a qualified person or by operation of law may be voted by such disqualified person only for the purposes of amending the articles of incorporation to convert to a regular business corporation or dissolving the professional corporation.

§753. Responsibility for professional services

     1. Relationship between professional and recipient of services. This chapter does not modify the liability of a person rendering a professional service with respect to that service.

     2. Shareholder liability for debts and claims. Except as provided in subsection 3, the liability of shareholders for the debts of and claims against a corporation is the same as that of shareholders of a business corporation.

     3. Shareholder liability arising from rendering professional service. A shareholder is jointly and severally liable for claims arising from the rendering of a professional service by a domestic professional corporation or foreign professional corporation if that shareholder:

SUBCHAPTER V
REORGANIZATION AND TERMINATION

§761. Merger

     1. Merger allowed. A professional corporation may merge with another domestic professional corporation or foreign professional corporation or with a domestic or foreign business entity as defined in Title 13-C if all the interest holders of the constituent entities are qualified to be interest holders of the surviving entity.

     2. Compliance. After a merger in accordance with subsection 1, if the surviving corporation is to render in this State any of the professional services described in section 723, subsection 7, paragraph A, the surviving corporation must comply with this Act.

§762. Termination of professional activities

     If a professional corporation ceases to render professional services, it must amend its articles of incorporation to delete references to rendering professional services and to conform its corporate name to the requirements of Title 13-C, section 401. After the amendment becomes effective, the corporation may continue in existence as a business corporation under Title 13-C and the corporation is no longer subject to this Act.

§763. Judicial dissolution

     The Attorney General may commence a proceeding under Title 13-C, sections 1430 to 1433 to dissolve a professional corporation if:

     1. Service of notice of violation. The Secretary of State serves written notice on the professional corporation under Title 13-C, section 502 that it has violated or is violating a provision or provisions of this Act;

     2. Failure to correct. The professional corporation does not correct each alleged violation or demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the Secretary of State that the violation or violations did not occur, within 60 days after service of the notice is perfected under Title 13-C, section 502; and

     3. Certify. The Secretary of State certifies to the Attorney General a description of the violation or violations, that it notified the professional corporation of the violation or violations and that the corporation did not correct the violation or violations or demonstrate that the violation or violations did not occur, within 60 days after perfection of service of the notice.

SUBCHAPTER VI
FOREIGN PROFESSIONAL CORPORATIONS

§771. Authority to transact business

     1. Prohibition. Except as provided in subsection 3, a foreign professional corporation may not transact business in this State until it obtains authority from the Secretary of State.

     2. Preconditions. A foreign professional corporation may not obtain authority to transact business in this State unless:

     3. Office required. A foreign professional corporation is not required to obtain authority to transact business in this State unless it maintains or intends to maintain an office in this State for conduct of business or professional practice.

§772.   Application for authority to transact business

     The application of a foreign professional corporation for authority to render professional services in this State must contain the information set forth in Title 13-C, section 1503 and in addition include a statement that all of its shareholders, not less than a majority of its directors and all of its officers other than its clerk, secretary and treasurer, if any, are licensed in one or more states to render a professional service described in its articles of incorporation.

     Sec. B-3. Application to existing corporations.

     1. Existing professional corporations. This Act applies to every corporation incorporated under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 13, former chapter 22. An existing professional corporation to which this Act applies need not amend its articles of incorporation to specify the professional service that it renders as of the effective date of this Act. A professional corporation that is in existence on the effective date of this Act shall amend its articles of incorporation if, after the effective date of this Act, that professional corporation engages in any additional professional service, which amendment must specify all professional services to be engaged in by the professional corporation.

     2. Other corporations. This Act does not apply to a corporation that is or will be incorporated under a law of this State that is not repealed by this Act unless the corporation elects professional corporation status under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 13, section 731.

     3. Other rights unaffected. This Act does not affect any right or privilege to render professional services through the use of any other form of business entity.

     Sec. B-4. Saving provisions.

     1. Effect of repeal. Except as provided in subsection 2, the repeal of the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 13, chapter 22 by this Act does not affect:

     2. Reduction in penalty or punishment. If a penalty or punishment imposed for violation of a statute repealed by this Act is reduced by this Act, the penalty or punishment if not already imposed must be imposed in accordance with this Act.

     Sec. B-5. Revisor's review; cross-references. The Revisor of Statutes shall review the Maine Revised Statutes and include in the errors and inconsistencies bill submitted to the First Regular Session of the 121st Legislature pursuant to Title 1, section 94 any sections necessary to correct and update any cross-references in the statutes to provisions of law repealed in this Act.

     Sec. B-6. Authorization to report out legislation. The joint standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over judiciary matters may report out to the First Regular Session of the 121st Legislature legislation to make any conforming changes necessitated by this Act.

     Sec. B-7. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, 2003.

Effective July 1, 2003.

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