Full text: Secretarial practice

PRIVATE COMPANIES 
293 
The secretary of a private company, apart from the Duties of 
matters specified above, will have the same duties to perform Secretary. 
as the secretary of any other company, for apart from these 
matters a private company may do whatever any other 
company may, and must do whatever any other company 
must. His work will obviously be lighter in many respects, 
e.g. in keeping the register posted, in making out the annual 
summary, and in the matter of transfers. 
There 1s nothing in the Act to prevent a company, which 
is not a private company, making in its articles such altera- 
tions as are necessary to constitute itself a private company, 
1.6. by deleting inappropriate provisions, such as provisions 
relating to share warrants, provisions relating to public issues, 
and unsuitable provisions relating to transfers, and inserting 
the provisions required by s. 26, and thereafter claiming the 
privileges of a private company. 
The converse case of the transformation of a private com- 
pany into a public company was expressly provided for by 
s. 121 (2) of the Act of 1908. That sub-section was repealed 
by the Act of 1928, and now by s. 27 (1) of the Act of 1929 
(see above) a private company automatically becomes a 
public company if it alters its articles in such manner that 
they no longer contain the provisions necessary to a private 
company. Under the Act of 1908 the power of a private 
company to convert itself into a public company by altering 
its articles was expressed to be ‘subject to anything con- 
tained in the memorandum or articles.’ These words 
are not repeated in s. 27, but, semble, are implied: for if 
there is in the memorandum an express provision that the 
company shall always be a private company, that provision 
would be unalterable [s. 4]; while if there was such a provision 
in the Articles, it would bind the company until the articles 
had been amended by deleting the provision in accordance 
with s. 10. 
The procedure to enable a private company to become a 
public company, where the memorandum does not forbid 
1s accordingly: 
{r) If the articles forbid the conversion into a public 
company, to pass ¢ special resolution deleting ITO- 
vision; and, in any case, 
(2) to pass aud file a special resolution in accordance with 
5. 27° 
(3) to file a statement in lieu of prospectus within fourteen 
days after the last-mentioned special resolution has been 
passed [.. ~7 and third Sched:ila]
	        
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