Full text: Secretarial practice

Legal Effect 
of Articles. 
Company 
and its 
Members. 
Members 
Inter se. 
2A 
SECRETARIAL PRACTICE 
deprive them of that right is invalid [Peveril Gold Mines 
1898), 1. Ch. 122]. In the same way an article seeking to 
take away the right of shareholders to requisition a meeting, 
or to inspect the company’s books would be wholly inoperative. 
The legal effect of articles of association, as a whole, requires 
to be clearly understood. S. 20 (1) of the Act provides 
that ‘subject to the provisions of this Act, the memorandum 
and articles shall, when registered, bind the company and the 
members thereof to the same extent as if they respectively had 
been signed and sealed by each member and contained 
covenants on the part of each member to observe all the 
provisions of the memorandum and of the articles,” and this 
section as judicially interpreted is the chief source of informa- 
tion on the point. The questions which require to be con- 
sidered may be stated as follows: (1) What is the effect as 
between the company and the members? (2) What is the 
effect as between the members themselves? (3) What is the 
effect as between the company and outsiders? 
(1) As between the company and its members, it is clear 
that the members are bound to the company, and a series of 
decisions has firmly established the proposition that the 
company is similarly bound to the members. It is to be 
observed that the relationship of the member to the company 
is more than a simple contractual relation. He is bound as 
though he had covenanted with the company under seal. 
The practical result is that the company can sue a member to 
enforce the obligations of the member to the company under 
the articles. Thus the company can sue a member for calls, 
or to enforce a lien, or for many other purposes. Similarly, 
a member can sue the company if the company acts in con- 
travention of the articles, e.g. in forfeiting shares without 
complying strictly with the relevant terms of the articles. 
The rights, however, in respect of which a member can sue 
the company are the rights merely with which he is endowed 
as a member of the company. When, although a member, 
he acquires rights in another capacity, even as a director, 
other principles apply (see 3, below). 
(2) As between the members themselves the position 
appears to be different. It is true that in Wood v. Odessa 
Waterworks Company (1888, 42 Ch. D. 636), Stirling, J., 
said that the articles of association of a company constitute 
a contract not merely between the shareholders and the 
company, but between each individual shareholder and 
every other. But the words of the section hardly bear the 
construction that each shareholder has contracted with every
	        
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