
The
Companies Act 2006 is a piece of primary legislation
that largely applies to companies directly. A number
of provisions are currently being set out in secondary
legislation, mainly through regulations or orders made
by statutory instrument. The Companies Act 1985 has
been amended in order to meet four key objectives:
- To
enhance shareholder engagement and a long term investment
culture;
- To
ensure better regulation and a ‘Think Small
First’ approach;
- To
make it easier to set up and run a company; and
- To
provide flexibility for the future.
A
copy of the Companies Act 2006 is available from the
Office of Public Sector Information http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2006a.htm,
or from the Companies Act Publications page of the Companies
House website.
The
Companies Act 2006 is by no means complete and will
be supplemented by a series of Regulations using powers
given to the Secretary of State in certain parts of
the Act. It will be supplemented by Commencements Orders
which bring the Act into force. As they are published,
details can be at:
http://www.berr.gov.uk/bbf/co-act-2006/made-or-before-parliament/page35232.html.
The
Act will not be fully implemented until October 2009,

All
companies
A
clear statement of directors’ general duties clarifies
the existing case law based rules
Companies
will be able to make greater use of electronic communications
for communications with shareholders.
Directors
will automatically have the option of filing a service
address on the public record (rather than their private
home address).
Directors
must be at least 16 years old, and all companies must
have one natural person as a director – i.e. they
cannot have all corporate directors.
There
will be improved rules for company names.
Companies
will no longer be required to specify their objects
on incorporation.
The
articles will form the basis of the company’s
constitution.
Private
companies
There
will be separate and simpler model Articles of Association
for private companies.
As
part of the "think small first" agenda, there
will be a separate, comprehensive "code" of
accounting and reporting requirements for small companies.
Private
companies will not be required to have a company secretary.
Private
companies will not need to hold an annual general meeting
unless they positively opt to do so.
It
will be easier for companies to take decisions by written
resolutions.
There
will be simpler rules on share capital, removing provisions
that are largely irrelevant to the vast majority of
private companies and their creditors.
Shareholders
There
will be greater rights for nominee shareholders. These
will include the right to receive information electronically
or in hard copy if they so wish.
There
will be more timely accountability to shareholders by
requiring public companies to hold their AGM within
6 months of the financial year-end
Directors
Every
director must provide both their usual residential address
and, for each directorship, a service address. The service
address will be on the public record; the residential
address will be protected information. A director may
choose to use his residential address as his service
address; in which case the fact that the two addresses
are the same will be protected information.
Directors
will still need to file their residential address with
Companies House but they will also have the choice of
filing a service address. The service address can be
the same as the residential address, or the registered
office address, or it can be somewhere different. The
residential address will be held on a private register
only available to predetermined organisations. This
will be introduced from October 2009.
The
following will be able to access information on directors
residential addresses:
- Specified
public bodies for carrying out their public functions.
- Credit
reference agencies for vetting applications for credit
and associated work and to meet the obligations in
the Money Laundering Regulations.
Vulnerable directors will be able to apply to the Registrar
for their addresses not to be provided to credit reference
agencies where for example a director is the beneficiary
of a valid Confidentiality Order on 30 September 2009
or who has made a successful application to the Registrar
on the grounds that he is:
- at
serious risk of violence or intimidation as a result
of the activities of a company of which he is a director;
- or
has been, employed by the police or security services;
Minimum and maximum age for directors
The
Act introduces a minimum age for a director of 16. Any
directors under 16, when the Act is implemented in October
2008, will automatically cease to be a director.
From
6th April 2007 the maximum age for directors of PLC’s,
which was 70, has been removed.
Secretaries
From
6th April 2008 private companies will have the option
whether or not they have a company secretary. If the
company decide to no longer have a secretary after that
date they will need to inform Companies House on the
usual 288b form.
A
company can have a sole director and no secretary as
long as it is a private company and from 1st October
2008 that the director is a natural person.
The new provisions relating to natural directors do
not apply to secretaries. Secretaries can still be corporate.
On
1st October 2009 secretaries who are an individual person
will be able to file a service address for the public
record and corporate secretaries will be required to
give details of where they are registered and the registered
company number, if applicable.
Accounts
The
filing dates for accounts will be reduced from 10 months
to 9 months for private companies and from 7 months
to 6 months for PLCs. The reduction in the accounts
filing deadlines will be introduced for companies with
accounting periods beginning on or after 6th April 2008.
Minutes
After
1st October 2007 a company will only have to hold an
EGM to pass an extraordinary resolution if it is stated
in the company’s articles. Any resolution that
was passed as an extraordinary resolution under the
Companies Act 1985 can now be passed as a special resolution
Under
the Companies Act 2006 private companies will no longer
be required to hold annual general meetings, however
the shareholders will still be involved in the decision
making process of the company. Public companies must
still hold AGM’s.
The
required majority needed for written resolutions will
be similar to that for shareholders’ meetings
– a simple majority of eligible shares for ordinary
resolutions, or 75% for special resolutions. Written
resolutions passed on or after 1 October 2007 (under
the Companies Act 2006) require only one signature (but
may have more).
Section
390 of the Companies Act 85 will be amended so that
auditors are still entitled to receive all communications
that go to members in connection written resolutions.
Shareholder
meetings for private companies can now all be on a 14
notice period, unless different arrangements are specified
in a company’s articles.
Under
the Companies Act 2006 elective resolutions excluding
section 80a (now section 549-55 of the 2006 Act) have
been repealed.
As
of 1 October 2007, four of the five elective resolution
types are no longer necessary to be filed for private
limited companies - these being:
- Dispensing
with the laying of accounts and reports before a general
meeting (s252)
- Dispensing
with the holding of annual general meetings (s366a)
- Reduction
of majority required to authorise a meeting at short
notice (s369(4) or 378(3))
- Dispensing
with the annual appointment of auditors (s386)
But if they are filed they will be placed on the public
record.
Company Names
In
situations where, on similarity of names, the company
is part of a group the proposal is that where there
is a suggested link between two companies such as by
the use of GB or UK (where either of these words is
the only difference in the company name) the incorporation
application is rejected unless it is accompanied by
written consent from the company already on the index
confirming that the applicant company is, or will be,
in the same group of companies and that they give their
agreement to the proposed name being taken.
Companies
that are exempt from using the word limited in their
company name under section 30 of the Companies Act 1985,
are still exempt from the requirements relating to the
publication of its company name under the new Act.
From
1st October 2008 the public can complain to an independent
names adjudicator about a company name. Complaints can
still be received at Companies House but where the company
name needs to be changed the complainant will be directed
to the independent adjudicator. The adjudicator will
consider the name and if it fails to comply with the
naming rules the company can be forced to change the
name to one the adjudicator states.A company can appeal
to the Court about a company name and if the Court determines
that the new name is appropriate then the order will
be filed at Companies House
Capital
Public
companies will need to establish whether they are maintaining
the minimum share capital in sterling or euros (previously
only sterling was permitted).The minimum authorised
share capital is either 50,000 in sterling or 65,600
in euros.
An
application by a public company for a certificate to
commence business and borrow (trading certificate) will
no longer be required to be in the form of a statutory
declaration. A public company applying for a trading
certificate or a private company re-registering to a
public company will need to determine on the application
whether they are meeting the authorised minimum requirement
in sterling or euros.
Note: Information sourced from the
Companies House Web Site. This has been summarised here
but to view the provisions in full please visit http://www.companieshouse.gov.uk |