This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors to act for a proper purpose as provided in section 76(3)(a) of the 2008 Act (Companies Act 71 of 2008) whenever they distribute company money and/or property. This analysis is conducted with the obligations imposed under sections 4 and 46 of the 2008 Act in mind. The purpose is not to question the inclusion of this duty in the 2008 Act. It is simply to question whether the common law interpretation of the duty still suffices in the face of section 76(3) of the 2008 Act, which seems to suggest that a different standard of judgment must be used. The argument that is made here is that the use of common law principles in interpreting proper purpose is well ...
This article takes the view that the inclusion of the term ‘reasonably’ under s 4 of the Compan...
This article focuses generally on the interaction among several internal company law doctrines such ...
This article deals with the question of how directors' duties, as currently understood in English co...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors to act for ...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors to act for ...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors...
This paper challenges the prevailing assumption that the directors' duty to act for proper purposes ...
This article offers a critical examination of partial codification and its effect on the interpretat...
Sections 171 to 177 of the Companies Act 2006 (���the Act���) codified the duties owed by directors ...
For the first time, the general duties of directors have been given statutory form in the Companies ...
The partial codification of directors’ duties in section 76 of the Companies Act (71 of 2008, herein...
South Africa has included in the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act), provisions dealing with directo...
Magister Legum - LLMIn order to understand the context of the research paper, a brief discussion has...
Directors are required to exercise their powers and perform their functions in good faith and for a ...
The paper at hand will analyze directors’ duty not to make decisions which determine corporate viola...
This article takes the view that the inclusion of the term ‘reasonably’ under s 4 of the Compan...
This article focuses generally on the interaction among several internal company law doctrines such ...
This article deals with the question of how directors' duties, as currently understood in English co...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors to act for ...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors to act for ...
This paper seeks to critically analyse the requirements of the duty imposed on directors...
This paper challenges the prevailing assumption that the directors' duty to act for proper purposes ...
This article offers a critical examination of partial codification and its effect on the interpretat...
Sections 171 to 177 of the Companies Act 2006 (���the Act���) codified the duties owed by directors ...
For the first time, the general duties of directors have been given statutory form in the Companies ...
The partial codification of directors’ duties in section 76 of the Companies Act (71 of 2008, herein...
South Africa has included in the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act), provisions dealing with directo...
Magister Legum - LLMIn order to understand the context of the research paper, a brief discussion has...
Directors are required to exercise their powers and perform their functions in good faith and for a ...
The paper at hand will analyze directors’ duty not to make decisions which determine corporate viola...
This article takes the view that the inclusion of the term ‘reasonably’ under s 4 of the Compan...
This article focuses generally on the interaction among several internal company law doctrines such ...
This article deals with the question of how directors' duties, as currently understood in English co...