micky wrote:
>
nos...@isp.com wrote:
>> micky <
mis...@bigfoot.com> wrote:
>>> Is there any way someone can irretrievably give a proxy
>>> [to vote shares of stock one owns in a corporation] ?
>> Generally speaking (and except that one might guess that you mean
>> "irrevocably" rather than "irretrievably"), Yes
> Thanks. The more I think about it, the more sense it makes, tho' I'm
> pretty sure the tv show didn't ever say it was that.
Even an irrevocable proxy is usually, by its terms, limited
to a particular upcoming vote or series of votes to be
taken by shareholders, such as at an upcoming annual
meeting or special meeting of shareholders. Once the
meeting is over, the proxies, whether used or not, are as
valueless as yesterday's non-winning lottery tickets, or a
chit on a losing horse. That is one way it would be "too
late" to take them back, after the vote was already taken.
However, in a publicy held corporation, state laws
typically require a meaningful period of notice be given to
all shareholders before any upcoming meeting. That would
give a shareholder who had given someone else his proxy,
the chance to revoke that proxy before the vote was taken,
assuming the proxy was not an irrevocable one.
Whether or not the proxies in the Perry Mason episode were
irrevocable, a much more likely scenario for why
intervention would be "too late" in this plot about a
closely-held family corporation, is that the vote in
question may already have been taken, almost immediately
after the proxy was given. That is, the shareholder-
brother who was trying to take over the company, armed with
the proxy from his sibling which gave him an absolute
majority of all the outstanding shares, would have
_immediately_ called for a vote and would have voted his
own shares (plus the proxies) in favor of whatever action
it was he wanted the company to take -- with his lawyer by
his side, of course, to make sure he jumped thru all the
appropriate hoops to make the decision binding and legal.
Ergo, done, and too late to un-do.
--
This posting is for discussion purposes, not professional advice.
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Mike Jacobs
LAW OFFICE OF W. MICHAEL JACOBS
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