Québec Finance Minister Raymond Bachand announced
yesterday that the new Québec Business Corporations
Act would come into force on February 14, 2011. The
Business Corporations Act, which replaces the
Québec Companies Act, was adopted on December 1,
2009, seeks to modernize and simplify the law and offer more robust
protection to shareholders. In this substantial Québec
company law reform, the National Assembly also adopted Bill 87, the
Act respecting the legal publicity of enterprises on May
18, 2010. This new law will come into force on February 14, 2011
and will effectively merge the Act respecting the legal
publicity of sole proprietorships, partnerships and legal
persons with the Act respecting the enterprise
registrar.
This reform affects some 300,000 companies in Québec and is
the first major reform to Québec company law since 1981. The
new Québec Business Corporations Act incorporates
many standard practices that exist elsewhere in Canada and
establishes a regime harmonized with the Canada Business
Corporations Act. It will give Québec a more modern and
attractive company law. Furthermore, Bill 63 was developed with the
ambitious objective of making Québec a national leader in
corporate legislative framework.
The following is a brief overview of the principal changes
established by the Québec Business Corporations
Act.
More Robust Protection For Minority Shareholders
- A minority shareholder who disagrees with a major change made to the structure or the activities of the corporation will be able to require that its shares be repurchased.
- Shareholders will have the opportunity to table a shareholders' proposal at annual meetings. The draft Regulation Respecting Shareholder Proposals setting out the rules applicable to shareholder proposals was published in the Gazette officielle du Québec on July 21, 2010.
- Shareholders will have access to the financial statements of the corporation's subsidiaries.
- Shareholders will have new remedies in the event of abuse or inequity, notably:
-
- Shareholders will have the right to ask the Court for the authorization to act in the name of the corporation (also known as "representative action" or "derivative action");
- Shareholders may obtain a court order to rectify a situation in the event of abuse of power or inequity; and
- The Court will now have vast remedial powers to deal with cases of abusive or unjust acts on the part of the corporation or its directors.
New Governance Rules
- Codification of the duties of care, diligence, honesty and loyalty.
- A director will now have the right to present a defense of reasonable diligence with respect to acts made in good faith within the framework of his or her office.
- Creation of a new system of disclosure of directors' and officers' interests.
- The absence of a requirement of Canadian residence for the directors is maintained under the new act.
- The articles may provide for cumulative voting for the election of directors.
- If the corporation is a reporting issuer, the board of directors must be composed of at least two directors who are not officers or employees of the corporation or an affiliate of the corporation.
Use of New Technologies
- Shareholders and directors will now be able to participate and vote remotely in their respective meetings by way of technology.
- The constitution and many administrative transactions will be carried out online with the enterprise registrar.
- Possibility of issuance of shares without certificate.
Administrative Simplification
- Clarification of the rules regarding the unanimous shareholder agreement.
- A corporate entity constituted in another jurisdiction will have the right to continue its existence under the new Québec legislation.
- A Québec corporation will have the right to continue its existence in another jurisdiction.
- Removal of the solvency and liquidity tests with respect to granting financial assistance to shareholders.
- The accounting test is abolished (e.g., in cases involving the payment of a dividend by the corporation or the repurchase of shares).
- Removal of the requirements for annual meetings and for the nomination of an auditor in single shareholder corporations.
To ensure that the legislation constantly evolves to reflect the
realities of modern corporate practice, the Business
Corporations Act provides that the Minister of Finance report
to the Government every five years on how the act is being carried
out and, if applicable, whether it would be advisable to amend
it.
The transition to this new legislative system should be relatively
straightforward. A company constituted, continued or resulting from
an amalgamation under Part IA of the Québec Companies
Act will be automatically continued under the Québec
Business Corporations Act on February 14, 2011, the date
the law comes into force.
A company constituted, continued or resulting from an amalgamation
under Part I of the Québec Companies Act will be
required to send, within five years of the law coming into force,
articles of continuance to the enterprise registrar. Companies that
do not satisfy this requirement will be dissolved as of February
14, 2016.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.