Cotman v Brougham

Cotman v Brougham [1918] AC 514 is UK company law case concerning the objects clause of a company, and the problems involving the ultra vires doctrine. It held that a clause stipulating the courts should not read long lists of objects as subordinate to one another was valid.

Cotman v Brougham
CourtHouse of Lords
Citation(s)[1918] AC 514
Case opinions
Lord Finlay LC, Lord Parker, Lord Wrenbury and Lord Atkinson
Keywords
Objects clause

This case is now largely an historical artifact, given that new companies no longer have to register objects under the Companies Act 2006 section 31, and that even if they do the ultra vires doctrine has been abolished against third parties under section 39. It is only relevant in an action against a director for breach of duty under section 171 for failure to observe the limits of their constitutional power.

Facts

Essequibo Rubber and Tobacco Estates Limited was registered on 6 April 1910 under the Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908, whose section 3 required a company to register its objects. The company had a huge number of objects and its last clause said that clauses should be read individually and not as subclauses of main clauses. The question was whether the company had the capacity to underwrite (guarantee the value of) an issue of shares in the Anglo-Cuban Oil Bitumen and Asphalt Company Limited.

Judgment

Court of Appeal

Warrington LJ was sceptical that these objects clauses were intelligible to the public and wondered whether the registrar could refuse.

House of Lords

Lord Finlay LC relied on subclauses 8 and 12 to say that the company could deal in shares and it was clearly intra vires. He noted section 17 (now Companies Act 2006 section 15(4)) saying the incorporation certificate is conclusive evidence that everything is complied with.

Lord Parker noted the argument that a company should be wound up on the ground that its substratum had failed, but dismissed it. He said the two purposes of the objects were to show subscribers what their money was to be used for and show those who dealt with a company the extent of its powers. The narrower the objects, he opined, the less the subscriber’s risk but the wider the objects, the greater the security of those who contract with the company.

A person who deals with a company is entitled to assume that a company can do everything which it is expressly authorised to do by its memorandum of association, and need not investigate the equities between the company and its shareholders.

Lord Wrenbury and Lord Atkinson concurred.

See also

Notes

    References

      This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.