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topic: corporate dissolution
description for corporate dissolution
A corporation is a legal entity separate from the persons who own it or the persons who manage or operate it. In British tradition it is the term designating a body corporate, where it can be either a corporation sole (an office held by an individual natural person, which is a legal entity separate from that person) or a corporation aggregate (involving more persons). In American and, increasingly, international usage, the term denotes a body corporate formed to conduct business, and this meaning of corporation is discussed in the remaining part of this entry (the limited company in British usage). Corporations exist as a product of corporate law, and their rules balance the interests of the management who operate the corporation; creditors who loan it goods, services or money; shareholders that invest their capital; the employees who contribute their labor; and the clients they serve. People work together in corporations to produce value and generate income. In modern times, corporations have become an incre
definition for corporate dissolution
possessing or existing in bodily form; "what seemed corporal melted as breath into the wind"- Shakespeare; "an incarnate spirit"; "`corporate'' is an archaic term"
related topics for corporate dissolution
Corporation, Companies law, List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 1998, Zaibatsu, List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 1994, Unlimited liability corporation, List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 1996, Corporate Ministry, Corporate law, Private enterprise in Japan, Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 2006, Beaulieu Abbey, New Rome, Ohio, List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 1997, List of Statutory Instruments of the United Kingdom, 2008, List of law topics (A-E), Dissolution, Liquidation, Tradespace