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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Constitutional Law - Due Process - Retroactive Application Of Uniform Principal And Income Act, Thomas E. Kauper S.Ed.
Constitutional Law - Due Process - Retroactive Application Of Uniform Principal And Income Act, Thomas E. Kauper S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
The trustee of a trust created prior to the 1957 enactment of the Uniform Principal and Income Act petitioned for instructions as to whether a stock dividend received by it subsequent to the passage of the act should be allocated to principal or income. The Uniform Act provides a rule for the treatment of stock dividends contrary to the judicial rule previously adopted in Wisconsin, and is expressly made applicable to trusts existing on its date of enactment. The county court, finding the act could not be constitutionally applied to trusts created prior to its enactment, ordered the allocation of …
Setting The Price In An Close Corporation Buy-Sell Agreement, David Keith Page
Setting The Price In An Close Corporation Buy-Sell Agreement, David Keith Page
Michigan Law Review
The stockholders of a close corporation may consider it important to keep control of the business "within the family." This can be accomplished through a restrictive agreement, typically one which gives the corporation or the remaining stockholders a first option to purchase the shares of any departing stockholder. The original owners may also wish to guarantee themselves a ready purchaser for their stock when they die or leave the business. This second objective can be attained by adopting a restrictive agreement which places an obligation on the departing stockholder to sell to the corporation or to the surviving stockholders, who …
Trusts - Construction - Distinction Between "Stock Dividends" And "Stock Spit" For Allocation Purposes, Roger W. Findley S.Ed.
Trusts - Construction - Distinction Between "Stock Dividends" And "Stock Spit" For Allocation Purposes, Roger W. Findley S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In 1918 a settlor created two identical trusts, the corpus of each consisting of 300 shares of General Electric no-par common stock. The income was to go to life beneficiaries, and at their deaths the principal was to revert to the settlor or his residuary estate. The trust instrument directed the trustee to transfer to the settlor or his executor, "free of all trusts hereby created, any and all stock dividends .... " In 1954 the corpus of each trust included 1200 shares of G.E. no-par stock with a stated value of $6.25 per share, there having been two stock …
Federal Taxation - Tax Aspects Of Corporate Buy And Sell Agreement, Joel D. Tauber S.Ed.
Federal Taxation - Tax Aspects Of Corporate Buy And Sell Agreement, Joel D. Tauber S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
It is the purpose of this comment to consider the tax problems connected with both types of "conventional" corporate buy and sell agreements. It should be recognized, however, that there are many questions of local law and business necessity that also exert influence on the use of such agreements.
Choka: An Introduction To Securities Regulation, Laylin K. James
Choka: An Introduction To Securities Regulation, Laylin K. James
Michigan Law Review
A Review of An Introduction to Securities Regulation. By Allen D. Choka
Corporations - Compensation Of Management - Bonus Plan, Sidney Buchanan
Corporations - Compensation Of Management - Bonus Plan, Sidney Buchanan
Michigan Law Review
Defendant corporation's board of directors adopted a profit-sharing retirement plan which was never ratified by the shareholders. The plan assigned to key employees "units" having a fixed dollar value equal to the current market value of the corporation's common stock. The company promised to pay each unit holder, upon termination of employment, a sum equal to the number of units held times the increase in market value of the stock from the time the units were issued to the date employment terminated or any date within five years thereafter selected by the employee. The right of each unit-holder to receive …