TITLE 17 - CORPORATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS AND ASSOCIATIONS
CHAPTER 1 - BUSINESS CORPORATIONS
ARTICLE 1 - IN GENERAL
17-1-101. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-102. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-103. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-104. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-105. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-106. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-107. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-108. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-109. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-110. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-111. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-112. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-113. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-114. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-115. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-116. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-117. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-118. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-119. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-120. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-121. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-122. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-123. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-124. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-125. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-126. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-127. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-128. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-129. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-130. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-131. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-132. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-133. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-134. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-135. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-136. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-137. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-138. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-139. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-140. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-141. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-142. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-143. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-144. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 2 - FORMATION OF CORPORATIONS
17-1-201. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-202. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-203. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-204. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-205. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-206. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 3 - AMENDMENTS AND REDUCTION OF CAPITAL
17-1-301. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-302. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-303. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-304. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-305. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-306. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-307. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-308. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-309. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-310. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-311. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-312. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 4 - MERGER AND CONSOLIDATION
17-1-401. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-402. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-403. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-404. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-405. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-406. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 5 - DISPOSITION OF ASSETS; RIGHTS
OF DISSENTING SHAREHOLDERS
17-1-501. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-502. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-503. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-504. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 6 - DISSOLUTION
17-1-601. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-602. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-603. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-604. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-605. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-606. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-607. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-608. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-609. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-610. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-611. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-612. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-613. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-614. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-615. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-616. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-617. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-618. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-619. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-620. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-621. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-622. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 7 - FOREIGN CORPORATIONS GENERALLY
17-1-701. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-702. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-703. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-704. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-705. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-706. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-707. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-708. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-709. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-710. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-711. Repealed by Laws 1985, ch. 47, § 2; 1989, ch.
249, § 3.
17-1-712. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-713. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-714. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-715. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-716. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-717. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-718. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-719. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 8 - CONTINUANCE OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CORPORATIONS
17-1-801. Repealed by Laws 1980, ch. 50, § 3.
17-1-802. Repealed by Laws 1980, ch. 50, § 3.
17-1-803. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
17-1-804. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
ARTICLE 9 - FEES AND CHARGES
17-1-901. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-902. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 10 - MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
17-1-1001. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1002. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1003. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1004. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1005. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1006. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1007. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1008. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1009. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1010. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
17-1-1011. Repealed by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 3.
ARTICLE 11 - DOMESTICATION OF FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
17-1-1101. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
17-1-1102. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
CHAPTER 2 - ANNUAL REPORTS AND LICENSE TAXES
17-2-101. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
17-2-102. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
17-2-103. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
17-2-104. Renumbered by Laws 1989, ch. 249, § 2.
CHAPTER 3 - PRACTICE OF PROFESSIONS BY CORPORATIONS
17-3-101. Practice of profession through licensed
stockholder or employee authorized.
A corporation organized under the Wyoming Business Corporation
Act or the Wyoming Statutory Close Corporation Supplement, whose
capital stock is owned exclusively by a person or persons
licensed to practice a profession by the state of Wyoming or by
an agency, office or instrumentality authorized by the laws of
Wyoming to license individuals for the practice of such
profession, may, by and through the person or persons of such
licensed stockholder or stockholders, or licensed employees,
practice and offer professional services in such profession.
17-3-102. Licensed stockholder or employee subject to
certain requirements.
No corporation may offer professional services or practice a
profession except by and through the person or persons of its
licensed stockholder or stockholders, or licensed employees,
each of whom shall retain his professional license in good
standing, and shall remain as fully liable and responsible for
his professional activities, and subject to all rules,
regulations, standards and requirements pertaining thereto, as
though practicing individually rather than in a corporation.
17-3-103. Words or initials to be contained in corporate
name.
The corporate name of every professional corporation shall
contain either the words "A Professional Corporation" or the
capital initials "P.C.". These words or initials shall be the
last word of the name of the professional corporation.
17-3-104. Language to be contained in articles of
incorporation; location.
The articles of incorporation of a professional practice
corporation incorporated after the date of this act shall
contain the following language: "All shareholders of the
corporation are, and will continually be, licensed in the
profession for which the corporation is formed, and no
professional service will be offered by the corporation except
by or under the supervision of licensed stockholders or licensed
employees." This language shall be inserted in the articles
immediately after the provisions pertaining to the aggregate
number of shares which the corporation is authorized to issue.
CHAPTER 4 - SECURITIES
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-4-101. Short title.
This act may be cited as the "Wyoming Uniform Securities Act."
17-4-102. Definitions.
(a) In this act, unless the context otherwise requires:
(i) "Administrator" means the secretary of state;
(ii) "Agent" means an individual, other than a
broker-dealer, who represents a broker-dealer in effecting or
attempting to effect purchases or sales of securities or
represents an issuer in effecting or attempting to effect
purchases or sales of the issuer's securities. But a partner,
officer, or director of a broker-dealer or issuer, or an
individual having a similar status or performing similar
functions is an agent only if the individual otherwise comes
within the term. The term does not include an individual
excluded by rule adopted or order issued under this act;
(iii) "Bank" means:
(A) A banking institution organized under the
laws of the United States;
(B) A member bank of the federal reserve system;
(C) Any other banking institution, whether
incorporated or not, doing business under the laws of a state or
of the United States, a substantial portion of the business of
which consists of receiving deposits or exercising fiduciary
powers similar to those permitted to be exercised by national
banks under the authority of the comptroller of the currency
pursuant to section 1 of Public Law 87-722 (12 U.S.C. § 92a),
and which is supervised and examined by a state or federal
agency having supervision over banks, and which is not operated
for the purpose of evading this act; and
(D) A receiver, conservator, or other
liquidating agent of any institution or firm included in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of this paragraph.
(iv) "Broker-dealer" means a person engaged in the
business of effecting transactions in securities for the account
of others or for the person's own account. The term does not
include:
(A) An agent;
(B) An issuer;
(C) A bank or savings institution if its
activities as a broker-dealer are limited to those specified in
subsections 3(a)(4)(B)(i) through (vi), (viii) through (x), and
(xi) if limited to unsolicited transactions; 3(a)(5)(B); and
3(a)(5)(C) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. §§
78c(a)(4) and (5)) or a bank that satisfies the conditions
described in subsection 3(a)(4)(E) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(4));
(D) An international banking institution;
(E) A person excluded by rule adopted or order
issued under this act.
(F) Repealed by Laws 2019, ch. 170, § 4.
(v) "Depository institution" means:
(A) A bank; or
(B) A savings institution, trust company, credit
union, or similar institution that is organized or chartered
under the laws of a state or of the United States, authorized to
receive deposits, and supervised and examined by an official or
agency of a state or the United States if its deposits or share
accounts are insured to the maximum amount authorized by statute
by the federal deposit insurance corporation, the national
credit union share insurance fund, or a successor authorized by
federal law. The term does not include:
(I) An insurance company or other
organization primarily engaged in the business of insurance;
(II) A morris plan bank; or
(III) An industrial loan company that is
not an "insured depository institution" as defined in section
3(c)(2) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, (12 U.S.C.
1813(c)(2)), or any successor federal statute.
(vi) "Federal covered investment adviser" means a
person registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940;
(vii) "Federal covered security" means a security
that is, or upon completion of a transaction will be, a covered
security under section 18(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15
U.S.C. § 77r(b)) or rules or regulations adopted pursuant to
that provision;
(viii) "Filing" means the receipt under this act of a
record by the secretary of state or a designee of the secretary
of state;
(ix) "Fraud," "deceit," and "defraud" are not limited
to common law deceit;
(x) "Guaranteed" means guaranteed as to payment of
all principal and all interest;
(xi) "Institutional investor" means any of the
following, whether acting for itself or for others in a
fiduciary capacity:
(A) A depository institution or international
banking institution;
(B) An insurance company;
(C) A separate account of an insurance company;
(D) An investment company as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940;
(E) A broker-dealer registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(F) An employee pension, profit-sharing, or
benefit plan if the plan has total assets in excess of ten
million dollars ($10,000,000.00) or its investment decisions are
made by a named fiduciary, as defined in the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, that is a broker-dealer registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, an investment adviser
registered or exempt from registration under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, an investment adviser registered under
this act, a depository institution, or an insurance company;
(G) A plan established and maintained by a
state, a political subdivision of a state, or an agency or
instrumentality of a state or a political subdivision of a state
for the benefit of its employees, if the plan has total assets
in excess of ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00) or its
investment decisions are made by a duly designated public
official or by a named fiduciary, as defined in the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, that is a broker-dealer
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, an
investment adviser registered or exempt from registration under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, an investment adviser
registered under this act, a depository institution, or an
insurance company;
(H) A trust, if it has total assets in excess of
ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00), its trustee is a
depository institution, and its participants are exclusively
plans of the types identified in subparagraph (F) or (G) of this
paragraph, regardless of the size of their assets, except a
trust that includes as participants self-directed individual
retirement accounts or similar self-directed plans;
(J) An organization described in section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3)),
corporation, Massachusetts trust or similar business trust,
limited liability company, or partnership, not formed for the
specific purpose of acquiring the securities offered, with total
assets in excess of ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00);
(K) A small business investment company licensed
by the small business administration under section 301(c) of the
Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. § 681(c)) with
total assets in excess of ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00);
(M) A private business development company as
defined in section 202(a)(22) of the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(22)) with total assets in excess of
ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00);
(N) A federal covered investment adviser acting
for its own account;
(O) A "qualified institutional buyer" as defined
in rule 144A(a)(1), other than rule 144A(a)(1)(i)(H), adopted
under the Securities Act of 1933 (17 C.F.R. 230.144A);
(P) A "major United States institutional
investor" as defined in rule 15a-6(b)(4)(i) adopted under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (17 C.F.R. 240.15a-6);
(Q) Any other person, other than an individual,
of institutional character with total assets in excess of ten
million dollars ($10,000,000.00) not organized for the specific
purpose of evading this act; or
(R) Any other person specified by rule adopted
or order issued under this act.
(xii) "Insurance company" means a company organized
as an insurance company whose primary business is writing
insurance or reinsuring risks underwritten by insurance
companies and which is subject to supervision by the insurance
commissioner or a similar official or agency of a state;
(xiii) "Insured" means insured as to payment of all
principal and all interest;
(xiv) "International banking institution" means an
international financial institution of which the United States
is a member and whose securities are exempt from registration
under the Securities Act of 1933;
(xv) "Investment adviser" means a person that, for
compensation, engages in the business of advising others, either
directly or through publications or writings, as to the value of
securities or the advisability of investing in, purchasing, or
selling securities or that, for compensation and as a part of a
regular business, issues or promulgates analyses or reports
concerning securities. The term includes a financial planner or
other person that, as an integral component of other financially
related services, provides investment advice to others for
compensation as part of a business or that holds itself out as
providing investment advice to others for compensation. The term
does not include:
(A) An investment adviser representative;
(B) A lawyer, accountant, engineer, or teacher
whose performance of investment advice is solely incidental to
the practice of the person's profession;
(C) A broker-dealer or its agents whose
performance of investment advice is solely incidental to the
conduct of business as a broker-dealer and that does not receive
special compensation for the investment advice;
(D) A publisher of a bona fide newspaper, news
magazine, or business or financial publication of general and
regular circulation;
(E) A federal covered investment adviser;
(F) A bank or savings institution;
(G) Any other person that is excluded by the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 from the definition of
investment adviser; or
(H) Any other person excluded by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(xvi) "Investment adviser representative" means an
individual employed by or associated with an investment adviser
or federal covered investment adviser and who makes any
recommendations or otherwise gives investment advice regarding
securities, manages accounts or portfolios of clients,
determines which recommendation or advice regarding securities
should be given, provides investment advice or holds himself out
as providing investment advice, receives compensation to
solicit, offer, or negotiate for the sale of or for selling
investment advice, or supervises employees who perform any of
the foregoing. The term does not include an individual who:
(A) Performs only clerical or ministerial acts;
(B) Is an agent whose performance of investment
advice is solely incidental to the individual acting as an agent
and who does not receive special compensation for investment
advisory services;
(C) Is employed by or associated with a federal
covered investment adviser, unless the individual has a "place
of business" in this state as that term is defined by rule
adopted under section 203A of the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-3a) and is:
(I) An "investment adviser representative"
as that term is defined by rule adopted under section 203A of
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-3a); or
(II) Not a "supervised person" as that term
is defined in section 202(a)(25) of the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(25)).
(D) Is excluded by rule adopted or order issued
under this act.
(xvii) "Issuer" means a person that issues or
proposes to issue a security, subject to the following:
(A) The issuer of a voting trust certificate,
collateral trust certificate, certificate of deposit for a
security, or share in an investment company without a board of
directors or individuals performing similar functions is the
person performing the acts and assuming the duties of depositor
or manager pursuant to the trust or other agreement or
instrument under which the security is issued;
(B) The issuer of an equipment trust certificate
or similar security serving the same purpose is the person by
which the property is or will be used or to which the property
or equipment is or will be leased or conditionally sold or that
is otherwise contractually responsible for assuring payment of
the certificate;
(C) The issuer of a fractional undivided
interest in an oil, gas, or other mineral lease or in payments
out of production under a lease, right, or royalty is the owner
of an interest in the lease or in payments out of production
under a lease, right, or royalty, whether whole or fractional,
that creates fractional interests for the purpose of sale.
(xviii) "Nonissuer transaction" or "nonissuer
distribution" means a transaction or distribution not directly
or indirectly for the benefit of the issuer;
(xix) "Offer to purchase" includes an attempt or
offer to obtain, or solicitation of an offer to sell, a security
or interest in a security for value. The term does not include a
tender offer that is subject to section 14(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78n(d));
(xx) "Person" means an individual; corporation;
business trust; estate; trust; partnership; limited liability
company; association; joint venture; government; governmental
subdivision, agency, or instrumentality; public corporation; or
any other legal or commercial entity;
(xxi) "Place of business" of a broker-dealer, an
investment adviser, or a federal covered investment adviser
means:
(A) An office at which the broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or federal covered investment adviser
regularly provides brokerage or investment advice or solicits,
meets with, or otherwise communicates with customers or clients;
or
(B) Any other location that is held out to the
general public as a location at which the broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or federal covered investment adviser
provides brokerage or investment advice or solicits, meets
with, or otherwise communicates with customers or clients.
(xxii) "Predecessor act" means the act repealed and
replaced by this act;
(xxiii) "Price amendment" means the amendment to a
registration statement filed under the Securities Act of 1933
or, if an amendment is not filed, the prospectus or prospectus
supplement filed under the Securities Act of 1933 that includes
a statement of the offering price, underwriting and selling
discounts or commissions, amount of proceeds, conversion rates,
call prices, and other matters dependent upon the offering
price;
(xxiv) "Principal place of business" of a
broker-dealer or an investment adviser means the executive
office of the broker-dealer or investment adviser from which the
officers, partners, or managers of the broker-dealer or
investment adviser direct, control, and coordinate the
activities of the broker-dealer or investment adviser;
(xxv) "Record," except in the phrases "of record,"
"official record," and "public record," means information that
is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in an
electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable
form;
(xxvi) "Sale" includes every contract of sale,
contract to sell, or disposition of, a security or interest in a
security for value, and "offer to sell" includes every attempt
or offer to dispose of, or solicitation of an offer to purchase,
a security or interest in a security for value. Both terms
include:
(A) A security given or delivered with, or as a
bonus on account of, a purchase of securities or any other thing
constituting part of the subject of the purchase and having been
offered and sold for value;
(B) A gift of assessable stock involving an
offer and sale; and
(C) A sale or offer of a warrant or right to
purchase or subscribe to another security of the same or another
issuer and a sale or offer of a security that gives the holder a
present or future right or privilege to convert the security
into another security of the same or another issuer, including
an offer of the other security.
(xxvii) "Securities and exchange commission" means
the United States securities and exchange commission;
(xxviii) "Security" means a note; stock; treasury
stock; security future; bond; debenture; evidence of
indebtedness; certificate of interest or participation in a
profit-sharing agreement; collateral trust certificate;
preorganization certificate or subscription; transferable share;
investment contract; voting trust certificate; certificate of
deposit for a security; put, call, straddle, option, or
privilege on a security, certificate of deposit, or group or
index of securities, including an interest therein or based on
the value thereof; put, call, straddle, option, or privilege
entered into on a national securities exchange relating to
foreign currency; or, in general, an interest or instrument
commonly known as a "security"; or a certificate of interest or
participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt
for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or
purchase, any of the foregoing. The term:
(A) Includes both a certificated and an
uncertificated security;
(B) Does not include an insurance or endowment
policy or annuity contract under which an insurance company
promises to pay a fixed or variable sum of money either in a
lump sum or periodically for life or other specified period;
(C) Does not include an interest in a
contributory or noncontributory pension or welfare plan subject
to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974;
(D) Includes as an "investment contract" an
investment in a common enterprise with the expectation of
profits to be derived primarily from the efforts of a person
other than the investor and a "common enterprise" means an
enterprise in which the fortunes of the investor are interwoven
with those of either the person offering the investment, a third
party, or other investors;
(E) Includes as an "investment contract," among
other contracts, an interest in a limited partnership and a
limited liability company and an investment in a viatical
settlement or similar agreement.
(F) Repealed by Laws 2019, ch. 170, § 4.
(xxix) "Self-regulatory organization" means a
national securities exchange registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, a national securities association of
broker-dealers registered under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, a clearing agency registered under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, or the municipal securities rulemaking board
established under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(xxx) "Sign" means, with present intent to
authenticate or adopt a record:
(A) To execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(B) To attach or logically associate with the
record an electronic symbol, sound, or process.
(xxxi) "State" means a state of the United States,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States;
(xxxii) "This act" means W.S. 17-4-101 through
17-4-701.
17-4-103. References to federal statutes.
As used in this act: "Securities Act of 1933" (15 U.S.C. § 77a
et seq.), "Securities Exchange Act of 1934" (15 U.S.C. § 78a et
seq.), "Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935" (15 U.S.C. §
79 et seq.), "Investment Company Act of 1940" (15 U.S.C. § 80a-1
et seq.), "Investment Advisers Act of 1940" (15 U.S.C. § 80b-1
et seq.), "Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974" (29
U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.), "National Housing Act" (12 U.S.C. § 1701
et seq.), "Commodity Exchange Act" (7 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.),
"Internal Revenue Code" (26 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.), "Securities
Investor Protection Act of 1970" (15 U.S.C. § 78aaa et seq.),
"Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998" (112 Stat.
3227), "Small Business Investment Act of 1958" (15 U.S.C. § 661
et seq.), and "Electronic Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act" (15 U.S.C. § 7001 et seq.) mean those statutes and
the rules and regulations adopted under those statutes, as in
effect on the date of enactment of this act.
17-4-104. References to federal agencies.
A reference in this act to an agency or department of the United
States is also a reference to a successor agency or department.
17-4-105. Electronic records and signatures;
applicability.
(a) This act modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, but
does not modify, limit, or supersede section 101(c) of that act
(15 U.S.C. § 7001(c)) or authorize electronic delivery of any of
the notices described in section 103(b) of that act (15 U.S.C. §
7003(b)). This act authorizes the filing of records and
signatures, when specified by provisions of this act or by a
rule adopted or order issued under this act, in a manner
consistent with section 104(a) of that act (15 U.S.C. §
7004(a)).
(b) The Financial Technology Sandbox Act shall apply to
this act.
17-4-106. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-107. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-108. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-109. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-110. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-111. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-112. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-113. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-114. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-115. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-116. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-117. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-118. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-119. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-120. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-121. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-122. Repealed by Laws 2016, ch. 22, § 3.
17-4-123. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
3.
17-4-124. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-125. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-126. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-127. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-128. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-129. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-130. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-131. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
17-4-132. Repealed and Recreated by Laws 2016, ch. 22, §
1.
ARTICLE 2 - EXEMPTIONS FROM REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES
17-4-201. Exempt securities.
(a) The following securities are exempt from the
requirements of W.S. 17-4-301 through 17-4-306 and 17-4-504:
(i) A security, including a revenue obligation or a
separate security as defined in rule 131 (17 C.F.R. 230.131)
adopted under the Securities Act of 1933, issued, insured, or
guaranteed by the United States; by a state; by a political
subdivision of a state; by a public authority, agency, or
instrumentality of one (1) or more states; by a political
subdivision of one (1) or more states; or by a person controlled
or supervised by and acting as an instrumentality of the United
States under authority granted by the congress; or a certificate
of deposit for any of the foregoing;
(ii) A security issued, insured or guaranteed by a
foreign government with which the United States maintains
diplomatic relations, or any of its political subdivisions, if
the security is recognized as a valid obligation by the issuer,
insurer, or guarantor;
(iii) A security issued by and representing or that
will represent an interest in or a direct obligation of, or be
guaranteed by:
(A) An international banking institution;
(B) A banking institution organized under the
laws of the United States; a member bank of the federal reserve
system; or a depository institution a substantial portion of the
business of which consists or will consist of receiving deposits
or share accounts that are insured to the maximum amount
authorized by statute by the federal deposit insurance
corporation, the national credit union share insurance fund, or
a successor authorized by federal law or exercising fiduciary
powers that are similar to those permitted for national banks
under the authority of the comptroller of currency pursuant to
section 1 of Public Law 87-722 (12 U.S.C. § 92a); or
(C) Any other depository institution, unless by
rule or order the secretary of state proceeds under W.S.
17-4-205.
(iv) A security issued by and representing an
interest in, or a debt of, or insured or guaranteed by, an
insurance company authorized to do business in this state;
(v) A security issued or guaranteed by a railroad,
other common carrier, public utility, or public utility holding
company that is:
(A) Regulated in respect to its rates and
charges by the United States or a state;
(B) Regulated in respect to the issuance or
guarantee of the security by the United States, a state, Canada,
or a Canadian province or territory; or
(C) A public utility holding company registered
under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 or a
subsidiary of such a registered holding company within the
meaning of that act.
(vi) A federal covered security specified in section
18(b)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. § 77r(b)(1))
or by rule adopted under that provision or a security listed or
approved for listing on another securities market specified by
rule under this act; a put or a call option contract; a warrant;
a subscription right on or with respect to such securities; or
an option or similar derivative security on a security or an
index of securities or foreign currencies issued by a clearing
agency registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
listed or designated for trading on a national securities
exchange, a facility of a national securities exchange, or a
facility of a national securities association registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or an offer or sale, of the
underlying security in connection with the offer, sale, or
exercise of an option or other security that was exempt when the
option or other security was written or issued; or an option or
a derivative security designated by the securities and exchange
commission under section 9(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78i(b));
(vii) A security issued by a person organized and
operated exclusively for religious, educational, benevolent,
fraternal, charitable, social, athletic, or reformatory
purposes, or as a chamber of commerce, and not for pecuniary
profit, no part of the net earnings of which inures to the
benefit of a private stockholder or other person, or a security
of a company that is excluded from the definition of an
investment company under section 3(c)(10)(B) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80a-3(c)(10)(B)); except that
with respect to the offer or sale of a note, bond, debenture, or
other evidence of indebtedness issued by such a person, a rule
may be adopted under this act limiting the availability of this
exemption by classifying securities, persons, and transactions,
imposing different requirements for different classes,
specifying with respect to subparagraph (B) of this paragraph
the scope of the exemption and the grounds for denial or
suspension, and requiring an issuer:
(A) To file a notice specifying the material
terms of the proposed offer or sale and copies of any proposed
sales and advertising literature to be used and provide that the
exemption becomes effective if the secretary of state does not
disallow the exemption within the period established by the
rule;
(B) To file a request for exemption
authorization for which a rule under this act may specify the
scope of the exemption, the requirement of an offering
statement, the filing of sales and advertising literature, the
filing of consent to service of process complying with W.S.
17-4-611, and grounds for denial or suspension of the exemption;
or
(C) To register under W.S. 17-4-304.
(viii) A member's or owner's interest in, or a
retention certificate or like security given in lieu of a cash
patronage dividend issued by, a cooperative organized and
operated as a nonprofit membership cooperative under the
cooperative laws of a state, but not a member's or owner's
interest, retention certificate, or like security sold to
persons other than bona fide members of the cooperative; and
(ix) An equipment trust certificate with respect to
equipment leased or conditionally sold to a person, if any
security issued by the person would be exempt under this section
or would be a federal covered security under section 18(b)(1) of
the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. § 77r(b)(1)).
17-4-202. Exempt transactions.
(a) The following transactions are exempt from the
requirements of W.S. 17-4-301 through 17-4-306 and 17-4-504:
(i) An isolated nonissuer transaction, whether
effected by or through a broker-dealer or not;
(ii) A nonissuer transaction by or through a
broker-dealer registered, or exempt from registration under this
act, and a resale transaction by a sponsor of a unit investment
trust registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, in a
security of a class that has been outstanding in the hands of
the public for at least ninety (90) days, if, at the date of the
transaction:
(A) The issuer of the security is engaged in
business, the issuer is not in the organizational stage or in
bankruptcy or receivership, and the issuer is not a blank check,
blind pool, or shell company that has no specific business plan
or purpose or has indicated that its primary business plan is to
engage in a merger or combination of the business with, or an
acquisition of, an unidentified person;
(B) The security is sold at a price reasonably
related to its current market price;
(C) The security does not constitute the whole
or part of an unsold allotment to, or a subscription or
participation by, the broker-dealer as an underwriter of the
security or a redistribution;
(D) A nationally recognized securities manual or
its electronic equivalent designated by rule adopted or order
issued under this act or a record filed with the securities and
exchange commission that is publicly available and contains:
(I) A description of the business and
operations of the issuer; and
(II) The names of the issuer's executive
officers and the names of the issuer's directors, if any; and
(III) An audited balance sheet of the
issuer as of a date within eighteen (18) months before the date
of the transaction or, in the case of a reorganization or merger
when the parties to the reorganization or merger each had an
audited balance sheet, a pro forma balance sheet for the
combined organization; and
(IV) An audited income statement for each
of the issuer's two (2) immediately previous fiscal years or for
the period of existence of the issuer, whichever is shorter, or,
in the case of a reorganization or merger when each party to the
reorganization or merger had audited income statements, a pro
forma income statement.
(E) Any one (1) of the following requirements is
met:
(I) The issuer of the security has a class
of equity securities listed on a national securities exchange
registered under section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 or designated for trading on the national association of
securities dealers automated quotation system;
(II) The issuer of the security is a unit
investment trust registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940;
(III) The issuer of the security, including
its predecessors, has been engaged in continuous business for at
least three (3) years; or
(IV) The issuer of the security has total
assets of at least two million dollars ($2,000,000.00) based on
an audited balance sheet as of a date within eighteen (18)
months before the date of the transaction or, in the case of a
reorganization or merger when the parties to the reorganization
or merger each had such an audited balance sheet, a pro forma
balance sheet for the combined organization.
(iii) A nonissuer transaction by or through a
broker-dealer registered or exempt from registration under this
act in a security of a foreign issuer that is a margin security
defined in regulations or rules adopted by the board of
governors of the federal reserve system;
(iv) A nonissuer transaction by or through a
broker-dealer registered or exempt from registration under this
act in an outstanding security if the guarantor of the security
files reports with the securities and exchange commission under
the reporting requirements of section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78m or 78o(d));
(v) A nonissuer transaction by or through a
broker-dealer registered or exempt from registration under this
act in a security that:
(A) Is rated at the time of the transaction by a
nationally recognized statistical rating organization in one (1)
of its four (4) highest rating categories; or
(B) Has a fixed maturity or a fixed interest or
dividend, if:
(I) A default has not occurred during the
current fiscal year or within the three (3) previous fiscal
years or during the existence of the issuer and any predecessor
if less than three (3) fiscal years, in the payment of
principal, interest, or dividends on the security; and
(II) The issuer is engaged in business, is
not in the organizational stage or in bankruptcy or
receivership, and is not and has not been within the previous
twelve (12) months a blank check, blind pool, or shell company
that has no specific business plan or purpose or has indicated
that its primary business plan is to engage in a merger or
combination of the business with, or an acquisition of, an
unidentified person.
(vi) A nonissuer transaction by or through a
broker-dealer registered or exempt from registration under this
act effecting an unsolicited order or offer to purchase;
(vii) A nonissuer transaction executed by a bona fide
pledgee without the purpose of evading this act;
(viii) A nonissuer transaction by a federal covered
investment adviser with investments under management in excess
of one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000.00) acting in the
exercise of discretionary authority in a signed record for the
account of others;
(ix) A transaction in a security, whether or not the
security or transaction is otherwise exempt, in exchange for one
(1) or more bona fide outstanding securities, claims, or
property interests, or partly in such exchange and partly for
cash, if the terms and conditions of the issuance and exchange
or the delivery and exchange and the fairness of the terms and
conditions have been approved by the secretary of state after a
hearing;
(x) A transaction between the issuer or other person
on whose behalf the offering is made and an underwriter, or
among underwriters;
(xi) A transaction in a note, bond, debenture, or
other evidence of indebtedness secured by a mortgage or other
security agreement if:
(A) The note, bond, debenture, or other evidence
of indebtedness is offered and sold with the mortgage or other
security agreement as a unit;
(B) A general solicitation or general
advertisement of the transaction is not made; and
(C) A commission or other remuneration is not
paid or given, directly or indirectly, to a person not
registered under this act as a broker-dealer or as an agent.
(xii) A transaction by an executor, administrator of
an estate, sheriff, marshal, receiver, trustee in bankruptcy,
guardian, or conservator;
(xiii) A sale or offer to sell to:
(A) An institutional investor;
(B) A federal covered investment adviser; or
(C) Any other person exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(xiv) A sale or an offer to sell securities of an
issuer, if the transaction is part of a single issue in which:
(A) Not more than twenty-five (25) purchasers
are present in this state during any twelve (12) consecutive
months, other than those designated in paragraph (xiii) of this
subsection;
(B) A general solicitation or general
advertising is not made in connection with the offer to sell or
sale of the securities;
(C) A commission or other remuneration is not
paid or given, directly or indirectly, to a person other than a
broker-dealer registered under this act or an agent registered
under this act for soliciting a prospective purchaser in this
state; and
(D) The issuer reasonably believes that all the
purchasers in this state, other than those designated in
paragraph (xiii) of this subsection, are purchasing for
investment.
(xv) A transaction under an offer to existing
security holders of the issuer, including persons that at the
date of the transaction are holders of convertible securities,
options, or warrants, if a commission or other remuneration,
other than a standby commission, is not paid or given, directly
or indirectly, for soliciting a security holder in this state;
(xvi) An offer to sell, but not a sale, of a security
not exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933
if:
(A) A registration or offering statement or
similar record as required under the Securities Act of 1933 has
been filed, but is not effective, or the offer is made in
compliance with rule 165 adopted under the Securities Act of
1933 (17 C.F.R. 230.165); and
(B) A stop order of which the offeror is aware
has not been issued against the offeror by the secretary of
state or the securities and exchange commission, and an audit,
inspection, or proceeding that is public and that may culminate
in a stop order is not known by the offeror to be pending.
(xvii) An offer to sell, but not a sale, of a
security exempt from registration under the Securities Act of
1933 if:
(A) A registration statement has been filed
under this act, but is not effective;
(B) a solicitation of interest is provided in a
record to offerees in compliance with a rule adopted by the
secretary of state under this act; and
(C) A stop order of which the offeror is aware
has not been issued by the secretary of state under this act and
an audit, inspection, or proceeding that may culminate in a stop
order is not known by the offeror to be pending.
(xviii) A transaction involving the distribution of
the securities of an issuer to the security holders of another
person in connection with a merger, consolidation, exchange of
securities, sale of assets, or other reorganization to which the
issuer, or its parent or subsidiary and the other person, or its
parent or subsidiary, are parties;
(xix) A rescission offer, sale, or purchase under
W.S. 17-4-510;
(xx) An offer or sale of a security to a person not a
resident of this state and not present in this state if the
offer or sale does not constitute a violation of the laws of the
state or foreign jurisdiction in which the offeree or purchaser
is present and is not part of an unlawful plan or scheme to
evade this act;
(xxi) Employees' stock purchase, savings, option,
profit-sharing, pension, or similar employees' benefit plan,
including any securities, plan interests, and guarantees issued
under a compensatory benefit plan or compensation contract,
contained in a record, established by the issuer, its parents,
its majority-owned subsidiaries, or the majority-owned
subsidiaries of the issuer's parent for the participation of
their employees including offers or sales of such securities to:
(A) Directors; general partners; trustees, if
the issuer is a business trust; officers; consultants; and
advisers;
(B) Family members who acquire such securities
from those persons through gifts or domestic relations orders;
(C) Former employees, directors, general
partners, trustees, officers, consultants, and advisers if those
individuals were employed by or providing services to the issuer
when the securities were offered; and
(D) Insurance agents who are exclusive insurance
agents of the issuer, or the issuer's subsidiaries or parents,
or who derive more than fifty percent (50%) of their annual
income from those organizations.
(xxii) A transaction involving:
(A) A stock dividend or equivalent equity
distribution, whether the corporation or other business
organization distributing the dividend or equivalent equity
distribution is the issuer or not, if nothing of value is given
by stockholders or other equity holders for the dividend or
equivalent equity distribution other than the surrender of a
right to a cash or property dividend if each stockholder or
other equity holder may elect to take the dividend or equivalent
equity distribution in cash, property, or stock;
(B) An act incident to a judicially approved
reorganization in which a security is issued in exchange for one
(1) or more outstanding securities, claims, or property
interests, or partly in such exchange and partly for cash; or
(C) The solicitation of tenders of securities by
an offeror in a tender offer in compliance with rule 162 adopted
under the Securities Act of 1933 (17 C.F.R. 230.162).
(xxiii) A nonissuer transaction in an outstanding
security by or through a broker-dealer registered or exempt from
registration under this act, if the issuer is a reporting issuer
in a foreign jurisdiction designated by this paragraph or by
rule adopted or order issued under this act; has been subject to
continuous reporting requirements in the foreign jurisdiction
for not less than one hundred eighty (180) days before the
transaction; and the security is listed on the foreign
jurisdiction's securities exchange that has been designated by
this paragraph or by rule adopted or order issued under this
act, or is a security of the same issuer that is of senior or
substantially equal rank to the listed security or is a warrant
or right to purchase or subscribe to any of the foregoing. For
purposes of this paragraph, Canada, together with its provinces
and territories, is a designated foreign jurisdiction and the
Toronto Stock Exchange, Inc., is a designated securities
exchange. After an administrative hearing in compliance with the
Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act, the secretary of state, by
rule adopted or order issued under this act, may revoke the
designation of a securities exchange under this paragraph, if
the secretary of state finds that revocation is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest and for the protection of
investors.
17-4-203. Intrastate crowdfunding exemption.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this act, an offer or
sale of a security by an issuer is exempt from the requirements
of W.S. 17-4-301 through 17-4-306 and 17-4-504 if the offer or
sale meets all of the following requirements:
(i) The issuer of the security is:
(A) An entity that is incorporated or organized
under the laws of this state;
(B) A resident of this state under securities
and exchange commission rule 147, (17 C.F.R. 230.147), or rule
147A, (17 C.F.R. 230.147A); and
(C) Authorized to do business in this state.
(ii) The transaction meets the requirements for the
federal exemption for intrastate offerings under section
3(a)(11) of the Securities Act of 1933, (15 U.S.C. 77c(a)(11)),
and securities and exchange commission rule 147, (17 C.F.R.
230.147), including, but not limited to, the requirements for
determining whether an offeree or purchaser is a resident of
this state, or under 15 U.S.C. 77e and securities and exchange
commission rule 147A, (17 C.F.R. 230.147A). All of the following
apply concerning these requirements:
(A) Each of the following is prima facie
evidence that an individual is a resident of this state:
(I) A valid operator's license, chauffeur's
license, or official personal identification card issued by this
state;
(II) A current Wyoming voter registration;
(III) A signed affidavit showing that the
purchaser is a resident of this state as defined by W.S.
22-1-102(a)(xxx); or
(IV) Any other record or documents issued
by this state that establishes that the purchaser's principal
residence is in this state.
(B) The provisions of securities and exchange
commission rule 147, (17 C.F.R. 230.147), or rule 147A, (17
C.F.R. 230.147A), apply in determining the residency of an
offeree or purchaser that is a corporation, partnership, trust,
or other form of business organization;
(C) If a purchaser of a security that is exempt
under this section resells that security within six (6) months
after the closing of the particular offering in which the
purchaser obtained that security to a person that is not a
resident of this state, the original investment agreement
between the issuer and the purchaser is void. If an agreement to
purchase, or the purchase of, a security is void under this
subparagraph, the issuer may recover damages from the
misrepresenting offeree or purchaser. These damages include, but
are not limited to, the issuer's expenses in resolving the
misrepresentation. However, damages described in this
subparagraph shall not exceed the amount of the person's
investment in the security.
(iii) The sum of all cash and other consideration to
be received for all sales of the security in reliance on this
exemption does not exceed the following amounts:
(A) Three million dollars ($3,000,000.00), less
the aggregate amount received for all sales of securities by the
issuer within the twelve (12) months before the first offer or
sale made in reliance on this exemption, if the issuer has not
made available to each prospective purchaser and the secretary
of state audited financial statements or reviewed financial
statements for the issuer's most recently completed fiscal year,
prepared by a certified public accountant, holding a certificate
pursuant to W.S. 33-3-109, in accordance with the statements on
auditing standards of the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants or the statements on standards for accounting and
review services of the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, as applicable;
(B) Ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00), less
the aggregate amount received for all sales of securities by the
issuer within the twelve (12) months before the first offer or
sale made in reliance on this exemption, if the issuer has made
available to each prospective purchaser and the secretary of
state audited financial statements or reviewed financial
statements for the issuer's most recently completed fiscal year,
prepared by a certified public accountant, holding a certificate
pursuant to W.S. 33-3-109, in accordance with the statements on
auditing standards of the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants or the statements on standards for accounting and
review services of the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, as applicable.
(iv) The issuer has not accepted more than twenty-
five thousand dollars ($25,000.00) from any single purchaser
unless the purchaser is an accredited investor as defined by
rule 501 of securities and exchange commission regulation D, (17
C.F.R. 230.501) who comes within any category listed in the
definition of that rule or who the issuer reasonably believes
comes within any category listed in the definition of that rule,
at the time of the sale. The issuer may rely on confirmation
that the purchaser is an accredited investor from information
provided by the purchaser, a licensed broker-dealer or another
third party in making a determination that the purchaser is an
accredited investor;
(v) At least ten (10) days before an offer of
securities is made in reliance on this exemption or the use of
any publicly available website in connection with an offering of
securities in reliance on this exemption, the issuer files a
notice with the secretary of state, in writing or in electronic
form as specified by the secretary of state, that contains all
of the following:
(A) A notice of claim of exemption from
registration, specifying that the issuer intends to conduct an
offering in reliance on this exemption, accompanied by the
filing fee specified in this section;
(B) A copy of the disclosure statement to be
provided to prospective investors in connection with the
offering. The disclosure statement shall be provided at the time
the offer of securities is made to the prospective purchaser and
shall contain all of the following:
(I) A description of the issuer, including
its type of entity, the address and telephone number of its
principal office, its formation history, its business plan, and
the intended use of the offering proceeds, including any amounts
to be paid, as compensation or otherwise, to any owner,
executive officer, director, managing member, or other person
occupying a similar status or performing similar functions on
behalf of the issuer;
(II) The identity of each person that owns
more than ten percent (10%) of the ownership interests of any
class of securities of the issuer;
(III) The identity of the executive
officers, directors, and managing members of the issuer, and any
other individuals who occupy similar status or perform similar
functions in the name of and on behalf of the issuer, including
their titles and their prior experience;
(IV) The terms and conditions of the
securities being offered and of any outstanding securities of
the issuer, the minimum and maximum amount of securities being
offered, if any, and either the percentage ownership of the
issuer represented by the offered securities or the valuation of
the issuer implied by the price of the offered securities;
(V) The identity of any person that the
issuer has or intends to retain to assist the issuer in
conducting the offering and sale of the securities, including
the owner of any websites, if known, but excluding any person
acting solely as an accountant or attorney and any employees
whose primary job responsibilities involve the operating
business of the issuer rather than assisting the issuer in
raising capital, and for each person identified in response to
this subdivision, a description of the consideration being paid
to that person for that assistance;
(VI) A description of any litigation or
legal proceedings involving the issuer or its management;
(VII) The name and address of any website
that the issuer intends to use in connection with the offering,
including its uniform resource locator (URL). If the issuer has
not engaged a website described in this subdivision at the time
the issuer files the disclosure statement described in this
subparagraph with the secretary of state under this paragraph
but subsequently does engage a website for use in connection
with the offering, the issuer shall provide the information
described in this subdivision to the secretary of state by
filing a supplemental notice;
(VIII) Additional information material to
the offering, including, where appropriate, a discussion of
significant factors that make the offering speculative or risky.
This discussion shall be concise and organized logically and
need not present risks that could apply to any issuer or any
offering.
(C) An escrow agreement with a bank or other
depository institution located in this state, in which the
purchaser funds will be deposited, that provides that all
offering proceeds will be released to the issuer only when the
aggregate capital raised from all purchasers is equal to or
greater than the minimum target offering amount specified in the
disclosure statement as necessary to implement the business plan
and that all purchasers will receive a return of their
subscription funds if that target offering amount is not raised
by the time stated in the disclosure statement. The bank or
other depository institution may contract with the issuer to
collect reasonable fees for its escrow services regardless of
whether the target offering amount is reached.
(vi) The issuer is not, either before or as a result
of the offering, an investment company, as defined in section 3
of the Investment Company Act of 1940, (15 U.S.C. § 80a-3), or
an entity that would be an investment company but for the
exclusions provided in subsection (c) of that section, or
subject to the reporting requirements of section 13 or 15(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, (15 U.S.C. §§ 78m and
78o(d));
(vii) The issuer informs each prospective purchaser
that the securities are not registered under federal or state
securities laws and that the securities are subject to
limitations on transfer or resale and displays the following
legend conspicuously on the cover page of the disclosure
statement:
"IN MAKING AN INVESTMENT DECISION, PURCHASERS MUST RELY ON THEIR
OWN EXAMINATION OF THE ISSUER AND THE TERMS OF THE OFFERING,
INCLUDING THE MERITS AND RISKS INVOLVED. THESE SECURITIES HAVE
NOT BEEN RECOMMENDED BY ANY FEDERAL OR STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION OR REGULATORY AUTHORITY. FURTHERMORE, THE FOREGOING
AUTHORITIES HAVE NOT CONFIRMED THE ACCURACY OR DETERMINED THE
ADEQUACY OF THIS DOCUMENT. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS
A CRIMINAL OFFENSE. THESE SECURITIES ARE SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS
ON TRANSFERABILITY AND RESALE AND MAY NOT BE TRANSFERRED OR
RESOLD EXCEPT AS PERMITTED BY SUBSECTION (E) OF SEC RULE 147,
(17 C.F.R. 230.147(E)), OR RULE 147A, (17 C.F.R. 230.147A(E)),
AS PROMULGATED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED, AND
THE APPLICABLE STATE SECURITIES LAWS, PURSUANT TO REGISTRATION
OR EXEMPTION THEREFROM. PURCHASERS SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THEY
WILL BE REQUIRED TO BEAR THE FINANCIAL RISKS OF THIS INVESTMENT
FOR AN INDEFINITE PERIOD OF TIME.".
(viii) The issuer requires each purchaser to certify
in writing, and to include as part of that certification his
signature, and his initials next to each paragraph of the
certification, as follows:
"I understand and acknowledge that:
I am investing in a high-risk, speculative business venture. I
may lose all of my investment, and I can afford the loss of my
investment. This offering has not been reviewed or approved by
any state or federal securities commission or other regulatory
authority and that no regulatory authority has confirmed the
accuracy or determined the adequacy of any disclosure made to me
relating to this offering.
The securities I am acquiring in this offering are illiquid,
that the securities are subject to possible dilution, that there
is no ready market for the sale of those securities, that it may
be difficult or impossible for me to sell or otherwise dispose
of this investment, and that, accordingly, I may be required to
hold this investment indefinitely.
I may be subject to tax on my share of the taxable income and
losses of the issuer, whether or not I have sold or otherwise
disposed of my investment or received any dividends or other
distributions from the issuer.
By entering into this transaction with the issuer, I am
affirmatively representing myself as being a Wyoming resident at
the time that this contract is formed, and if this
representation is subsequently shown to be false, the contract
is void.
If I resell any of the securities I am acquiring in this
offering to a person that is not a Wyoming resident, within six
(6) months after the closing of the offering, my contract with
the issuer for the purchase of these securities is void.".
(ix) If the offer and sale of securities under this
section is made through an internet website, all of the
following requirements are met:
(A) Before any offer of an investment
opportunity to residents of this state through the use of a
website, the issuer provides to the website and to the secretary
of state evidence that the issuer is organized under the laws of
this state and that it is authorized to do business in this
state;
(B) The issuer obtains from each purchaser of a
security under this section evidence that the purchaser is a
resident of this state and, if applicable, an accredited
investor;
(C) The website operator files a written notice
with the secretary of state that includes the website operator's
name, business address, and contact information and states that
it is authorized to do business in this state and is being
utilized to offer and sell securities under this exemption.
Beginning twelve (12) months after the date of the written
notice, a website operator that has filed a written notice under
this subparagraph shall annually notify the secretary of state
in writing of any changes in the information provided to the
secretary of state under this subparagraph;
(D) The issuer and the website keep and maintain
records of the offers and sales of securities made through the
website and provide ready access to the records to the secretary
of state on request. The secretary of state may access, inspect,
and review any website described in this paragraph and its
records.
(x) All payments for the purchase of securities are
directed to and held by the bank or depository institution
subject to the provisions of subparagraph (v)(C) of this
subsection;
(xi) Offers or sales of a security are not made
through an internet website unless the website has filed the
written notice required under subparagraph (ix)(C) of this
subsection with the secretary of state;
(xii) The issuer does not pay, directly or
indirectly, any commission or remuneration to an executive
officer, director, managing member, or other individual who has
a similar status or performs similar functions in the name of
and on behalf of the issuer for offering or selling the
securities unless he or she is registered as a broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative under
article 4 of this act. An executive officer, director, managing
member, or other individual who has a similar status or performs
similar functions in the name of and on behalf of the issuer is
exempt from the registration requirements under article 4 of
this act if he or she does not receive, directly or indirectly,
any commission or remuneration for offering or selling
securities of the issuer that are exempt from registration under
this section;
(xiii) Repealed by Laws 2018, ch. 71, § 2.
(xiv) The term of the offering does not exceed twelve
(12) months after the date of the first offer.
(b) If the offer and sale of a security of an issuer is
exempt under this section, the issuer shall provide the
information described in paragraph (iv) of this subsection upon
request of the issuer's purchasers until none of the securities
issued under this section are outstanding. All of the following
apply:
(i) The issuer shall provide the information free of
charge to the purchasers;
(ii) An issuer may satisfy the information
requirement under this subsection by making the information
available on an internet website;
(iii) The issuer must provide a written copy of the
information to any purchaser or the secretary of state on
request;
(iv) The information provided must include all of the
following:
(A) The compensation received by each director
and executive officer of the issuer, including cash compensation
earned on an annual basis and any bonuses, stock options, other
rights to receive securities of the issuer or any affiliate of
the issuer, or other compensation received;
(B) An analysis by management of the issuer of
the business operations and financial condition of the issuer.
(c) The exemption provided in this section shall not be
used in conjunction with any other exemption under this article,
except offers and sales to controlling persons shall not count
toward the limitation in paragraph (a)(iii) of this section.
(d) The exemption described in this section does not apply
if an issuer or person that is affiliated with the issuer or
offering is subject to any disqualification established by the
secretary of state by rule or contained in rule 262 as
promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, (17 C.F.R.
230.262). However, this subsection does not apply if both of the
following are met:
(i) On a showing of good cause and without prejudice
to any other action by the secretary of state, the secretary of
state determines that it is not necessary under the
circumstances that an exemption be denied; and
(ii) The issuer establishes that it made factual
inquiry into whether any disqualification existed under this
subsection but did not know, and in the exercise of reasonable
care could not have known, that a disqualification existed under
this subsection. The nature and scope of the requisite inquiry
will vary based on the circumstances of the issuer and the other
offering participants.
(e) The secretary of state may adopt rules to implement
the provisions of this section and to protect purchasers that
purchase securities that are exempt from registration under this
section.
(f) The secretary of state shall charge a nonrefundable
filing fee for filing an exemption notice required under
subsection (a) of this section according to the following
conditions:
(i) If the offering is being made by the issuer the
filing fee is two hundred dollars ($200.00);
(ii) Internet websites filing written notice shall
pay a filing fee of one hundred dollars ($100.00), for a period
of twelve (12) consecutive months following the date of written
notice. Internet websites may file renewal notices every twelve
(12) months accompanied by a one hundred dollar ($100.00)
renewal fee.
(g) A website through which an offer or sale of securities
under this section is made is not subject to the broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative
registration requirements under article 4 of this act if the
website meets all of the following conditions:
(i) It does not offer investment advice or
recommendations;
(ii) It does not solicit purchases, sales, or offers
to buy the securities offered or displayed on the website;
(iii) It does not compensate employees, agents, or
other persons for the solicitation or based on the sale of
securities displayed or referenced on the website;
(iv) It does not hold, manage, possess, or otherwise
handle purchaser funds or securities;
(v) It does not engage in any other activities that
the secretary of state by rule determines are inappropriate for
an exemption from the registration requirements under article 4
of this act.
(h) Except for W.S. 17-4-504, article 5 of this act
applies to a violation of this section, including a violation
concerning website operation.
(j) As used in this section, "controlling person" means an
officer, director, partner, or trustee, or another individual
who has similar status or performs similar functions, of or for
the issuer or to a person that owns ten percent (10%) or more of
the outstanding shares of any class or classes of securities of
the issuer.
(k) The exemption described in this section may be
referred to as the "Wyoming Invests Now (WIN) exemption".
17-4-204. Additional exemptions and waivers.
A rule adopted or order issued under this act may exempt a
security, transaction, or offer; a rule under this act may
exempt a class of securities, transactions, or offers from any
or all of the requirements of W.S. 17-4-301 through 17-4-306 and
17-4-504; and an order under this act may waive, in whole or in
part, any or all of the conditions for an exemption or offer
under W.S. 17-4-201 through 17-4-203.
17-4-205. Denial, suspension, revocation, condition, or
limitation of exemptions.
(a) Except with respect to a federal covered security or a
transaction involving a federal covered security, an order under
this act may deny, suspend application of, condition, limit, or
revoke an exemption created under W.S. 17-4-201(a)(iii)(C),
(vii) or (viii), or 17-4-202 and 17-4-203, or an exemption or
waiver created under W.S. 17-4-204 with respect to a specific
security, transaction, or offer. An order under this section may
be issued only pursuant to the procedures in W.S. 17-4-306(d) or
17-4-604 and only prospectively.
(b) A person does not violate W.S. 17-4-301, 17-4-303
through 17-4-306, 17-4-504, or 17-4-510 by an offer to sell,
offer to purchase, sale, or purchase effected after the entry of
an order issued under this section if the person did not know,
and in the exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of
the order.
17-4-206. Repealed by Laws 2019, ch. 170, § 4.
ARTICLE 3 - REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES AND NOTICE FILING OF
FEDERAL COVERED SECURITIES
17-4-301. Securities registration requirement.
(a) It is unlawful for a person to offer or sell a
security in this state unless:
(i) The security is a federal covered security;
(ii) The security, transaction, or offer is exempted
from registration under W.S. 17-4-201 through 17-4-204; or
(iii) The security is registered under this act.
17-4-302. Notice filing.
(a) With respect to a federal covered security, as defined
in section 18(b)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. §
77r(b)(2)), that is not otherwise exempt under W.S. 17-4-201
through 17-4-204, a rule adopted or order issued under this act
may require the filing of any or all of the following records:
(i) Before the initial offer of a federal covered
security in this state, all records that are part of a federal
registration statement filed with the securities and exchange
commission under the Securities Act of 1933 and a consent to
service of process complying with W.S. 17-4-611 signed by the
issuer and the payment of a fee of two hundred dollars
($200.00);
(ii) After the initial offer of the federal covered
security in this state, all records that are part of an
amendment to a federal registration statement filed with the
securities and exchange commission under the Securities Act of
1933; and
(iii) To the extent necessary or appropriate to
compute fees, a report of the value of the federal covered
securities sold or offered to persons present in this state, if
the sales data are not included in records filed with the
securities and exchange commission and payment of a fee as set
by rule.
(b) A notice filing under subsection (a) of this section
is effective for two (2) years commencing on the later of the
notice filing or the effectiveness of the offering filed with
the securities and exchange commission. On or before expiration,
the issuer may renew a notice filing by filing a copy of those
records filed by the issuer with the securities and exchange
commission that are required by rule or order under this act to
be filed and by paying a renewal fee as set by rule. A
previously filed consent to service of process complying with
W.S. 17-4-611 may be incorporated by reference in a renewal. A
renewed notice filing becomes effective upon the expiration of
the filing being renewed.
(c) With respect to a security that is a federal covered
security under section 18(b)(4)(D) of the Securities Act of 1933
(15 U.S.C. § 77r(b)(4)(D)), a rule under this act may require a
notice filing by or on behalf of an issuer to include a copy of
Form D, including the appendix, as promulgated by the securities
and exchange commission, and a consent to service of process
complying with W.S. 17-4-611 signed by the issuer not later than
fifteen (15) days after the first sale of the federal covered
security in this state and the payment of a fee as set by rule;
and the payment of a fee for any late filing as set by rule.
(d) Except with respect to a federal security under
section 18(b)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. §
77r(b)(1)), if the secretary of state finds that there is a
failure to comply with a notice or fee requirement of this
section, the secretary of state may issue a stop order
suspending the offer and sale of a federal covered security in
this state. If the deficiency is corrected, the stop order is
void as of the time of its issuance and no penalty may be
imposed by the secretary of state.
17-4-303. Securities registration by coordination.
(a) A security for which a registration statement has been
filed under the Securities Act of 1933 in connection with the
same offering may be registered by coordination under this
section.
(b) A registration statement and accompanying records
under this section must contain or be accompanied by the
following records in addition to the information specified in
W.S. 17-4-305 and a consent to service of process complying with
W.S. 17-4-611:
(i) A copy of the latest form of prospectus filed
under the Securities Act of 1933;
(ii) A copy of the articles of incorporation and
bylaws or their substantial equivalents currently in effect; a
copy of any agreement with or among underwriters; a copy of any
indenture or other instrument governing the issuance of the
security to be registered; and a specimen, copy, or description
of the security that is required by rule adopted or order issued
under this act;
(iii) Copies of any other information or any other
records filed by the issuer under the Securities Act of 1933
requested by the secretary of state; and
(iv) An undertaking to forward each amendment to the
federal prospectus, other than an amendment that delays the
effective date of the registration statement, promptly after it
is filed with the securities and exchange commission.
(c) A registration statement under this section becomes
effective simultaneously with or subsequent to the federal
registration statement when all the following conditions are
satisfied:
(i) A stop order under subsection (d) of this section
or W.S. 17-4-306 or issued by the securities and exchange
commission is not in effect and a proceeding is not pending
against the issuer under W.S. 17-4-306; and
(ii) The registration statement has been on file for
at least twenty (20) days or a shorter period provided by rule
adopted or order issued under this act.
(d) The registrant shall promptly notify the secretary of
state in a record of the date when the federal registration
statement becomes effective and the content of any price
amendment and shall promptly file a record containing the price
amendment. If the notice is not timely received, the secretary
of state may issue a stop order, without prior notice or
hearing, retroactively denying effectiveness to the registration
statement or suspending its effectiveness until compliance with
this section. The secretary of state shall promptly notify the
registrant of an order by telegram, telephone, or electronic
means and promptly confirm this notice by a record. If the
registrant subsequently complies with the notice requirements of
this section, the stop order is void as of the date of its
issuance.
(e) If the federal registration statement becomes
effective before each of the conditions in this section is
satisfied or is waived by the secretary of state, the
registration statement is automatically effective under this act
when all the conditions are satisfied or waived. If the
registrant notifies the secretary of state of the date when the
federal registration statement is expected to become effective,
the secretary of state shall promptly notify the registrant by
telegram, telephone, or electronic means and promptly confirm
this notice by a record, indicating whether all the conditions
are satisfied or waived and whether the secretary of state
intends the institution of a proceeding under W.S. 17-4-306. The
notice by the secretary of state does not preclude the
institution of such a proceeding.
17-4-304. Securities registration by qualification.
(a) A security may be registered by qualification under
this section.
(b) A registration statement under this section must
contain the information or records specified in W.S. 17-4-305, a
consent to service of process complying with W.S. 17-4-611, and,
if required by rule adopted under this act, the following
information or records:
(i) With respect to the issuer and any significant
subsidiary, its name, address, and form of organization; the
state or foreign jurisdiction and date of its organization; the
general character and location of its business; a description of
its physical properties and equipment; and a statement of the
general competitive conditions in the industry or business in
which it is or will be engaged;
(ii) With respect to each director and officer of the
issuer, and other person having a similar status or performing
similar functions, the person's name, address, and principal
occupation for the previous five (5) years; the amount of
securities of the issuer held by the person as of the thirtieth
day before the filing of the registration statement; the amount
of the securities covered by the registration statement to which
the person has indicated an intention to subscribe; and a
description of any material interest of the person in any
material transaction with the issuer or a significant subsidiary
effected within the previous three (3) years or proposed to be
effected;
(iii) With respect to persons covered by paragraph
(ii) of this subsection, the aggregate sum of the remuneration
paid to those persons during the previous twelve (12) months and
estimated to be paid during the next twelve (12) months,
directly or indirectly, by the issuer, and all predecessors,
parents, subsidiaries, and affiliates of the issuer;
(iv) With respect to a person owning of record or
owning beneficially, if known, ten percent (10%) or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of equity security of the
issuer, the information specified in paragraph (ii) of this
subsection other than the person's occupation;
(v) With respect to a promoter, if the issuer was
organized within the previous three (3) years, the information
or records specified in paragraph (ii) of this subsection, any
amount paid to the promoter within that period or intended to be
paid to the promoter, and the consideration for the payment;
(vi) With respect to a person on whose behalf any
part of the offering is to be made in a nonissuer distribution,
the person's name and address; the amount of securities of the
issuer held by the person as of the date of the filing of the
registration statement; a description of any material interest
of the person in any material transaction with the issuer or any
significant subsidiary effected within the previous three (3)
years or proposed to be effected; and a statement of the reasons
for making the offering;
(vii) The capitalization and long term debt, on both
a current and pro forma basis, of the issuer and any significant
subsidiary, including a description of each security outstanding
or being registered or otherwise offered, and a statement of the
amount and kind of consideration, whether in the form of cash,
physical assets, services, patents, goodwill, or anything else
of value, for which the issuer or any subsidiary has issued its
securities within the previous two (2) years or is obligated to
issue its securities;
(viii) The kind and amount of securities to be
offered; the proposed offering price or the method by which it
is to be computed; any variation at which a proportion of the
offering is to be made to a person or class of persons other
than the underwriters, with a specification of the person or
class; the basis on which the offering is to be made if
otherwise than for cash; the estimated aggregate underwriting
and selling discounts or commissions and finders' fees,
including separately cash, securities, contracts, or anything
else of value to accrue to the underwriters or finders in
connection with the offering or, if the selling discounts or
commissions are variable, the basis of determining them and
their maximum and minimum amounts; the estimated amounts of
other selling expenses, including legal, engineering, and
accounting charges; the name and address of each underwriter and
each recipient of a finder's fee; a copy of any underwriting or
selling group agreement under which the distribution is to be
made or the proposed form of any such agreement whose terms have
not yet been determined; and a description of the plan of
distribution of any securities that are to be offered otherwise
than through an underwriter;
(ix) The estimated monetary proceeds to be received
by the issuer from the offering; the purposes for which the
proceeds are to be used by the issuer; the estimated amount to
be used for each purpose; the order or priority in which the
proceeds will be used for the purposes stated; the amounts of
any funds to be raised from other sources to achieve the
purposes stated; the sources of the funds; and, if a part of the
proceeds is to be used to acquire property, including goodwill,
otherwise than in the ordinary course of business, the names and
addresses of the vendors, the purchase price, the names of any
persons that have received commissions in connection with the
acquisition, and the amounts of the commissions and other
expenses in connection with the acquisition, including the cost
of borrowing money to finance the acquisition;
(x) A description of any stock options or other
security options outstanding, or to be created in connection
with the offering, and the amount of those options held or to be
held by each person required to be named in paragraph (ii),
(iv), (v), (vi), or (viii) of this subsection and by any person
that holds or will hold ten percent (10%) or more in the
aggregate of those options;
(xi) The dates of, parties to, and general effect
concisely stated of each managerial or other material contract
made or to be made otherwise than in the ordinary course of
business to be performed in whole or in part at or after the
filing of the registration statement or that was made within the
previous two (2) years, and a copy of the contract;
(xii) A description of any pending litigation,
action, or proceeding to which the issuer is a party and that
materially affects its business or assets, and any litigation,
action, or proceeding known to be contemplated by governmental
authorities;
(xiii) A copy of any prospectus, pamphlet, circular,
form letter, advertisement, or other sales literature intended
as of the effective date to be used in connection with the
offering and any solicitation of interest used in compliance
with W.S. 17-4-202(a)(xvii)(B);
(xiv) A specimen or copy of the security being
registered, unless the security is uncertificated; a copy of the
issuer's articles of incorporation and bylaws or their
substantial equivalents, in effect; and a copy of any indenture
or other instrument covering the security to be registered;
(xv) A signed or conformed copy of an opinion of
counsel concerning the legality of the security being
registered, with an English translation if it is in a language
other than English, which states whether the security when sold
will be validly issued, fully paid, and nonassessable and, if a
debt security, a binding obligation of the issuer;
(xvi) A signed or conformed copy of a consent of any
accountant, engineer, appraiser, or other person whose
profession gives authority for a statement made by the person,
if the person is named as having prepared or certified a report
or valuation, other than an official record, that is public,
which is used in connection with the registration statement;
(xvii) A balance sheet of the issuer as of a date
within four (4) months before the filing of the registration
statement; a statement of income and a statement of cash flows
for each of the three (3) fiscal years preceding the date of the
balance sheet and for any period between the close of the
immediately previous fiscal year and the date of the balance
sheet, or for the period of the issuer's and any predecessor's
existence if less than three (3) years; and, if any part of the
proceeds of the offering is to be applied to the purchase of a
business, the financial statements that would be required if
that business were the registrant; and
(xviii) Any additional information or records
required by rule adopted or order issued under this act.
(c) A registration statement under this section becomes
effective when the secretary of state so orders.
(d) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require as a condition of registration under this section that a
prospectus containing a specified part of the information or
record specified in subsection (b) of this section be sent or
given to each person to which an offer is made, before or
concurrently, with the earliest of:
(i) The first offer made in a record to the person
otherwise than by means of a public advertisement, by or for the
account of the issuer or another person on whose behalf the
offering is being made or by an underwriter or broker-dealer
that is offering part of an unsold allotment or subscription
taken by the person as a participant in the distribution;
(ii) The confirmation of a sale made by or for the
account of the person;
(iii) Payment pursuant to such a sale; or
(iv) Delivery of the security pursuant to such a
sale.
17-4-305. Securities registration filings.
(a) A registration statement may be filed by the issuer, a
person on whose behalf the offering is to be made, or a
broker-dealer registered under this act.
(b) A person filing a registration statement shall pay a
filing fee of one-fiftieth of one percent (.0002) of the total
dollar offering amount to be offered in this state, but the fee
shall in no case be less than two hundred dollars ($200.00) nor
more than six hundred dollars ($600.00) when filing an initial
registration statement or renewing a previously filed
registration statement. If a registration statement is withdrawn
before the effective date or a preeffective stop order is issued
under W.S. 17-4-306 the secretary of state shall retain one
hundred dollars ($100.00) of the fee.
(c) A registration statement filed under W.S. 17-4-303 or
17-4-304 must specify:
(i) The amount of securities to be offered in this
state;
(ii) The states in which a registration statement or
similar record in connection with the offering has been or is to
be filed; and
(iii) Any adverse order, judgment, or decree issued
in connection with the offering by a state securities regulator,
the securities and exchange commission, or a court.
(d) A record filed under this act or the predecessor act
within five (5) years preceding the filing of a registration
statement may be incorporated by reference in the registration
statement to the extent that the record is currently accurate.
(e) In the case of a nonissuer distribution, information
or a record may not be required under subsection (j) of this
section or W.S. 17-4-304, unless it is known to the person
filing the registration statement or to the person on whose
behalf the distribution is to be made or unless it can be
furnished by those persons without unreasonable effort or
expense.
(f) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require as a condition of registration that a security issued
within the previous five (5) years or to be issued to a promoter
for a consideration substantially less than the public offering
price or to a person for a consideration other than cash be
deposited in escrow; and that the proceeds from the sale of the
registered security in this state be impounded until the issuer
receives a specified amount from the sale of the security either
in this state or elsewhere. The conditions of any escrow or
impoundment required under this subsection may be established by
rule adopted or order issued under this act, but the secretary
of state may not reject a depository institution solely because
of its location in another state.
(g) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require as a condition of registration that a security
registered under this act be sold only on a specified form of
subscription or sale contract and that a signed or conformed
copy of each contract be filed under this act or preserved for a
period specified by the rule or order, which may not be longer
than five (5) years.
(h) Except while a stop order is in effect under W.S.
17-4-306, a registration statement is effective for one (1) year
after its effective date, or for any longer period designated in
an order under this act during which the security is being
offered or distributed in a nonexempted transaction by or for
the account of the issuer or other person on whose behalf the
offering is being made or by an underwriter or broker-dealer
that is still offering part of an unsold allotment or
subscription taken as a participant in the distribution. For the
purposes of a nonissuer transaction, all outstanding securities
of the same class identified in the registration statement as a
security registered under this act are considered to be
registered while the registration statement is effective. If any
securities of the same class are outstanding, a registration
statement may not be withdrawn until one (1) year after its
effective date. A registration statement may be withdrawn only
with the approval of the secretary of state.
(j) While a registration statement is effective, a rule
adopted or order issued under this act may require the person
that filed the registration statement to file reports, not more
often than quarterly, to keep the information or other record in
the registration statement reasonably current and to disclose
the progress of the offering.
(k) A registration statement may be amended after its
effective date. The post effective amendment becomes effective
when the secretary of state so orders. If a post effective
amendment is made to increase the number of securities specified
to be offered or sold, the person filing the amendment shall pay
a registration fee specified in subsection (b) of this section.
A post effective amendment relates back to the date of the
offering of the additional securities being registered if,
within one (1) year after the date of the sale, the amendment is
filed and the additional registration fee is paid.
17-4-306. Denial, suspension, and revocation of securities
registration.
(a) The secretary of state may issue a stop order denying
effectiveness to, or suspending or revoking the effectiveness
of, a registration statement if the secretary of state finds
that the order is in the public interest and that:
(i) The registration statement as of its effective
date or before the effective date in the case of an order
denying effectiveness, an amendment under W.S. 17-4-305(k) as of
its effective date, or a report under W.S. 17-4-305(j), is
incomplete in a material respect or contains a statement that,
in the light of the circumstances under which it was made, was
false or misleading with respect to a material fact;
(ii) This act or a rule adopted or order issued under
this act or a condition imposed under this act has been
willfully violated, in connection with the offering, by the
person filing the registration statement; by the issuer, a
partner, officer, or director of the issuer or a person having a
similar status or performing a similar function; a promoter of
the issuer; or a person directly or indirectly controlling or
controlled by the issuer; but only if the person filing the
registration statement is directly or indirectly controlled by
or acting for the issuer; or by an underwriter;
(iii) The security registered or sought to be
registered is the subject of a permanent or temporary injunction
of a court of competent jurisdiction or an administrative stop
order or similar order issued under any federal, foreign, or
state law other than this act applicable to the offering, but
the secretary of state may not institute a proceeding against an
effective registration statement under this paragraph more than
one (1) year after the date of the order or injunction on which
it is based, and the secretary of state may not issue an order
under this paragraph on the basis of an order or injunction
issued under the securities act of another state unless the
order or injunction was based on conduct that would constitute,
as of the date of the order, a ground for a stop order under
this section;
(iv) The issuer's enterprise or method of business
includes or would include activities that are unlawful where
performed;
(v) With respect to a security sought to be
registered under W.S. 17-4-303, there has been a failure to
comply with the undertaking required by W.S. 17-4-303(b)(iv);
(vi) The applicant or registrant has not paid the
filing fee, but the secretary of state shall void the order if
the deficiency is corrected; or
(vii) The offering:
(A) Will work or tend to work a fraud upon
purchasers or would so operate;
(B) Has been or would be made with unreasonable
amounts of underwriters' and sellers' discounts, commissions, or
other compensation, or promoters' profits or participations, or
unreasonable amounts or kinds of options; or
(C) Is being made on terms that are unfair,
unjust, or inequitable.
(b) To the extent practicable, the secretary of state by
rule adopted or order issued under this act shall publish
standards that provide notice of conduct that violates paragraph
(a)(vii) of this section.
(c) The secretary of state may not institute a stop order
proceeding against an effective registration statement on the
basis of conduct or a transaction known to the secretary of
state when the registration statement became effective unless
the proceeding is instituted within thirty (30) days after the
registration statement became effective.
(d) The secretary of state may summarily revoke, deny,
postpone, or suspend the effectiveness of a registration
statement pending final determination of an administrative
proceeding. Upon the issuance of the order, the secretary of
state shall promptly notify each person specified in subsection
(e) of this section that the order has been issued, the reasons
for the revocation, denial, postponement, or suspension, and
that within fifteen (15) days after the receipt of a request in
a record from the person the matter will be scheduled for a
hearing. If a hearing is not requested and none is ordered by
the secretary of state, within thirty (30) days after the date
of service of the order, the order becomes final. If a hearing
is requested or ordered, the secretary of state, after notice of
and opportunity for hearing for each person subject to the
order, may modify or vacate the order or extend the order until
final determination.
(e) A stop order may not be issued under this section
without:
(i) Appropriate notice to the applicant or
registrant, the issuer, and the person on whose behalf the
securities are to be or have been offered;
(ii) An opportunity for hearing; and
(iii) Findings of fact and conclusions of law in a
record in accordance with the Wyoming Administrative Procedure
Act.
(f) The secretary of state may modify or vacate a stop
order issued under this section if the secretary of state finds
that the conditions that caused its issuance have changed or
that it is necessary or appropriate in the public interest or
for the protection of investors.
17-4-307. Waiver and modification.
The secretary of state may waive or modify, in whole or in part,
any or all of the requirements of W.S. 17-4-302, 17-4-303, and
17-4-304(b) or the requirement of any information or record in a
registration statement or in a periodic report filed pursuant to
W.S. 17-4-305(j).
ARTICLE 4 - BROKER-DEALERS, AGENTS, INVESTMENT ADVISERS,
INVESTMENT ADVISER REPRESENTATIVES, AND FEDERAL COVERED
INVESTMENT ADVISERS
17-4-401. Broker-dealers registration requirement and
exemptions.
(a) It is unlawful for a person to transact business in
this state as a broker-dealer unless the person is registered
under this act as a broker-dealer or is exempt from registration
as a broker-dealer under subsection (b) or (d) of this section.
(b) The following persons are exempt from the registration
requirement of subsection (a) of this section:
(i) A broker-dealer without a place of business in
this state if its only transactions effected in this state are
exclusively with or through:
(A) The issuer of the securities involved in the
transactions;
(B) A broker-dealer registered as a
broker-dealer under this act or not required to be registered as
a broker-dealer under this act;
(C) An institutional investor;
(D) A nonaffiliated federal covered investment
adviser with investments under management in excess of one
hundred million dollars ($100,000,000.00) acting for the account
of others pursuant to discretionary authority in a signed
record;
(E) A bona fide preexisting customer whose
principal place of residence is not in this state and the person
is registered as a broker-dealer under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 or not required to be registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is registered under the
securities act of the state in which the customer maintains a
principal place of residence;
(F) A bona fide preexisting customer whose
principal place of residence is in this state but was not
present in this state when the customer relationship was
established, if:
(I) The broker-dealer is registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or not required to be
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is
registered under the securities laws of the state in which the
customer relationship was established and where the customer had
maintained a principal place of residence; and
(II) Within forty-five (45) days after the
customer's first transaction in this state, the person files an
application for registration as a broker-dealer in this state
and a further transaction is not effected more than seventy-five
(75) days after the date on which the application is filed, or,
if earlier, the date on which the secretary of state notifies
the person that the secretary of state has denied the
application for registration or has stayed the pendency of the
application for good cause.
(G) Not more than one (1) customer in this state
during the previous twelve (12) months, in addition to those
customers specified in subparagraphs (A) through (F) and under
subparagraph (H) of this paragraph, if the broker-dealer is
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or not
required to be registered under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 and is registered under the securities act of the state in
which the broker-dealer has its principal place of business; and
(H) Any other person exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(ii) A person that deals solely in United States
government securities and is supervised as a dealer in
government securities by the board of governors of the federal
reserve system, the comptroller of the currency, the federal
deposit insurance corporation, or the office of thrift
supervision.
(c) It is unlawful for a broker-dealer, or for an issuer
engaged in offering, offering to purchase, purchasing, or
selling securities in this state, directly or indirectly, to
employ or associate with an individual to engage in an activity
related to securities transactions in this state if the
registration of the individual is suspended or revoked or the
individual is barred from employment or association with a
broker-dealer, an issuer, an investment adviser, or a federal
covered investment adviser by an order of the secretary of state
under this act, the securities and exchange commission, or a
self-regulatory organization. A broker-dealer or issuer does not
violate this subsection if the broker-dealer or issuer did not
know and in the exercise of reasonable care could not have
known, of the suspension, revocation, or bar. Upon request from
a broker-dealer or issuer and for good cause, an order under
this act may modify or waive, in whole or in part, the
application of the prohibitions of this subsection to the
broker-dealer.
(d) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
permit:
(i) A broker-dealer that is registered in Canada or
other foreign jurisdiction and that does not have a place of
business in this state to effect transactions in securities with
or for, or attempt to effect the purchase or sale of any
securities by:
(A) An individual from Canada or other foreign
jurisdiction who is temporarily present in this state and with
whom the broker-dealer had a bona fide customer relationship
before the individual entered the United States;
(B) An individual from Canada or other foreign
jurisdiction who is present in this state and whose transactions
are in a self-directed tax advantaged retirement plan of which
the individual is the holder or contributor in that foreign
jurisdiction; or
(C) An individual who is present in this state,
with whom the broker-dealer customer relationship arose while
the individual was temporarily or permanently resident in Canada
or the other foreign jurisdiction.
(ii) An agent who represents a broker-dealer that is
exempt under this subsection to effect transactions in
securities or attempt to effect the purchase or sale of
securities in this state as permitted for a broker-dealer
described in paragraph (i) of this subsection.
17-4-402. Agent registration requirement and exemptions.
(a) It is unlawful for an individual to transact business
in this state as an agent unless the individual is registered
under this act as an agent or is exempt from registration as an
agent under subsection (b) of this section.
(b) The following individuals are exempt from the
registration requirement of subsection (a) of this section:
(i) An individual who represents a broker-dealer in
effecting transactions in this state limited to those described
in section 15(h)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. § 78(o)(2));
(ii) An individual who represents a broker-dealer
that is exempt under W.S. 17-4-401(b) or (d);
(iii) An individual who represents an issuer with
respect to an offer or sale of the issuer's own securities or
those of the issuer's parent or any of the issuer's
subsidiaries, and who is not compensated in connection with the
individual's participation by the payment of commissions or
other remuneration based, directly or indirectly, on
transactions in those securities;
(iv) An individual who represents an issuer and who
effects transactions in the issuer's securities exempted by W.S.
17-4-202, other than W.S. 17-4-202(a)(xi) and (xiv);
(v) An individual who represents an issuer that
effects transactions solely in federal covered securities of the
issuer, but an individual who effects transactions in a federal
covered security under section 18(b)(3) or 18(b)(4)(D) of the
Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. § 77r(b)(3) or 77r(b)(4)(D))
is not exempt if the individual is compensated in connection
with the agent's participation by the payment of commissions or
other remuneration based, directly or indirectly, on
transactions in those securities;
(vi) An individual who represents a broker-dealer
registered in this state under W.S. 17-4-401(a) or exempt from
registration under W.S. 17-4-401(b) in the offer and sale of
securities for an account of a nonaffiliated federal covered
investment adviser with investments under management in excess
of one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000.00) acting for the
account of others pursuant to discretionary authority in a
signed record;
(vii) An individual who represents an issuer in
connection with the purchase of the issuer's own securities;
(viii) An individual who represents an issuer and who
restricts participation to performing clerical or ministerial
acts; or
(ix) Any other individual exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(c) The registration of an agent is effective only while
the agent is employed by or associated with a broker-dealer
registered under this act or an issuer that is offering,
selling, or purchasing its securities in this state.
(d) It is unlawful for a broker-dealer, or an issuer
engaged in offering, selling, or purchasing securities in this
state, to employ or associate with an agent who transacts
business in this state on behalf of broker-dealers or issuers
unless the agent is registered under subsection (a) of this
section or exempt from registration under subsection (b) of this
section.
17-4-403. Investment adviser registration requirement.
(a) It is unlawful for a person to transact business in
this state as an investment adviser unless the person is
registered under this act as an investment adviser or is exempt
from registration as an investment adviser under subsection (b)
of this section.
(b) The following persons are exempt from the registration
requirement of subsection (a) of this section:
(i) A person without a place of business in this
state that is registered under the securities act of the state
in which the person has its principal place of business if its
only clients in this state are:
(A) Federal covered investment advisers,
investment advisers registered under this act, or broker-dealers
registered under this act;
(B) Institutional investors;
(C) Bona fide preexisting clients whose
principal places of residence are not in this state if the
investment adviser is registered under the securities act of the
state in which the clients maintain principal places of
residence; or
(D) Any other client exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(ii) A person without a place of business in this
state if the person has had, during the preceding twelve (12)
months, not more than five (5) clients that are resident in this
state in addition to those specified under paragraph (i) of this
subsection; or
(iii) Any other person exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(c) It is unlawful for an investment adviser, directly or
indirectly, to employ or associate with an individual to engage
in an activity related to investment advice in this state if the
registration of the individual is suspended or revoked or the
individual is barred from employment or association with an
investment adviser, federal covered investment adviser, or
broker-dealer by an order under this act, the securities and
exchange commission, or a self-regulatory organization, unless
the investment adviser did not know, and in the exercise of
reasonable care could not have known, of the suspension,
revocation, or bar. Upon request from the investment adviser and
for good cause, the secretary of state, by order, may waive, in
whole or in part, the application of the prohibitions of this
subsection to the investment adviser.
(d) It is unlawful for an investment adviser to employ or
associate with an individual required to be registered under
this act as an investment adviser representative who transacts
business in this state on behalf of the investment adviser
unless the individual is registered under W.S. 17-4-404(a) or is
exempt from registration under W.S. 17-4-404(b).
17-4-404. Investment adviser representative registration
requirement and exemptions.
(a) It is unlawful for an individual to transact business
in this state as an investment adviser representative unless the
individual is registered under this act as an investment adviser
representative or is exempt from registration as an investment
adviser representative under subsection (b) of this section.
(b) The following individuals are exempt from the
registration requirement of subsection (a) of this section:
(i) An individual who is employed by or associated
with an investment adviser that is exempt from registration
under W.S. 17-4-403(b) or a federal covered investment adviser
that is excluded from the notice filing requirements of W.S.
17-4-405; and
(ii) Any other individual exempted by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(c) The registration of an investment adviser
representative is not effective while the investment adviser
representative is not employed by or associated with an
investment adviser registered under this act or a federal
covered investment adviser that has made or is required to make
a notice filing under W.S. 17-4-405.
(d) An individual may transact business as an investment
adviser representative for more than one (1) investment adviser
or federal covered investment adviser unless a rule adopted or
order issued under this act prohibits or limits an individual
from acting as an investment adviser representative for more
than one (1) investment adviser or federal covered investment
adviser.
(e) It is unlawful for an individual acting as an
investment adviser representative, directly or indirectly, to
conduct business in this state on behalf of an investment
adviser or a federal covered investment adviser if the
registration of the individual as an investment adviser
representative is suspended or revoked or the individual is
barred from employment or association with an investment adviser
or a federal covered investment adviser by an order under this
act, the securities and exchange commission, or a
self-regulatory organization. Upon request from a federal
covered investment adviser and for good cause, the secretary of
state, by order issued, may waive, in whole or in part, the
application of the requirements of this subsection to the
federal covered investment adviser.
(f) An investment adviser registered under this act, a
federal covered investment adviser that has filed a notice under
W.S. 17-4-405, or a broker-dealer registered under this act is
not required to employ or associate with an individual as an
investment adviser representative if the only compensation paid
to the individual for a referral of investment advisory clients
is paid to an investment adviser registered under this act, a
federal covered investment adviser who has filed a notice under
W.S. 17-4-405, or a broker-dealer registered under this act with
which the individual is employed or associated as an investment
adviser representative.
17-4-405. Federal covered investment adviser notice filing
requirement.
(a) Except with respect to a federal covered investment
adviser described in subsection (b) of this section, it is
unlawful for a federal covered investment adviser to transact
business in this state as a federal covered investment adviser
unless the federal covered investment adviser complies with
subsection (c) of this section.
(b) The following federal covered investment advisers are
not required to comply with subsection (c) of this section:
(i) A federal covered investment adviser without a
place of business in this state if its only clients in this
state are:
(A) Federal covered investment advisers,
investment advisers registered under this act, and
broker-dealers registered under this act;
(B) Institutional investors;
(C) Bona fide preexisting clients whose
principal places of residence are not in this state; or
(D) Other clients specified by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(ii) A federal covered investment adviser without a
place of business in this state if the person has had, during
the preceding twelve (12) months, not more than five (5) clients
that are resident in this state in addition to those specified
under paragraph (i) of this subsection; and
(iii) Any other person excluded by rule adopted or
order issued under this act.
(c) A person acting as a federal covered investment
adviser, not excluded under subsection (b) of this section,
shall file a notice, a consent to service of process complying
with W.S. 17-4-611, and such records as have been filed with the
securities and exchange commission under the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 required by rule adopted or order issued under this
act and pay the fees specified in W.S. 17-4-410(e).
(d) The notice under subsection (c) of this section
becomes effective upon its filing.
17-4-406. Registration by broker-dealer, agent, investment
adviser, and investment adviser representative.
(a) A person shall register as a broker-dealer, agent,
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative by
filing an application and a consent to service of process
complying with W.S. 17-4-611, and paying the fee specified in
W.S. 17-4-410 and any reasonable fees charged by the designee of
the secretary of state for processing the filing. The
application must contain:
(i) The information or record required for the filing
of a uniform application; and
(ii) Upon request by the secretary of state, any
other financial or other information or record that the
secretary of state determines is appropriate.
(b) If the information or record contained in an
application filed under subsection (a) of this section is or
becomes inaccurate or incomplete in a material respect, the
registrant shall promptly file a correcting amendment.
(c) If an order is not in effect and a proceeding is not
pending under W.S. 17-4-412, registration becomes effective at
noon on the forty-fifth day after a completed application is
filed, unless the registration is denied. A rule adopted or
order issued under this act may set an earlier effective date or
may defer the effective date until noon on the forty-fifth day
after the filing of any amendment completing the application.
(d) A registration is effective until midnight on December
31 of the year for which the application for registration is
filed. Unless an order is in effect under W.S. 17-4-412, a
registration may be automatically renewed each year by filing
such records as are required by rule adopted or order issued
under this act, by paying the fee specified in W.S. 17-4-410,
and by paying costs charged by the designee of the secretary of
state for processing the filings.
(e) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
impose such other conditions, not inconsistent with the National
Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996. An order issued
under this act may waive, in whole or in part, specific
requirements in connection with registration as are in the
public interest and for the protection of investors.
17-4-407. Succession and change in registration of
broker-dealer or investment adviser.
(a) A broker-dealer or investment adviser may succeed to
the current registration of another broker-dealer or investment
adviser or a notice filing of a federal covered investment
adviser, and a federal covered investment adviser may succeed to
the current registration of an investment adviser or notice
filing of another federal covered investment adviser, by filing
as a successor an application for registration pursuant to W.S.
17-4-401 or 17-4-403 or a notice pursuant to W.S. 17-4-405 for
the unexpired portion of the current registration or notice
filing.
(b) A broker-dealer or investment adviser that changes its
form of organization or state of incorporation or organization
may continue its registration by filing an amendment to its
registration if the change does not involve a material change in
its financial condition or management. The amendment becomes
effective when filed or on a date designated by the registrant
in its filing. The new organization is a successor to the
original registrant for the purposes of this act. If there is a
material change in financial condition or management, the
broker-dealer or investment adviser shall file a new application
for registration. A predecessor registered under this act shall
stop conducting its securities business other than winding down
transactions and shall file for withdrawal of broker-dealer or
investment adviser registration within forty-five (45) days
after filing its amendment to effect succession.
(c) A broker-dealer or investment adviser that changes its
name may continue its registration by filing an amendment to its
registration. The amendment becomes effective when filed or on a
date designated by the registrant.
(d) A change of control of a broker-dealer or investment
adviser may be made in accordance with a rule adopted or order
issued under this act.
17-4-408. Termination of employment or association of
agent and investment adviser representative and transfer of
employment or association.
(a) If an agent registered under this act terminates
employment by or association with a broker-dealer or issuer, or
if an investment adviser representative registered under this
act terminates employment by or association with an investment
adviser or federal covered investment adviser, or if either
registrant terminates activities that require registration as an
agent or investment adviser representative, the broker-dealer,
issuer, investment adviser, or federal covered investment
adviser shall promptly file a notice of termination. If the
registrant learns that the broker-dealer, issuer, investment
adviser, or federal covered investment adviser has not filed the
notice, the registrant may do so.
(b) If an agent registered under this act terminates
employment by or association with a broker-dealer registered
under this act and begins employment by or association with
another broker-dealer registered under this act; or if an
investment adviser representative registered under this act
terminates employment by or association with an investment
adviser registered under this act or a federal covered
investment adviser that has filed a notice under W.S. 17-4-405
and begins employment by or association with another investment
adviser registered under this act or a federal covered
investment adviser that has filed a notice under W.S. 17-4-405;
then upon the filing by or on behalf of the registrant, within
thirty (30) days after the termination, of an application for
registration that complies with the requirement of W.S.
17-4-406(a) and payment of the filing fee required under W.S.
17-4-410, the registration of the agent or investment adviser
representative is:
(i) Immediately effective as of the date of the
completed filing, if the agent's central registration depository
record or successor record or the investment adviser
representative's investment adviser registration depository
record or successor record does not contain a new or amended
disciplinary disclosure within the previous twelve (12) months;
or
(ii) Temporarily effective as of the date of the
completed filing, if the agent's central registration depository
record or successor record or the investment adviser
representative's investment adviser registration depository
record or successor record contains a new or amended
disciplinary disclosure within the preceding twelve (12) months.
(c) The secretary of state may withdraw a temporary
registration if there are or were grounds for discipline as
specified in W.S. 17-4-412 and the secretary of state does so
within thirty (30) days after the filing of the application. If
the secretary of state does not withdraw the temporary
registration within the thirty (30) day period, registration
becomes automatically effective on the thirty-first day after
filing.
(d) The secretary of state may prevent the effectiveness
of a transfer of an agent or investment adviser representative
under paragraph (b)(i) or (ii) of this section based on the
public interest and the protection of investors.
(e) If the secretary of state determines that a registrant
or applicant for registration is no longer in existence or has
ceased to act as a broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, or
investment adviser representative, or is the subject of an
adjudication of incapacity or is subject to the control of a
committee, conservator, or guardian, or cannot reasonably be
located, a rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require the registration be cancelled or terminated or the
application denied. The secretary of state may reinstate a
cancelled or terminated registration, with or without hearing,
and may make the registration retroactive.
17-4-409. Withdrawal of registration of broker-dealer,
agent, investment adviser, and investment adviser
representative.
Withdrawal of registration by a broker-dealer, agent, investment
adviser, or investment adviser representative becomes effective
sixty (60) days after the filing of the application to withdraw
or within any shorter period as provided by rule adopted or
order issued under this act unless a revocation or suspension
proceeding is pending when the application is filed. If a
proceeding is pending, withdrawal becomes effective when and
upon such conditions as required by rule adopted or order issued
under this act. The secretary of state may institute a
revocation or suspension proceeding under W.S. 17-4-412 within
one (1) year after the withdrawal became effective automatically
and issue a revocation or suspension order as of the last date
on which registration was effective if a proceeding is not
pending.
17-4-410. Filing fees.
(a) A person shall pay a fee of two hundred fifty dollars
($250.00) when initially filing an application for registration
as a broker-dealer and a fee of two hundred fifty dollars
($250.00) when filing a renewal of registration as a broker-
dealer. If the filing results in a denial or withdrawal, the
secretary of state shall retain the entire fee.
(b) The fee for an individual is forty-five dollars
($45.00) when filing an application for registration as an
agent, a fee of forty-five dollars ($45.00) when filing a
renewal of registration as an agent, and a fee of forty-five
dollars ($45.00) when filing for a change of registration as an
agent. If the filing results in a denial or withdrawal, the
secretary of state shall retain the entire fee.
(c) A person shall pay a fee of two hundred fifty dollars
($250.00) when filing an application for registration as an
investment adviser and a fee of two hundred fifty dollars
($250.00) when filing a renewal of registration as an investment
adviser. If the filing results in a denial or withdrawal, the
secretary of state shall retain the entire fee.
(d) The fee for an individual is forty-five dollars
($45.00) when filing an application for registration as an
investment adviser representative, a fee of forty-five dollars
($45.00) when filing a renewal of registration as an investment
adviser representative, and a fee of forty-five dollars ($45.00)
when filing a change of registration as an investment adviser
representative. If the filing results in a denial or withdrawal,
the secretary of state shall retain the entire fee.
(e) A federal covered investment adviser required to file
a notice under W.S. 17-4-405 shall pay an initial fee of two
hundred fifty dollars ($250.00) and an annual notice fee of two
hundred fifty dollars ($250.00).
(f) A person required to pay a filing or notice fee under
this section may transmit the fee through or to a designee as a
rule or order provides under this act.
(g) An investment adviser representative who is registered
as an agent under W.S. 17-4-402 and who represents a person that
is both registered as a broker-dealer under W.S. 17-4-401 and
registered as an investment adviser under W.S. 17-4-403 or
required as a federal covered investment adviser to make a
notice filing under W.S. 17-4-405 is not required to pay an
initial or annual registration fee for registration as an
investment adviser representative.
17-4-411. Post registration requirements.
(a) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78o(h)) or section 222 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-22), a rule
adopted or order issued under this act may establish minimum
financial requirements for broker-dealers registered or required
to be registered under this act and investment advisers
registered or required to be registered under this act.
(b) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78o(h)) or section 222(b) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-22), a
broker-dealer registered or required to be registered under this
act and an investment adviser registered or required to be
registered under this act shall file such financial reports as
are required by a rule adopted or order issued under this act.
If the information contained in a record filed under this
subsection is or becomes inaccurate or incomplete in a material
respect, the registrant shall promptly file a correcting
amendment.
(c) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78o(h)) or section 222 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-22):
(i) A broker-dealer registered or required to be
registered under this act and an investment adviser registered
or required to be registered under this act shall make and
maintain the accounts, correspondence, memoranda, papers, books,
and other records required by rule adopted or order issued under
this act;
(ii) Broker-dealer records required to be maintained
under paragraph (i) of this subsection may be maintained in any
form of data storage acceptable under section 17(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78q(a)) if they are
readily accessible to the secretary of state; and
(iii) Investment adviser records required to be
maintained under paragraph (i) of this subsection may be
maintained in any form of data storage required by rule adopted
or order issued under this act.
(d) The records of a broker-dealer registered or required
to be registered under this act and of an investment adviser
registered or required to be registered under this act are
subject to such reasonable periodic, special, or other audits or
inspections by a representative of the secretary of state,
within or without this state, as the secretary of state
considers necessary or appropriate in the public interest and
for the protection of investors. An audit or inspection may be
made at any time and without prior notice. The secretary of
state may copy, and remove for audit or inspection copies of,
all records the secretary of state reasonably considers
necessary or appropriate to conduct the audit or inspection. The
secretary of state may assess a reasonable charge for conducting
an audit or inspection under this subsection.
(e) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78o(h)) or section 222 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-22), a rule
adopted or order issued under this act may require a
broker-dealer or investment adviser that has custody of or
discretionary authority over funds or securities of a customer
or client to obtain insurance or post a bond or other
satisfactory form of security in an amount as set by rule. The
secretary of state may determine the requirements of the
insurance, bond, or other satisfactory form of security.
Insurance or a bond or other satisfactory form of security may
not be required of a broker-dealer registered under this act
whose net capital exceeds, or of an investment adviser
registered under this act whose minimum financial requirements
exceed, the amounts required by rule or order under this act.
The insurance, bond, or other satisfactory form of security must
permit an action by a person to enforce any liability on the
insurance, bond, or other satisfactory form of security if
instituted within the time limitations in W.S. 17-4-509(k)(ii).
(f) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78o(h)) or section 222 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. § 80b-22), an agent
may not have custody of funds or securities of a customer except
under the supervision of a broker-dealer and an investment
adviser representative may not have custody of funds or
securities of a client except under the supervision of an
investment adviser or a federal covered investment adviser. A
rule adopted or order issued under this act may prohibit, limit,
or impose conditions on a broker-dealer regarding custody of
funds or securities of a customer and on an investment adviser
regarding custody of securities or funds of a client.
(g) With respect to an investment adviser registered or
required to be registered under this act, a rule adopted or
order issued under this act may require that information or
other record be furnished or disseminated to clients or
prospective clients in this state as necessary or appropriate in
the public interest and for the protection of investors and
advisory clients.
(h) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require an individual registered under W.S. 17-4-402 or 17-4-404
to participate in a continuing education program approved by the
securities and exchange commission and administered by a
self-regulatory organization or, in the absence of such a
program, a rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require continuing education for an individual registered under
W.S. 17-4-404.
17-4-412. Denial, revocation, suspension, withdrawal,
restriction, condition, or limitation of registration.
(a) If the secretary of state finds that the order is in
the public interest and subsection (d) of this section
authorizes the action, an order issued under this act may deny
an application, or may condition or limit registration of an
applicant to be a broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, or
investment adviser representative, and, if the applicant is a
broker-dealer or investment adviser, of a partner, officer,
director, or person having a similar status or performing
similar functions, or a person directly or indirectly in
control, of the broker-dealer or investment adviser.
(b) If the secretary of state finds that the order is in
the public interest and subsection (d) of this section
authorizes the action, an order issued under this act may
revoke, suspend, condition, or limit the registration of a
registrant and, if the registrant is a broker-dealer or
investment adviser, of a partner, officer, director, or person
having a similar status or performing similar functions, or a
person directly or indirectly in control, of the broker-dealer
or investment adviser. However, the secretary of state may not:
(i) Institute a revocation or suspension proceeding
under this subsection based on an order issued under a law of
another state that is reported to the secretary of state or a
designee of the secretary of state more than one (1) year after
the date of the order on which it is based; or
(ii) Under subparagraph (d)(v)(A) or (B) of this
section, issue an order on the basis of an order issued under
the securities act of another state unless the other order was
based on conduct for which subsection (d) would authorize the
action had the conduct occurred in this state.
(c) If the secretary of state finds that the order is in
the public interest and paragraph (d)(i) through (vi), (viii),
(ix), (x), or (xii) and (xiii) of this section authorizes the
action, an order under this act may censure, impose a bar or
impose a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed a maximum of
five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for a single violation or
fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) for more than one (1)
violation, on a registrant, and, if the registrant is a
broker-dealer or investment adviser, a partner, officer,
director, or person having a similar status or performing
similar functions, or a person directly or indirectly in
control, of the broker-dealer or investment adviser.
(d) A person may be disciplined under subsections (a)
through (c) of this section if the person:
(i) Has filed an application for registration in this
state under this act or the predecessor act within the previous
ten (10) years, which, as of the effective date of registration
or as of any date after filing in the case of an order denying
effectiveness, was incomplete in any material respect or
contained a statement that, in light of the circumstances under
which it was made, was false or misleading with respect to a
material fact;
(ii) Willfully violated or willfully failed to comply
with this act or the predecessor act or a rule adopted or order
issued under this act or the predecessor act within the previous
ten (10) years;
(iii) Has been convicted of a felony that relates to
practice in securities and investing or to the ability to
practice as a broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, or
investment adviser representative, as identified in rule by the
secretary of state consistent with W.S. 33-1-304, or within the
previous ten (10) years has been convicted of a misdemeanor
involving a security, a commodity future or option contract, or
an aspect of a business involving securities, commodities,
investments, franchises, insurance, banking, or finance;
(iv) Is enjoined or restrained by a court of
competent jurisdiction in an action instituted by the secretary
of state under this act or the predecessor act, a state, the
securities and exchange commission, or the United States from
engaging in or continuing an act, practice, or course of
business involving an aspect of a business involving securities,
commodities, investments, franchises, insurance, banking, or
finance;
(v) Is the subject of an order, issued after notice
and opportunity for hearing by:
(A) The securities, depository institution,
insurance, or other financial services regulator of a state or
by the securities and exchange commission or other federal
agency denying, revoking, barring, or suspending registration as
a broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, federal covered
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative;
(B) The securities regulator of a state or the
securities and exchange commission against a broker-dealer,
agent, investment adviser, investment adviser representative, or
federal covered investment adviser;
(C) The securities and exchange commission or a
self-regulatory organization suspending or expelling the
registrant from membership in the self-regulatory organization;
(D) A court adjudicating a United States postal
service fraud order;
(E) The insurance regulator of a state denying,
suspending, or revoking registration as an insurance agent; or
(F) A depository institution regulator
suspending or barring the person from the depository institution
business.
(vi) Is the subject of an adjudication or
determination, after notice and opportunity for hearing, by the
securities and exchange commission, the commodity futures
trading commission; the federal trade commission; a federal
depository institution regulator, or a depository institution,
insurance, or other financial services regulator of a state that
the person willfully violated the Securities Act of 1933, the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Investment Advisers Act of
1940, the Investment Company Act of 1940, or the Commodity
Exchange Act, the securities or commodities law of a state, or a
federal or state law under which a business involving
investments, franchises, insurance, banking, or finance is
regulated;
(vii) Is insolvent, either because the person's
liabilities exceed the person's assets or because the person
cannot meet the person's obligations as they mature, but the
secretary of state may not enter an order against an applicant
or registrant under this paragraph without a finding of
insolvency as to the applicant or registrant;
(viii) Refuses to allow or otherwise impedes the
secretary of state from conducting an audit or inspection under
W.S. 17-4-411(d) or refuses access to a registrant's office to
conduct an audit or inspection under W.S. 17-4-411(d);
(ix) Has failed to reasonably supervise an agent,
investment adviser representative, or other individual, if the
agent, investment adviser representative, or other individual
was subject to the person's supervision and committed a
violation of this act or the predecessor act or a rule adopted
or order issued under this act or the predecessor act within the
previous ten (10) years;
(x) Has not paid the proper filing fee within thirty
(30) days after having been notified by the secretary of state
of a deficiency, but the secretary of state shall vacate an
order under this paragraph when the deficiency is corrected;
(xi) After notice and opportunity for a hearing, has
been found within the previous ten (10) years:
(A) By a court of competent jurisdiction to have
willfully violated the laws of a foreign jurisdiction under
which the business of securities, commodities, investment,
franchises, insurance, banking, or finance is regulated;
(B) To have been the subject of an order of a
securities regulator of a foreign jurisdiction denying,
revoking, or suspending the right to engage in the business of
securities as a broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser,
investment adviser representative, or similar person; or
(C) To have been suspended or expelled from
membership by or participation in a securities exchange or
securities association operating under the securities laws of a
foreign jurisdiction.
(xii) Is the subject of a cease and desist order
issued by the securities and exchange commission or issued under
the securities, commodities, investment, franchise, banking,
finance, or insurance laws of a state;
(xiii) Has engaged in dishonest or unethical
practices in the securities, commodities, investment, franchise,
banking, finance, or insurance business within the previous ten
(10) years; or
(xiv) Is not qualified on the basis of factors such
as training, experience, and knowledge of the securities
business. However, in the case of an application by an agent for
a broker-dealer that is a member of a self-regulatory
organization or by an individual for registration as an
investment adviser representative, a denial order may not be
based on this paragraph if the individual has successfully
completed all examinations required by subsection (e) of this
section. The secretary of state may require an applicant for
registration under W.S. 17-4-402 or 17-4-404 who has not been
registered in a state within the two (2) years preceding the
filing of an application in this state to successfully complete
an examination.
(e) A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require that an examination, including an examination developed
or approved by an organization of securities regulators, be
successfully completed by a class of individuals or all
individuals. An order issued under this act may waive, in whole
or in part, an examination as to an individual and a rule
adopted under this act may waive, in whole or in part, an
examination as to a class of individuals if the secretary of
state determines that the examination is not necessary or
appropriate in the public interest and for the protection of
investors.
(f) The secretary of state may suspend or deny an
application summarily; restrict, condition, limit, or suspend a
registration; or censure, bar, or impose a civil penalty on a
registrant before final determination of an administrative
proceeding. Upon the issuance of an order, the secretary of
state shall promptly notify each person subject to the order
that the order has been issued, the reasons for the action, and
that within fifteen (15) days after the receipt of a request in
a record from the person the matter will be scheduled for a
hearing. If a hearing is not requested and none is ordered by
the secretary of state within thirty (30) days after the date of
service of the order, the order becomes final by operation of
law. If a hearing is requested or ordered, the secretary of
state, after notice of and opportunity for hearing to each
person subject to the order, may modify or vacate the order or
extend the order until final determination.
(g) An order issued may not be issued under this section,
except under subsection (f) of this section, without:
(i) Appropriate notice to the applicant or
registrant;
(ii) Opportunity for hearing; and
(iii) Findings of fact and conclusions of law in a
record in accordance with the Wyoming Administrative Procedure
Act.
(h) A person that controls, directly or indirectly, a
person not in compliance with this section may be disciplined by
order of the secretary of state under subsections (a) through
(c) of this section to the same extent as the noncomplying
person, unless the controlling person did not know, and in the
exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of the
existence of conduct that is a ground for discipline under this
section.
(j) The secretary of state may not institute a proceeding
under subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this section based solely
on material facts actually known by the secretary of state
unless an investigation or the proceeding is instituted within
one (1) year after the secretary of state actually acquires
knowledge of the material facts.
ARTICLE 5 - FRAUD AND LIABILITIES
17-4-501. General fraud.
(a) It is unlawful for a person, in connection with the
offer, sale, or purchase of a security, directly or indirectly:
(i) To employ a device, scheme, or artifice to
defraud;
(ii) To make an untrue statement of a material fact
or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make
the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which
they were made, not misleading; or
(iii) To engage in an act, practice, or course of
business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit
upon another person.
17-4-502. Prohibited conduct in providing investment
advice.
(a) It is unlawful for a person that advises others for
compensation, either directly or indirectly or through
publications or writings, as to the value of securities or the
advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities
or that, for compensation and as part of a regular business,
issues or promulgates analyses or reports relating to
securities:
(i) To employ a device, scheme, or artifice to
defraud another person; or
(ii) To engage in an act, practice, or course of
business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit
upon another person.
(b) A rule adopted under this act may define an act,
practice, or course of business of an investment adviser or an
investment adviser representative, other than a supervised
person of a federal covered investment adviser, as fraudulent,
deceptive, or manipulative, and prescribe means reasonably
designed to prevent investment advisers and investment adviser
representatives, other than supervised persons of a federal
covered investment adviser, from engaging in acts, practices,
and courses of business defined as fraudulent, deceptive, or
manipulative.
(c) A rule adopted under this act may specify the contents
of an investment advisory contract entered into, extended, or
renewed by an investment adviser.
17-4-503. Evidentiary burden.
(a) In a civil action or administrative proceeding under
this act, a person claiming an exemption, exception, preemption,
or exclusion has the burden to prove the applicability of the
claim.
(b) In a criminal proceeding under this act, a person
claiming an exemption, exception, preemption, or exclusion has
the burden of going forward with evidence of the claim.
17-4-504. Filing of sales and advertising literature.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section, a rule adopted or order issued under this act may
require the filing of a prospectus, pamphlet, circular, form
letter, advertisement, sales literature, or other advertising
record relating to a security or investment advice, addressed or
intended for distribution to prospective investors, including
clients or prospective clients of a person registered or
required to be registered as an investment adviser under this
act.
(b) This section does not apply to sales and advertising
literature specified in subsection (a) of this section which
relates to a federal covered security, a federal covered
investment adviser, or a security or transaction exempted by
W.S. 17-4-201 through 17-4-204 except as required pursuant to
W.S. 17-4-201(a)(vii).
17-4-505. Misleading filings.
It is unlawful for a person to make or cause to be made, in a
record that is used in an action or proceeding or filed under
this act, a statement that, at the time and in the light of the
circumstances under which it is made, is false or misleading in
a material respect, or, in connection with the statement, to
omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statement
made, in the light of the circumstances under which it was made,
not false or misleading.
17-4-506. Misrepresentations concerning registration or
exemption.
(a) The filing of an application for registration, a
registration statement, a notice filing under this act, the
registration of a person, the notice filing by a person, or the
registration of a security under this act does not constitute a
finding by the secretary of state that a record filed under this
act is true, complete, and not misleading. The filing or
registration or the availability of an exemption, exception,
preemption, or exclusion for a security or a transaction does
not mean that the secretary of state has passed upon the merits
or qualifications of, or recommended or given approval to, a
person, security, or transaction.
(b) It is unlawful to make, or cause to be made, to a
purchaser, customer, client, or prospective customer or client a
representation inconsistent with this section.
17-4-507. Qualified immunity.
A broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, federal covered
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative is not
liable to another broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser,
federal covered investment adviser, or investment adviser
representative for defamation relating to a statement that is
contained in a record required by the secretary of state, or
designee of the secretary of state, the securities and exchange
commission, or a self-regulatory organization, unless the person
knew, or should have known at the time that the statement was
made, that it was false in a material respect or the person
acted in reckless disregard of the statement's truth or falsity.
17-4-508. Criminal penalties.
(a) A person that willfully violates this act, or a rule
adopted or order issued under this act, except W.S. 17-4-504 or
the notice filing requirements of W.S. 17-4-302 or 17-4-405, or
that willfully violates W.S. 17-4-505 knowing the statement made
to be false or misleading in a material respect, upon
conviction, shall be fined not more than five thousand dollars
($5,000.00) or imprisoned not more than three (3) years, or
both. An individual convicted of violating a rule or order under
this act may be fined, but may not be imprisoned, if the
individual did not have knowledge of the rule or order.
(b) The attorney general or district attorney with or
without a reference from the secretary of state, may institute
criminal proceedings under this act.
(c) This act does not limit the power of this state to
punish a person for conduct that constitutes a crime under other
laws of this state.
17-4-509. Civil Liability.
(a) Enforcement of civil liability under this section is
subject to the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of
1998.
(b) A person is liable to the purchaser if the person
sells a security in violation of W.S. 17-4-301 or, by means of
an untrue statement of a material fact or an omission to state a
material fact necessary in order to make the statement made, in
light of the circumstances under which it is made, not
misleading, the purchaser not knowing the untruth or omission
and the seller not sustaining the burden of proof that the
seller did not know and, in the exercise of reasonable care,
could not have known of the untruth or omission. An action under
this subsection is governed by the following:
(i) The purchaser may maintain an action to recover
the consideration paid for the security, less the amount of any
income received on the security, and interest at six percent
(6%) per year from the date of the purchase, costs, and
reasonable attorneys' fees determined by the court, upon the
tender of the security, or for actual damages as provided in
paragraph (iii) of this subsection;
(ii) The tender referred to in paragraph (i) of this
subsection may be made any time before entry of judgment.
Tender requires only notice in a record of ownership of the
security and willingness to exchange the security for the amount
specified. A purchaser that no longer owns the security may
recover actual damages as provided in paragraph (iii) of this
subsection;
(iii) Actual damages in an action arising under this
subsection are the amount that would be recoverable upon a
tender less the value of the security when the purchaser
disposed of it, and interest at six percent (6%) per year from
the date of the purchase, costs and reasonable attorneys' fees
determined by the court.
(c) A person is liable to the seller if the person buys a
security by means of an untrue statement of a material fact or
omission to state a material fact necessary in order to make the
statement made, in light of the circumstances under which it is
made, not misleading, the seller not knowing of the untruth or
omission, and the purchaser not sustaining the burden of proof
that the purchaser did not know, and in the exercise of
reasonable care, could not have known of the untruth or
omission. An action under this subsection is governed by the
following:
(i) The seller may maintain an action to recover the
security, and any income received on the security, costs, and
reasonable attorneys' fees determined by the court, upon the
tender of the purchase price, or for actual damages as provided
in paragraph (iii) of this subsection;
(ii) The tender referred to in paragraph (i) of this
subsection may be made any time before entry of judgment. Tender
requires only notice in a record of the present ability to pay
the amount tendered and willingness to take delivery of the
security for the amount specified. If the purchaser no longer
owns the security, the seller may recover actual damages as
provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection;
(iii) Actual damages in an action arising under this
subsection are the difference between the price at which the
security was sold and the value the security would have had at
the time of the sale in the absence of the purchaser's conduct
causing liability, and interest at six percent (6%) per year
from the date of the sale of the security, costs, and reasonable
attorneys' fees determined by the court.
(d) A person acting as a broker-dealer or agent that sells
or buys a security in violation of W.S. 17-4-401(a),
17-4-402(a), or 17-4-506 is liable to the customer. The
customer, if a purchaser, may maintain an action for recovery of
actual damages as specified in paragraphs (b)(i) through (iii)
of this section, or, if a seller, for a remedy as specified in
paragraphs (c)(i) through (iii) of this section.
(e) A person acting as an investment adviser or investment
adviser representative that provides investment advice for
compensation in violation of W.S. 17-4-403(a), 17-4-404(a), or
17-4-506 is liable to the client. The client may maintain an
action to recover the consideration paid for the advice,
interest at the rate of six percent (6%) per year from the date
of payment, costs, and reasonable attorneys' fees determined by
the court.
(f) A person that receives directly or indirectly any
consideration for providing investment advice to another person
and that employs a device, scheme, or artifice to defraud the
other person or engages in an act, practice, or course of
business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit on
the other person, is liable to the other person. An action under
this subsection is governed by the following:
(i) The person defrauded may maintain an action to
recover the consideration paid for the advice and the amount of
any actual damages caused by the fraudulent conduct, interest at
six percent (6%) per year from the date of the fraudulent
conduct, costs, and reasonable attorneys' fees determined by the
court, less the amount of any income received as a result of the
fraudulent conduct;
(ii) This subsection does not apply to a
broker-dealer or its agents if the investment advice provided is
solely incidental to transacting business as a broker-dealer and
no special compensation is received for the investment advice.
(g) The following persons are liable jointly and severally
with and to the same extent as persons liable under subsections
(b) through (f) of this section:
(i) A person that directly or indirectly controls a
person liable under subsections (b) through (f) of this section,
unless the controlling person sustains the burden of proof that
the person did not know, and in the exercise of reasonable care
could not have known, of the existence of conduct by reason of
which the liability is alleged to exist;
(ii) An individual who is a managing partner,
executive officer, or director of a person liable under
subsections (b) through (f) of this section, including an
individual having a similar status or performing similar
functions, unless the individual sustains the burden of proof
that the individual did not know and, in the exercise of
reasonable care could not have known, of the existence of
conduct by reason of which the liability is alleged to exist;
(iii) An individual who is an employee of or
associated with a person liable under subsections (b) through
(f) of this section and who materially aids the conduct giving
rise to the liability, unless the individual sustains the burden
of proof that the individual did not know and, in the exercise
of reasonable care could not have known, of the existence of
conduct by reason of which the liability is alleged to exist;
and
(iv) A person that is a broker-dealer, agent,
investment adviser, or investment adviser representative that
materially aids the conduct giving rise to the liability under
subsections (b) through (f) of this section, unless the person
sustains the burden of proof that the person did not know and,
in the exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of the
existence of conduct by reason of which liability is alleged to
exist.
(h) A person liable under this section has a right of
contribution as in cases of contract against any other person
liable under this section for the same conduct.
(j) A cause of action under this section survives the
death of an individual who might have been a plaintiff or
defendant.
(k) A person may not obtain relief:
(i) Under subsection (b) of this section for
violation of W.S. 17-4-301, or under subsection (d) or (e) of
this section, unless the action is instituted within one (1)
year after the violation occurred; or
(ii) Under subsection (b) of this section, other than
for violation of W.S. 17-4-301, or under subsection (c) or (f)
of this section, unless the action is instituted within the
earlier of two (2) years after discovery of the facts
constituting the violation or five (5) years after the
violation.
(m) A person that has made, or has engaged in the
performance of, a contract in violation of this act or a rule
adopted or order issued under this act, or that has acquired a
purported right under the contract with knowledge of conduct by
reason of which its making or performance was in violation of
this act, may not base an action on the contract.
(n) A condition, stipulation, or provision binding a
person purchasing or selling a security or receiving investment
advice to waive compliance with this act or a rule adopted or
order issued under this act is void.
(o) The rights and remedies provided by this act are in
addition to any other rights or remedies that may exist, but
this act does not create a cause of action not specified in this
section or W.S. 17-4-411(e).
17-4-510. Rescission offers.
(a) A purchaser, seller, or recipient of investment advice
may not maintain an action under W.S. 17-4-509 if:
(i) The purchaser, seller, or recipient of investment
advice receives in a record, before the action is instituted:
(A) An offer stating the respect in which
liability under W.S. 17-4-509 may have arisen and fairly
advising the purchaser, seller, or recipient of investment
advice of that person's rights in connection with the offer, and
any financial or other information necessary to correct all
material misrepresentations or omissions in the information that
was required by this act to be furnished to that person at the
time of the purchase, sale, or investment advice;
(B) If the basis for relief under this section
may have been a violation of W.S. 17-4-509(b), an offer to
repurchase the security for cash, payable on delivery of the
security, equal to the consideration paid, and interest at six
percent (6%) per year from the date of the purchase, less the
amount of any income received on the security, or, if the
purchaser no longer owns the security, an offer to pay the
purchaser upon acceptance of the offer damages in an amount that
would be recoverable upon a tender, less the value of the
security when the purchaser disposed of it, and interest at six
percent (6%) per year from the date of the purchase in cash
equal to the damages computed in the manner provided in this
subsection;
(C) If the basis for relief under this section
may have been a violation of W.S. 17-4-509(c), an offer to
tender the security, on payment by the seller of an amount equal
to the purchase price paid, less income received on the security
by the purchaser and interest at six percent (6%) per year from
the date of the sale; or if the purchaser no longer owns the
security, an offer to pay the seller upon acceptance of the
offer, in cash, damages in the amount of the difference between
the price at which the security was purchased and the value the
security would have had at the time of the purchase in the
absence of the purchaser's conduct that may have caused
liability and interest at six percent (6%) per year from the
date of the sale;
(D) If the basis for relief under this section
may have been a violation of W.S. 17-4-509(d); and if the
customer is a purchaser, an offer to pay as specified in
subparagraph (B) of this paragraph; or, if the customer is a
seller, an offer to tender or to pay as specified in
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph;
(E) If the basis for relief under this section
may have been a violation of W.S. 17-4-509(e), an offer to
reimburse in cash the consideration paid for the advice and
interest at six percent (6%) per year from the date of payment;
or
(F) If the basis for relief under this section
may have been a violation of W.S. 17-4-509(f), an offer to
reimburse in cash the consideration paid for the advice, the
amount of any actual damages that may have been caused by the
conduct, and interest at six percent (6%) per year from the date
of the violation causing the loss.
(ii) The offer under paragraph (i) of this subsection
states that it must be accepted by the purchaser, seller, or
recipient of investment advice within thirty (30) days after the
date of its receipt by the purchaser, seller, or recipient of
investment advice or any shorter period, of not less than three
(3) days, that the secretary of state, by order, specifies;
(iii) The offeror has the present ability to pay the
amount offered or to tender the security under paragraph (i) of
this subsection;
(iv) The offer under paragraph (i) of this subsection
is delivered to the purchaser, seller, or recipient of
investment advice, or sent in a manner that ensures receipt by
the purchaser, seller, or recipient of investment advice; and
(v) The purchaser, seller, or recipient of investment
advice that accepts the offer under paragraph (i) of this
subsection in a record within the period specified under
paragraph (ii) of this subsection is paid in accordance with the
terms of the offer.
ARTICLE 6 - ADMINISTRATION AND JUDICIAL REVIEW
17-4-601. Administration.
(a) The secretary of state shall administer this act.
(b) It is unlawful for the secretary of state or an
officer, employee, or designee of the secretary of state to use
for personal benefit or the benefit of others records or other
information obtained by or filed with the secretary of state
that are not public under W.S. 17-4-607(b). This act does not
authorize the secretary of state or an officer, employee, or
designee of the secretary of state to disclose the record or
information, except in accordance with W.S. 17-4-602,
17-4-607(c), or 17-4-608.
(c) This act does not create or diminish a privilege or
exemption that exists at common law, by statute or rule, or
otherwise.
(d) The secretary of state may develop and implement
investor education initiatives to inform the public about
investing in securities, with particular emphasis on the
prevention and detection of securities fraud. In developing and
implementing these initiatives, the secretary of state may
collaborate with public and nonprofit organizations with an
interest in investor education. The secretary of state may
accept a grant or donation from a person that is not affiliated
with the securities industry or from a nonprofit organization,
regardless of whether the organization is affiliated with the
securities industry, to develop and implement investor education
initiatives. This subsection does not authorize the secretary of
state to require participation or monetary contributions of a
registrant in an investor education program.
17-4-602. Investigations and subpoenas.
(a) The secretary of state may:
(i) Conduct public or private investigations within
or outside of this state which the secretary of state considers
necessary or appropriate to determine whether a person has
violated, is violating, or is about to violate this act or a
rule adopted or order issued under this act, or to aid in the
enforcement of this act or in the adoption of rules and forms
under this act;
(ii) Require or permit a person to testify, file a
statement, or produce a record, under oath or otherwise as the
secretary of state determines, as to all the facts and
circumstances concerning a matter to be investigated or about
which an action or proceeding is to be instituted; and
(iii) Publish a record concerning an action,
proceeding, or an investigation under, or a violation of, this
act or a rule adopted or order issued under this act if the
secretary of state determines it is necessary or appropriate in
the public interest and for the protection of investors.
(b) For the purpose of an investigation under this act,
the secretary of state or his designated officer may administer
oaths and affirmations, subpoena witnesses, seek compulsion of
attendance, take evidence, require the filing of statements, and
require the production of any records that the secretary of
state considers relevant or material to the investigation.
(c) If a person does not appear or refuses to testify,
file a statement, produce records, or otherwise does not obey a
subpoena as required by the secretary of state under this act,
the secretary of state may refer the matter to the attorney
general or district attorney, who may apply to the Wyoming
district court or a court of another state to enforce
compliance. The court may:
(i) Hold the person in contempt;
(ii) Order the person to appear before the secretary
of state;
(iii) Order the person to testify about the matter
under investigation or in question;
(iv) Order the production of records;
(v) Grant injunctive relief, including restricting or
prohibiting the offer or sale of securities or the providing of
investment advice;
(vi) Impose a civil penalty of not less than five
thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and not greater than fifty thousand
($50,000.00) for each violation; and
(vii) Grant any other necessary or appropriate
relief.
(d) This section does not preclude a person from applying
to Wyoming district court or a court of another state for relief
from a request to appear, testify, file a statement, produce
records, or obey a subpoena.
(e) An individual is not excused from attending,
testifying, filing a statement, producing a record or other
evidence, or obeying a subpoena of the secretary of state under
this act or in an action or proceeding instituted by the
secretary of state under this act on the ground that the
required testimony, statement, record, or other evidence,
directly or indirectly, may tend to incriminate the individual
or subject the individual to a criminal fine, penalty, or
forfeiture. If the individual refuses to testify, file a
statement, or produce a record or other evidence on the basis of
the individual's privilege against self-incrimination, the
secretary of state may apply to the Wyoming district court to
compel the testimony, the filing of the statement, the
production of the record, or the giving of other evidence. The
testimony, record, or other evidence compelled under such an
order may not be used, directly or indirectly, against the
individual in a criminal case, except in a prosecution for
perjury or contempt or otherwise failing to comply with the
order.
(f) At the request of the securities regulator of another
state or a foreign jurisdiction, the secretary of state may
provide assistance if the requesting regulator states that it is
conducting an investigation to determine whether a person has
violated, is violating, or is about to violate a law or rule of
the other state or foreign jurisdiction relating to securities
matters that the requesting regulator administers or enforces.
The secretary of state may provide the assistance by using the
authority to investigate and the powers conferred by this
section as the secretary of state determines is necessary or
appropriate. The assistance may be provided without regard to
whether the conduct described in the request would also
constitute a violation of this act or other law of this state if
occurring in this state. In deciding whether to provide the
assistance, the secretary of state may consider whether the
requesting regulator is permitted and has agreed to provide
assistance reciprocally within its state or foreign jurisdiction
to the secretary of state on securities matters when requested;
whether compliance with the request would violate or prejudice
the public policy of this state; and the availability of
resources and employees of the secretary of state to carry out
the request for assistance.
17-4-603. Civil enforcement.
(a) If the secretary of state believes that a person has
engaged, is engaging, or is about to engage in an act, practice,
or course of business constituting a violation of this act or a
rule adopted or order issued under this act or that a person
has, is, or is about to engage in an act, practice, or course of
business that materially aids a violation of this act or a rule
adopted or order issued under this act, the secretary of state
may maintain an action in the Wyoming district court to enjoin
the act, practice, or course of business and to enforce
compliance with this act or a rule adopted or order issued under
this act.
(b) In an action under this section and on a proper
showing, the court may:
(i) Issue a permanent or temporary injunction,
restraining order, or declaratory judgment;
(ii) Order other appropriate or ancillary relief,
which may include:
(A) An asset freeze, accounting, writ of
attachment, writ of general or specific execution, and
appointment of a receiver or conservator, that may be the
secretary of state, for the defendant or the defendant's assets;
(B) Ordering the secretary of state to take
charge and control of a defendant's property, including
investment accounts and accounts in a depository institution,
rents, and profits; to collect debts; and to acquire and dispose
of property;
(C) Imposing a civil penalty up to five thousand
dollars ($5,000.00) for a single violation or up to fifty
thousand dollars ($50,000.00) for more than one (1) violation;
an order of rescission, restitution, or disgorgement directed to
a person that has engaged in an act, practice, or course of
business constituting a violation of this act or the predecessor
act or a rule adopted or order issued under this act or the
predecessor act; and
(D) Ordering the payment of prejudgment and post
judgment interest.
(iii) Order such other relief as the court considers
appropriate.
(c) The secretary of state may not be required to post a
bond in an action or proceeding under this act.
17-4-604. Administrative enforcement.
(a) If the secretary of state determines that a person has
engaged, is engaging or is about to engage in an act, practice,
or course of business constituting a violation of this act or a
rule adopted or order issued under this act or that a person has
materially aided, is materially aiding, or is about to
materially aid an act, practice, or course of business
constituting a violation of this act or a rule adopted or order
issued under this act, the secretary of state may:
(i) Issue an order directing the person to cease and
desist from engaging in the act, practice, or course of business
or to take other action necessary or appropriate to comply with
this act;
(ii) Issue an order denying, suspending, revoking, or
conditioning the exemptions for a broker-dealer under W.S.
17-4-401(b)(i)(D) or (F) or an investment adviser under W.S.
17-4-403(b)(i)(C); or
(iii) Issue an order under W.S. 17-4-205.
(b) An order under subsection (a) of this section is
effective on the date of issuance. Upon issuance of the order,
the secretary of state shall promptly serve each person subject
to the order with a copy of the order and a notice that the
order has been entered. The order must include a statement
whether the secretary of state will seek a civil penalty or
costs of the investigation, a statement of the reasons for the
order, and notice that, within fifteen (15) days after receipt
of a request in a record from the person, the matter will be
scheduled for a hearing. If a person subject to the order does
not request a hearing and none is ordered by the secretary of
state within thirty (30) days after the date of service of the
order, the order, which may include a civil penalty or costs of
the investigation if a civil penalty or costs were sought in the
statement accompanying the order, becomes final as to that
person by operation of law. If a hearing is requested or
ordered, the secretary of state, after notice of and opportunity
for hearing to each person subject to the order, may modify or
vacate the order or extend it until final determination.
(c) If a hearing is requested or ordered pursuant to
subsection (b) of this section, a hearing must be held pursuant
to the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. A final order may
not be issued unless the secretary of state makes findings of
fact and conclusions of law in a record in accordance with the
Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. The final order may make
final, vacate, or modify the order issued under subsection (a)
of this section.
(d) In a final order under subsection (c) of this section,
the secretary of state may impose a civil penalty up to five
thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for a single violation or up to
fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) for more than one (1)
violation.
(e) In a final order, the secretary of state may charge
the actual cost of an investigation or proceeding for a
violation of this act or a rule adopted or order issued under
this act.
(f) If a petition for judicial review of a final order is
not filed in accordance with W.S. 17-4-609, the secretary of
state may file a certified copy of the final order with the
clerk of a court of competent jurisdiction. The order so filed
has the same effect as a judgment of the court and may be
recorded, enforced, or satisfied in the same manner as a
judgment of the court.
(g) If a person does not comply with an order under this
section, the secretary of state may petition a court of
competent jurisdiction to enforce the order. The court may not
require the secretary of state to post a bond in an action or
proceeding under this section. If the court finds, after service
and opportunity for hearing, that the person was not in
compliance with the order, the court may adjudge the person in
civil contempt of the order. The court may impose a further
civil penalty against the person for contempt in an amount not
less than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) but not greater than
fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) for each violation and may
grant any other relief the court determines is just and proper
in the circumstances.
17-4-605. Rules, forms, orders, interpretative opinions,
and hearings.
(a) The secretary of state may:
(i) Issue forms and orders and, after notice and
comment, may adopt and amend rules necessary or appropriate to
carry out this act and may repeal rules, including rules and
forms governing registration statements, applications, notice
filings, reports, and other records;
(ii) By rule, define terms, whether or not used in
this act, but those definitions may not be inconsistent with
this act; and
(iii) By rule, classify securities, persons, and
transactions and adopt different requirements for different
classes.
(b) Under this act, a rule or form may not be adopted or
amended, or an order issued or amended, unless the secretary of
state finds that the rule, form, order, or amendment is
necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors and is consistent with the purposes
intended by this act. In adopting, amending, and repealing rules
and forms, W.S. 17-4-608 applies in order to achieve uniformity
among the states and coordination with federal laws in the form
and content of registration statements, applications, reports,
and other records, including the adoption of uniform rules,
forms, and procedures.
(c) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities Exchange
Act and section 222 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, the
secretary of state may require that a financial statement filed
under this act be prepared in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles in the United States and comply with other
requirements specified by rule adopted or order issued under
this act. A rule adopted or order issued under this act may
establish:
(i) Subject to section 15(h) of the Securities
Exchange Act and section 222 of the Investment Advisers Act of
1940, the form and content of financial statements required
under this act;
(ii) Whether unconsolidated financial statements must
be filed; and
(iii) Whether required financial statements must be
audited by an independent certified public accountant.
(d) The secretary of state may provide interpretative
opinions or issue determinations that the secretary of state
will not institute a proceeding or an action under this act
against a specified person for engaging in a specified act,
practice, or course of business if the determination is
consistent with this act. A rule adopted or order issued under
this act may establish a reasonable charge for interpretative
opinions or determinations that the secretary of state will not
institute an action or a proceeding under this act.
(e) A penalty under this act may not be imposed for, and
liability does not arise from conduct that is engaged in or
omitted in good faith believing it conforms to a rule, form, or
order of the secretary of state under this act.
(f) A hearing in an administrative proceeding under this
act must be conducted in public unless the secretary of state
for good cause consistent with this act determines that the
hearing will not be so conducted.
17-4-606. Administrative files and opinions.
(a) The secretary of state shall maintain, or designate a
person to maintain, a register of applications for registration
of securities; registration statements; notice filings;
applications for registration of broker-dealers, agents,
investment advisers, and investment adviser representatives;
notice filings by federal covered investment advisers that are
or have been effective under this act or the predecessor act;
notices of claims of exemption from registration or notice
filing requirements contained in a record; orders issued under
this act or the predecessor act; and interpretative opinions or
no action determinations issued under this act.
(b) The secretary of state shall make all rules, forms,
interpretative opinions, and orders available to the public.
(c) The secretary of state shall control the availability
and dissemination of records, including the records identified
as public records in W.S. 17-4-607, pursuant to the requirements
set forth in the Wyoming Public Records Act, W.S. 16-4-201
through 16-4-205.
17-4-607. Public records; confidentiality.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section, records obtained by the secretary of state or filed
under this act, including a record contained in or filed with a
registration statement, application, notice filing, or report,
are public records and are available for public examination.
(b) The following records are not public records and are
not available for public examination under subsection (a) of
this section:
(i) A record obtained by the secretary of state in
connection with an audit or inspection under W.S. 17-4-411(d) or
an investigation under W.S. 17-4-602;
(ii) A part of a record filed in connection with a
registration statement under W.S. 17-4-301 and 17-4-303 through
17-4-305 or a record under W.S. 17-4-411(d) that contains trade
secrets or confidential information if the person filing the
registration statement or report has asserted a claim of
confidentiality or privilege that is authorized by law;
(iii) A record that is not required to be provided to
the secretary of state or filed under this act and is provided
to the secretary of state only on the condition that the record
will not be subject to public examination or disclosure;
(iv) A nonpublic record received from a person
specified in W.S. 17-4-608(a); and
(v) Any social security number, residential address
unless used as a business address, and residential telephone
number unless used as a business telephone number, contained in
a record that is filed; and
(vi) A record obtained by the secretary of state
through a designee of the secretary of state that a rule or
order under this act determines has been:
(A) Expunged from the secretary of state's
records by the designee; or
(B) Determined to be nonpublic or nondisclosable
by that designee if the secretary of state finds the
determination to be in the public interest and for the
protection of investors.
(c) If disclosure is for the purpose of a civil,
administrative, or criminal investigation, action, or proceeding
or to a person specified in W.S. 17-4-608(a), the secretary of
state may disclose a record obtained in connection with an audit
or inspection under W.S. 17-4-411(d) or a record obtained in
connection with an investigation under W.S. 17-4-602.
17-4-608. Uniformity and cooperation with other agencies.
(a) The secretary of state shall, in his discretion,
cooperate, coordinate, consult, and, subject to W.S. 17-4-607,
share records and information with the securities regulator of
another state, Canada, a Canadian province or territory, a
foreign jurisdiction, the securities and exchange commission,
the United States department of justice, the commodity futures
trading commission, the federal trade commission, the securities
investor protection corporation, a self-regulatory organization,
a national or international organization of securities
regulators, a federal or state banking and insurance regulator,
and a governmental law enforcement agency to effectuate greater
uniformity in securities matters among the federal government,
self-regulatory organizations, states, and foreign governments.
(b) In cooperating, coordinating, consulting, and sharing
records and information under this section and in acting by
rule, order, or waiver under this act, the secretary of state
shall, in its discretion, take into consideration in carrying
out the public interest the following general policies:
(i) Maximizing effectiveness of regulation for the
protection of investors;
(ii) Maximizing uniformity in federal and state
regulatory standards; and
(iii) Minimizing burdens on the business of capital
formation, without adversely affecting essentials of investor
protection.
(c) The cooperation, coordination, consultation, and
sharing of records and information authorized by this section
includes:
(i) Establishing or employing one (1) or more
designees as a central depository for registration and notice
filings under this act and for records required or allowed to be
maintained under this act;
(ii) Developing and maintaining uniform forms;
(iii) Conducting a joint examination or
investigation;
(iv) Holding a joint administrative hearing;
(v) Instituting and prosecuting a joint civil or
administrative proceeding;
(vi) Sharing and exchanging personnel;
(vii) Coordinating registrations under W.S. 17-4-301
and 17-4-401 through 17-4-404 and exemptions under W.S.
17-4-204;
(viii) Sharing and exchanging records, subject to
W.S. 17-4-607;
(ix) Formulating rules, statements of policy,
guidelines, forms, and interpretative opinions and releases;
(x) Formulating common systems and procedures;
(xi) Notifying the public of proposed rules, forms,
statements of policy, and guidelines;
(xii) Attending conferences and other meetings among
securities regulators, which may include representatives of
governmental and private sector organizations involved in
capital formation, deemed necessary or appropriate to promote or
achieve uniformity; and
(xiii) Developing and maintaining a uniform exemption
from registration for small issuers, and taking other steps to
reduce the burden of raising investment capital by small
businesses.
17-4-609. Judicial review.
A final order issued by the secretary of state under this act is
subject to judicial review in accordance with Wyoming
Administrative Procedure Act.
17-4-610. Jurisdiction.
(a) W.S. 17-4-301, 17-4-302, 17-4-401(a), 17-4-402(a),
17-4-403(a), 17-4-404(a), 17-4-501, 17-4-506, 17-4-509, and
17-4-510 do not apply to a person that sells or offers to sell a
security unless the offer to sell or the sale is made in this
state or the offer to purchase or the purchase is made and
accepted in this state.
(b) W.S. 17-4-401(a), 17-4-402(a), 17-4-403(a),
17-4-404(a), 17-4-501, 17-4-506, 17-4-509, and 17-4-510 do not
apply to a person that purchases or offers to purchase a
security unless the offer to purchase or the purchase is made in
this state or the offer to sell or the sale is made and accepted
in this state.
(c) For the purpose of this section, an offer to sell or
to purchase a security is made in this state, whether or not
either party is then present in this state, if the offer:
(i) Originates from within this state; or
(ii) Is directed by the offeror to a place in this
state and received at the place to which it is directed.
(d) For the purpose of this section, an offer to purchase
or to sell is accepted in this state, whether or not either
party is then present in this state, if the acceptance:
(i) Is communicated to the offeror in this state and
the offeree reasonably believes the offeror to be present in
this state and the acceptance is received at the place in this
state to which it is directed; and
(ii) Has not previously been communicated to the
offeror, orally or in a record, outside this state.
(e) An offer to sell or to purchase is not made in this
state when a publisher circulates or there is circulated on the
publisher's behalf in this state a bona fide newspaper or other
publication of general, regular, and paid circulation that is
not published in this state, or that is published in this state
but has had more than two-thirds (2/3) of its circulation
outside this state during the previous twelve (12) months or
when a radio or television program or other electronic
communication originating outside this state is received in this
state. A radio or television program, or other electronic
communication is considered as having originated in this state
if either the broadcast studio or the originating source of
transmission is located in this state, unless:
(i) The program or communication is syndicated and
distributed from outside this state for redistribution to the
general public in this state;
(ii) The program or communication is supplied by a
radio, television, or other electronic network with the
electronic signal originating from outside this state for
redistribution to the general public in this state;
(iii) The program or communication is an electronic
communication that originates outside this state and is captured
for redistribution to the general public in this state by a
community antenna or cable, radio, cable television, or other
electronic system; or
(iv) The program or communication consists of an
electronic communication that originates in this state, but
which is not intended for distribution to the general public in
this state.
(f) W.S. 17-4-403(a), 17-4-404(a), 17-4-405(a), 17-4-502,
17-4-505, and 17-4-506 apply to a person if the person engages
in an act, practice, or course of business instrumental in
effecting prohibited or actionable conduct in this state,
whether or not either party is then present in this state.
17-4-611. Service of process.
(a) A consent to service of process complying with W.S.
17-4-611 required by this act must be signed and filed in the
form required by a rule or order under this act. A consent
appointing the secretary of state the person's agent for service
of process in a noncriminal action or proceeding against the
person, or the person's successor or personal representative
under this act or a rule adopted or order issued under this act
after the consent is filed, has the same force and validity as
if the service were made personally on the person filing the
consent. A person that has filed a consent complying with this
subsection in connection with a previous application for
registration or notice filing need not file an additional
consent.
(b) If a person, including a nonresident of this state,
engages in an act, practice, or course of business prohibited or
made actionable by this act or a rule adopted or order issued
under this act and the person has not filed a consent to service
of process under subsection (a) of this section, the act,
practice, or course of business constitutes the appointment of
the secretary of state as the person's agent for service of
process in a noncriminal action or proceeding against the person
or the person's successor or personal representative.
(c) Service under subsection (a) or (b) of this section
may be made by providing a copy of the process to the office of
the secretary of state, but it is not effective unless:
(i) The plaintiff, which may be the secretary of
state, promptly sends notice of the service and a copy of the
process, return receipt requested, to the defendant or
respondent at the address set forth in the consent to service of
process or, if a consent to service of process has not been
filed, at the last known address, or takes other reasonable
steps to give notice; and
(ii) The plaintiff files an affidavit of compliance
with this subsection in the action or proceeding on or before
the return day of the process, if any, or within the time that
the court, or the secretary of state in a proceeding before the
secretary of state, allows.
(d) Service pursuant to subsection (c) of this section may
be used in a proceeding before the secretary of state or by the
secretary of state in a civil action in which the secretary of
state is the moving party.
(e) If process is served under subsection (c) of this
section, the court, or the secretary of state in a proceeding
before the secretary of state, shall order continuances as are
necessary or appropriate to afford the defendant or respondent
reasonable opportunity to defend.
17-4-612. Severability clause.
If any provision of this act or its application to any person or
circumstances is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect
other provisions or applications of this act that can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this
end the provisions of this act are severable.
17-4-613. Securities enforcement and compliance account;
purposes.
(a) There is created the securities enforcement and
compliance account. Funds within the account shall only be
expended by legislative appropriation. All funds within the
account shall be invested by the state treasurer and all
investment earnings from the account shall be credited to the
general fund.
(b) The secretary of state shall credit sixty percent
(60%) of all fees collected by the secretary of state under this
act to the general fund and the balance to the securities
enforcement and compliance account. Annually, on July 1, monies
within the account in excess of three hundred fifty thousand
dollars ($350,000.00) in the securities enforcement and
compliance account shall be credited to the general fund.
(c) The secretary of state may expend money within the
account created in subsection (a) of this section as
appropriated by the legislature to investigate, prosecute and
otherwise ensure compliance with this act and to promote
investor awareness which may include investment and antifraud
publications and seminars.
(d) The secretary of state shall develop separately
identifiable biennial expenditure requests using a base budget,
standard budget and exception budget as provided in W.S.
9-2-1002 through 9-2-1014 for the purposes specified in this
section and from the account created in subsection (a) of this
section.
ARTICLE 7 - TRANSITION
17-4-701. Application of act to existing proceeding and
existing rights and duties.
(a) The predecessor act exclusively governs all actions or
proceedings that are pending on the effective date of this act
or may be instituted on the basis of conduct occurring before
the effective date of this act, but a civil action may not be
maintained to enforce any liability under the predecessor act
unless instituted within any period of limitation that applied
when the cause of action accrued or within five (5) years after
the effective date of this act, whichever is earlier.
(b) All effective registrations under the predecessor act,
all administrative orders relating to the registrations, rules,
statements of policy, interpretative opinions, declaratory
rulings, no action determinations, and conditions imposed on the
registrations under the predecessor act remain in effect while
they would have remained in effect if this act had not been
enacted. They are considered to have been filed, issued, or
imposed under this act, but are exclusively governed by the
predecessor act.
(c) The predecessor act exclusively applies to an offer or
sale made within one (1) year after the effective date of this
act pursuant to an offering made in good faith before the
effective date of this act on the basis of an exemption
available under the predecessor act.
CHAPTER 5 - LOAN, REAL ESTATE AND ABSTRACT COMPANIES
17-5-101. Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 59, § 2.
17-5-102. Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 59, § 2.
17-5-103. Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 59, § 2.
17-5-104. Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 59, § 2.
17-5-105. Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 59, § 2.
CHAPTER 6 - NONPROFIT CORPORATIONS GENERALLY
17-6-101. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-102. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-103. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-104. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-105. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-106. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-107. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-108. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-109. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-110. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-111. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-112. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-113. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-114. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-115. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-116. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-6-117. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
CHAPTER 7 - CHARITABLE, EDUCATIONAL, RELIGIOUS AND OTHER
SOCIETIES
ARTICLE 1 - IN GENERAL
17-7-101. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-102. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-103. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-104. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-105. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-106. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-107. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-108. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-109. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-110. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-111. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-112. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-113. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-114. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-115. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-7-116. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
ARTICLE 2 - UNIFORM MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
17-7-201. Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 185, § 2.
17-7-202. Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 185, § 2.
17-7-203. Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 185, § 2.
17-7-204. Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 185, § 2.
17-7-205. Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 185, § 2.
ARTICLE 3 - UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS
ACT
17-7-301. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the Uniform Prudent
Management of Institutional Funds Act.
17-7-302. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Charitable purpose" means the relief of poverty,
the advancement of education or religion, the promotion of
health, the promotion of a governmental purpose or any other
purpose the achievement of which is beneficial to the community;
(ii) "Endowment fund" means an institutional fund or
part thereof that, under the terms of a gift instrument, is not
wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis. The
term does not include assets that an institution designates as
an endowment fund for its own use;
(iii) "Gift instrument" means a record or records,
including an institutional solicitation, under which property is
granted to, transferred to or held by an institution as an
institutional fund;
(iv) "Institution" means:
(A) A person, other than an individual,
organized and operated exclusively for charitable purposes;
(B) A government or governmental subdivision,
agency or instrumentality to the extent that it holds funds
exclusively for a charitable purpose; or
(C) A trust that had both charitable and
noncharitable interests, after all noncharitable interests have
been terminated.
(v) "Institutional fund" means a fund held by an
institution exclusively for charitable purposes. The term does
not include:
(A) Program-related assets;
(B) A fund held for an institution by a trustee
that is not an institution; or
(C) A fund in which a beneficiary that is not an
institution has an interest, other than an interest that could
arise upon violation or failure of the purposes of the fund.
(vi) "Person" means as defined by W.S. 8-1-102;
(vii) "Program-related asset" means an asset held by
an institution primarily to accomplish a charitable purpose of
the institution and not primarily for investment;
(viii) "Record" means information that is inscribed
on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other
medium and is retrievable in perceivable form;
(ix) "This act" means W.S. 17-7-301 through 17-7-307.
17-7-303. Standard of conduct in managing and investing
institutional fund.
(a) Subject to the intent of a donor expressed in a gift
instrument, an institution, in managing and investing an
institutional fund, shall consider the charitable purposes of
the institution and the purposes of the institutional fund.
(b) In addition to complying with the duty of loyalty
imposed by law other than this act, each person responsible for
managing and investing an institutional fund shall manage and
invest the fund in good faith and with the care an ordinarily
prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar
circumstances.
(c) In managing and investing an institutional fund, an
institution:
(i) May incur only costs that are appropriate and
reasonable in relation to the assets, the purposes of the
institution and the skills available to the institution; and
(ii) Shall make a reasonable effort to verify facts
relevant to the management and investment of the fund.
(d) An institution may pool two (2) or more institutional
funds for purposes of management and investment.
(e) Except as otherwise provided by a gift instrument, the
following rules shall apply:
(i) In managing and investing an institutional fund,
the following factors if relevant shall be considered:
(A) General economic conditions;
(B) The possible effect of inflation or
deflation;
(C) The expected tax consequences, if any, of
investment decisions or strategies;
(D) The role that each investment or course of
action plays within the overall investment portfolio of the
fund;
(E) The expected total return from income and
the appreciation of investments;
(F) Other resources of the institution;
(G) The needs of the institution and the fund to
make distributions and to preserve capital; and
(H) An asset's special relationship or special
value, if any, to the charitable purposes of the institution.
(ii) Management and investment decisions about an
individual asset shall be made not in isolation but rather in
the context of the institutional fund's portfolio of investments
as a whole and as a part of an overall investment strategy
having risk and return objectives reasonably suited to the fund
and to the institution;
(iii) Except as otherwise provided by law other than
this act, an institution may invest in any kind of property or
type of investment consistent with this section;
(iv) An institution shall diversify the investments
of an institutional fund unless the institution reasonably
determines that, because of special circumstances, the purposes
of the fund are better served without diversification;
(v) Within a reasonable time after receiving
property, an institution shall make and carry out decisions
concerning the retention or disposition of the property or to
rebalance a portfolio in order to bring the institutional fund
into compliance with the purposes, terms and distribution
requirements of the institution as necessary to meet other
circumstances of the institution and the requirements of this
act;
(vi) A person who has special skills or expertise, or
is selected in reliance upon the person's representation that
the person has special skills or expertise, has a duty to use
those skills or that expertise in managing and investing
institutional funds.
17-7-304. Appropriation for expenditure or accumulation of
endowment fund; rules of construction.
(a) Subject to subsection (d) of this section and to the
intent of a donor expressed in the gift instrument, an
institution may appropriate for expenditure or accumulate so
much of an endowment fund as the institution determines is
prudent for the uses, benefits, purposes and duration for which
the endowment fund is established. Unless stated otherwise in
the gift instrument, the assets in an endowment fund are donor-
restricted assets until appropriated for expenditure by the
institution. In making a determination to appropriate or
accumulate, the institution shall act in good faith, with the
care that an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would
exercise under similar circumstances, and shall consider, if
relevant, the following factors:
(i) The duration and preservation of the endowment
fund;
(ii) The purposes of the institution and the
endowment fund;
(iii) General economic conditions;
(iv) The possible effect of inflation or deflation;
(v) The expected total return from income and the
appreciation of investments;
(vi) Other resources of the institution; and
(vii) The investment policy of the institution.
(b) To limit the authority to appropriate for expenditure
or accumulate under subsection (a) of this section, a gift
instrument shall specifically state the limitation.
(c) Terms in a gift instrument designating a gift as an
endowment, or a direction or authorization in the gift
instrument to use only "income", "interest", "dividends", or
"rents, issues or profits", or "to preserve the principal
intact" or words of similar import:
(i) Create an endowment fund of permanent duration
unless other language in the gift instrument limits the duration
or purpose of the fund; and
(ii) Do not otherwise limit the authority to
appropriate for expenditure or accumulate under subsection (a)
of this section.
(d) The appropriation for expenditure in any year of an
amount greater than seven percent (7%) of the fair market value
of an endowment fund, calculated on the basis of market values
determined at least quarterly and averaged over a period of not
less than three (3) years immediately preceding the year in
which the appropriation for expenditure is made, creates a
rebuttable presumption of imprudence. For an endowment fund in
existence for fewer than three (3) years, the fair market value
of the endowment fund shall be calculated for the period the
endowment fund has been in existence. This subsection shall
not:
(i) Apply to an appropriation for expenditure
permitted under law other than this act or by the gift
instrument; or
(ii) Create a presumption of prudence for an
appropriation for expenditure of an amount less than or equal to
seven percent (7%) of the fair market value of the endowment
fund.
17-7-305. Delegation of management and investment
functions.
(a) Subject to any specific limitation set forth in a gift
instrument or in law other than this act, an institution may
delegate to an external agent the management and investment of
an institutional fund to the extent that an institution could
prudently delegate under the circumstances. An institution
shall act in good faith, with the care that an ordinarily
prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar
circumstances, in:
(i) Selecting an agent;
(ii) Establishing the scope and terms of the
delegation, consistent with the purposes of the institution and
the institutional fund; and
(iii) Periodically reviewing the agent's actions in
order to monitor the agent's performance and compliance with the
scope and terms of the delegation.
(b) In performing a delegated function, an agent owes a
duty to the institution to exercise reasonable care to comply
with the scope and terms of the delegation.
(c) An institution that complies with subsection (a) of
this section is not liable for the decisions or actions of an
agent to which the function was delegated.
(d) By accepting delegation of a management or investment
function from an institution that is subject to the laws of this
state, an agent submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of
this state in all proceedings arising from or related to the
delegation or the performance of the delegated function.
(e) An institution may delegate management and investment
functions to its committees, officers or employees as authorized
by law of this state other than this act.
17-7-306. Release or modification of restrictions on
management, investment or purpose.
(a) If the donor consents in a record, an institution may
release or modify, in whole or in part, a restriction contained
in a gift instrument on the management, investment or purpose of
an institutional fund. A release or modification may not allow
a fund to be used for a purpose other than a charitable purpose
of the institution.
(b) The court upon application of an institution, may
modify a restriction contained in a gift instrument regarding
the management or investment of an institutional fund if the
restriction has become impracticable or wasteful, if it impairs
the management or investment of the fund, or if, because of
circumstances not anticipated by the donor, a modification of a
restriction will further the purposes of the fund. If the
institution is a governmental institution as defined by W.S. 17-
7-302(a)(iv), the institution shall notify the attorney general
of the application, and the attorney general shall be given an
opportunity to be heard. To the extent practicable, any
modification shall be made in accordance with the donor's
probable intention.
(c) If a particular charitable purpose or a restriction
contained in a gift instrument on the use of an institutional
fund becomes unlawful, impracticable, impossible to achieve or
wasteful, the court, upon application of an institution, may
modify the purpose of the fund or the restriction on the use of
the fund in a manner consistent with the charitable purposes
expressed in the gift instrument. If the institution is a
governmental institution as defined by W.S. 17-7-302(a)(iv), the
institution shall notify the attorney general of the
application, and the attorney general shall be given an
opportunity to be heard.
(d) If an institution determines that a restriction
contained in a gift instrument on the management, investment or
purposes of an institutional fund is unlawful, impracticable,
impossible to achieve or wasteful, the institution, not less
than sixty (60) days after notification to the attorney general,
may release or modify the restriction, in whole or part, if:
(i) The institutional fund subject to the restriction
has a total value of less than twenty-five thousand dollars
($25,000.00);
(ii) More than twenty (20) years have elapsed since
the fund was established; and
(iii) The institution uses the property in a manner
consistent with the charitable purposes expressed in the gift
instrument.
17-7-307. Reviewing compliance.
Compliance with this act shall be determined in light of the
facts and circumstances existing at the time a decision is made
or action is taken.
CHAPTER 8 - CHURCHES AND RELIGIOUS SOCIETIES GENERALLY
17-8-101. Incorporation by churches, parishes and
societies having governing body; purposes generally.
Churches, parishes, and societies of all religious bodies,
sects, or denominations in this state, or a board of trustees of
such churches, parishes, and societies of all religious bodies,
having an episcopate, presbytery, synod, conference or other
governing body, with spiritual jurisdiction extending over the
whole state, or part thereof not less than six (6) counties, may
become incorporated for religious, missionary, educational or
charitable purposes in the manner hereinafter provided; or said
incorporation may be limited to the purposes of acquiring and
holding the legal title to property, real and personal, required
for the use of such churches, parishes, or societies, or any of
them, or of such general governing body, and for the purpose of
conveying the same, and contracting with reference thereto.
17-8-102. Organization meeting; officers.
The chief or presiding or executive officer of the religious
bodies, sects or denominations mentioned in the preceding
section may, at such place in this state as he may appoint for
the purpose, convene a meeting of himself and some other officer
or officers, subordinate to himself, but having general
jurisdiction throughout the state, or part of the state
aforesaid, and one (1) or more priests, ministers or clergymen
of the proposed church, parish or society, and at least two (2)
laymen resident within the limits thereof, of which meeting the
said chief or presiding or executive officer shall be president
and one (1) of the other persons present shall be secretary.
17-8-103. Contents, execution and filing of articles of
incorporation; competency to transact business in corporate
name.
(a) The said five (5) or more persons, being so convened
and organized as a meeting, shall adopt articles of
incorporation which shall fix:
(i) The name of the church, parish or society so
incorporated, or the name of the church, parish or society in
whose behalf or interest the corporation is formed;
(ii) The object and purpose of the incorporation;
(iii) The amount of debts which it shall be competent
to contract, beyond which amount the corporation shall have no
power to contract debts binding at law or equity upon it, its
members or its property;
(iv) The manner in which it may contract and become
bound for debts and may convey, encumber or change its property;
(v) The manner in which the succession of the members
of said corporation shall be regulated and vacancies in their
number filled;
(vi) The time of the commencement and the termination
of the corporation;
(vii) By what officers its affairs shall be
conducted.
(b) Which articles, being subscribed and acknowledged by
the persons present at said meeting and filed in the office of
the secretary of state, and recorded in the office of the county
clerk of the county where such church, parish or society shall
be located, whereupon such corporation shall be competent to
transact all business in any by its corporate name.
17-8-104. Authority to make bylaws.
Every incorporation under this act shall be authorized to make
such bylaws as may be necessary to carry into effect fully all
the purposes of such incorporation; provided, the same be not in
conflict with the constitution of the United States, the laws of
congress or of this state.
17-8-105. Corporators and members of corporation.
The persons attending said meeting shall be the corporators and
members of the corporation until their places may be supplied by
and under the provisions of the articles of incorporation.
17-8-106. Incorporation by body of Christians for purposes
of education, benevolence, charity and missions.
If any body of Christians has or shall have, according to its
order or mode of government, an organization, whether known as
synod, presbytery, conference, episcopate or other name, with
ecclesiastical or spiritual jurisdiction over its members
throughout this state, and its authorities shall desire to
engage in work of education, benevolence, charity and missions,
which works shall be of like extensive operation and benefit,
and not of limited or local service, and they shall deem an
incorporation convenient for the more successful operation of
said works, all, or any of them, its said authorities, with such
persons as they may associate with them, may cause such
incorporation to be formed in the manner and with the powers
hereinbefore provided for the incorporation of a church,
congregation or society.
17-8-107. Applicability of general corporation laws.
Corporations organized under the provisions of this act shall be
subject to the laws of this state in respect to corporations
which are applicable to them, save as herein expressly provided.
17-8-108. Incorporation for establishing benevolent
institutions and for holding real and personal property.
If any presbytery, synod, conference, episcopate or other
ecclesiastical body or association of Christians having
jurisdiction over its members throughout the state, or a part
thereof, extending over at least four (4) counties, and its
authorities shall desire to establish missions, churches and
other benevolent institutions and in this behalf to acquire
property real and personal to aid in extending its spiritual
jurisdiction and charities, and shall deem an incorporation
necessary or convenient for the more effective accomplishment of
its general objects, its authorities may cause such
incorporation to be formed in the manner and with all the powers
now provided by law for the incorporation of churches,
congregations or societies and such other powers as are incident
and necessary to the successful performance of any or all its
objects.
17-8-109. Corporations; purposes for which such
corporations may be formed.
Corporations may be formed for acquiring, holding or disposing
of church or religious society property, for the benefit of
religion, for works of charity and for public worship in the
manner hereinafter provided.
17-8-110. Corporations; execution, acknowledgment and
filing of articles of incorporation.
Any person being the archbishop, bishop, president, trustee in
trust, president of stake, president of congregation, overseer,
presiding elder, or clergyman, of any church or religious
society, who shall have been duly chosen, elected or appointed,
in conformity with the constitution, canons, rites, regulations,
or discipline of said church or religious society, and in whom
shall be vested the legal title to the property of such church
or religious society, may make and subscribe written articles of
incorporation in duplicate, acknowledge the same before some
officer authorized to take acknowledgment, and file one (1) of
such articles in the office of the secretary of state, and
retain possession of the other.
17-8-111. Corporations; contents of articles of
incorporation; amendment of articles.
(a) The articles of incorporation shall specify:
(i) The name of the corporation, by which it shall be
known;
(ii) The object of said corporation;
(iii) The estimated value of the property at the time
of making the articles of incorporation;
(iv) The title of the person making such articles.
Any corporation so formed shall have power from time to time to
alter or amend its articles of incorporation; such amendment
shall be made by the corporation sole, and executed by the same
person who executed the original articles of incorporation, or
by his successor in office, and shall be filed and recorded in
the same office and in the same manner as is provided for filing
the original articles.
17-8-112. Corporations; creation and powers generally.
Upon making and filing for record articles of incorporation as
herein provided, the person subscribing the same, and his
successor in office by the name or title specified in the
articles, shall thereafter be deemed, and is hereby created, a
body politic and a corporation sole, with continual perpetual
succession, and shall have power to acquire and possess, by
donation, gift, bequest, devise, or purchase, and to hold and
maintain property, real, personal, and mixed, and to grant,
sell, convey, rent, or otherwise dispose of the same as may be
necessary to carry on or promote the objects of the corporation;
and shall have authority to borrow money and to give written
obligations therefor, and to secure the payment thereof by
mortgage or other lien, upon real or personal property, when
necessary to promote said objects.
17-8-113. Corporations; other powers.
Such corporation shall have the power to contract and be
contracted with, to sue and be sued, plead and be pleaded in all
courts of justice, and to have and use a common seal by which
all deeds and acts of such corporation may be authenticated.
17-8-114. Corporations; execution of deeds and other
written instruments.
All deeds and other instruments of writing shall be made in the
name of the corporation and signed by the person representing
the corporation, in the official capacity designated in the
articles of incorporation, and be sealed with the seal of the
corporation, an impression of which seal shall be filed in the
office of the secretary of state.
17-8-115. Corporations; evidence of corporate existence.
The articles of incorporation, or a certified copy of those
filed and recorded in the office of the secretary of state,
shall be evidence of the existence of such corporation.
17-8-116. Corporations; vesting of title to property in
successor; filing of certified copy of commission by successor.
In the event of the death or resignation of any such archbishop,
bishop, president, trustee in trust, president of stake,
president of congregation, overseer, presiding elder, or
clergyman, or of his removal therefrom by the person or body
having authority to remove him, when such person is at the time
a corporation sole, his successor in office, as such corporation
sole, shall be vested with the title to any and all property
held by his predecessor, as such corporation sole, with like
power and authority over the same, and subject to all the legal
liabilities and obligations with reference thereto. Such
successor shall file in the office of the county clerk of each
county wherein any of said real property is situated, a
certified copy of his commission, certificate or letter of
election or appointment.
17-8-117. Vesting of title to property in successor when
held beneficially by church official and not by corporation.
In case of the death, resignation or removal of any such
archbishop, bishop, president, trustee in trust, president of
stake, president of congregation, overseer, presiding elder, or
clergyman, who at the time of his death, resignation, or
removal, was holding the title to trust property for the use or
benefit of any church or religious society, and not incorporated
as a corporation sole, the title to any and all such property
held by him, of every nature and kind, shall not revert to the
donor, nor vest in the heirs of such deceased person, but shall
be deemed to be in abeyance, after such death, resignation, or
removal, until his successor is duly appointed to fill such
vacancy, and upon the appointment of such successor, the title
to all the property held by his predecessor shall at once,
without any other act or deed, vest in the person appointed to
fill such vacancy.
CHAPTER 9 - SECRET OR BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES
17-9-101. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-102. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-103. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-104. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-105. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-106. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-9-107. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 206, § 3.
17-9-108. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 206, § 3.
CHAPTER 10 - COOPERATIVE MARKETING ASSOCIATIONS
ARTICLE 1 - IN GENERAL
17-10-101. Purpose of chapter.
In order to promote, foster, and encourage the intelligent and
orderly marketing of agricultural products through cooperation,
and to eliminate speculation and waste; and to make the
distribution of agricultural products as direct as can be
efficiently done between producer and consumer; and to stabilize
the marketing problems of agricultural products, this act is
passed.
17-10-102. Definitions; associations deemed nonprofit;
short title.
(a) The term "agricultural products" shall include
horticultural, viticultural, forestry, dairy, livestock,
poultry, bee, and any farm products.
(b) The term "member" shall include actual members of
associations without capital stock and holders of common stock
in associations organized with capital stock.
(c) The term "association" or "cooperative" means any
corporation organized under this act.
(d) The term "person" shall include individuals, firms,
partnerships, corporations and associations.
(e) Associations organized hereunder shall be deemed
nonprofit, inasmuch as they are not organized to make profits
for themselves, as such, or for their members as such, but only
for their members as producers.
(f) This act shall be referred to as the "Cooperative
Marketing Act".
17-10-103. Formation.
Five (5) or more persons, qualified electors of the state of
Wyoming, engaged in the production of agricultural products may
form a nonprofit, cooperative association, with or without
capital stock, under the provisions of this act.
17-10-104. Purposes.
An association may be organized to engage in any activity in
connection with the marketing or selling of the agricultural
products of its members, or with the harvesting, preserving,
drying, processing, canning, packing, storing, handling,
shipping, or utilization thereof, of the manufacturing or
marketing of the by-products thereof; or in connection with the
manufacturing, selling, or supplying to its members of
machinery, equipment, or supplies; or in the financing of the
above enumerated activities; or in any one (1) or more of the
activities specified herein.
17-10-105. Certificate of incorporation; execution and
contents.
(a) The incorporators shall sign and acknowledge, in the
manner required for the signing and acknowledgment of deeds, a
certificate of incorporation showing the following facts:
(i) The name of the cooperative;
(ii) The purpose of the cooperative;
(iii)(A) If organized without capital stock, whether
the property rights of each member shall be equal or unequal;
and if unequal, the articles shall set forth the general rule or
rules applicable to all members by which the property rights and
interests, respectively, of each member shall be determined and
fixed; and the association shall have the power to admit new
members who shall be entitled to share in the property of the
association with the old members, in accordance with such
general rule or rules. This provision of the articles of
incorporation shall not be altered, amended, or repealed except
by the written consent or the affirmative vote of three-fourths
of the members;
(B) If organized with capital stock, the amount
of such stock, the number of shares into which the capital stock
is divided, and the par value of each share shall be given.
(iv) The period of duration for the cooperative, if
the duration is not to be perpetual;
(v) The number of directors, not less than five (5)
and the names of those who shall manage the concerns of the
corporation for the first corporate year;
(vi) The name of the town or post office and the
county where the principal office or place of business of the
corporation shall be located;
(vii) Any further provisions, not inconsistent with
law, which the incorporators may deem expedient to be embodied
in such certificate.
17-10-106. Certificate of incorporation; filing; fees;
commencement of corporate existence.
The certificate of incorporation shall be filed in the office of
the secretary of state. The fees for filing or recording such
certificate shall be the same as in the case of corporations
formed under the general corporation laws. The corporation shall
come into existence upon the filing of its certificate in the
office of the secretary of state.
17-10-107. Certificate of incorporation; amendment.
The certificate of incorporation of any association organized
under this act or which may elect to come under the provisions
of this act may be amended in the following manner: the board of
directors, by majority vote of its members, may pass a
resolution setting forth the full text of the proposed amendment
and also the full text of such section or sections as may be
altered or repealed by such amendments. Upon such action by the
board of directors, notice shall be mailed to each and every
member containing a copy of the resolution so adopted, the full
text of the proposed amendment and also the full text of such
section or sections as will be altered or repealed by such
amendment. Such notice shall also designate the time, not less
than twenty (20) days from the mailing of such notice, and place
of the meeting at which such proposed amendment shall be
considered and voted upon. If a quorum of the members is
registered as being present or represented by mail votes at such
meeting, a majority of the members so present or represented by
mail votes may adopt or reject such proposed amendment; provided
that no amendment may be adopted inconsistent with W.S.
17-10-104. Such amendments shall be put into effect by the
directors, who shall sign and acknowledge and file, as above
provided by the general corporation law of this state, new or
revised certificates containing such amendments and superseding
the original certificate.
17-10-108. Applicability of general corporation law
relative to notice for service of process.
Public notice of the filing of the original certificate and of
all amended certificates shall be given in like manner as that
required in the case of corporations formed under the general
corporation law. The corporation shall also designate an agent
and office for the service of papers and processes as required
by the general corporation law.
17-10-109. Powers.
(a) Each cooperative formed under the provisions of this
article shall have power:
(i) To have succession by its corporate name for the
period limited in its certificate;
(ii) To sue and be sued, complain and defend in any
court;
(iii) To establish and use a common seal and alter
the same;
(iv) To hold, purchase and convey such real and
personal property as the purpose of the corporation may require,
including stock or membership in subsidiary, allied or similar
cooperative corporations within or without this state;
(v) To appoint such officers and agents as the
business may require, including in every case, a president and a
secretary, and to fix their compensation;
(vi) To make bylaws not inconsistent with law for the
management of its property, the regulation of its business and
the transfer of its stock or membership;
(vii) To engage in any activity in connection with
producing, marketing, selling, preserving, drying, processing,
canning, packing, handling, storing or utilization of any
agricultural products of its members; or the manufacturing or
marketing of the by-products thereof; or in connection with the
purchase, hiring or use by its members of supplies, machinery or
equipment, or in the financing of such activities, or in any one
(1) or more of the activities specified in this paragraph;
(viii) To borrow money and to make advances to
members upon products of members in the hands of the
association;
(ix) To act as agent or representative of any member
or members in any of the activities mentioned in paragraphs
(vii) and (viii) of this subsection;
(x) To purchase or otherwise acquire, and to hold,
own and exercise all rights of ownership in, and to sell,
transfer or pledge shares of the capital stock or bonds, or
memberships of any corporation or association organized under
this act;
(xi) To establish reserves and invest the funds
thereof in bonds or such other property as may be provided in
the bylaws;
(xii) To do each and everything necessary, suitable
or proper for the accomplishment of any one (1) of the purposes
or the attainment of any one (1) or more of the objects herein
enumerated; and to contract accordingly; and in addition to
exercise and possess all powers, rights and privileges necessary
or incidental to the purposes for which the association is
organized or to the activities in which it is engaged; and in
addition any other rights, powers and privileges granted by the
laws of this state to ordinary corporations, except such as are
inconsistent with the express provisions of this act; and to do
any such things anywhere.
17-10-110. Members and stock generally.
(a) When a member of an association established without
capital stock has paid his membership fee in full, he shall
receive a certificate of membership.
(b) No association shall issue stock to a member until it
has been fully paid for. The promissory notes of the members may
be accepted by the association as full or partial payment. The
association shall hold the stock as security for the payment of
the note, but such retention of security shall not affect the
members' right to vote.
(c) Except for debts lawfully contracted between him and
the association, no member shall be liable for the debts of the
association to an amount exceeding the sum remaining unpaid on
his membership fee or his subscription to the capital stock,
including any unpaid balance on any promissory notes given in
payment thereof.
(d) No stockholder of a cooperative association shall hold
more than twenty percent (20%) of the common stock of the
association; and the association, in its bylaws, may limit the
amount of common stock which one (1) member may own to any
amount less than twenty percent (20%) of the common stock.
(e) No member or stockholder shall be entitled to more
than one (1) vote.
(f) The bylaws shall prohibit the transfer of the common
stock or membership of the association to persons not engaged in
the production of the agricultural products handled by the
association, and such restrictions must be printed upon every
certificate of stock or membership certificate subject thereto.
(g) Any association organized with stock under this act
may issue preferred stock, without the right to vote, and
bearing a rate of interest not to exceed eight percent (8%).
Such stock may be redeemable or retireable by the association on
such terms and conditions as may be provided for by the
certificate of incorporation and printed on the face of the
certificate.
17-10-111. Management by board of directors; composition
and election of board; terms of office.
The stock, property and concerns of such corporation shall be
managed by the board of directors who shall be respectively
members, stockholders or subscribers for stock and who shall,
after the first corporate year, be annually elected by the
members or stockholders at such time and place as shall be
provided by the bylaws. The bylaws may provide that the
directors be elected for staggered terms not to exceed three (3)
years. Directors shall hold office until their successors have
been elected and qualified. The bylaws may provide that the
territory in which the association has members shall be divided
into districts, and the directors shall be elected according to
such districts. In such case the bylaws shall specify the number
of directors to be elected by each district, the manner and
method of reapportioning the directors and redistricting the
territory covered by the association. The bylaws may provide
that primary elections should be held in each district to elect
the directors apportioned to such district, and the result of
all such primary elections must be ratified by the next regular
meeting of the association.
17-10-112. Regular meetings; calling of special meetings;
notice of meetings.
In its bylaws each association shall provide for one (1) or more
regular meetings annually. The board of directors shall have the
right to call a special meeting at any time, and ten percent
(10%) of the members or stockholders may file a petition stating
the specific business to be brought before the association, and
demand a special meeting at any time. Such meeting must
thereupon be called by the board of directors. Notice of all
meetings, together with a statement of the purposes thereof,
shall be mailed to each member at least twenty (20) days prior
to the meeting. Provided, however, that the bylaws may require
instead that such notice may be given by publication in a
newspaper of general circulation, published at the principal
place of business of the association. Date of publication of
such meeting is to be at least twenty (20) days before the date
of such meeting.
17-10-113. Removal of officers or directors.
(a) Any member may bring charges against an officer or
director by filing them in writing with the secretary of the
association, together with a petition signed by ten percent
(10%) of the members, requesting the removal of the officer or
director in question. The removal shall be voted upon at the
next regular or special meeting of the association, and by a
vote of a majority of the members of the association, the
association may remove the officer or director and fill the
vacancy. The director or officer against whom such charges have
been brought shall be informed in writing of the charges
previous to the meeting, and shall have an opportunity at the
meeting, to be heard in person or by counsel, and to present
witnesses; and the person or persons bringing the charges
against him shall have the same opportunity.
(b) In case the bylaws provide for the election of
directors by districts, with primary elections in each district,
then the petition for the removal of a director must be signed
by twenty percent (20%) of the members residing in the district
from which he was elected. The board of directors must call a
special meeting of the members residing in that district to
consider the removal of the director. By a vote of the majority
of the members of that district, the director in question shall
be removed from office.
17-10-114. Liability of directors for excess of
indebtedness over assets or capital.
If the indebtedness of such corporation shall at any time exceed
the amount of the assets of a nonstock corporation or the amount
of subscribed capital stock of a stock company, the directors
assenting thereto shall be personally and individually liable
for such excess to the creditors.
17-10-115. Apportionment of net profits by directors of
corporation with capital stock.
(a) The directors in any cooperative association organized
under this article may set aside a portion of net income to
create or maintain a capital reserve as they see fit or may set
aside none, in their discretion. In addition to a capital
reserve, the board may:
(i) Set aside an amount not to exceed five percent
(5%) of the annual net income of the cooperative association
for:
(A) Promoting and encouraging cooperative
organization;
(B) Promotion, education or research activities
which are beneficial to the cooperative, its members and
products; and
(C) Any other endeavor or effort which the board
deems is in the best interests of the cooperative or its
members.
(ii) Establish and accumulate reserves for new
buildings, machinery and equipment depreciation, losses and
other purposes.
(b) Repealed By Laws 2001, Ch. 144, § 4.
17-10-116. Repealed By Laws 2001, Ch. 144, § 4.
17-10-117. Sales contracts with members.
Any association organized under this act, as agent to sell the
products of members or purchase supplies for members may operate
upon a nonprofit basis by contracting to pay the members, for
products sold by said members to or through the association, the
resale price minus a uniform charge to cover the expenses
involved in the handling of said products; there shall also be
set aside for a reserve fund a small percentage of the sale
price, said percentage to be fixed by the bylaws; resale price
to be the actual resale price to be based upon the average price
during any period for products of the same type and quality; the
uniform charges for expenses to be specified in the contract or
made otherwise ascertainable or left for determination by the
directors.
17-10-118. Liability of directors upon payment of
dividends or appointment when corporation insolvent; exception.
If the directors of any corporation organized under this act
shall declare and pay any dividend or apportionment of earnings
or profits to members or nonmembers when the corporation is
insolvent or when it would be rendered insolvent by such
payment, such directors shall be jointly and severally liable
for all debts of the corporation then existing and for all such
debts thereafter incurred while they shall respectively continue
in office. Any director may relieve himself from such liability
at any time before the time fixed for the payment of such
dividend or apportionment by filing a certificate in writing of
his objection with the secretary of the corporation, and with
the county clerk of the county in which the principal office is
located.
17-10-119. Preparation and disposition of financial
statement.
At the time of each dividend or apportionment of profits, and at
least once in every year, the directors shall cause to be
prepared a statement showing the financial condition of the
corporation. This statement shall be in such form as shall fully
exhibit the assets and liabilities of the corporation; its
earnings and profits, purchases and sales, expenses and outlays,
for the period covered by such dividend, apportionment of
earnings, or yearly statement, and this statement, shall be in
such form that good understanding of the financial condition of
said company may be obtained from such statement. The directors
shall cause one (1) copy of this statement to be mailed to each
member or stockholder of the corporation and one (1) copy to be
kept on file with the secretary where the same may be examined
by any member of the corporation at all reasonable times.
17-10-120. Repealed by Laws 1992, ch. 53, § 3.
17-10-121. Marketing contracts generally.
(a) The association and its members may make and execute
marketing contracts, requiring the members to sell, for a period
of time, not over ten (10) years, all or any specified part of
their agricultural products or specified commodities exclusively
to or through the association or any facilities to be created by
the association. The contract may provide that the association
may sell or resell the products of its members, with or without
taking title thereto, and pay over to its members the resale
price, after deducting all necessary selling, overhead, and
other costs and expenses, if any; and other proper reserves; and
in interest not exceeding six percent (6%) per annum upon common
stock.
(b) The bylaws of the marketing contract may fix, as
liquidated damages, specified sums to be paid by the member or
stockholder to the association upon the breach by him of any
provision of the marketing contract regarding the sale or
delivery or withholding of products; and may further provide
that the member will pay all costs, premiums for bonds, expenses
or fees in case any action is brought upon the contract by the
association; and any such provision shall be valid and
enforceable in the courts of this state.
(c) In the event of any such breach or threatened breach
of such marketing contract by a member, the association shall be
entitled to an injunction to prevent the further breach of the
contract, and to a decree of specific performance thereof.
Pending the adjudication of such an action, and upon filing a
certified complaint, showing the breach or threatened breach,
and upon filing a sufficient bond, the association shall be
entitled to a temporary restraining order and preliminary
injunction against the member.
17-10-122. Inducing breach of marketing contract or
spreading false reports of finances or management; penalty.
Any person who, or any corporation whose officers or employees
knowingly induces or attempts to induce any member or
stockholder of an association organized hereunder to breach his
marketing contract with the association, or who maliciously and
knowingly spreads false reports about the finances or management
thereof, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and subject to a fine
of not less than one hundred dollars ($100.00), and not more
than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), for each such offense and
shall be liable to the association aggrieved in a civil suit in
the penal sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each such
offense; provided, that this section shall not apply to a bona
fide creditor of such association, or the agent or attorney of
any such bona fide creditor, endeavoring to make collections of
the indebtedness.
17-10-123. Legality of associations.
No association organized hereunder shall be deemed to be a
combination in restraint of trade or an illegal monopoly; or an
attempt to lessen competition or fix prices arbitrarily, nor
shall the marketing contracts or agreements between the
association and its members, or any agreements authorized in
this act be considered illegal or in restraint of trade.
17-10-124. Applicability of conflicting laws.
Any provisions of law which are in conflict with this act shall
not be construed as applying to the associations herein provided
for.
17-10-125. Applicability of general corporation laws.
The provisions of the general corporation laws of this state,
and all powers and rights thereunder, shall apply to the
associations organized hereunder, except where such provisions
are in conflict with or inconsistent with the express provisions
of this act.
17-10-126. Agricultural product marketing contract.
A cooperative organized under the provisions of this article and
its patron members or patrons may make and execute a marketing
contract under W.S. 17-10-214.
ARTICLE 2 - PROCESSING COOPERATIVE
17-10-201. Title.
This act may be cited as the "Wyoming Processing Cooperative
law."
17-10-202. Definitions.
(a) As used in this article:
(i) "Address" means mailing address, including a zip
code. In the case of a registered address, the term means the
mailing address and the actual office location, which may not be
a post office box;
(ii) "Articles" means the articles of organization of
a cooperative as originally filed and subsequently amended;
(iii) "Association" means an organization conducting
business on a cooperative plan under the laws of this state or
another state that is chartered to conduct business under other
laws of this state or another state;
(iv) "Board" means the board of directors of a
cooperative;
(v) "Business entity" means a company, limited
liability company, limited liability partnership or other legal
entity, whether domestic or foreign, association or body vested
with the power or function of a legal entity;
(vi) "Cooperative" means an association organized
under this article conducting business on a cooperative plan as
provided under this article;
(vii) "Domestic business entity" means a business
entity organized under the laws of this state;
(viii) "Filed with the secretary of state" means that
a document meeting the applicable requirements of this article,
signed and accompanied by the required filing fee, has been
delivered to the secretary of state of this state. The
secretary of state shall endorse on the document the word
"Filed" or a similar word determined by the secretary of state
and the month, day, and year of filing, record the document in
the office of the secretary of state, and return a document to
the person or entity who delivered it for filing;
(ix) "Foreign business entity" means a business
entity that is not a domestic business entity;
(x) "Member" means a person or entity reflected on
the books of the cooperative as the owner of governance rights
of a membership interest of the cooperative and includes patron
and nonpatron members;
(xi) "Membership interest" means a member's interest
in a cooperative consisting of a member's financial rights, a
member's right to assign financial rights, a member's governance
rights and a member's right to assign governance rights.
Membership interest includes patron membership interests and
nonpatron membership interests;
(xii) "Members' meeting" means a regular or special
members' meeting;
(xiii) "Nonpatron membership interest" means a
membership interest that does not require the holder to conduct
patronage business for or with the cooperative to receive
financial rights or distributions;
(xiv) "Patron" means a person or entity who conducts
patronage business with the cooperative;
(xv) "Patronage" means business, transactions, or
services done for or with the cooperative as defined by the
cooperative;
(xvi) "Patron member" means a member holding a patron
membership interest;
(xvii) "Patron membership interest" means the
membership interest requiring the holder to conduct patronage
business for or with the cooperative, as specified by the
cooperative to receive financial rights or distributions;
(xviii) "Signed" means that the signature of a person
has been written on a document, and, with respect to a document
required by this article to be filed with the secretary of
state, means that the document has been signed by a person
authorized to do so by this article, the articles or bylaws, or
by a resolution approved by the directors or the members. A
signature on a document may be a facsimile affixed, engraved,
printed, placed, stamped with indelible ink, transmitted by
facsimile or electronically or in any other manner reproduced on
the document;
(xix) "The act" means W.S. 17-10-201 through
17-10-253.
17-10-203. Filing fee; rules and regulations; annual
reports and license taxes.
(a) Unless otherwise provided, the filing fee for
documents filed under this article with the secretary of state
shall be subject to the provisions of W.S. 17-16-122. The
secretary of state shall promulgate rules and regulations
necessary to implement the provisions of this article.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-16-1630 regarding the filing
of reports, license taxes and records shall apply to
cooperatives formed under this article.
17-10-204. Registered agent; change of registered office
or registered agent.
(a) Each cooperative shall have and continuously maintain
in this state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111;
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(c) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(d) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3
(e) If any cooperative has failed for thirty (30) days to
appoint and maintain a registered agent in this state, or has
failed for thirty (30) days after change of its registered
office or registered agent to file in the office of the
secretary of state a statement of the change it shall be deemed
to be transacting business within this state without authority
and to have forfeited any franchises, rights or privileges
acquired under the laws thereof and the forfeiture shall be made
effective in the following manner. The secretary of state shall
provide by first class mail or by electronic means a notice of
its failure to comply with aforesaid provisions. Unless
compliance is made within thirty (30) days of mailing or
electronic submission of the notice, the cooperative shall be
deemed defunct and to have forfeited its certificate of
organization acquired under the laws of this state. Provided,
that any defunct cooperative may at any time within two (2)
years after the forfeiture of its certificate, in the manner
herein provided, be revived and reinstated, by filing the
necessary statement under this act and paying a reinstatement
fee established by the secretary of state by rule, together with
a penalty of one hundred dollars ($100.00). The reinstatement
fee shall not exceed the costs of providing the reinstatement
service. The cooperative shall retain its registered name during
the two (2) year reinstatement period under this section.
(f) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all cooperatives.
17-10-205. Organizational purpose.
A cooperative may be formed and organized on a cooperative plan
as provided under this article to market, process, or otherwise
change the form or marketability of crops, livestock and other
agricultural products, including manufacturing and further
processing of those products and other purposes that are
necessary or convenient to facilitate the production or
marketing of agricultural products by patron members and other
purposes that are related to the business of the cooperative.
17-10-206. Organizers.
A cooperative may be organized by one (1) or more organizers who
shall be adult natural persons, who may act for themselves as
individuals or as the agents of other entities. The organizers
forming the cooperative need not be members of the cooperative.
17-10-207. Cooperative name.
(a) The name of a cooperative shall distinguish the
cooperative upon the records in the office of the secretary of
state from the name of a domestic business entity or a foreign
business entity, authorized or registered to do business in this
state or a name the right to which is, at the time of
organization, reserved or provided for by law.
(b) The cooperative name shall be reserved for the
cooperative during its existence.
17-10-208. Articles of organization.
(a) The organizers shall prepare the articles, which shall
include:
(i) The name of the cooperative;
(ii) The purpose of the cooperative;
(iii) The principal place of business for the
cooperative and the name and address of its registered agent in
this state;
(iv) The period of duration for the cooperative, if
the duration is not to be perpetual;
(v) The capital structure of the cooperative
including a statement of the classes and relative rights,
preferences, and restrictions granted to or imposed upon each
class of member interests, the rights to share in profits or
distributions of the cooperative, and the authority to issue
member interests, which may be designated to be determined by
the board;
(vi) A provision designating the voting and
governance rights, including which membership interests have
voting power and any limitations or restrictions on the voting
power, which shall be in accordance with the provisions of this
article;
(vii) A statement that patron membership interests
with voting power shall be restricted to one (1) vote for each
member regardless of the amount of patron membership interests
held in the affairs of the cooperative or a statement describing
the allocation of voting power allocated as prescribed in this
article;
(viii) A statement that membership interests held by
a member are transferable only with the approval of the board or
as provided in the bylaws;
(ix) The names, post office addresses, and terms of
office of the directors of the first board;
(x) A statement as to how profits and losses will be
allocated and cash will be distributed between patron membership
interests collectively and nonpatron membership interests
collectively, a statement that net income allocated to a patron
membership interests as determined by the board in excess of
dividends and additions to reserves shall be distributed on the
basis of patronage, and that the records of the cooperative
shall include the interests of patron membership interests and
nonpatron membership interests which may be further described in
the bylaws, of any classes, and in the reserves; and
(xi) The registered address of the cooperative.
(b) The articles shall contain the provisions in
subsection (a) of this section, except that the names, post
office addresses of the directors of the first board may be
omitted after their successors have been elected by the members
or the articles are amended in their entirety.
(c) The articles may contain any other lawful provision.
(d) The articles shall be signed by the organizers.
(e) The original articles shall be filed with the
secretary of state. The fee for filing the articles with the
secretary of state shall be subject to the provisions of W.S.
17-16-122.
(f) When the articles of organization have been filed with
the secretary of state and the required fee has been paid to the
secretary of state, it shall be presumed that:
(i) All conditions precedent that are required to be
performed by the organizers have been complied with;
(ii) The organization of the cooperative has been
chartered by the state as a separate legal entity; and
(iii) The secretary of state shall issue a
certificate of organization to the cooperative.
17-10-209. Amendment of articles.
(a) The articles of a cooperative shall be amended as
follows:
(i) The board by majority vote shall pass a
resolution stating the text of the proposed amendment. The text
of the proposed amendment and an attached mail ballot, if the
board has provided for a mail ballot in the resolution or
alternative method approved by the board and stated in the
resolution, shall be mailed or distributed with a regular or
special meeting notice to each member. The notice shall
designate the time and place of the meeting for the proposed
amendment to be considered and voted on;
(ii) If a quorum of the members is registered as
being present or represented by alternative vote at the meeting,
the proposed amendment is adopted:
(A) If approved by a majority of the votes cast;
or
(B) For a cooperative with articles or bylaws
requiring more than majority approval or other conditions for
approval, the amendment is approved by a proportion of the votes
cast or a number of total members as required by the articles or
bylaws and the conditions for approval in the articles or bylaws
have been satisfied.
(b) After an amendment has been adopted by the members,
the amendment shall be signed by the chair, vice-chair, records
officer, or assistant records officer and a copy of the
amendment filed in the office of the secretary of state.
(c) A certificate shall be prepared stating:
(i) The vote and meeting of the board adopting a
resolution of the proposed amendment;
(ii) The notice given to members of the meeting at
which the amendment was adopted;
(iii) The quorum registered at the meeting; and
(iv) The vote cast adopting the amendment.
(d) The certificate shall be signed by the chair, vice-
chair, records officer or financial officer and filed with the
records of the cooperative.
(e) A majority of directors may amend the articles if the
cooperative does not have any members with voting rights.
17-10-210. Amendment of organizational documents to be
governed by this article.
(a) A business entity organized and doing business under
other statutes of this state or under the laws of other states
that has or will conduct business as a cooperative may become
subject to this article by amending its organizational documents
to conform to the requirements of articles of organization under
this article.
(b) A business entity organized under other statutes of
this state may amend its articles in the manner provided under
the statute that it is governed by for the adoption of
amendments to comply with the provisions of this article and
file the amended articles with the secretary of state to be a
cooperative governed under this article. The status of the
business entity under the other statutes terminates with the
filing of articles to be governed under this article.
(c) A business entity organized under laws of other states
shall amend its organizational documents in the manner required
by the laws of the state where it was organized to comply with
the provisions of this article. After the organizational
documents are amended, the business entity shall file a
certified copy of the organizational documents as amended with
the secretary of state to comply with the provisions of this
article with the fees and requirements prescribed for filing
articles. After filing, the business entity is a cooperative in
this state organized under and subject to the provisions of this
article.
17-10-211. Existence.
(a) The existence of a cooperative shall begin when the
articles are filed with the secretary of state.
(b) A cooperative shall have a perpetual duration unless
the cooperative provides for a limited period of duration in the
articles of organization.
17-10-212. Bylaws.
(a) A cooperative shall have bylaws governing the
cooperative's business affairs, structure, the qualifications,
classification, rights and obligations of members, and the
classifications, allocations and distributions of membership
interests.
(b) The bylaws of a cooperative may be adopted or amended
by the directors as provided in subsection (c) of this section,
or at a regular or special members' meeting if:
(i) The notice of the meeting contains a statement
that the bylaws or restated bylaws will be voted upon and copies
are included with the notice, or copies are available upon
request from the cooperative and summary statement of the
proposed bylaws or amendment is included with the notice;
(ii) A quorum is registered as being present or
represented by mail or alternative voting method if the mail or
alternative voting method is authorized by the board; and
(iii) The bylaws or amendment is approved by a
majority vote cast, or for a cooperative with articles or bylaws
requiring more than majority approval or other conditions for
approval, the bylaws or amendment is approved by a proportion of
the vote cast or a number of the total members as required by
the articles or bylaws and the conditions for approval in the
articles or bylaws have been satisfied.
(c) Until the next annual or special members' meeting, the
majority of directors may adopt and amend bylaws for the
cooperative that are consistent with subsection (d) of this
section which may be further amended or repealed by the members
at an annual or special members' meeting.
(d) Bylaws may contain any provision relating to the
management or regulation of the affairs of the cooperative that
are not inconsistent with law or the articles, and shall include
the following:
(i) The number of directors, and the qualifications,
manner of election, powers, duties, and compensation, if any, of
directors;
(ii) The qualifications of members and any
limitations on their number;
(iii) The manner of admission, withdrawal,
suspensions, and expulsion of members;
(iv) Generally the governance rights, financial
rights, assignability of governance and financial rights, and
other rights, privileges and obligations of members and their
membership interests, which may be further described in member
control agreements.
17-10-213. Powers.
(a) In addition to other powers, a cooperative as an agent
or otherwise:
(i) May perform every act and thing necessary or
proper to the conduct of the cooperative's business or the
accomplishment of the purposes of the cooperative;
(ii) Has other rights, powers, or privileges granted
by the laws of this state to other cooperatives, except those
that are inconsistent with the express provisions of this
article; and
(iii) Has the powers given in this section.
(b) A cooperative may buy, sell, or deal in its own
products, the products of the cooperative's individual members,
patrons or nonmembers, the products of another cooperative
association, or of its members or patrons, or the products of
another person or entity. A cooperative may negotiate the price
at which the products the cooperative is selling may be sold.
(c) A cooperative may enter into or become a party to a
contract or agreement for the cooperative or for the
cooperative's individual members or patrons or between the
cooperative and its members.
(d) A cooperative may purchase and hold, lease, mortgage,
encumber, sell, exchange and convey as a legal entity real
estate, buildings and personal property as the business of the
cooperative may require including the sale or other disposition
of assets required by the business of the cooperative as
determined by the board.
(e) A cooperative may erect buildings or other structures
or facilities on the cooperative's owned or leased property or
on a right-of-way legally acquired by the cooperative.
(f) A cooperative may issue bonds or other evidence of
indebtedness and may borrow money to finance the business of the
cooperative.
(g) A cooperative may make advances to the cooperative's
members or patrons on products delivered by the members or
patrons to the cooperative.
(h) A cooperative may accept deposits of money from other
cooperatives, associations or members from which it is
constituted.
(j) A cooperative may loan or borrow money to or from
individual members, cooperatives or associations from which it
is constituted with security that it considers sufficient in
dealing with the members, cooperatives, or associations.
(k) A cooperative may purchase, acquire, hold, or dispose
of the ownership interests of another business entity whether
organized under the laws of this state or another state and
assume all rights, interests, privileges, responsibilities and
obligations arising out of the ownership interests.
(m) A cooperative may acquire and hold ownership interests
in another business entity organized under the laws of this
state or another state of the United States, including a
business entity organized:
(i) As a federation of associations;
(ii) For the purpose of forming a district, state, or
national marketing, sales or service agency; or
(iii) For the purpose of acquiring marketing
facilities at terminal or other markets in this state or other
states.
(n) A cooperative may purchase, own, and hold ownership
interests, memberships, interests in nonstock capital, evidences
of indebtedness of any domestic business entity or foreign
business entity when reasonably necessary or incidental to
accomplish the purposes stated in the articles.
(o) A cooperative may exercise any and all fiduciary
powers in relations with members, cooperatives, associations or
business entities from which it is constituted.
(p) A cooperative may take, receive, and hold real and
personal property, including the principal and interest of money
or other funds and rights in a contract, in trust for any
purpose not inconsistent with the purposes of the cooperative in
its articles and may exercise fiduciary powers in relation to
taking, receiving, and holding the real and personal property.
17-10-214. Agricultural product marketing contracts.
(a) A cooperative and its patron member or patron may make
and execute a marketing contract, requiring the patron member or
patron to sell a specified portion of his agricultural product
or specified commodity produced from a certain area exclusively
to or through the cooperative or facility established by the
cooperative.
(b) If a sale is contracted to the cooperative, the sale
shall transfer title to the product absolutely, except for a
recorded lien or security interest, to the cooperative on
delivery of the product or at another specified time if
expressly provided in the contract. The contract may allow the
cooperative to sell or resell the product of its patron member
or patron with or without taking title to the product, and pay
the resale price to the patron member or patron, after deducting
all necessary selling, overhead and other costs and expenses,
including other proper reserves and interest.
(c) A single term of a marketing contract shall not exceed
ten (10) years, but a marketing contract may be made
self-renewing for periods not exceeding five (5) years each,
subject to the right of either party to terminate by giving
written notice of the termination during a period of the current
term as specified in the contract.
(d) The bylaws or the marketing contract, or both, may set
a specific sum as liquidated damages to be paid by the patron
member or patron to the cooperative for breach of any provision
of the marketing contract regarding the sale or delivery or
withholding of a product and may provide that the member or
patron shall pay the costs, premiums for bonds, expenses and
fees if an action is brought on the contract by the cooperative.
The remedies for breach of contract are valid and enforceable in
the courts of this state. The provisions shall be enforced as
liquidated damages and are not to be considered or regarded as a
penalty.
(e) If there is a breach or threatened breach of a
marketing contract by a patron member or patron, the cooperative
is entitled to an injunction to prevent the further breach of
the contract and to a decree of specific performance of the
contract. Pending the adjudication of the action after filing a
certified complaint showing the breach or threatened breach and
filing a sufficient bond, the cooperative is entitled to a
temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against
the patron member or patron.
(f) Any person who knowingly induces or attempts to induce
any member or patrons of a cooperative organized under this
article to breach his marketing contract with the cooperative,
or who maliciously and knowingly spreads false reports about the
finances or management thereof, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor
and subject to a fine of not less than one hundred dollars
($100.00), and not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00),
for each such offense; provided, that this section shall not
apply to a bona fide creditor of such cooperative, or the agent
or attorney of any such bona fide creditor, endeavoring to make
collections of the indebtedness.
(g) In addition to the penalty provided in subsection (f)
of this section, the person, corporation or other entity may be
liable to the cooperative for civil damages for any violation of
the provisions of subsection (f) of this section. Each violation
shall constitute a separate offense and is subject to the
penalties in this subsection and subsection (f) of this section.
17-10-215. Board governs cooperative.
A cooperative shall be governed by its board.
17-10-216. Number of directors.
The board shall have not less than three (3) directors.
17-10-217. Election of directors.
(a) Directors shall be elected for the term, at the time,
and in the manner provided in this section and the bylaws. A
majority of the directors shall be members and at least one (1)
director shall be elected exclusively by the members holding
patron membership interests. The voting authority of the
directors may be allocated according to allocation units or
equity classifications of the cooperative provided that at least
one-half (1/2) of the voting power on general matters of the
cooperative shall be allocated to one (1) or more directors
elected by members holding patron membership interests or in the
alternative the one (1) or more directors elected by the members
holding patron membership interests shall have an equal or shall
not have a minority voting power on general matters of the
cooperative.
(b) Directors shall be elected at the regular members'
meeting for the terms of office prescribed in the bylaws. Except
for directors elected at district meetings, all directors shall
be elected at the regular members' meeting.
(c) For a cooperative with districts or other units,
members may elect directors on a district or unit basis if
provided in the bylaws. The directors may be nominated or
elected at district meetings if provided in the bylaws.
Directors who are nominated at district meetings shall be
elected at the annual regular members' meeting by vote of the
entire membership, unless the bylaws provide that directors who
are nominated at district meetings are to be elected by vote of
the members of the district at the annual regular members'
meeting.
(d) The following shall apply to alternative voting:
(i) A member may not vote other than by their
presence at a meeting for a director unless alternative voting
is authorized for election of directors by the articles or
bylaws;
(ii) The ballot shall be in a form prescribed by the
board;
(iii) The member shall mark the ballot for the
candidate chosen and mail the ballot to the cooperative in a
sealed plain envelope inside another envelope bearing the
member's name, or shall vote in the alternative manner
prescribed by the board;
(iv) If the ballot of the member is received by the
cooperative on or before the date of the regular members'
meeting, the ballot shall be accepted and counted as the vote of
the absent member.
(e) If a member of a cooperative is not a natural person,
and the bylaws do not provide otherwise, the member may appoint
or elect one (1) or more natural persons to be eligible for
election as a director to the board.
17-10-218. Filling vacancies.
If a patron member director's position becomes vacant for a
director that was elected by patron members, the board shall
appoint a patron member of the cooperative to fill the
director's position until the next regular or special members'
meeting. If the vacating director was not a patron member, the
board shall appoint a patron member to fill the vacant position.
At the next regular or special members' meeting, the members or
patron members shall elect a director to fill the unexpired term
of the vacant director's position.
17-10-219. Removal of directors.
The members electing a director may remove the director at a
members' meeting for cause related to the duties of the position
of director and fill the vacancy caused by the removal.
17-10-220. Limitation of director's liability.
(a) A director's personal liability to the cooperative or
members for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a
director may be eliminated or limited in the articles except as
provided in subsection (b) of this section.
(b) The articles may not eliminate or limit the liability
of a director:
(i) For a breach of the director's duty of loyalty to
the cooperative or its members;
(ii) For acts or omissions that are not in good faith
or involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law;
(iii) For a transaction from which the director
derived an improper personal benefit; or
(iv) For an act or omission occurring before the date
when the provision in the articles eliminating or limiting
liability becomes effective.
17-10-221. Officers.
(a) The board shall elect:
(i) A chair; and
(ii) One (1) or more vice-chairs.
(b) The board shall elect or appoint:
(i) A records officer; and
(ii) A financial officer.
(c) The board may elect additional officers as the
articles or bylaws authorize or require.
(d) The offices of records officer and financial officer
may be combined.
(e) The chair and first vice-chair shall be directors and
members. The financial officer, records officer, and additional
officers need not be directors or members.
(f) The board may employ a chief executive officer to
manage the day-to-day affairs and business of the cooperative.
(g) Other than the chief executive officer, members may
remove an officer at a members' meeting for cause related to the
duties of the position of the officer and fill the vacancy
caused by the removal.
17-10-222. Membership interests.
(a) The authorized amount and divisions of patron
membership interests and nonpatron membership interests may be
increased or decreased or established or altered, in accordance
with the restrictions in this article by amending the articles
at a regular members' meeting or at a special members' meeting
called for the purpose of the amendment.
(b) Authorized membership interests may be issued on terms
and conditions prescribed in the articles, bylaws, or as
determined by the board. The cooperative shall disclose to any
person or entity acquiring membership interests to be issued by
the cooperative, the organization, capital structure and
business prospects and risks of the cooperative, the nature of
the governance and financial rights of the membership interest
being acquired and of other classes of membership and membership
interests. The cooperative shall notify all members of the
membership interests being offered by the cooperative. A
membership interest may not be issued until the subscription
price of the membership interest has been paid for in cash or a
cash equivalent or property with the agreed upon value of the
property to be contributed.
(c) The patron membership interests collectively shall
have not less than fifteen percent (15%) of the cooperative's
financial rights to profit allocations and distributions.
(d) After issuance by the cooperative, membership
interests in a cooperative may only be sold or transferred with
the approval of the board.
(e) The cooperative may solicit and issue nonpatron
membership interests on terms and conditions determined by the
board and disclosed in the articles, bylaws or by separate
disclosure to the members. Each member acquiring nonpatron
membership interests shall sign a member control agreement which
shall describe the rights and obligations of the member as it
relates to the nonpatron membership interests, the financial and
governance rights, the transferability of the nonpatron
membership interests, the division and allocations of profits
and losses among the membership interests and membership
classes, and financial rights upon liquidation. If the bylaws do
not otherwise provide for the allocation of the profits and
losses between patron membership interests and nonpatron
membership interests, then the allocation of profits and losses
among nonpatron membership interests individually and patron
membership interests collectively shall be allocated on the
basis of the value of contributions to capital made according to
the patron membership interests collectively and the nonpatron
membership interests individually to the extent the
contributions have been accepted by the cooperative.
Distributions of cash or other assets of the cooperative shall
be allocated among the membership interests as provided in the
articles and bylaws, subject to the provisions of this article.
If not otherwise provided, distributions shall be made on the
basis of value of the capital contributions of the patron
membership interests collectively and the nonpatron membership
interests to the extent the contributions have been accepted by
the cooperative.
(f) The bylaws may provide that the cooperative or the
patron members, individually or collectively, have the first
privilege of purchasing the membership interests of any class of
patron member's membership interests offered for sale. The first
privilege to purchase patron membership interests may be
satisfied by notice to other patron members that the patron
membership interests are for sale and a procedure by which
patron members may proceed to attempt to purchase and acquire
the patron membership interests. A patron membership interest
acquired by the cooperative may be held to be reissued or may be
retired and cancelled.
(g) Subject to the provisions in the bylaws, a member may
dissent from and obtain payment for the fair value of the
member's nonpatron membership interests in the cooperative if
the articles or bylaws are amended in a manner that materially
and adversely affects the rights and preferences of the
nonpatron membership interests of the dissenting member. The
dissenting member shall file a notice of intent to demand fair
value of the membership interest with the records officer of the
cooperative within thirty (30) days after the amendment of the
bylaws and notice of the amendment to members, otherwise the
right of the dissenting member to demand payment of fair value
for the membership interest is deemed to be waived. If a
proposed amendment of the articles or bylaws shall be approved
by the members, a member who is entitled to dissent and who
wishes to exercise dissenter's rights shall file a notice to
demand fair value of the membership interest with the records
officer of the cooperative before the vote on the proposed
action and shall not vote in favor of the proposed action,
otherwise the right to demand fair value for the membership
interest by the dissenting member is deemed waived. After
receipt of the dissenting member's demand notice and approval of
the amendment, the cooperative has sixty (60) days to rescind
the amendment or otherwise the cooperative shall remit the fair
value for the one (1) member's interest to the dissenting member
by one hundred eighty (180) days after receipt of the notice.
Upon receipt of the fair value for the membership interest, the
member has no further member rights in the cooperative.
17-10-223. Grouping of members.
(a) A cooperative may group members and patron members in
districts, units or another basis if and as authorized in its
articles and bylaws which may include authorization for the
board to determine the groupings.
(b) The board may do things necessary to implement the use
of districts or units including setting the time and place and
prescribing the rules of conduct for holding meetings by
districts or units to elect delegates to members' meetings.
17-10-224. Member violations; liability for cooperative
debts.
(a) A member who knowingly, intentionally, or repeatedly
violates a provision of the articles, bylaws, member control
agreement or marketing contract with the cooperative, may be
required by the board to surrender the financial rights of
membership interest of any class owned by the member.
(b) The cooperative shall refund to the member for the
surrendered financial rights of membership interest the lesser
of the book value or market value of the financial right of the
membership interest payable in not more than seven (7) years
from the date of surrender or the board may transfer all of any
patron member's financial rights to a class of financial rights
held by members who are not patron members, or to a certificate
of interest which carries liquidation rights on par with
membership interests and is redeemed within seven (7) years
after the transfer as provided in the certificate.
(c) Membership interests required to be surrendered may be
reissued or be retired and cancelled by the board.
(d) A member who knowingly, intentionally or repeatedly
violates a provision of the articles, bylaws, member control
agreement, or a marketing contract, may be required by the board
to surrender voting power in the cooperative.
(e) A member is not, merely on the account of that status,
personally liable for the acts, debts, liabilities, or
obligations of a cooperative. A member is liable for any unpaid
subscription for the membership interest, unpaid membership
fees, or a debt for which the member has separately contracted
with the cooperative.
17-10-225. Regular members' meetings.
(a) Regular members' meetings shall be held annually at a
time determined by the board, unless otherwise provided for in
the bylaws.
(b) The regular members' meeting shall be held at the
principal place of business of the cooperative or at another
conveniently located place as determined by the bylaws or the
board.
(c) The officers shall submit reports to the members at
the regular members' meeting covering the business of the
cooperative for the previous fiscal year that show the condition
of the cooperative at the close of the fiscal year.
(d) All directors shall be elected at the regular members'
meeting for the terms of office prescribed in the bylaws, except
for directors elected at district or unit meetings.
(e) The cooperative shall give notice of regular members'
meetings by mailing the regular members' meeting notice to each
member at the member's last known post office address or by
other notification approved by the board and agreed to by the
members. The regular members' meeting notice shall be published
or otherwise given by approved method at least two (2) weeks
before the date of the meeting or mailed at least fifteen (15)
days before the date of the meeting.
17-10-226. Special members' meetings.
(a) Special members' meetings of the members may be called
by:
(i) A majority vote of the board; or
(ii) The written petition of at least twenty percent
(20%) of the patron members, twenty percent (20%) of the
nonpatron members or twenty percent (20%) of all members
collectively are submitted to the chair.
(b) The cooperative shall give notice of a special
members' meeting by mailing the special members' meeting notice
to each member personally at the person's last known post office
address or an alternative method approved by the board and the
member individually or the members generally. For a member that
is an entity, notice mailed or delivered by an alternative
method shall be to an officer of the entity. The special
members' meeting notice shall state the time, place, and purpose
of the special members' meeting. The special members' meeting
notice shall be issued within ten (10) days from and after the
date of the presentation of a members' petition, and the special
members' meeting shall be held within thirty (30) days after the
date of the presentation of the members' petition.
17-10-227. Certification of meeting notice.
(a) After mailing special or regular members' meeting
notices or otherwise delivering the notices, the cooperative
shall execute a certificate containing the date of mailing or
delivery of the notice and a statement that the special or
regular members' meeting notices were mailed or delivered as
prescribed by law.
(b) The certificate shall be made a part of the record of
the meeting.
17-10-228. Failure to receive meeting notice.
Failure of a member to receive a special or regular members'
meeting notice does not invalidate an action that is taken by
the members at a members' meeting.
17-10-229. Quorum.
(a) The quorum for a members' meeting to transact business
shall be:
(i) Ten percent (10%) of the total number of members
for a cooperative with five hundred (500) or less members; or
(ii) Fifty (50) members for cooperatives with more
than five hundred (500) members.
(b) In determining a quorum at a meeting, on a question
submitted to a vote by mail or an alternative method, members
present in person or represented by mail vote or the alternative
voting method shall be counted. The attendance of a sufficient
number of members to constitute a quorum shall be established by
a registration of the members of the cooperative present at the
meeting. The registration shall be verified by the chair or the
records officer of the cooperative and shall be reported in the
minutes of the meeting.
(c) An action by a cooperative is not valid or legal in
the absence of a quorum at the meeting at which the action was
taken.
17-10-230. Member voting rights.
(a) A patron member of a cooperative is only entitled to
one (1) vote on an issue to be voted upon by members holding
patron membership interests, except that a patron member of a
cooperative described in W.S. 17-10-231 may be entitled to more
than one (1) vote as provided in that section. On any matter of
the cooperative, the entire patron members voting power shall be
voted collectively based upon the vote of the majority of patron
members voting on the issue. A nonpatron member has the voting
rights in accordance to his nonpatron membership interests as
granted in the bylaws, subject to the provisions of this
article.
(b) A member or delegate may exercise voting rights on any
matter that is before the members as prescribed in the articles
or bylaws at a members' meeting from the time the member or
delegate arrives at the members' meeting, unless the articles or
bylaws specify an earlier and specific time for closing the
right to vote.
(c) A member's vote at a members' meeting shall be in
person or by mail if a mail vote is authorized by the board or
by alternative method if authorized by the board, and not by
proxy except as provided in subsection (d) of this section.
(d) The following shall apply to members represented by
delegates:
(i) A cooperative may provide in the articles or
bylaws that units or districts of members are entitled to be
represented at members' meetings by delegates chosen by the
members of the unit or district. The delegates may vote on
matters at the members' meeting in the same manner as a member.
The delegates may only exercise the voting rights on a basis and
with the number of votes as prescribed in the articles or
bylaws;
(ii) If the approval of a certain portion of the
members is required for adoption of amendments, a dissolution, a
merger, a consolidation, or a sale of assets, the votes of
delegates shall be counted as votes by the members represented
by the delegate;
(iii) Patron members may be represented by the proxy
of other patron members;
(iv) Nonpatron members may be represented by proxy if
authorized in the bylaws.
(e) The following shall apply to absentee ballots:
(i) A member who is or will be absent from a members'
meeting may vote by mail or by an approved alternative method on
the ballot prescribed in this subsection on any motion,
resolution or amendment that the board submits for vote by mail
or alternative method to the members;
(ii) The ballot shall be in the form prescribed by
the board and contain:
(A) The exact text of the proposed motion,
resolution or amendment to be acted on at the meeting; and
(B) The text of the motion, resolution or
amendment for which the member may indicate an affirmative or
negative vote.
(iii) The member shall express a choice by marking an
appropriate choice on the ballot and mail, deliver or otherwise
submit the ballot to the cooperative in a plain, sealed envelope
inside another envelope bearing the member's name or by an
alternative method approved by the board;
(iv) A properly executed ballot shall be accepted by
the board and counted as the vote of the absent member at the
meeting.
17-10-231. Patron member voting in cooperatives
constituted entirely or partially of other cooperatives or
associations.
(a) A cooperative that is constituted entirely or
partially of other cooperatives or associations may authorize by
the articles or the bylaws for affiliated cooperative patron
members to have an additional vote for:
(i) A stipulated amount of business transacted
between the patron member cooperative and the central
cooperative organization;
(ii) A stipulated number of patron members in the
member cooperative;
(iii) A certain stipulated amount of equity allocated
to or held by the patron member cooperative in the cooperative
central organization; or
(iv) A combination of methods in paragraphs (i)
through (iii) of this subsection.
(b) A cooperative that is organized into units or
districts of patron members, may, by the articles or the bylaws,
authorize the delegates elected by its patron members or, have
an additional vote for:
(i) A stipulated amount of business transacted
between the patron members in the units or districts and the
cooperative;
(ii) A certain stipulated amount of equity allocated
to or held by the patron members of the units or districts of
the cooperative; or
(iii) A combination of methods in paragraphs (i) and
(ii) of this subsection.
17-10-232. Vote of ownership interests held by
cooperative.
A cooperative that holds ownership interests of another business
entity may, by direction of the cooperative's board, elect or
appoint a person to represent the cooperative at a meeting of
the business entity. The representative has authority to
represent the cooperative and may cast the cooperative's vote at
the business entity's meeting.
17-10-233. Allocations and distributions to members.
(a) The bylaws shall prescribe the allocation of profits
and losses between patron membership interests collectively and
other membership interests. If the bylaws do not otherwise
provide, the profits and losses between patron membership
interests collectively and other membership interests shall be
allocated on the basis of the value of contributions to capital
made by the patron membership interests collectively and other
membership interests and accepted by the cooperative. The
allocation of profits to the patron membership interests
collectively shall not be less than fifteen percent (15%) of the
total profits in any fiscal year.
(b) The bylaws shall prescribe the distribution of cash or
other assets of the cooperative among the membership interests
of the cooperative. If not otherwise provided in the bylaws,
distribution shall be made to the patron membership interests
collectively and other members on the basis of the value of
contributions to capital made and accepted by the cooperative by
the patron membership interests collectively and other
membership interests. The distributions to patron membership
interests collectively shall not be less than fifteen percent
(15%) of the total distributions in any fiscal year.
17-10-234. Allocations and distributions to patron
members.
(a) A cooperative may set aside a portion of net income
allocated to the patron membership interests as the board
determines advisable to create or maintain a capital reserve.
(b) In addition to a capital reserve, the board may, for
patron membership interests:
(i) Set aside an amount not to exceed five percent
(5%) of the annual net income of the cooperative for promoting
and encouraging cooperative organization; and
(ii) Establish and accumulate reserves for new
buildings, machinery and equipment, depreciation, losses, and
other proper purposes.
(c) Net income allocated to patron members in excess of
dividends on equity and additions to reserves shall be
distributed to patron members on the basis of patronage. A
cooperative may establish allocation units, whether the units
are functional, divisional, departmental, geographic, or
otherwise and pooling arrangements and may account for and
distribute net income to patrons on the basis of allocation
units and pooling arrangements. A cooperative may offset the net
loss of an allocation unit or pooling arrangement against the
net income of other allocation units or pooling arrangements.
(d) Distribution of net income shall be made at least
annually. The board shall present to the members at their annual
meeting a report covering the operations of the cooperative
during the preceding fiscal year.
(e) A cooperative may distribute net income to patron
members in cash, capital credits, allocated patronage equities,
revolving fund certificates, or its own or other securities.
(f) The cooperative may provide in the bylaws that
nonmember patrons are allowed to participate in the distribution
of net income payable to patron members on equal terms with
patron members.
(g) If a nonmember patron with patronage credits is not
qualified or eligible for membership, a refund due may be
credited to the patron's individual account. The board may issue
a certificate of interest to reflect the credited amount. After
the patron is issued a certificate of interest, the patron may
participate in the distribution of income on the same basis as a
patron member.
17-10-235. Distribution of unclaimed property.
(a) A cooperative may, in lieu of paying or delivering to
the state the unclaimed property specified in its report of
unclaimed property, distribute the unclaimed property to a
corporation or organization that is exempt from taxation. A
cooperative making the election to distribute unclaimed property
shall file with the secretary of state:
(i) A verified written explanation of the proof of
claim of an owner establishing a right to receive the abandoned
property;
(ii) Any error in the presumption of abandonment;
(iii) The name, address, and exemption number of the
corporation or organization to which the property was or is to
be distributed; and
(iv) The approximate date of distribution.
(b) This subsection does not alter the procedure provided
by law for cooperatives to report unclaimed property to the
state and the requirement that claims of owners are made to the
cooperatives for a period following the publication of lists of
abandoned property.
(c) The right of an owner to unclaimed property held by a
cooperative is extinguished when the property is disbursed by
the cooperative to a tax exempt organization in accordance with
this section.
17-10-236. Merger and consolidation.
(a) Unless otherwise prohibited, cooperatives organized
under the laws of this state may merge or consolidate with each
other or other business entities organized under the laws of
this state or another state by complying with the provisions of
this section or the law of the state where the surviving or new
business entity will exist.
(b) To initiate a merger or consolidation of a
cooperative, a written plan of merger or consolidation shall be
prepared by the board or by a committee selected by the board to
prepare a plan. The plan shall state:
(i) The names of the constituent cooperatives and
other business entities;
(ii) The name of the surviving or new cooperative or
other business entity;
(iii) The manner and basis of converting membership
or ownership interests of the constituent cooperatives or
business entities into membership or ownership interests in the
surviving or new cooperative or business entity;
(iv) The terms of the merger or consolidation;
(v) The proposed effect of the consolidation or
merger on the members and patron members of the cooperative; and
(vi) For a consolidation, the plan shall contain the
articles of the entity or organizational documents to be filed
with the state in which the entity is organized.
(c) The following shall apply to notice:
(i) The board shall mail a merger or consolidation or
otherwise transmit or deliver notice to each member. The notice
shall contain:
(A) The full text of the plan; and
(B) The time and place of the meeting at which
the plan will be considered.
(ii) A cooperative with more than two hundred (200)
members may provide the merger or consolidation notice in the
same manner as a regular members' meeting notice.
(d) The following shall apply to the adoption of a plan or
merger or consolidation:
(i) A plan of merger or consolidation is adopted if:
(A) A quorum of the members is registered as
being present or represented by mail vote at the meeting; and
(B) The plan is approved by two-thirds (2/3) of
the votes cast, or for a cooperative with articles or bylaws
requiring more than two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast or other
conditions for approval, the plan is approved by a proportion of
the votes cast or a number of total members as required by the
articles or bylaws and the conditions for approval in the
articles or bylaws have been satisfied.
(ii) After the plan has been adopted, articles of
merger or consolidation stating the plan and that the plan was
adopted according to this article shall be signed by the chair,
vice-chair, records officer or documents officer of each
cooperative merging or consolidating;
(iii) The articles of merger or consolidation shall
be filed in the office of the secretary of state;
(iv) For a merger, the articles of the surviving
cooperative subject to this article are deemed amended to the
extent provided in the articles of merger;
(v) Unless a later date is provided in the plan, the
merger or consolidation is effective when the articles of merger
or consolidation are filed in the office of the secretary of
state;
(vi) The secretary of state shall issue a certificate
of organization of the merged or consolidated cooperative.
(e) The following shall apply to the effect of a merger:
(i) After the effective date, the cooperatives or
other business entities that are parties to the plan become a
single entity. For a merger, the surviving business entity is
the business entity designated in the plan. For a consolidation,
the new cooperative or other business entity is the business
entity provided for in the plan. Except for the surviving or new
business entity, the separate existence of all business entities
that are parties to the plan cease on the effective date of the
merger or consolidation;
(ii) The surviving or new business entity possesses
all of the rights and property of each of the merged or
consolidated business entities and is responsible for all their
obligations. The title to property of the merged or consolidated
business entity is vested in the surviving or new business
entity without reversion or impairment of the title caused by
the merger or consolidation;
(iii) The right of a creditor may not be impaired by
the merger or consolidation without the creditor's consent.
(f) The fee to be paid to the secretary of state for
filing articles of merger or consolidation shall conform with
the provisions of W.S. 17-16-122.
17-10-237. Liquidation.
(a) A cooperative shall be liquidated as provided in the
articles in a manner consistent with other business entities
organized in this state or if not provided, may be liquidated in
the same manner as a limited liability company organized in this
state or the members may authorize a liquidation by adopting a
resolution at a members' meeting. The notice of the members'
meeting shall include a statement that the disposition of all of
the assets of the cooperative will be considered at the meeting.
If a quorum is present in person, by mail ballot, or alternative
method approved by the board at the members' meeting, the
resolution approving of the liquidation is adopted if:
(i) Approved by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast;
or
(ii) For a cooperative with articles or bylaws
requiring more than two-thirds (2/3) for approval or other
conditions for approval, the resolution is approved by the
proportion of the votes cast or a number of total members as
required by the articles or bylaws and the conditions for
approval in the articles or bylaws have been satisfied.
(b) The board of directors by resolution may liquidate a
cooperative if the board obtains an opinion of an accountant
that the cooperative is unlikely to continue as a business based
on its current finances.
17-10-238. Methods of dissolution.
A cooperative may be dissolved by the members or by order of the
court.
17-10-239. Winding up.
(a) After the notice of intent to dissolve has been filed
with the secretary of state, the board, or the officers acting
under the direction of the board, shall proceed as soon as
possible:
(i) To collect or make provision for the collection
of all debts due or owing to the cooperative, including unpaid
subscriptions for shares; and
(ii) To pay or make provision for the payment of all
debts, obligations and liabilities of the cooperative according
to their priorities.
(b) After the notice of intent to dissolve has been filed
with the secretary of state, the board may sell, lease, transfer
or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of the property
and assets of the dissolving cooperative without a vote of the
members.
(c) Tangible and intangible property, including money,
remaining after the discharge of the debts, obligations and
liabilities of the cooperative may be distributed to the members
and former members as provided in the bylaws. If previously
authorized by the members, the tangible and intangible property
of the cooperative may be liquidated and disposed of at the
discretion of the board.
17-10-240. Revocation of dissolution proceedings.
(a) Dissolution proceedings may be revoked before the
articles of dissolution are filed with the secretary of state.
(b) The chair may call a members' meeting to consider the
advisability of revoking the dissolution proceedings. The
question of the proposed revocation shall be submitted to the
members at the members' meeting called to consider the
revocation. The dissolution proceedings are revoked if the
proposed revocation is approved at the members' meeting by a
majority of the members of the cooperative or for a cooperative
with articles or bylaws requiring a greater number of members,
the number of members required by the articles or bylaws.
(c) Revocation of dissolution proceedings is effective
when a notice of revocation is filed with the secretary of
state. After the notice is filed, the cooperative may resume
business.
17-10-241. Statute of limitations.
The claim of a creditor or claimant against a dissolving
cooperative is barred if the claim has not been enforced by
initiating legal, administrative or arbitration proceedings
concerning the claim by two (2) years after the date the notice
of intent to dissolve is filed with the secretary of state.
17-10-242. Articles of dissolution.
(a) Articles of dissolution of a cooperative shall be
filed with the secretary of state after payment of the claims of
all known creditors and claimants has been made or provided for
and the remaining property has been distributed by the board.
The articles of dissolution shall state:
(i) That all debts, obligations, and liabilities of
the cooperative have been paid or discharged or adequate
provisions have been made for them or time periods allowing
claims have run and other claims are not outstanding;
(ii) That the remaining property, assets, and claims
of the cooperative have been distributed among the members or
pursuant to a liquidation authorized by the members; and
(iii) That legal, administrative, or arbitration
proceedings by or against the cooperative are not pending or
adequate provision has been made for the satisfaction of a
judgment, order or decree that may be entered against the
cooperative in a pending proceeding.
(b) The cooperative is dissolved when the articles of
dissolution have been filed with the secretary of state.
(c) The secretary of state shall issue to the dissolved
cooperative or its legal representative a certificate of
dissolution that contains:
(i) The name of the dissolved cooperative;
(ii) The date the articles of dissolution were filed
with the secretary of state; and
(iii) A statement that the cooperative is dissolved.
17-10-243. Application for court-supervised voluntary
dissolution.
After a notice of intent to dissolve has been filed with the
secretary of state and before a certificate of dissolution has
been issued, the cooperative or, for good cause shown, a member
or creditor may apply to a court within the county where the
registered address is located to have the dissolution conducted
or continued under the supervision of the court as provided in
W.S. 17-10-250.
17-10-244. Court-ordered remedies or dissolution.
(a) A court may grant equitable relief that it deems just
and reasonable in the circumstances or may dissolve a
cooperative and liquidate its assets and business in any of the
following circumstances:
(i) In a supervised voluntary dissolution that is
applied for by the cooperative;
(ii) In an action by a member when it is established
that:
(A) The directors or the persons having the
authority otherwise vested in the board are deadlocked in the
management of the cooperative's affairs and the members are
unable to break the deadlock;
(B) The directors or those in control of the
cooperative have acted fraudulently, illegally or in a manner
unfairly prejudicial toward one (1) or more members in their
capacities as members, directors or officers;
(C) The members of the cooperative are so
divided in voting power that, for a period that includes the
time when two (2) consecutive regular members' meetings were
held, they have failed to elect successors to directors whose
terms have expired or would have expired upon the election and
qualification of their successors;
(D) The cooperative assets are being misapplied
or wasted; or
(E) The period of duration as provided in the
articles has expired and has not been extended as provided in
this article.
(iii) In an action by a creditor when:
(A) The claim of the creditor against the
cooperative has been reduced to judgment and an execution on the
judgment has been returned unsatisfied; or
(B) The cooperative has admitted in writing that
the claim of the creditor against the cooperative is due and
owing and it is established that the cooperative is unable to
pay its debts in the ordinary course of business.
(iv) In an action by the attorney general to dissolve
the cooperative in accordance with this article when it is
established that a decree of dissolution is appropriate.
(b) In determining whether to order equitable relief or
dissolution, the court shall take into consideration the
financial condition of the cooperative but may not refuse to
order equitable relief or dissolution solely on the ground that
the cooperative has accumulated operating net income or current
operating net income.
(c) In deciding whether to order dissolution of the
cooperative, the court shall consider whether lesser relief
suggested by one (1) or more parties, such as a form of
equitable relief or a partial liquidation, would be adequate to
permanently relieve the circumstances established under
subparagraph (a)(ii)(B) or (C) of this section. Lesser relief
may be ordered if it would be appropriate under the facts and
circumstances of the case.
(d) If the court finds that a party to a proceeding
brought under this section has acted arbitrarily, vexatiously,
or otherwise not in good faith, the court may in its discretion
award reasonable expenses, including attorneys' fees and
disbursements, to any of the other parties.
(e) Proceedings under this section shall be brought in a
court within the county where the registered address of the
cooperative is located.
(f) It is not necessary to make members parties to the
action or proceeding unless relief is sought against them
personally.
17-10-245. Procedure in involuntary or court-supervised
voluntary dissolution.
(a) In dissolution proceedings before a hearing can be
completed the court may:
(i) Issue injunctions;
(ii) Appoint receivers with all powers and duties
that the court directs;
(iii) Take actions required to preserve the
cooperative's assets wherever located; and
(iv) Carry on the business of the cooperative.
(b) After a hearing is completed, on notice the court
directs to be given to parties to the proceedings and to other
parties in interest designated by the court, the court may
appoint a receiver to collect the cooperative's assets,
including amounts owing to the cooperative by subscribers on
account of an unpaid portion of the consideration for the
issuance of shares. A receiver has authority, subject to the
order of the court, to continue the business of the cooperative
and to sell, lease, transfer, or otherwise dispose of the
property and assets of the cooperative either at public or
private sale.
(c) The assets of the cooperative or the proceeds
resulting from a sale, lease, transfer, or other disposition
shall be applied in the following order of priority:
(i) The costs and expenses of the proceedings,
including attorneys' fees and disbursements;
(ii) Debts, taxes and assessments due the United
States, this state and other states in that order;
(iii) Claims duly proved and allowed to employees
under the provisions of the workers' compensation act except
that claims under this clause may not be allowed if the
cooperative has carried workers' compensation insurance, as
provided by law, at the time the injury was sustained;
(iv) Claims, including the value of all compensation
paid in a medium other than money, proved and allowed to
employees for services performed within three (3) months
preceding the appointment of the receiver, if any; and
(v) Other claims proved and allowed.
(d) After payment of the expenses of receivership and
claims of creditors are proved, the remaining assets, if any,
may be distributed to the members or distributed pursuant to an
approved liquidation plan.
17-10-246. Receiver qualifications and powers.
(a) A receiver shall be a natural person or a domestic
corporation or a foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state. A receiver shall give a bond as directed
by the court with the sureties required by the court.
(b) A receiver may sue and defend in all courts as
receiver of the cooperative. The court appointing the receiver
has exclusive jurisdiction of the cooperative and its property.
17-10-247. Dissolution action by attorney general;
administrative dissolution.
(a) A cooperative may be dissolved involuntarily by a
decree of a court in this state in an action filed by the
attorney general if it is established that:
(i) The articles and certificate of organization were
procured through fraud;
(ii) The cooperative was organized for a purpose not
permitted by this article or prohibited by state law;
(iii) The cooperative has flagrantly violated a
provision of this article, has violated a provision of this
article more than once or has violated more than one (1)
provision of this article; or
(iv) The cooperative has acted, or failed to act, in
a manner that constitutes surrender or abandonment of the
cooperative's franchise, privileges, or enterprise.
(b) An action may not be commenced under subsection (a) of
this section until thirty (30) days after notice to the
cooperative by the attorney general of the reason for the filing
of the action. If the reason for filing the action is an act
that the cooperative has done, or omitted to do, and the act or
omission may be corrected by an amendment of the articles or
bylaws or by performance of or abstention from the act, the
attorney general shall give the cooperative thirty (30)
additional days to make the correction before filing the action.
(c) The provisions of W.S. 17-16-1420 through 17-16-1423
shall apply to the administrative dissolution of any domestic
cooperative and the provisions of W.S. 17-16-1530 through
17-16-1532 shall apply to the administrative dissolution of any
foreign cooperative.
17-10-248. Filing claims in court-supervised dissolution
proceedings.
(a) In proceedings to dissolve a cooperative, the court
may require all creditors and claimants of the cooperative to
file their claims under oath with the court administrator or
with the receiver in a form prescribed by the court.
(b) If the court requires the filing of claims, the court
shall:
(i) Set a date, by order, at least one hundred twenty
(120) days after the date the order is filed, as the last day
for the filing of claims; and
(ii) Prescribe the notice of the fixed date that
shall be given to creditors and claimants.
(c) Before the fixed date, the court may extend the time
for filing claims. Creditors and claimants failing to file
claims on or before the fixed date may be barred, by order of
court, from claiming an interest in or receiving payment out of
the property or assets of the cooperative.
17-10-249. Discontinuance of court-supervised dissolution
proceedings.
The involuntary or supervised voluntary dissolution of a
cooperative may be discontinued at any time during the
dissolution proceedings if it is established that cause for
dissolution does not exist. The court shall dismiss the
proceedings and direct the receiver, if any, to redeliver to the
cooperative its remaining property and assets.
17-10-250. Court-supervised dissolution order.
(a) In an involuntary or supervised voluntary dissolution
after the costs and expenses of the proceedings and all debts,
obligations and liabilities of the cooperative have been paid or
discharged and the remaining property and assets have been
distributed to its members or, if its property and assets are
not sufficient to satisfy and discharge the costs, expenses,
debts, obligations and liabilities, when all the property and
assets have been applied so far as they will go to their payment
according to their priorities, the court shall enter an order
dissolving the cooperative.
(b) When the order dissolving the cooperative or
association has been entered, the cooperative or association is
dissolved.
17-10-251. Filing court's dissolution order.
After the court enters an order dissolving a cooperative, the
court administrator shall cause a certified copy of the
dissolution order to be filed with the secretary of state. The
secretary of state may not charge a fee for filing the
dissolution order.
17-10-252. Barring of claims.
(a) A person who is or becomes a creditor or claimant
before, during, or following the conclusion of dissolution
proceedings, who does not file a claim or pursue a remedy in a
legal, administrative or arbitration proceeding during the
pendency of the dissolution proceeding or has not initiated a
legal, administrative, or arbitration proceeding before the
commencement of the dissolution proceedings and all those
claiming through or under the creditor or claimant, are forever
barred from suing on that claim or otherwise realizing upon or
enforcing it, except as provided in this section.
(b) Within one (1) year after articles of dissolution have
been filed with the secretary of state pursuant to this article
or a dissolution order has been entered, a creditor or claimant
who shows good cause for not having previously filed the claim
may apply to a court in this state to allow a claim:
(i) Against the cooperative to the extent of
undistributed assets; or
(ii) If the undistributed assets are not sufficient
to satisfy the claim, the claim may be allowed against a member
to the extent of the distributions to members in dissolution
received by the member.
(c) Debts, obligations, and liabilities incurred during
dissolution proceedings shall be paid or provided for by the
cooperative before the distribution of assets to a member. A
person to whom this kind of debt, obligation, or liability is
owed but is not paid may pursue any remedy against the officers,
directors or members of the cooperative before the expiration of
the applicable statute of limitations. This subsection does not
apply to dissolution under the supervision or order of a court.
17-10-253. Right to sue or defend after dissolution.
After a cooperative has been dissolved, any of its former
officers, directors or members may assert or defend, in the name
of the cooperative, a claim by or against the cooperative.
CHAPTER 11 - INDUSTRIAL CORPORATIONS
17-11-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Industrial Corporation Act".
17-11-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act, unless a different meaning is
required by the context, the following words and phrases have
the following meanings:
(i) "Corporation" means a Wyoming industrial
development corporation created under this act;
(ii) "Financial institution" means any bank, trust
company, savings and loan association, industrial bank, public
or private pension or retirement fund, insurance company or
related corporation, partnership, foundation, or other
institution engaged in lending or investing funds;
(iii) "Member" means any financial institution which
undertakes to lend money to or to buy stock in the corporation
created under this act;
(iv) "Board of directors" means the board of
directors of the corporation created under this act;
(v) "Loan limit" means for any member, the maximum
amount permitted to be outstanding at one (1) time on loans made
by such member to the corporation, as determined under the
provisions of this act;
(vi) "Shareholder" means:
(A) If the corporation is formed for profit, the
holder of record of shares in the corporation; or
(B) If the corporation is a nonprofit
corporation, a member who has contributed money, property,
services or other item of value and whose contribution is
recorded on the books of the corporation.
17-11-103. Incorporation; profit or nonprofit corporation;
articles of incorporation generally.
(a) Fifteen (15) or more persons, a majority of whom shall
be residents of this state, may form an industrial development
corporation under the provisions of this act, by filing in the
office of the secretary of state articles of incorporation.
(b) The corporation may be formed as a nonprofit
corporation in which event it shall be subject to and governed
by the provisions of W.S. 17-19-101 through 17-19-1807, not in
conflict with or inconsistent with the provisions of this act,
or the corporation may be formed for profit in which event it
shall be subject to and governed by the provisions of the
Wyoming Business Corporation Act not in conflict with or
inconsistent with the provisions of this act.
(c) The articles of incorporation shall contain:
(i) The name of the corporation which shall include
the words "Industrial Development Corporation of Wyoming";
(ii) A statement as to whether the corporation is
formed as a nonprofit corporation or for profit;
(iii) The purposes for which the corporation is
founded, which shall be to promote, stimulate, develop and
advance the business prosperity and economic welfare of Wyoming
and its citizens; to encourage and assist through loans,
investments or other business transactions in the location of
new business and industry in this state and to rehabilitate and
assist existing business and industry; to stimulate and assist
in the expansion of all kinds of business activity which will
tend to promote the business development and maintain the
economic stability of this state, provide maximum opportunities
for employment, and improve the standard of living of the
citizens of this state; similarly, to cooperate and act in
conjunction with other organizations, public or private, in the
promotion and advancement of industrial, commercial,
agricultural, and recreational developments in this state; and
to provide financing for the promotion, development, and conduct
of all kinds of business activity in this state. The purposes
for which the corporation is formed may also include the
rendering of service to industry by providing feasibility,
product, production and market analyses, patent advice,
technological information, research and development assistance,
financial availability counseling, management counseling, and
any other information, assistance or facilities required for the
creation of new industry, to further the expansion of existing
industry, or to induce industry to locate in the state;
(iv) The total number of directors, their terms, and
the method of their election;
(v) If the corporation is a nonprofit corporation, a
provision that the assets on dissolution, and any distributions
of earnings or assets prior to dissolution, shall be made only
to a charitable or educational organization or institution;
(vi) The information required by W.S. 17-19-202, if
the corporation is formed on a nonprofit basis and the
information required by W.S. 17-16-202, if the corporation is
formed for profit.
(d) The articles of incorporation shall be subscribed and
acknowledged by not less than five (5) persons.
(e) The articles of incorporation shall recite that the
corporation is organized under the provisions of this act.
(f) The secretary of state shall not approve the articles
of incorporation for a corporation organized under this act
until a total of at least ten (10) national banks, state banks,
savings banks, industrial savings banks, federal savings and
loan associations, domestic building and loan associations, or
insurance companies authorized to do business within this state,
or any combination thereof, have agreed in writing to become
members of said corporation, which agreement shall be filed with
the secretary of state with the articles of incorporation and
the filing of same shall be a condition precedent to the
approval of the articles of incorporation by the secretary of
state. Whenever the articles of incorporation shall have been
filed in the office of the secretary of state and approved by
him, and all filing fees and taxes have been paid, the
subscribers, their successors and assigns shall constitute a
corporation, and said corporation shall then be authorized to
commence business.
17-11-104. Powers of corporation generally.
(a) In furtherance of its purposes the corporation shall,
subject to the restrictions and limitations herein contained,
have the following powers:
(i) To elect, appoint, and employ officers, agents
and employees; to make contracts and incur liabilities for any
of the purposes of the corporation;
(ii) To borrow money from its members, the small
business administration or any other similar federal agency, or
the state of Wyoming or any agency or department thereof or any
other corporation or person, for any of the purposes of the
corporation; to issue therefor its bonds, debentures, notes or
other evidence of indebtedness, whether secured or unsecured,
and to secure the same by mortgage, pledge, deed of trust or
other lien on its property, franchises, rights, and privileges
of every kind and nature, or any part thereof or interest
therein, without securing stockholder or member approval;
(iii) To make loans to any project, person, firm,
corporation, association or trust, to invest in a small business
investment company as regulated by the small business
administration, and to establish and regulate the terms and
conditions with respect to those loans or investments;
(iv) To cooperate with and avail itself of the
facilities of the United States department of commerce, the
Wyoming business council created by W.S. 9-12-103 and any other
similar state or federal governmental agencies; and to cooperate
with and assist, and otherwise encourage organizations in the
various communities of the state in the promotion, assistance,
and development of the business prosperity and economic welfare
of such communities or of this state or of any part thereof;
(v) To do all acts and things necessary or convenient
to carry out the powers expressly granted in this act.
(b) In addition to the powers herein enumerated, the
corporation if organized as a nonprofit corporation shall have
all of the powers conferred on such corporations by W.S.
17-19-101 through 17-19-1807, and if organized as a profit
corporation shall have all of the powers conferred on
corporations under the Wyoming Business Corporation Act.
17-11-105. Authority to acquire and dispose of bonds,
securities and capital stock of corporation.
(a) Notwithstanding any rule at common law or any
provision of any general or special law or any provision in
their respective charters, agreements of association, articles
of organization or trust indentures:
(i) Any person, domestic or foreign corporation,
public utility company, insurance company, financial institution
as defined herein, or trust, is hereby authorized to acquire,
purchase, hold, sell, assign, transfer, mortgage, pledge or
otherwise dispose of any bonds, securities, or other evidence of
indebtedness, or the shares of the capital stock of the
corporation, or to make contributions to any corporation
organized hereunder, and while a shareholder to exercise all the
rights, powers, and privileges granted shareholders, including
the right to vote, all without the approval of any regulatory
authority of the state except as otherwise provided in this act;
(ii) All financial institutions as defined herein are
hereby authorized to become members of the corporation and to
make loans to the corporation as provided herein; and
(iii) Each financial institution which becomes a
member of the corporation may acquire, purchase, hold, sell,
assign, transfer, mortgage, pledge or otherwise dispose of any
bonds, securities, or other evidence of indebtedness, or the
shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and make
contributions to the corporation, and as a shareholder exercise
all the rights, powers, and privileges granted stockholders,
including the right to vote, all without the approval of any
regulatory authority of the state.
(b) The amount of capital stock of the corporation which
any member is authorized to acquire pursuant to the authority
granted herein is in addition to the amount of capital stock in
corporations which such member may otherwise be authorized to
acquire.
17-11-106. Membership generally; loans to corporation.
(a) Any financial institution may request membership in
the corporation by making application to the board of directors
on such form and in such manner as said board of directors may
require, and membership shall become effective upon acceptance
of such application by the board.
(b) Each member of the corporation shall make loans to the
corporation as and when called upon by it to do so on such terms
and other conditions as shall be approved from time to time by
the board of directors, subject to the following conditions:
(i) All loan limits shall be established at the
thousand dollar amount nearest to the amount computed in
accordance with the provisions of this section;
(ii) Repealed by Laws 1988, ch. 84, § 2.
(iii) The total amount outstanding on loans to the
corporation made by any member at any one (1) time, when added
to the amount of the investment in the capital stock of the
corporation then held by such member, shall not exceed:
(A) Twenty percent (20%) of the total amount
then outstanding on loans to the corporation by all members,
including in said total amount outstanding amounts validly
called for loan but not yet loaned;
(B) The following limit, to be determined as of
the time such member becomes a member on the basis of the
audited balance sheet of such member at the close of its fiscal
year immediately preceding its application for membership, or in
the case of an insurance company, its last annual statement to
the state insurance commissioner: two and one-half percent (2
1/2%) of the capital and surplus of commercial banks and trust
companies; one-half of one percent (1/2%) of the total
outstanding loans made by savings and loan associations, and
building and loan associations; two and one-half percent (2
1/2%) of the capital and unassigned surplus of stock insurance
companies, except fire insurance companies; two and one-half
percent (2 1/2%) of the unassigned surplus of mutual insurance
companies, except fire insurance companies; one-tenth of one
percent (1/10%) of the assets of fire insurance companies; and
such limits as may be approved by the board of directors of the
corporation for other financial institutions. The board of
directors may, on the request of any financial institution
applying for membership, and with the approval of two-thirds
(2/3%) of the members of the same class as the financial
institution making the request, authorize a different loan limit
for such financial institution than is set forth above.
(iv) Each call made by the corporation shall be
prorated among the members of the corporation in substantially
the same proportion that the adjusted loan limit of each member
bears to the aggregate of the adjusted loan limits of all
members. The adjusted loan limit of a member shall be the amount
of the member's loan limit, reduced by the balance of
outstanding loans made by the member to the corporation, the
investment in capital stock of the corporation held by the
member and the amount of any contribution made by the member to
the corporation, at the time of the call. No member shall be
subject to a call as a result of owning stock in the
corporation. Calls shall be made only on members who have made
member loans to the corporation;
(v) All loans to the corporation by members under
this section shall be evidenced by bonds, debentures, notes, or
other evidence of indebtedness of the corporation, which shall
be freely negotiable at all times, and which shall bear interest
at a rate of not less than one-quarter of one percent (1/4%).
17-11-107. Duration of membership; withdrawal.
Membership in the corporation shall be for the duration of the
corporation, provided that upon written notice given to the
corporation a minimum of three (3) years and a maximum of
fifteen (15) years in advance, as determined by the board of
directors, a member may withdraw from membership in the
corporation at the expiration date of such notice.
17-11-108. Powers of shareholders and members.
(a) The shareholders and the members of the corporation
shall have the following powers of the corporation:
(i) To determine the number of and elect directors as
provided in W.S. 17-11-110;
(ii) To make, amend and repeal bylaws;
(iii) To amend the certificate of incorporation;
(iv) To dissolve the corporation as provided in W.S.
17-11-116;
(v) To do all things necessary or desirable to secure
aid, assistance loans and other financing from any financial
institutions, and from any agency established under the Small
Business Investment Act of 1958, Public Law 85-699, 85th
Congress, or other similar federal laws now or hereafter
enacted, and from the state of Wyoming or any agency or
department thereof;
(vi) To exercise such other of the powers of the
corporation consistent with the act as may be conferred on the
shareholders and the members by the bylaws.
(b) As to all matters requiring action by the shareholders
and the members of the corporation, the shareholders and members
shall vote as provided in the bylaws of the corporation.
(c) Unless otherwise provided in the articles of
incorporation, each shareholder shall have one (1) vote, in
person or by proxy, for each share of stock held by him. Each
member shall have one (1) vote, in person or by proxy, for each
share of stock held by him except that any member having a loan
limit of more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) and having a
loan to the corporation as provided under W.S. 17-11-106(b)
shall have one (1) additional vote, in person or by proxy, for
each additional one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) which the
member has outstanding in loans to the corporation under W.S.
17-11-106(b) at any one (1) time.
17-11-109. Amendments to articles of incorporation.
(a) The articles of incorporation may be amended by the
votes of the shareholders and the members of the corporation as
provided in the corporate bylaws.
(b) An amendment to the articles of incorporation shall be
filed with the secretary of state, and shall not take effect
until the date of such filing.
17-11-110. Board of directors.
(a) The business and affairs of the corporation shall be
managed and conducted by a board of directors, which shall
consist of not less than five (5) nor more than seven (7)
members. One (1) member of the board shall be the chief
executive officer of the Wyoming business council or other
person designated by the council. The board of directors may
exercise all the powers of the corporation except such as are
conferred by law or by the articles of incorporation or the
bylaws of the corporation upon the shareholders or members.
(b) The board of directors shall be elected in the first
instance by the incorporators and thereafter at the annual
meeting, or if no annual meeting shall be held in the year of
incorporation, then within ninety (90) days after the filing of
the articles of incorporation at a special meeting to be called
for such purpose. The directors shall hold office until the next
annual meeting of the corporation and until their successors are
elected and qualified unless sooner removed in accordance with
the provisions of the bylaws. Any vacancy in the office of a
director elected by the members shall be filled by the directors
elected by the members, and any vacancy in the office of a
director elected by the stockholders shall be filled by the
directors elected by the stockholders.
(c) Directors and officers shall not be responsible for
losses unless the same shall have been occasioned by the willful
misconduct of such directors and officers.
17-11-111. Determination of net earnings and surplus.
Net earnings and surplus shall be determined by the board of
directors, after providing for such reserves as said directors
deem desirable, and the determination of the directors made in
good faith shall be conclusive on all persons.
17-11-112. Depository of funds.
The corporation shall not deposit any of its funds in any
banking institution unless such institution has been designated
as a depository by a vote of a majority of the directors present
at an authorized meeting of the board of directors, exclusive of
any director who is an officer or director of the depository so
designated.
17-11-113. Examination by director; reports.
The corporation shall be examined at least once annually by the
director of the state department of audit or his designee and
shall make reports of its condition annually to director, who in
turn shall make copies of such reports available to the
governor; and the corporation shall also furnish such other
information as may from time to time be required by the director
or the secretary of state. The director shall exercise the same
power and authority over corporations organized under this act
as is now exercised over banks and trust companies.
17-11-114. First meeting.
(a) The first meeting of the corporation shall be called
by a notice signed by three (3) or more of the incorporators,
stating the time, place, and purpose of the meeting, a copy of
which notice shall be mailed or delivered to each incorporator
at least five (5) days before the day appointed for the meeting,
or may be held without such notice upon waiver in writing signed
by all the incorporators. There shall be recorded in the minutes
of the meeting a copy of said notice or of such unanimous
agreement of the incorporators.
(b) At such first meeting, the incorporators shall adopt
bylaws, elect directors, and take such other action as the
incorporators may see fit. Eight (8) of the incorporators shall
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.
17-11-115. Perpetual existence.
The period of existence of the corporation shall be perpetual,
subject to the right of the shareholders and the members to
dissolve the corporation prior to the expiration of said period
as provided in W.S. 17-11-116.
17-11-116. Dissolution.
The corporation may upon the affirmative vote of two-thirds
(2/3) of the votes to which the shareholders shall be entitled
and two-thirds (2/3) of the votes to which the members shall be
entitled to dissolve said corporation. Upon any dissolution of
the corporation, none of the corporation's assets shall be
distributed to the shareholders until all sums due the members
of the corporation and creditors thereof have been paid in full.
If the corporation is a nonprofit corporation the assets
remaining after payment in full of all amounts due creditors and
the members of the corporation shall be paid only to charitable
or educational organizations and institutions, in accordance
with the articles of incorporation and bylaws of the
corporation.
17-11-117. Corporations designated "state development
companies" for purposes of federal law.
Any corporation organized under the provisions of this act shall
be a state development company, as defined in the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958, Public Law 85-699, 85th Congress, or any
similar federal legislation, and shall be authorized to operate
on a statewide basis.
17-11-118. Exemption from securities registration.
Corporations organized under the provisions of this act shall be
exempt from registration under, or compliance with, the Wyoming
Uniform Securities Act, W.S. 17-4-101 through 17-4-701.
17-11-119. Tax exemptions, credits or privileges.
Any tax exemptions, tax credits, or tax privileges granted to
banks, savings and loan associations, trust companies, and other
financial institutions by any general laws are granted to
corporations organized pursuant to this act.
17-11-120. Filing fees.
Corporations organized for profit under the provisions of this
act shall pay the filing fees required by W.S. 17-16-122 and
17-16-1630, and nonprofit corporations shall pay the filing fees
required by W.S. 17-19-122 and 17-19-1630.
CHAPTER 12 - MISCELLANEOUS COMPANIES
17-12-101. Certificate of ditch company.
Whenever any three (3) or more persons associate under the
provisions of this article, to form a company for the purpose of
constructing a ditch or ditches for the purpose of conveying
water to any mines, mills or lands to be used for mining,
milling or irrigating of lands, they shall in their certificate,
in addition to the matters required in the first section of this
article, specify as follows: the stream or streams from which
the water is to be taken out; the line of said ditch or ditches,
as near as may be, and the use to which said water is intended
to be applied.
17-12-102. Right-of-way of ditch company; interference
with prior ditch and water rights.
Any ditch company formed under the provisions of this article
shall have the right-of-way over the lines named in the
certificate, and shall also have the right to run the water of
the stream or streams named in the certificate through their
ditch or ditches; provided, that the lines proposed shall not
interfere with any other ditch whose rights are prior to those
acquired under this article and by virtue of said certificate.
Nor shall the water of any stream be directed from its original
channel to the detriment of any miners, mill men or others along
the line of said stream, or who may have a priority of right,
and there shall be at all times left sufficient water in said
stream for the use of miners and agriculturists who may have a
prior right to such water along said stream.
17-12-103. Proper condition of ditches.
Every ditch company organized under the provisions of this
article shall be required to keep the banks of their ditch or
ditches in good condition, so that the water shall not be
allowed to escape from the same, to the injury of any mining
claim, road, ditch or other property located and held prior to
the location of such ditch; and whenever it is necessary to
convey any ditch over, or across, or above any lode or mining
claim, the company shall, if necessary to keep the water of said
ditch out from any claim, flume the ditch so far as necessary to
protect such claim or property from the water of said ditch;
provided, that in all cases where the ditch has priority of
right by location, the owners of such claim or property shall be
compelled to protect themselves from any damages that might be
created by said ditch, and the owner of such claim shall be
liable for any damages resulting to said ditch by reason of the
works or operations performed on such claim or property.
17-12-104. Applicability of W.S. 17-12-101 through
17-12-104 to existing companies.
This act shall apply to all ditch companies already formed and
incorporated under the laws of Wyoming.
17-12-105. Authority of ditch and water companies to issue
bonds and mortgage property.
Every corporation organized under the laws of Wyoming for the
purpose of constructing or operating a system of waterworks,
within the corporate limits of any city or town, and every ditch
and water company organized under the laws of Wyoming shall have
power, and is hereby authorized to mortgage or execute deeds of
trust in whole or in part, of their real and personal property
and franchises, to secure money borrowed by them for the
construction or operation of their waterworks, or ditches, and
may also issue their corporate bonds, to make all of said bonds
payable to bearer, or otherwise, negotiable by delivery and
bearing interest at such rates, and may sell the same at such
rates and prices as they may deem proper; and said bonds shall
be made payable at such times, and the principal and interest
thereof may be made payable within or without this state, at
such place or places as may be determined upon by said company.
17-12-106. Certificate of flume company.
When any company shall organize under the provisions of this
article to form a company for the purpose of constructing a
flume, their certificate, in addition to the matters required in
the first section of this article, shall specify as follows: the
place of beginning, the termini and the route so near as may be,
and the purpose for which such flume is intended, and when
organized according to the provisions of this chapter, said
company shall have the right-of-way over the line proposed in
such certificate for such flume; provided, it does not conflict
with the right of any farmer, fluming, ditching or other
company.
17-12-107. Certificate of telegraph company.
Whenever any three (3) or more persons associate under the
provisions of this article, to form a company for the purpose of
constructing a line or lines of magnetic telegraph in this
state, their certificate shall specify as follows: the termini
of such line or lines, and the counties through which they shall
pass; and such corporation is hereby authorized to construct
said telegraph line or lines from point to point along and upon
any of the public roads, by the erection of the necessary
fixtures, including posts, piers and abutments, necessary for
the wires; provided, that the same shall not incommode the
public in the use of said roads or highways.
CHAPTER 13 - PARTNERSHIPS
ARTICLE 1 - IN GENERAL
17-13-101. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-102. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-103. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-104. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-105. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
ARTICLE 2 - NATURE OF PARTNERSHIP
17-13-201. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-202. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-203. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
ARTICLE 3 - RELATIONSHIP TO THIRD PERSONS
17-13-301. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-302. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-303. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-304. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-305. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-306. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-307. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-308. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-309. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
ARTICLE 4 - RELATIONSHIP OF PARTNERS ONE TO ANOTHER
17-13-401. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-402. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-403. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-404. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-405. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-406. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
ARTICLE 5 - PROPERTY RIGHTS OF PARTNERS
17-13-501. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-502. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-503. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-504. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-505. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
ARTICLE 6 - DISSOLUTION
17-13-601. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-602. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-603. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-604. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-605. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-606. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-607. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-608. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-609. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-610. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-611. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-612. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-613. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-614. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
17-13-615. Repealed by Laws 1993, ch. 194, § 2.
CHAPTER 14 - LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS
ARTICLE 1 - LIMITED PARTNERSHIP ACT OF 1971
17-14-101. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-102. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-103. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-104. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-105. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-106. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-107. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-108. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-109. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-110. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-111. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-112. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-113. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-114. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-115. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-116. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-117. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-118. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-119. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-120. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-121. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-122. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-123. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-124. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-125. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-126. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-127. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-128. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-129. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-130. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
17-14-131. Repealed by Laws 1979, ch. 153, § 3.
ARTICLE 2 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-14-201. Short title.
This act may be cited as the "Uniform Limited Partnership Act".
17-14-202. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act, unless the context otherwise
requires:
(i) "Certificate of limited partnership" means the
certificate referred to in W.S. 17-14-301, and the certificate
as amended or restated;
(ii) "Contribution" means any cash, property,
services rendered, or a promissory note or other binding
obligation to contribute cash or property or to perform
services, which a partner contributes to a limited partnership
in his capacity as a partner;
(iii) "Event of withdrawal of a general partner"
means an event that causes a person to cease to be a general
partner as provided in W.S. 17-14-502;
(iv) "Foreign limited partnership" means a
partnership formed under the laws of any state other than this
state and having as partners one (1) or more general partners
and one (1) or more limited partners;
(v) "General partner" means a person who has been
admitted to a limited partnership as a general partner in
accordance with the partnership agreement and named in the
certificate of limited partnership as a general partner;
(vi) "Limited partner" means a person who has been
admitted to a limited partnership as a limited partner in
accordance with the partnership agreement;
(vii) "Limited partnership" and "domestic limited
partnership" mean a partnership formed by two (2) or more
persons under the laws of this state and having one (1) or more
general partners and one (1) or more limited partners;
(viii) "Partner" means a limited or general partner;
(ix) "Partnership agreement" means any valid
agreement, written or oral, of the partners as to the affairs of
a limited partnership and the conduct of its business;
(x) "Partnership interest" means a partner's share of
the profits and losses of a limited partnership and the right to
receive distributions of partnership assets;
(xi) "Person" means a natural person, partnership,
limited partnership (domestic or foreign), limited liability
company, trust, estate, association or corporation;
(xii) "State" means a state, territory or possession
of the United States, the District of Columbia, or the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico;
(xiii) "Certificate of continuance" means the
certificate issued under the provisions of this act to continue
a foreign limited partnership in this state;
(xiv) "Foreign limited liability limited partnership"
means a foreign limited partnership whose general partners have
limited liability for the obligations of the foreign limited
partnership under a provision similar to W.S. 17-14-503;
(xv) "Limited liability limited partnership", except
in the phrase "foreign limited liability limited partnership"
means a limited partnership whose certificate of limited
partnership states that the limited partnership is a limited
liability limited partnership;
(xvi) "This act" means W.S. 17-14-201 through
17-14-1104.
17-14-203. Name.
(a) The name of each limited partnership as set forth in
its certificate of limited partnership:
(i) Shall contain without abbreviation the words
"limited partnership";
(ii) Shall not contain the name of a limited partner
unless:
(A) It is also the name of a general partner or
the corporate name of a corporate general partner; or
(B) The business of the limited partnership had
been carried on under that name before the admission of that
limited partner.
(iii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(iv) Shall not be the same as, or deceptively similar
to, any trademark or service mark registered in this state and
shall be distinguishable upon the records of the secretary of
state from other business names as provided in W.S. 17-16-401.
17-14-204. Reservation of name.
(a) The exclusive right to the use of a name may be
reserved by:
(i) Any person intending to organize a limited
partnership under this act and to adopt that name;
(ii) Any domestic limited partnership or any foreign
limited partnership registered in this state which, in either
case, intends to adopt that name;
(iii) Any foreign limited partnership intending to
register in this state and adopt that name; and
(iv) Any person intending to organize a foreign
limited partnership and intending to have it registered in this
state and adopt that name.
(b) The reservation shall be made by filing with the
secretary of state an application, executed by the applicant, to
reserve a specified name. If the secretary of state finds that
the name is available for use by a domestic or foreign limited
partnership, he shall reserve the name for the exclusive use of
the applicant for a period of one hundred twenty (120) days. The
reservation of a name is not renewable. The right to the
exclusive use of a reserved name may be transferred to any other
person by filing in the office of the secretary of state a
notice of the transfer, executed by the applicant for whom the
name was reserved and specifying the name and address of the
transferee.
17-14-205. Specified office and agent.
(a) Each limited partnership shall continuously maintain
in this state:
(i) An office, which may but need not be a place of
its business in this state, at which shall be kept the records
required by W.S. 17-14-206 to be maintained; and
(ii) A registered agent for service of process on the
limited partnership as provided in W.S. 17-28-101 through
17-28-111.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all limited partnerships.
17-14-206. Records to be kept.
(a) Each limited partnership shall keep at the office
referred to in W.S. 17-14-205 the following:
(i) A current list of the full name and last known
business address of each partner separately identifying in
alphabetical order the general partners and the limited
partners;
(ii) A copy of the certificate of limited partnership
and all certificates of amendment thereto, and any application
for and certificate of continuance, together with executed
copies of any powers of attorney pursuant to which any
certificate or application has been executed;
(iii) Copies of the limited partnership's federal,
state and local income tax returns and reports, if any, for the
three (3) most recent years;
(iv) Copies of any then effective written partnership
agreements and of any financial statements of the limited
partnership for the three (3) most recent years; and
(v) Unless contained in a written partnership
agreement, a writing setting out:
(A) The amount of cash and a description and
statement of the agreed value of the other property or services
contributed by each partner and which each partner has agreed to
contribute;
(B) The times at which or events on the
happening of which any additional contributions agreed to be
made by each partner are to be made;
(C) Any right of a partner to receive, or of a
general partner to make, distributions to a partner which
include a return of all or any part of the partner's
contribution; and
(D) Any events upon the happening of which the
limited partnership is to be dissolved and its affairs wound up.
(b) Records kept under this section are subject to
inspection and copying at the reasonable request, and at the
expense, of any partner during ordinary business hours.
17-14-207. Nature of business.
A limited partnership may carry on any business that a
partnership without limited partners may carry on except banking
or acting as an insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi).
17-14-208. Business transactions of partner with
partnership.
Except as provided in the partnership agreement, a partner may
lend money to and transact other business with the limited
partnership and, subject to other applicable law, has the same
rights and obligations with respect thereto as a person who is
not a partner.
17-14-209. Fees.
(a) The secretary of state shall charge and collect the
following fees:
(i) For filing a certificate of limited partnership
or for an application for a certificate of continuance a fee of
one hundred dollars ($100.00);
(ii) For filing a certificate of amendment or
cancellation, or for filing a reservation of name, sixty dollars
($60.00);
(iii) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(iv) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(v) For registering a foreign limited partnership, a
fee of one hundred fifty dollars ($150.00).
(b) In addition to the fees provided under subsection (a)
of this section, each limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership shall comply with and pay the fees provided by W.S.
17-16-1630(a) through (e) and 17-16-120(j) as if it were a
corporation.
(c) Any limited partnership or foreign limited partnership
failing to comply with subsection (b) of this section or failing
to pay any penalty imposed under W.S. 17-28-109 may be dissolved
or its franchise revoked by the secretary of state as if it were
a corporation.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section,
any Wyoming limited partnership dissolved or whose franchise is
revoked under subsection (c) of this section may be reinstated
as provided in W.S. 17-14-905.
17-14-210. Powers.
The secretary of state has the power reasonably necessary to
perform the duties required of him by this chapter. The
secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable forms, rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
ARTICLE 3 - FORMATION; CERTIFICATE OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
17-14-301. Certificate of limited partnership.
(a) In order to form a limited partnership a certificate
of limited partnership shall be executed and filed in the office
of the secretary of state. The certificate shall set forth:
(i) The name of the limited partnership;
(ii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(iii) The address of the office and the name and
address of the agent for service of process required to be
maintained by W.S. 17-14-205;
(iv) The name and the business address of each
general partner;
(v) The amount of cash and a description and
statement of the agreed value of the other property or services
contributed or to be contributed in the future;
(vi) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(vii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(viii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(ix) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(x) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(xi) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(xii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(xiii) The latest date upon which the limited
partnership is to dissolve;
(xiv) Whether the limited partnership is a limited
liability limited partnership; and
(xv) Any other matters the partners determine to
include therein.
(b) A limited partnership is formed at the time of the
filing of the certificate of limited partnership in the office
of the secretary of state or at any later time specified in the
certificate of limited partnership if, in either case, there has
been substantial compliance with the requirements of this
section.
17-14-302. Amendment of certificate.
(a) A certificate of limited partnership is amended by
filing a certificate of amendment thereto in the office of the
secretary of state. The certificate shall set forth:
(i) The name of the limited partnership;
(ii) The date of filing the certificate; and
(iii) The amendment to the certificate.
(b) Within thirty (30) days after the occurrence of any of
the following events and except as provided by subsection (f) of
this section, an amendment to a certificate of limited
partnership reflecting the occurrence of the event shall be
filed:
(i) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(ii) The admission of a new general partner;
(iii) The withdrawal of a general partner; or
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1999, ch. 145, § 2.
(v) The election of all the partners to become a
limited liability limited partnership.
(c) A general partner who becomes aware that any statement
in a certificate of limited partnership was false when made or
that any arrangements or other facts described have changed,
making the certificate inaccurate in any respect, shall promptly
amend the certificate.
(d) A certificate of limited partnership may be amended at
any time for any other proper purpose the general partners
determine.
(e) A person is not liable because an amendment to a
certificate of limited partnership has not been filed to reflect
the occurrence of any event referred to in subsection (b) of
this section if the amendment is filed within the periods
[period] specified in subsection (b) or (f) of this section,
whichever applies.
(f) An amendment to a certificate of limited partnership
reflecting the occurrence of any event specified by subsection
(b) of this section for a partnership comprised of ten (10)
partners or less, who are natural persons, may be filed annually
instead of within the thirty (30) day period prescribed by
subsection (b) of this section. The amendment certificate shall
reflect all events specified by subsection (b) of this section
which occurred during the calendar year and shall be filed in
the office of the secretary of state no later than January 31 of
the year following the year for which the amendment certificate
applies.
(g) A restated certificate of limited partnership may be
executed and filed in the same manner as a certificate of
amendment.
17-14-303. Cancellation of certificate.
(a) A certificate of limited partnership shall be
cancelled upon the dissolution and the commencement of winding
up of the partnership or at any other time there are no limited
partners. A certificate of cancellation shall be filed in the
office of the secretary of state and set forth:
(i) The name of the limited partnership;
(ii) The date of filing of its certificate of limited
partnership;
(iii) The reason for filing the certificate of
cancellation;
(iv) The effective date (which shall be a date
certain) of cancellation if it is not to be effective upon the
filing of the certificate; and
(v) Any other information the general partners filing
the certificate determine.
17-14-304. Execution of certificates.
(a) Each certificate required by this article to be filed
in the office of the secretary of state shall be executed in the
following manner:
(i) An original certificate of limited partnership
shall be signed by all general partners;
(ii) A certificate of amendment shall be signed by at
least one (1) general partner and by each other general partner
designated in the certificate as a new general partner; and
(iii) A certificate of cancellation shall be signed
by all general partners.
(b) Any person may sign a certificate by an
attorney-in-fact, but a power of attorney to sign a certificate
relating to the admission of a general partner shall
specifically describe the admission.
(c) The execution of a certificate by a general partner
constitutes an affirmation under the penalties of perjury that
the facts stated therein are true.
17-14-305. Execution by judicial act.
If a person required by W.S. 17-14-304 to execute any
certificate fails or refuses to do so, any other person who is
adversely affected by the failure or refusal, may petition the
district court to direct the execution of the certificate. If
the court finds that it is proper for the certificate to be
executed and that any person so designated has failed or refused
to execute the certificate, it shall order the secretary of
state to record an appropriate certificate.
17-14-306. Filing in office of secretary of state.
(a) Two (2) signed copies of the certificate of limited
partnership and of any certificates of amendment or cancellation
(or of any judicial decree of amendment or cancellation) shall
be delivered to the secretary of state. A person who executes a
certificate as an agent or fiduciary need not exhibit evidence
of his authority as a prerequisite to filing. Unless the
secretary of state finds that any certificate does not conform
to law, upon receipt of all filing fees required by law he
shall:
(i) Endorse on each duplicate original the word
"Filed" and the day, month and year of the filing thereof;
(ii) File one (1) duplicate original in his office;
and
(iii) Return the other duplicate original to the
person who filed it or his representative.
(b) Upon the filing of a certificate of amendment (or
judicial decree of amendment) in the office of the secretary of
state, the certificate of limited partnership shall be amended
as set forth therein, and upon the effective date of a
certificate of cancellation (or a judicial decree thereof), the
certificate of limited partnership is cancelled.
(c) If the secretary of state refuses to file a
certificate under subsection (a) of this section, the secretary
of state shall return it to the person who delivered it or to
the person's representative within fifteen (15) days after the
document was delivered, together with a brief, written
explanation of the reason for the refusal.
17-14-307. Liability for false statement in certificate.
(a) If any certificate of limited partnership or
certificate of amendment or cancellation contains a false
statement, one who suffers loss by reliance on the statement may
recover damages for the loss from:
(i) Any person who executes the certificate, or
causes another to execute it on his behalf, and knew, and any
general partner who knew or should have known, the statement to
be false at the time the certificate was executed; and
(ii) Any general partner who thereafter knows or
should have known that any arrangement or other fact described
in the certificate has changed, making the statement inaccurate
in any respect within a sufficient time before the statement was
relied upon reasonably to have enabled that general partner to
cancel or amend the certificate, or to file a petition for its
cancellation or amendment under W.S. 17-14-305.
17-14-308. Scope of notice.
The fact that a certificate of limited partnership is on file in
the office of the secretary of state is notice that the
partnership is a limited partnership and the persons designated
therein as general partners are general partners, but it is not
notice of any other fact.
17-14-309. Delivery of certificates to limited partners.
Upon the return by the secretary of state pursuant to W.S.
17-14-306 of a certificate marked "Filed", the general partners
shall promptly deliver or mail a copy of the certificate of
limited partnership and each certificate to each limited partner
unless the partnership agreement provides otherwise.
ARTICLE 4 - LIMITED PARTNERS
17-14-401. Admission of limited partners.
(a) A person becomes a limited partner:
(i) At the time the limited partnership is formed; or
(ii) At any later time specified in the records of
the limited partnership for becoming a limited partner.
(b) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(c) After the limited partnership is formed, a person may
be admitted as an additional limited partner:
(i) In the case of a person acquiring a partnership
interest directly from the limited partnership, upon the
compliance with the partnership agreement or, if the partnership
agreement does not so provide, upon the written consent of all
partners; and
(ii) In the case of an assignee of a partnership
interest of a partner who has the power, as provided in W.S.
17-14-804, to grant the assignee the right to become a limited
partner, upon the exercise of that power and compliance with any
conditions limiting the grant or exercise of the power.
17-14-402. Voting.
Subject to W.S. 17-14-403, the partnership agreement may grant
to all or a specified group of the limited partners the right to
vote (on a per capita or other basis) upon any matter.
17-14-403. Liability to third parties.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (d) of this section,
a limited partner is not liable for the obligations of a limited
partnership unless he is also a general partner or, in addition
to the exercise of his rights and powers as a limited partner,
he participates in the control of the business. However, if the
limited partner participates in the control of the business, he
is liable only to persons who transact business with the limited
partnership with actual knowledge of his participation in
control.
(b) A limited partner does not participate in the control
of the business within the meaning of subsection (a) of this
section solely by doing one (1) or more of the following:
(i) Being a contractor for or an agent or employee of
the limited partnership or of a general partner or being an
officer, director or shareholder of a general partner that is a
corporation;
(ii) Consulting with and advising a general partner
with respect to the business of the limited partnership;
(iii) Acting as surety for the limited partnership or
guaranteeing or assuming one (1) or more specific obligations of
the limited partnership;
(iv) Taking any action required or permitted by law
to bring or pursue a derivative action in the right of the
limited partnership;
(v) Requesting or attending a meeting of partners;
(vi) Proposing, approving or disapproving, by voting
or otherwise, one (1) or more of the following matters:
(A) The dissolution and winding up of the
limited partnership;
(B) The sale, exchange, lease, mortgage, pledge
or other transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of
the limited partnership;
(C) The incurrence of indebtedness by the
limited partnership other than in the ordinary course of its
business;
(D) A change in the nature of the business;
(E) The admission or removal of a general
partner;
(F) The admission or removal of a limited
partner;
(G) A transaction involving an actual or
potential conflict of interest between a general partner and the
limited partners;
(H) An amendment to the partnership agreement or
certificate of limited partnership; or
(J) Matters related to the business of the
limited partnership not otherwise enumerated in this subsection
which the partnership agreement states in writing may be subject
to the approval or disapproval of limited partners.
(vii) Winding up the limited partnership pursuant to
W.S. 17-14-903; or
(viii) Exercising any right or power permitted to
limited partners under this act and not specifically enumerated
in this subsection.
(c) The enumeration in subsection (b) of this section does
not mean that the possession or exercise of any other powers by
a limited partner constitutes participation by him in the
business of the limited partnership.
(d) A limited partner who knowingly permits his name to be
used in the name of the limited partnership, except under
circumstances permitted by W.S. 17-14-203(a)(ii)(A), is liable
to creditors who extend credit to the limited partnership
without actual knowledge that the limited partner is not a
general partner.
17-14-404. Person erroneously believing himself limited
partner.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
a person who makes a contribution to a business enterprise and
erroneously but in good faith believes that he has become a
limited partner in the enterprise is not a general partner in
the enterprise and is not bound by its obligations by reason of
making the contribution, receiving distributions from the
enterprise, or exercising any rights of a limited partner, if,
on ascertaining the mistake, he:
(i) Causes an appropriate certificate of limited
partnership or a certificate of amendment to be executed and
filed; or
(ii) Withdraws from future equity participation in
the enterprise.
(b) A person who makes a contribution of the kind
described in subsection (a) of this section is liable as a
general partner to any third party who transacts business with
the enterprise:
(i) Before the person withdraws and an appropriate
certificate is filed to show withdrawal; or
(ii) Before an appropriate certificate is filed to
show that he is not a general partner, but in either case only
if the third party actually believed in good faith that the
person was a general partner at the time of the transaction.
17-14-405. Information.
(a) Each limited partner has the right to:
(i) Inspect and copy any of the partnership records
required to be maintained by W.S. 17-14-206; and
(ii) Obtain from the general partners from time to
time upon reasonable demand:
(A) True and full information regarding the
state of the business and financial condition of the limited
partnership;
(B) Promptly after becoming available, a copy of
the limited partnership's federal, state and local income tax
returns for each year; and
(C) Other information regarding the affairs of
the limited partnership as is just and reasonable.
ARTICLE 5 - GENERAL PARTNERS
17-14-501. Admission of additional general partners.
After the filing of a limited partnership's original certificate
of limited partnership, additional general partners may be
admitted as provided in writing in the partnership agreement or,
if the partnership agreement does not provide in writing for the
admission of additional general partners, with the written
consent of all partners.
17-14-502. Events of withdrawal.
(a) Except as approved by the specific written consent of
all partners at the time, a person ceases to be a general
partner of a limited partnership upon the happening of any of
the following events:
(i) The general partner withdraws from the limited
partnership as provided in W.S. 17-14-702;
(ii) The general partner ceases to be a member of the
limited partnership as provided in W.S. 17-14-802;
(iii) The general partner is removed as a general
partner in accordance with the partnership agreement;
(iv) Unless otherwise provided in writing in the
partnership agreement, the general partner:
(A) Makes an assignment for the benefit of
creditors;
(B) Files a voluntary petition in bankruptcy;
(C) Is adjudicated as bankrupt or insolvent;
(D) Files a petition or answer seeking for
himself any reorganization, arrangement, composition,
readjustment, liquidation, dissolution or similar relief under
any statute, law or regulation;
(E) Files an answer or other pleading admitting
or failing to contest the material allegations of a petition
filed against him in any proceeding of this nature; or
(F) Seeks, consents to or acquiesces in the
appointment of a trustee, receiver or liquidator of the general
partner or of all or any substantial part of his properties.
(v) Unless otherwise provided in writing in the
partnership agreement, one hundred twenty (120) days after the
commencement of any proceeding against the general partner
seeking reorganization, arrangement, composition, readjustment,
liquidation, dissolution or similar relief under any statute,
law or regulation, the proceeding has not been dismissed, or if
within ninety (90) days after the appointment without his
consent or acquiescence of a trustee, receiver or liquidator of
the general partner or of all or any substantial part of his
properties, the appointment is not vacated or stayed or within
ninety (90) days after the expiration of any such stay, the
appointment is not vacated;
(vi) In the case of a general partner who is a
natural person:
(A) His death; or
(B) The entry by a court of competent
jurisdiction adjudicating him incompetent to manage his person
or his estate.
(vii) In the case of a general partner who is acting
as a general partner by virtue of being a trustee of a trust,
the termination of the trust (but not merely the substitution of
a new trustee);
(viii) In the case of a general partner that is a
separate partnership, the dissolution and commencement of
winding up of the separate partnership;
(ix) In the case of a general partner that is a
corporation, the filing of a certificate of dissolution, or its
equivalent, for the corporation or the revocation of its
charter; or
(x) In the case of an estate, the distribution by the
fiduciary of the estate's entire interest in the partnership.
17-14-503. General powers and liabilities.
(a) Except as provided in this act, in subsections (b) and
(c) of this section or in the partnership agreement, a general
partner of a limited partnership has the rights and powers and
is subject to the restrictions and liabilities of a partner in a
partnership without limited partners.
(b) A person that becomes a general partner of an existing
limited partnership is not personally liable for an obligation
of a limited partnership incurred before the person became a
partner.
(c) An obligation of a limited partnership incurred while
the limited partnership is a limited liability limited
partnership, whether arising in contract, tort or otherwise, is
solely the obligation of the limited partnership. A general
partner is not personally liable, directly or indirectly, by way
of contribution or otherwise, for such an obligation solely by
reason of being or acting as a general partner of a limited
liability limited partnership. This subsection applies despite
anything inconsistent in the partnership agreement that existed
immediately before the election by all the partners to become a
limited liability limited partnership. For purposes of this
section, the obligation of a limited partnership under contract
is deemed to arise at the time the limited partnership entered
into the contract.
17-14-504. Contributions by, and distributions to, general
partner.
A general partner of a limited partnership may make
contributions to the partnership and share in the profits and
losses of, and in the distributions from, the limited
partnership as a general partner. A general partner also may
make contributions to and share in profits, losses and
distributions as a limited partner. A person who is both a
general partner and a limited partner has the rights and powers,
and is subject to the restrictions and liabilities, of a general
partner and, except as provided in the partnership agreement,
also has the powers, and is subject to the restrictions, of a
limited partner to the extent of his participation in the
partnership as a limited partner.
17-14-505. Voting.
The partnership agreement may grant to all or certain identified
general partners the right to vote (on a per capita or any other
basis), separately or with all or any class of the limited
partners, on any matter.
ARTICLE 6 - FINANCE
17-14-601. Form of contribution.
The contribution of a partner may be in cash, property or
services rendered, or a promissory note or other obligation to
contribute cash or property or to perform services.
17-14-602. Liability for contribution.
(a) A promise by a limited partner to contribute to the
limited partnership is not enforceable unless set out in a
writing signed by the limited partner.
(b) Except as provided in the partnership agreement, a
partner is obligated to the limited partnership to perform any
enforceable promise to contribute cash or property or to perform
services, even if he is unable to perform because of death,
disability or any other reason. If a partner does not make the
required contribution of property or services, he is obligated
at the option of the limited partnership to contribute cash
equal to that portion of the value (as stated in the partnership
records required to be kept pursuant to W.S. 17-14-206) of the
stated contribution that has not been made.
(c) Unless otherwise provided in the partnership
agreement, the obligation of a partner to make a contribution or
return money or other property paid or distributed in violation
of this act may be compromised only by consent of all the
partners. Notwithstanding the compromise, a creditor of a
limited partnership who extends credit, or otherwise acts in
reliance on that obligation after the partner signs a writing
which reflects the obligation, and before the amendment or
cancellation thereof to reflect the compromise, may enforce the
original obligation.
17-14-603. Sharing of profits and losses.
The profits and losses of a limited partnership shall be
allocated among the partners, and among classes of partners, in
the manner provided in writing in the partnership agreement. If
the partnership agreement does not so provide in writing,
profits and losses shall be allocated on the basis of the value
(as stated in the partnership records required to be kept
pursuant to W.S. 17-14-206) of the contributions made by each
partner to the extent they have been received by the partnership
and have not been returned.
17-14-604. Sharing of distributions.
Distributions of cash or other assets of a limited partnership
shall be allocated among the partners, and among classes of
partners, in the manner provided in writing in the partnership
agreement. If the partnership agreement does not so provide in
writing, distributions shall be made on the basis of the value
(as stated in the partnership records required to be kept
pursuant to W.S. 17-14-206) of the contributions made by each
partner to the extent they have been received by the partnership
and have not been returned.
ARTICLE 7 - DISTRIBUTIONS AND WITHDRAWAL
17-14-701. Interim distributions.
(a) Except as provided in this article, a partner is
entitled to receive distributions from a limited partnership
before his withdrawal from the limited partnership and before
the dissolution and winding up thereof to the extent and at the
times or upon the happening of the events specified in the
partnership agreement.
(i) Amended into (a) by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 1.
(ii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
17-14-702. Withdrawal of general partner.
A general partner may withdraw from a limited partnership at any
time by giving written notice to the other partners, but if the
withdrawal violates the partnership agreement, the limited
partnership may recover from the withdrawing general partner
damages for breach of the partnership agreement and offset the
damages against the amount otherwise distributable to him.
17-14-703. Withdrawal of limited partner.
(a) A limited partner may withdraw from a limited
partnership at the time or upon the happening of events
specified in writing in the partnership agreement. If the
agreement does not specify in writing the time or the events
upon the happening of which a limited partner may withdraw or a
definite time for the dissolution and winding up of the limited
partnership, a limited partner may withdraw upon not less than
six (6) months prior written notice to each general partner at
his address on the books of the limited partnership at its
office in this state. The provisions of this subsection shall
apply to limited partnerships formed under this act prior to
July 1, 1999, unless the limited partnership properly adopts the
provisions of subsection (b) of this section.
(b) A limited partner may only withdraw from a limited
partnership at the time or upon the happening of events
specified in writing in the partnership agreement. This
subsection applies to limited partnerships formed under this act
on or after July 1, 1999. A limited partnership formed under
this act prior to July 1, 1999, may adopt the provisions of this
subsection by filing a certificate of amendment with the
secretary of state after July 1, 1999 that expressly refers to
and adopts this subsection.
17-14-704. Distribution upon withdrawal.
Except as provided in this article, upon withdrawal any
withdrawing partner is entitled to receive any distribution to
which he is entitled under the partnership agreement and, if not
otherwise provided in the agreement, he is entitled to receive,
within a reasonable time after withdrawal, the fair value of his
interest in the limited partnership as of the date of withdrawal
based upon his right to share in distributions from the limited
partnership.
17-14-705. Distribution in kind.
Except as provided in writing in the partnership agreement, a
partner, regardless of the nature of his contribution, has no
right to demand and receive any distribution from a limited
partnership in any form other than cash. Except as provided in
writing in the partnership agreement, a partner may not be
compelled to accept a distribution of any asset in kind from a
limited partnership to the extent that the percentage of the
asset distributed to him exceeds a percentage of that asset
which is equal to the percentage in which he shares in
distributions from the limited partnership.
17-14-706. Right to distribution.
At the time a partner becomes entitled to receive a
distribution, he has the status of, and is entitled to all
remedies available to, a creditor of the limited partnership
with respect to the distribution.
17-14-707. Limitations on distribution.
A partner may not receive a distribution from a limited
partnership to the extent that, after giving effect to the
distribution, all liabilities of the limited partnership, other
than liabilities to partners on account of their partnership
interests, exceed the fair value of the partnership assets.
17-14-708. Liability upon return of contribution.
(a) If a partner has received the return of any part of
his contribution without violation of the partnership agreement
or this act, he is liable to the limited partnership for a
period of one (1) year thereafter for the amount of the returned
contribution, but only to the extent necessary to discharge the
limited partnership's liabilities to creditors who extended
credit to the limited partnership during the period the
contribution was held by the partnership.
(b) If a partner has received the return of any part of
his contribution in violation of the partnership agreement or
this act, he is liable to the limited partnership for a period
of six (6) years thereafter for the amount of the contribution
wrongfully returned.
(c) A partner receives a return of his contribution to the
extent that a distribution to him reduces his share of the fair
value of the net assets of the limited partnership below the
value (as set forth in the partnership records required to be
kept pursuant to W.S. 17-14-206) of his contribution which has
not been distributed to him.
ARTICLE 8 - ASSIGNMENT OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS
17-14-801. Nature of partnership interest.
A partnership interest is personal property.
17-14-802. Assignment of partnership interest.
Except as provided in the partnership agreement, a partnership
interest is assignable in whole or in part. An assignment of a
partnership interest does not dissolve a limited partnership or
entitle the assignee to become or to exercise any rights of a
partner. An assignment entitles the assignee to receive, to the
extent assigned, only the distribution to which the assignor
would be entitled. Except as provided in the partnership
agreement, a partner ceases to be a partner upon assignment of
all his partnership interest.
17-14-803. Rights of creditor.
On application to a court of competent jurisdiction by any
judgment creditor of a partner, the court may charge the
partnership interest of the partner with payment of the
unsatisfied amount of the judgment with interest. To the extent
so charged, the judgment creditor has only the rights of an
assignee of the partnership interest. This act does not deprive
any partner of the benefit of any exemption laws applicable to
his partnership interest.
17-14-804. Right of assignee to become limited partner.
(a) An assignee of a partnership interest, including an
assignee of a general partner, may become a limited partner if
and to the extent that:
(i) The assignor gives the assignee that right in
accordance with authority described in the partnership
agreement; or
(ii) All other partners consent.
(b) An assignee who has become a limited partner has, to
the extent assigned, the rights and powers, and is subject to
the restrictions and liabilities, of a limited partner under the
partnership agreement and this act. An assignee who becomes a
limited partner also is liable for the obligations of his
assignor to make and return contributions as provided in
articles 6 and 7. However, the assignee is not obligated for
liabilities unknown to the assignee at the time he became a
limited partner.
(c) If an assignee of a partnership interest becomes a
limited partner, the assignor is not released from his liability
to the limited partnership under W.S. 17-14-307 and 17-14-602.
17-14-805. Deceased or incompetent partner; dissolved or
terminated partner.
If a partner who is an individual dies or a court of competent
jurisdiction adjudges him to be incompetent to manage his person
or his property, the partner's executor, administrator,
guardian, conservator or other legal representative may exercise
all the partner's rights for the purpose of settling his estate
or administering his property, including any power the partner
had to give an assignee the right to become a limited partner.
If a partner is a corporation, trust or other entity and is
dissolved or terminated, the powers of that partner may be
exercised by its legal representative or successor.
ARTICLE 9 - DISSOLUTION
17-14-901. Nonjudicial dissolution.
(a) A limited partnership is dissolved and its affairs
shall be wound up upon the happening of the first to occur of
the following:
(i) At the time specified in the certificate of
limited partnership;
(ii) Upon the happening of events specified in
writing in the partnership agreement;
(iii) Written consent of all partners;
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1999, ch. 145, § 2.
(v) Entry of a decree of judicial dissolution under
W.S. 17-14-902;
(vi) A vote to dissolve by all of the limited
partners, or a number or percentage of limited partners
specified in the partnership agreement, within ninety (90) days
after an event of withdrawal of the last remaining general
partner; or
(vii) The failure of the limited partners to admit or
appoint another general partner within ninety (90) days after an
event of withdrawal of the last remaining general partner.
17-14-902. Judicial dissolution.
On application by or for a partner the district court may decree
dissolution of a limited partnership whenever it is not
reasonably practicable to carry on the business in conformity
with the partnership agreement.
17-14-903. Winding up.
Except as provided in the partnership agreement, the general
partners who have not wrongfully dissolved a limited partnership
or, if none, the limited partners, may wind up the limited
partnership's affairs; but the district court may wind up the
limited partnership's affairs upon application of any partner,
his legal representative, or assignee.
17-14-904. Distribution of assets.
(a) Upon the winding up of a limited partnership, the
assets shall be distributed as follows:
(i) To creditors, including partners who are
creditors, to the extent permitted by law, in satisfaction of
liabilities of the limited partnership other than liabilities
for distributions to partners under W.S. 17-14-701 or 17-14-704;
(ii) Except as provided in the partnership agreement,
to partners and former partners in satisfaction of liabilities
for distributions under W.S. 17-14-701 or 17-14-704; and
(iii) Except as provided in the partnership
agreement, to partners first for the return of their
contributions and secondly respecting their partnership
interests, in the proportions in which the partners share in
distributions.
17-14-905. Reinstatement following administrative
dissolution.
(a) A Wyoming limited partnership administratively
dissolved for failure to pay fees as provided in W.S.
17-14-209(c) may apply to the secretary of state for
reinstatement within two (2) years after the effective date of
dissolution. The application shall recite the name of the
domestic limited partnership and the effective date of its
administrative dissolution.
(b) A domestic limited partnership applying for
reinstatement pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall
include payment of fees and taxes then delinquent and a
reinstatement certificate fee prescribed by the secretary of
state by rule.
(c) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section, that the information is correct and the
application contains the fees and taxes required by subsection
(b) of this section, he shall cancel the certificate of
dissolution and prepare a certificate of reinstatement that
recites his determination and the effective date of
reinstatement, file the original of the certificate and return a
copy to the domestic limited partnership.
(d) When the reinstatement is effective, it relates back
and takes effect as of the effective date of the administrative
dissolution pursuant to W.S. 17-14-209(c) and the limited
partnership resumes carrying on its business as if the
administrative dissolution had never occurred.
(e) The domestic limited partnership shall retain its
registered name during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
ARTICLE 10 - FOREIGN LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS
17-14-1001. Law governing.
(a) Subject to the constitution of this state:
(i) The laws of the state under which a foreign
limited partnership is organized govern its organization and
internal affairs and the liability of its limited partners,
unless the partnership has been issued a certificate of
continuance pursuant to this article; and
(ii) A foreign limited partnership shall not be
denied registration by reason of any difference between the laws
of the state under which it was organized and the laws of this
state.
17-14-1002. Registration.
(a) Before transacting business in this state, a foreign
limited partnership shall register with the secretary of state.
In order to register, a foreign limited partnership shall submit
to the secretary of state, in duplicate, an application for
registration as a foreign limited partnership, signed by a
general partner and setting forth:
(i) The name of the foreign limited partnership and,
if different, the name under which it proposes to register and
transact business in this state;
(ii) The state and date of its formation;
(iii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(iv) The name and address of any agent for service of
process on the foreign limited partnership whom the foreign
limited partnership elects to appoint; the agent shall be an
individual resident of this state, a domestic corporation or a
foreign corporation having a place of business in, and
authorized to do business in, this state;
(v) Repealed By Laws 2012, Ch. 10, § 2.
(vi) The address of the office required to be
maintained in the state of its organization by the laws of that
state or, if not so required, of the principal office of the
foreign limited partnership;
(vii) Repealed by Laws 1995, ch. 45, § 2.
(viii) The name and business address of each general
partner;
(ix) Whether the foreign limited partnership is a
foreign limited liability limited partnership; and
(x) The address of the office at which is kept a list
of the names and addresses of the limited partners and their
capital contributions, together with an undertaking by the
foreign limited partnership to keep those records until the
foreign limited partnership's registration in this state is
cancelled or withdrawn.
(b) The foreign limited partnership shall deliver with the
completed application a certificate of existence, duly
authenticated by the secretary of state or other official having
custody of limited partnership records in the state or country
under whose laws it is formed, which verifies the active
existence of the foreign limited partnership.
17-14-1003. Issuance of registration.
(a) If the secretary of state finds that an application
for registration conforms to law and all requisite fees have
been paid, he shall:
(i) Endorse on the application the word "Filed", and
the month, day and year of the filing thereof;
(ii) File in his office a duplicate original of the
application; and
(iii) Issue a certificate of registration to transact
business in this state.
(b) The certificate of registration, together with a
duplicate original of the application, shall be returned to the
person who filed the application or his representative.
17-14-1004. Name.
A foreign limited partnership may register with the secretary of
state under any name (whether or not it is the name under which
it is registered in its state of organization) that includes
without abbreviation the words "limited partnership" and that
could be registered by a domestic limited partnership.
17-14-1005. Changes and amendments.
If any statement in the application for registration of a
foreign limited partnership was false when made or any
arrangements or other facts described have changed, making the
application inaccurate in any respect, the foreign limited
partnership shall promptly file in the office of the secretary
of state a certificate, signed and sworn to by a general
partner, correcting such statement.
17-14-1006. Cancellation of registration.
(a) A foreign limited partnership may cancel its
registration by filing with the secretary of state a certificate
of cancellation signed and sworn to by a general partner. A
cancellation does not terminate the authority of the secretary
of state to accept service of process on the foreign limited
partnership with respect to causes of action arising out of the
transactions of business in this state.
(b) The registration to transact business of a foreign
limited liability partnership is subject to the same revocation
and reinstatement provisions as applicable to foreign
corporations authorized to transact business in this state
pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1530 through 17-16-1536.
17-14-1007. Transaction of business without registration.
(a) A foreign limited partnership transacting business in
this state may not maintain any action, suit or proceeding in
any court of this state until it has registered in this state.
(b) The failure of a foreign limited partnership to
register in this state does not impair the validity of any
contract or act of the foreign limited partnership or prevent
the foreign limited partnership from defending any action, suit
or proceeding in any court of this state.
(c) A limited partner of a foreign limited partnership is
not liable as a general partner of the foreign limited
partnership solely by reason of having transacted business in
this state without registration.
(d) A foreign limited partnership, by transacting business
in this state without registration, appoints the secretary of
state as its agent for service of process with respect to causes
of actions arising out of the transaction of business in this
state.
(e) Any foreign limited partnership transacting business
in this state without registering is subject to the penalties
provided by W.S. 17-16-1502(d).
17-14-1008. Action by secretary of state.
The secretary of state may bring an action to restrain a foreign
limited partnership from transacting business in this state in
violation of this article.
17-14-1009. Applicability of other provisions.
(a) In any case not provided for in this act, the
provisions of the Uniform Partnership Act apply.
(b) In cases concerning service of process on the
secretary of state as agent for a foreign limited partnership,
provisions of the Wyoming Business Corporations Act concerning
service of process, the manner of service and fees charged
apply.
17-14-1010. Continuance of a foreign limited partnership.
Any foreign limited partnership, except partnerships acting as
an insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi) or acting as a
financial institution as defined in W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix), may
apply to the secretary of state for a certificate of continuance
to permit the foreign limited partnership to continue in Wyoming
as if the partnership had been formed under the laws of this
state.
17-14-1011. Application for certificate of continuance;
requirements.
(a) To continue in this state, a foreign limited
partnership shall submit to the secretary of state, in
duplicate, an application for a certificate of continuance
setting forth:
(i) Written confirmation from the state in which the
partnership was formed that the partnership's domicile in that
state is terminated or will be terminated upon continuance in
this state;
(ii) A certified copy of the limited partnership's
original certificate of limited partnership, or equivalent
authorization, including any amendments;
(iii) The name of the limited partnership;
(iv) The duration of the limited partnership from
date of formation to present;
(v) The address of the office and the name and
address of the agent for service of process required to be
maintained by W.S. 17-14-205;
(vi) The name and business address of each general
partner;
(vii) A statement that the limited partnership will
abide by the constitution and laws of this state;
(viii) The latest date upon which the limited
partnership is to dissolve;
(ix) Any other matters the partners determine to
include in the application;
(x) Any additional information necessary to enable
the secretary of state to determine whether the foreign limited
partnership is entitled to a certificate of continuance.
(b) The application may vary from the original certificate
that formed the foreign limited partnership provided that the
change would be permissible as an amendment for a limited
partnership organized in this state.
17-14-1012. Execution of application.
(a) The application for a certificate of continuance filed
in the office of the secretary of state shall be signed by all
general partners.
(b) Any person may sign an application by an attorney-in-
fact, but a power of attorney to sign a certificate relating to
the admission of a general partner shall specifically describe
the admission.
(c) The execution of an application by a general partner
constitutes an affirmation under the penalties of perjury that
the facts stated therein are true.
17-14-1013. Issuance of certificate of continuance.
(a) If the secretary of state finds that an application
for continuance substantially conforms to law and all requisite
fees have been paid, he shall:
(i) Endorse on each duplicate original application
the word "filed," and the month, day and year of the filing;
(ii) File one (1) duplicate original in his office;
(iii) Issue a certificate of continuance to continue
in this state;
(iv) Notify the secretary of state or appropriate
official in the state of terminated domicile that a certificate
of continuance has been issued in this state.
(b) The certificate of continuance, together with a
duplicate original of the application, shall be returned to the
person who filed the application or his representative.
(c) The certificate of continuance may incorporate by
reference the original certificate of limited partnership. The
original certificate is deemed amended to the extent necessary
to conform to the laws of Wyoming and the provisions of the
certificate of continuance.
17-14-1014. Effect of certification.
(a) Upon issuance of a certificate of continuance by the
secretary of state, the certificate of continuance shall be
deemed to be a certificate of limited partnership and the
limited partnership shall be subject to the provisions of this
act as though formed under the laws of this state.
(b) Except for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through
16-6-121, the existence of any limited partnership issued a
certificate of continuance shall be deemed to have commenced on
the date the limited partnership was originally formed under the
laws of another state.
(c) The laws of Wyoming shall apply to a limited
partnership continuing under this act from the date a
certificate of continuance is issued by the secretary of state.
(d) The continuance shall not affect the ownership of
partnership property, liability for any existing obligation,
cause of action, claim, pending or threatened prosecution, civil
or administrative action, conviction, ruling, order or judgment.
The continuance does not deprive a partner of any right or
privilege, nor relieve a partner of any liability.
ARTICLE 11 - DERIVATIVE ACTIONS
17-14-1101. Right of action.
A limited partner may bring an action in the right of a limited
partnership to recover a judgment in its favor if general
partners with authority to do so have refused to bring the
action or if an effort to cause those general partners to bring
the action is not likely to succeed.
17-14-1102. Proper plaintiff.
(a) In a derivative action, the plaintiff shall be a
partner at the time of bringing the action and:
(i) At the time of the transaction of which he
complains; or
(ii) His status as a partner had devolved upon him by
operation of law or pursuant to the terms of the partnership
agreement from a person who was a partner at the time of the
transaction.
17-14-1103. Pleading.
In a derivative action, the complaint shall set forth with
particularity the effort of the plaintiff to secure initiation
of the action by a general partner or the reasons for not making
the effort.
17-14-1104. Expenses.
If a derivative action is successful, in whole or in part, or if
anything is received by the plaintiff as a result of a judgment,
compromise or settlement of an action or claim, the court may
award the plaintiff reasonable expenses, including reasonable
attorney's fees, and shall direct him to remit to the limited
partnership the remainder of those proceeds received by him.
CHAPTER 15 - LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES
17-15-101. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-102. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-103. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-104. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-105. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-106. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-107. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-108. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-109. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-110. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-111. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-112. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-113. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-114. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-115. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-116. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-117. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-118. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-119. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-120. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-121. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-122. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-123. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-124. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-125. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-126. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-127. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-128. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-129. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-130. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-131. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-132. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-133. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-134. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-135. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-136. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-137. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-138. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-139. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-140. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-141. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-142. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-143. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-144. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-145. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-146. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-15-147. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
CHAPTER 16 - WYOMING BUSINESS CORPORATION ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
A. Short Title and Reservation of Power
17-16-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Business Corporation Act."
17-16-102. Reservation of power to amend or repeal;
applicability.
(a) The legislature has power to amend or repeal all or
part of this act at any time and all domestic and foreign
corporations subject to this act are governed by the amendment
or repeal.
(b) The Financial Technology Sandbox Act shall apply to
this act.
B. Filing Documents
17-16-120. Requirements for documents.
(a) A document shall satisfy the requirements of this
section, and of any other section that adds to or varies from
these requirements, to be entitled to filing by the secretary of
state.
(b) This act shall require or permit filing the document
in the office of the secretary of state.
(c) The document shall contain the information required by
this act. It may contain other information as well.
(d) The document shall be typewritten or printed or, if
electronically transmitted, it shall be in a format that can be
retrieved or reproduced in typewritten or printed form.
(e) The document shall be in the English language. A
corporate name need not be in English if written in English
letters or Arabic or Roman numerals, and the certificate of
existence required of foreign corporations need not be in
English if accompanied by an English translation acceptable to
the secretary of state.
(f) The document shall be executed:
(i) By the chairman of the board of directors of a
domestic or foreign corporation, by its president, or by another
of its officers;
(ii) If directors have not been selected or the
corporation has not been formed, by an incorporator; or
(iii) If the corporation is in the hands of a
receiver, trustee, or other court-appointed fiduciary, by that
fiduciary.
(g) The person executing the document shall sign it and
shall state beneath or opposite his signature his name and the
capacity in which he signs. The document may but need not
contain:
(i) The corporate seal;
(ii) An attestation by the secretary or an assistant
secretary;
(iii) An acknowledgment, verification or proof.
(h) If the secretary of state has prescribed a mandatory
form for the document under W.S. 17-16-121, the document shall
be in or on the prescribed form.
(i) The document shall be delivered to the office of the
secretary of state for filing. Delivery may be made by
electronic transmission if and to the extent permitted by the
secretary of state. If it is filed in typewritten or printed
form and not transmitted electronically, the secretary of state
may require one (1) exact copy to be delivered with the
document, except as provided in W.S. 17-28-103.
(j) When any document is delivered to the office of the
secretary of state for filing, the correct filing fee, and any
franchise tax, license fee, penalty or past due fees, taxes or
penalties required to be paid by this act or other law shall be
paid or provision for payment made in a manner provided by the
secretary of state.
(k) Reserved.
17-16-121. Forms.
(a) If the secretary of state so requires, use of forms
provided by the secretary of state pursuant to this subsection
is mandatory. The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish
on request forms for:
(i) An application for a certificate of existence;
(ii) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state;
(iii) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of withdrawal;
(iv) The annual report;
(v) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of continuance;
(vi) An application for a certificate of transfer;
(vii) A foreign corporation's application for
certificate of domestication; and
(viii) A consent of registered agent to appointment.
(b) The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish on
request forms for other documents required or permitted to be
filed by this act but their use is not mandatory.
17-16-122. Filing, service and copying fees.
The secretary of state shall set and collect filing, service and
copying fees to recover his costs to administer this act. Fees
shall not exceed the costs of providing these services.
17-16-123. Effective time and date of document.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section
and W.S. 17-16-124(c), a document accepted for filing pursuant
to W.S. 17-16-120 is effective:
(i) As of the time received for filing, as evidenced
by such means as the secretary of state may use for the purpose
of recording the date and time of filing; or
(ii) At the time specified in the document as its
effective time on the date it is filed.
(b) A document may specify a delayed effective time and
date, and if it does so the document becomes effective at the
time and date specified. If a delayed effective date but no
time is specified, the document is effective at the close of
business on that date. A delayed effective date for a document
may not be later than the ninetieth (90th) day after the date it
is filed.
17-16-124. Correcting filed document.
(a) A domestic or foreign corporation may correct a
document filed with the secretary of state if the document:
(i) Contains an inaccuracy;
(ii) Was defectively executed, attested, sealed,
verified, or acknowledged; or
(iii) The electronic transmission was defective.
(b) A document is corrected:
(i) By preparing articles of correction that:
(A) Describe the document, including its filing
date, or attach a copy of the document to the articles of
correction;
(B) Specify the inaccuracy or defect to be
corrected; and
(C) Correct the inaccuracy or defect.
(ii) By delivering the articles of correction to the
secretary of state for filing.
(c) Articles of correction are effective on the effective
date of the document they correct except as to persons relying
on the uncorrected document and adversely affected by the
correction. As to those persons, articles of correction are
effective when filed.
17-16-125. Filing duty of secretary of state.
(a) If a document delivered to the office of the secretary
of state for filing satisfies the requirements of W.S.
17-16-120, the secretary of state shall file the document.
(b) The secretary of state files a document by stamping or
otherwise endorsing "Filed," together with his official title
and the date and time of filing, on both the original and the
document copy and on the receipt for the filing fee. The
secretary of state may prescribe rules for filing of electronic
transmissions. After filing a document, except as provided in
W.S. 17-28-103, the secretary of state shall deliver the
document copy, with the filing fee receipt (or acknowledgement
of receipt if no fee is required) attached, to the domestic or
foreign corporation or its representative. The secretary of
state, in his discretion, may issue a certificate evidencing the
filing of a document upon the payment of the requisite fee.
(c) If the secretary of state refuses to file a document,
he shall return it to the domestic or foreign corporation or its
representative within fifteen (15) days after the document was
delivered, together with a brief, written explanation of the
reason for his refusal.
(d) The secretary of state's duty to file documents under
this section is ministerial. His filing or refusing to file a
document does not:
(i) Affect the validity or invalidity of the document
in whole or part;
(ii) Relate to the correctness or incorrectness of
information contained in the document; or
(iii) Create a presumption that the document is valid
or invalid or that information contained in the document is
correct or incorrect.
17-16-126. Appeal from secretary of state's refusal to
file document.
(a) If the secretary of state refuses to file a document
delivered to his office for filing, the domestic or foreign
corporation may, within thirty (30) days after the return of the
document, appeal the refusal to the district court of the county
where the corporation's principal office is located in the state
or, if the corporation does not have a principal office in the
state, the district court of the county where its registered
office is or will be located, or the district court of the
county of residence of an incorporator for a domestic
corporation, or in the district court of Laramie county. The
appeal is commenced by petitioning the court to compel filing
the document and by attaching to the petition the document and
the secretary of state's explanation of his refusal to file.
(b) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to file the document or take other action the court considers
appropriate.
(c) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
17-16-127. Evidentiary effect of copy of filed document.
A certificate from the secretary of state delivered with a copy
of a document filed by the secretary of state is conclusive
evidence that the original document is on file with the
secretary of state.
17-16-128. Certificate of existence.
(a) Anyone may apply to the secretary of state to furnish
a certificate of existence for a domestic corporation or a
certificate of authorization for a foreign corporation.
(b) A certificate of existence or authorization sets
forth:
(i) The domestic corporation's corporate name or the
foreign corporation's corporate name used in this state;
(ii) That:
(A) The domestic corporation is duly
incorporated under the law of this state, the date of its
incorporation, and the period of its duration if less than
perpetual; or
(B) The foreign corporation is authorized to
transact business in this state.
(iii) That all fees, taxes, and penalties owed to
this state have been paid, if:
(A) Payment is reflected in the records of the
secretary of state; and
(B) Nonpayment affects the existence or
authorization of the domestic or foreign corporation.
(iv) That its most recent annual report required by
W.S. 17-16-1630 has been filed by the secretary of state;
(v) That articles of dissolution have not been filed;
and
(vi) Other facts of record in the office of the
secretary of state that may be requested by the applicant.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the
certificate, a certificate of existence or authorization issued
by the secretary of state may be relied upon as conclusive
evidence that the domestic or foreign corporation is in
existence or is authorized to transact business in this state.
17-16-129. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 91, § 3.
C. Secretary of State
17-16-130. Powers.
The secretary of state has the power reasonably necessary to
perform the duties required of him by this act. The secretary
of state shall promulgate reasonable forms, rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.
D. Definitions
17-16-140. Definitions.
(a) In this act:
(i) "Articles of incorporation" means the original
articles of incorporation, all amendments thereof and any other
documents permitted or required to be filed by a domestic
business corporation with the secretary of state under any
provision of this act. If an amendment of the articles or any
other document filed under this act restates the articles in
their entirety thenceforth the articles shall not include any
prior documents;
(ii) "Authorized shares" means the shares of all
classes a domestic or foreign corporation is authorized to
issue;
(iii) "Conspicuous" means so written that a
reasonable person against whom the writing is to operate should
have noticed it. For example, printing in italics or boldface
or contrasting color, or typing in capitals or underlined, is
conspicuous;
(iv) "Corporation" or "domestic corporation" means a
corporation for profit, which is not a foreign corporation,
incorporated under or subject to the provisions of this act;
(v) "Deliver" or "delivery" means any method of
delivery used in conventional commercial practice, including
delivery by hand, mail, commercial delivery and electronic
transmission;
(vi) "Distribution" means a direct or indirect
transfer of money or other property, except the corporation's
own shares, or incurrence of indebtedness by a corporation to or
for the benefit of its shareholders in respect of any of its
shares. A distribution may be in the form of a declaration or
payment of a dividend, a purchase, redemption, or other
acquisition of shares, a distribution of indebtedness, or
otherwise;
(vii) "Domestic unincorporated entity" means an
unincorporated entity whose internal affairs are governed by the
laws of this state;
(viii) "Effective date of notice" is defined in W.S.
17-16-141;
(ix) "Electronic transmission" or "transmitted
electronically" means any process of communication that does not
directly involve the physical transfer of paper, including a
process of communication that uses one (1) or more distributed
or other electronic networks or databases, and that is suitable
for the retention, retrieval and reproduction of information by
the recipient;
(x) "Eligible entity" means a domestic or foreign
unincorporated entity or a domestic or foreign nonprofit
corporation;
(xi) "Eligible interests" means interests;
(xii) "Employee" includes an officer but not a
director. A director may accept duties that make him also an
employee;
(xiii) "Entity" includes domestic corporation and
foreign corporation, domestic nonprofit corporation and foreign
nonprofit corporation, domestic and foreign profit and not-for-
profit unincorporated association, business trust, statutory
trust, estate, partnership, trust, or two (2) or more persons
having a joint or common economic interest, and state, United
States or foreign government;
(xiv) "Expenses" means reasonable expenses of any
kind that are incurred in connection with a matter, including
but not limited to attorney and expert witness fees;
(xv) "Foreign corporation" means a corporation for
profit incorporated under a law other than the law of this
state;
(xvi) "Governmental subdivision" includes authority,
county, district, municipality, and any other political
subdivision;
(xvii) "Includes" denotes a partial definition;
(xviii) "Individual" means a natural person and
includes the estate of an incompetent or deceased individual;
(xix) "Interest" means either or both of the
following rights under the organic law of an unincorporated
entity:
(A) The right to receive distributions from the
entity either in the ordinary course or upon liquidation; or
(B) The right to receive notice or vote on
issues involving its internal affairs, other than as an agent,
assignee, proxy or person responsible for managing its business
and affairs.
(xx) "Interest holder" means a person who holds of
record an interest;
(xxi) "Means" denotes an exhaustive definition;
(xxii) "Net assets" means the amount by which the
total assets of a corporation exceed the total debts of the
corporation;
(xxiii) "Notice" is defined in W.S. 17-16-141;
(xxiv) "Organic document" means a public organic
document or a private organic document;
(xxv) "Organic law" means the statute governing the
internal affairs of a domestic or foreign business or nonprofit
corporation or unincorporated entity;
(xxvi) "Owner liability" means personal liability for
a debt, obligation or liability of a domestic or foreign
business or nonprofit corporation or unincorporated entity that
is imposed on a person:
(A) Solely by reason of the person's status as a
shareholder or interest holder; or
(B) By the articles of incorporation, bylaws or
an organic document under a provision of the organic law of an
entity authorizing the articles of incorporation, bylaws or an
organic document to make one (1) or more specified shareholders
or interest holders liable in their capacity as shareholders or
interest holders for all or specified debts, obligations or
liabilities of the entity.
(xxvii) "Person" includes an individual, partnership,
joint venture, corporation, joint stock company, limited
liability company or any other association or entity, public or
private;
(xxviii) "Principal office" means the office within
or outside of this state, so designated in the annual report;
(xxix) "Private organic document" means any document
other than the public organic document, if any, that determines
the internal governance of an unincorporated entity. Where a
private organic document has been amended or restated, the term
means the private organic document as last amended or restated;
(xxx) "Proceeding" includes civil suit and criminal,
administrative, and investigatory action;
(xxxi) "Public corporation" means a corporation that
has shares listed on a national securities exchange or regularly
traded in a market maintained by one (1) or more members of a
national securities association;
(xxxii) "Public organic document" means the document,
if any, that is filed of public record to create an
unincorporated entity. Where a public organic document has been
amended or restated, the term means the public organic document
as last amended or restated;
(xxxiii) "Qualified director" is defined in W.S.
17-16-143;
(xxxiv) "Record date" means the date established
under article 6 or 7 on which a corporation determines the
identity of its shareholders and their shareholdings for
purposes of this act. The determinations shall be made as of
the close of business on the record date unless another time for
doing so is specified when the record date is fixed;
(xxxv) "Registered agent" means as provided in W.S.
17-28-101 through 17-28-111;
(xxxvi) "Secretary" means the corporate officer to
whom the board of directors has delegated responsibility under
W.S. 17-16-840(c) for custody of the minutes of the meetings of
the board of directors and of the shareholders and for
authenticating records of the corporation;
(xxxvii) "Shareholder" means the person in whose name
shares are registered in the records of a corporation, the
beneficial owner of shares to the extent of the rights granted
by a nominee certificate on file with a corporation or the owner
of a private key that is uniquely associated with a data address
that facilitates or records the sending and receiving of shares;
(xxxviii) "Shares" means the units into which the
proprietary interests in a corporation are divided;
(xxxix) "Sign" or "signature" includes any manual,
facsimile, conformed or electronic signature or a network
signature;
(xl) "State," when referring to a part of the United
States, includes a state and commonwealth, and their agencies
and governmental subdivisions, and a territory and insular
possession, and their agencies and governmental subdivisions, of
the United States;
(xli) "Subscriber" means a person who subscribes for
shares in a corporation, whether before or after incorporation;
(xlii) "Unincorporated entity" means an organization
or artificial legal person that either has a separate legal
existence or has the power to acquire an estate in real property
in its own name and that is not any of the following: a domestic
or foreign business or nonprofit corporation, an estate, a
trust, a state, the United States or a foreign government. The
term includes, but is not limited to, a general partnership,
limited liability company, limited partnership, limited
liability limited partnership, registered limited liability
partnership, business trust, statutory trust, cooperative, joint
stock association, joint venture and unincorporated nonprofit
association;
(xliii) "United States" includes district, authority,
bureau, commission, department, and any other agency of the
United States;
(xliv) "Voting group" means all shares of one (1) or
more classes or series that under the articles of incorporation
or this act are entitled to vote and be counted together
collectively on a matter at a meeting of shareholders. All
shares entitled by the articles of incorporation or this act to
vote generally on the matter are for that purpose a single
voting group;
(xlv) "Voting power" means the current power to vote
in the election of directors;
(xlvi) "Identity" means the name of a shareholder or
the data address for which the shareholder has knowledge or
possession of the private key uniquely associated with the data
address;
(xlvii) "Data address" means the string of
alphanumeric characters on one (1) or more distributed or other
electronic networks or databases that may only be accessed by
knowledge or possession of a private key in order to facilitate
or record transactions on the distributed or other electronic
network or database;
(xlviii) "Network signature" means a string of
alphanumeric characters that, when broadcast by a person to the
data address's corresponding distributed or other electronic
network or database, provides reasonable assurances to a
recipient that the broadcasting person has knowledge or
possession of the private key uniquely associated with the data
address;
(xlix) "Record of shareholders" means one (1) or more
records administered by or on behalf of a corporation that
records the identity of all the corporation's shareholders and
the number and class of shares held by each shareholder in
accordance with W.S. 17-16-1601. "Record of shareholders"
includes a record of all issuances and transfers of shares of a
corporation at the discretion of the corporation;
(l) "This act" means W.S. 17-16-101 through
17-16-1810.
17-16-141. Notice.
(a) Notice under this act shall be in writing unless oral
notice is reasonable under the circumstances. Notice by
electronic transmission is written notice.
(b) Notice may be communicated in person; by telephone,
telegraph, teletype, or other form of wire or wireless
communication; or by mail or private carrier. If these forms of
personal notice are impracticable, notice may be communicated by
a newspaper of general circulation in the area where published;
or by radio, television, or other form of public broadcast
communication.
(c) Written notice by a domestic or foreign corporation to
its shareholder, if in a comprehensible form, is effective:
(i) Upon deposit in the United States mail, if mailed
postpaid and correctly addressed to the shareholder's address
shown in the corporation's current record of shareholders;
(ii) When an electronic transmission has been made to
a data address provided by the shareholder; or
(iii) When electronically transmitted to the
shareholder in a manner otherwise authorized by the shareholder.
(d) Written notice to a domestic or foreign corporation
authorized to transact business in this state may be addressed
to its registered agent at its registered office or to the
corporation or its secretary at its principal office shown in
its most recent annual report or, in the case of a foreign
corporation that has not yet delivered an annual report, in its
application for a certificate of authority.
(e) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section,
written notice, if in a comprehensible form, is effective at the
earliest of the following:
(i) When received;
(ii) Five (5) days after its deposit in the United
States mail, as evidenced by the postmark, if mailed postpaid
and correctly addressed; or
(iii) On the date shown on the return receipt, if
sent by registered or certified mail, or comparable private
carrier, return receipt requested, and the receipt is signed,
either manually or in facsimile, by or on behalf of the
addressee.
(f) Oral notice is effective when communicated if
communicated in a comprehensible manner.
(g) If this act prescribes notice requirements for
particular circumstances, those requirements govern. If
articles of incorporation or bylaws prescribe notice
requirements, not inconsistent with this section or other
provisions of this act, those requirements govern.
17-16-142. Number of shareholders.
(a) For purposes of this act, the following identified as
a shareholder in a corporation's current record of shareholders
constitutes one (1) shareholder:
(i) Three (3) or fewer coowners;
(ii) A corporation, partnership, trust, estate, or
other entity;
(iii) The trustees, guardians, custodians, or other
fiduciaries of a single trust, estate, or account; or
(iv) One (1) data address.
(b) For purposes of this act, shareholdings registered in
substantially similar names constitute one (1) shareholder if it
is reasonable to believe that the names represent the same
person.
17-16-143. Qualified director.
(a) A "qualified director" is a director who, at the time
action is to be taken under:
(i) W.S. 17-16-744, does not have:
(A) A material interest in the outcome of the
proceeding; or
(B) A material relationship with a person who
has such an interest.
(ii) W.S. 17-16-853 or 17-16-855:
(A) Is not a party to the proceeding;
(B) Is not a director as to whom a transaction
is a director's conflicting interest transaction or who sought a
disclaimer of the corporation's interest in a business
opportunity under W.S. 17-16-870, which transaction or
disclaimer is challenged in the proceeding; and
(C) Does not have a material relationship with a
director described in either subparagraph (A) or (B) of this
paragraph.
(iii) W.S. 17-16-862, is not a director as to whom
the transaction is a director's conflicting interest
transaction, or a director who has a material relationship with
another director as to whom the transaction is a director's
conflicting interest transaction; or
(iv) W.S. 17-16-870, would be a qualified director
under paragraph (iii) of this subsection if the business
opportunity were a director's conflicting interest transaction.
(b) For purposes of this section:
(i) "Material interest" means an actual or potential
benefit or detriment, other than one which would devolve on the
corporation or the shareholders generally, that would reasonably
be expected to impair the objectivity of the director's judgment
when participating in the action to be taken;
(ii) "Material relationship" means a familial,
financial, professional, employment or other relationship that
would reasonably be expected to impair the objectivity of the
director's judgment when participating in the action to be
taken.
(c) The presence of one (1) or more of the following
circumstances shall not automatically prevent a director from
being a qualified director:
(i) Nomination or election of the director to the
current board by any director who is not a qualified director
with respect to the matter, or by any person that has a material
relationship with that director, acting alone or participating
with others;
(ii) Service as a director of another corporation of
which a director who is not a qualified director with respect to
the matter, or any individual who has a material relationship
with that director, is or was also a director; or
(iii) With respect to action to be taken under W.S.
17-16-744, status as a named defendant, as a director against
whom action is demanded or as a director who approved the
conduct being challenged.
17-16-144. Reserved.
ARTICLE 2 - INCORPORATION
17-16-201. Incorporators.
One (1) or more persons may act as the incorporator or
incorporators of a corporation by delivering articles of
incorporation to the secretary of state for filing.
17-16-202. Articles of incorporation.
(a) The articles of incorporation shall set forth:
(i) A corporate name for the corporation that
satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401;
(ii) The number of shares the corporation is
authorized to issue, which may be unlimited if so stated;
(iii) The street address of the corporation's initial
registered office and the name of its initial registered agent
at that office; and
(iv) The name and address of each incorporator.
(b) The articles of incorporation may set forth:
(i) The names and addresses of the individuals who
are to serve as the initial directors;
(ii) Provisions not inconsistent with law including:
(A) The purpose or purposes for which the
corporation is organized;
(B) Managing the business and regulating the
affairs of the corporation;
(C) Defining, limiting, and regulating the
powers of the corporation, its board of directors, and
shareholders;
(D) A par value for authorized shares or classes
of shares;
(E) The imposition of personal liability on
shareholders for the debts of the corporation to a specified
extent and upon specified conditions.
(iii) Any provision that under this act is required
or permitted to be set forth in the bylaws;
(iv) A provision eliminating or limiting the
liability of a director to the corporation or its shareholders
for money damages for any action taken, or any failure to take
any action, as a director, except liability for:
(A) The amount of financial benefit received by
a director to which he is not entitled;
(B) An intentional infliction of harm on the
corporation or shareholders;
(C) A violation of W.S. 17-16-833; or
(D) An intentional violation of criminal law;
and
(v) A provision permitting or making obligatory
indemnification of a director for liability (as defined in W.S.
17-16-850(a)(iii)) to any person for any action taken, or
failure to take any action, as a director, except liability for:
(A) Receipt of a financial benefit to which he
is not entitled;
(B) An intentional infliction of harm on the
corporation or its shareholders;
(C) A violation of W.S. 17-16-833; or
(D) An intentional violation of criminal law.
(c) The articles of incorporation need not set forth any
of the corporate powers enumerated in this act.
(d) Reserved.
(e) The articles of incorporation shall be accompanied by
a written consent to appointment signed by the registered agent.
17-16-203. Incorporation.
(a) Unless a delayed effective date is specified, the
corporate existence becomes effective when the articles of
incorporation are filed.
(b) The secretary of state's filing of the articles of
incorporation is conclusive proof that the incorporators
satisfied all conditions precedent to incorporation except in a
proceeding by the state to cancel or revoke the incorporation or
involuntarily dissolve the corporation.
17-16-204. Liability for preincorporation transactions.
All persons purporting to act as or on behalf of a corporation,
knowing there was no incorporation under this act, are jointly
and severally liable for all liabilities created while so
acting.
17-16-205. Organization of corporation.
(a) After incorporation:
(i) If initial directors are named in the articles of
incorporation, the initial directors shall hold an
organizational meeting, at the call of a majority of the
directors, to complete the organization of the corporation by
appointing officers, adopting bylaws, and carrying on any other
business brought before the meeting;
(ii) If initial directors are not named in the
articles, the incorporator or incorporators shall hold an
organizational meeting at the call of a majority of the
incorporators to:
(A) Elect directors and complete the
organization of the corporation; or
(B) Elect a board of directors who shall
complete the organization of the corporation.
(b) Action required or permitted by this act to be taken
by incorporators at an organizational meeting may be taken
without a meeting if the action taken is evidenced by one (1) or
more written consents describing the action taken and signed by
each incorporator.
(c) An organizational meeting may be held within or
outside of this state.
(d) Within sixty (60) days after filing articles of
incorporation, a corporation shall provide information to its
registered agent as required by W.S. 17-28-107.
17-16-206. Bylaws.
(a) The incorporators or board of directors of a
corporation shall adopt initial bylaws for the corporation.
(b) The bylaws of a corporation may contain any provision
for managing the business and regulating the affairs of the
corporation that is not inconsistent with law or the articles of
incorporation.
(c) If bylaws are not adopted:
(i) An annual meeting shall be held within three (3)
months after the close of the corporation's fiscal year;
(ii) The required officers shall be the president,
the secretary and the treasurer; and
(iii) Bylaws may be adopted at any director or
shareholder meeting.
17-16-207. Emergency bylaws.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, the board of directors of a corporation may adopt
bylaws to be effective only in an emergency defined in
subsection (d) of this section. The emergency bylaws, which are
subject to amendment or repeal by the shareholders, may make all
provisions necessary for managing the corporation during the
emergency, including:
(i) Procedures for calling a meeting of the board of
directors;
(ii) Quorum requirements for the meeting; and
(iii) Designation of additional or substitute
directors.
(b) All provisions of the regular bylaws consistent with
the emergency bylaws remain effective during the emergency. The
emergency bylaws are not effective after the emergency ends.
(c) Corporate action taken in good faith in accordance
with the emergency bylaws:
(i) Binds the corporation; and
(ii) May not be used to impose liability on a
corporate director, officer, employee, or agent.
(d) An emergency exists for purposes of this section if a
quorum of the corporation's directors cannot readily be
assembled because of some extraordinary event.
ARTICLE 3 - PURPOSES AND POWERS
17-16-301. Purposes.
(a) Every corporation incorporated under this act has the
purpose of engaging in any lawful business unless a more limited
purpose is set forth in the articles of incorporation.
(b) A corporation engaging in a business that is subject
to regulation under another statute of this state may
incorporate under this act only if permitted by, and subject to
all limitations of, the other statute.
17-16-302. General powers.
(a) Unless its articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, every corporation has perpetual duration and
succession in its corporate name and has the same powers as an
individual to do all things necessary or convenient to carry out
its business and affairs, including without limitation power to:
(i) Sue and be sued, complain and defend in its
corporate name;
(ii) Have a corporate seal, which may be altered at
will, and to use it, or a facsimile of it, by impressing or
affixing it or in any other manner reproducing it;
(iii) Make and amend bylaws, not inconsistent with
its articles of incorporation or with the laws of this state,
for managing the business and regulating the affairs of the
corporation;
(iv) Purchase, receive, lease, or otherwise acquire,
and own, hold, improve, use, and otherwise deal with, real or
personal property, or any legal or equitable interest in
property, wherever located;
(v) Sell, convey, mortgage, pledge, lease, exchange,
and otherwise dispose of all or any part of its property;
(vi) Purchase, receive, subscribe for, or otherwise
acquire; own, hold, vote, use, sell, mortgage, lend, pledge, or
otherwise dispose of; and deal in and with shares or other
interests in, or obligations of, any other entity;
(vii) Make contracts and guarantees, incur
liabilities, borrow money, issue its notes, bonds, and other
obligations which may be convertible into or include the option
to purchase other securities of the corporation, and secure any
of its obligations by mortgage or pledge of any of its property,
franchises, or income;
(viii) Lend money, invest and reinvest its funds, and
receive and hold real and personal property as security for
repayment;
(ix) Be a promoter, partner, member, associate, or
manager of any partnership, joint venture, trust, or other
entity;
(x) Conduct its business, locate offices, and
exercise the powers granted by this act within or without this
state;
(xi) Elect directors and appoint officers, employees,
and agents of the corporation, define their duties, fix their
compensation, and lend them money and credit;
(xii) Pay pensions and establish pension plans,
pension trusts, profit sharing plans, share bonus plans, share
option plans, and benefit or incentive plans for any or all of
its current or former directors, officers, employees, and
agents;
(xiii) Make donations for the public welfare or for
charitable, scientific, or educational purposes;
(xiv) Transact any lawful business; and
(xv) Make payments or donations, or do any other act,
not inconsistent with law, that furthers the business and
affairs of the corporation.
17-16-303. Emergency powers.
(a) In anticipation of or during an emergency defined in
subsection (d) of this section, the board of directors of a
corporation may:
(i) Modify lines of succession to accommodate the
incapacity of any director, officer, employee, or agent; and
(ii) Relocate the principal office, designate
alternative principal offices or regional offices, or authorize
the officers to do so.
(b) During an emergency defined in subsection (d) of this
section, unless emergency bylaws provide otherwise:
(i) Notice of a meeting of the board of directors
need be given only to those directors whom it is practicable to
reach and may be given in any practicable manner, including by
publication and radio; and
(ii) One (1) or more officers of the corporation
present at a meeting of the board of directors may be deemed to
be directors for the meeting, in order of rank and within the
same rank in order of seniority, as necessary to achieve a
quorum.
(c) Corporate action taken in good faith during an
emergency under this section to further the ordinary business
affairs of the corporation:
(i) Binds the corporation; and
(ii) May not be used to impose liability on a
corporate director, officer, employee, or agent.
(d) An emergency exists for the purposes of this section
if a quorum of the corporation's directors cannot readily be
assembled because of some extraordinary event.
17-16-304. Ultra vires.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the validity of corporate action may not be challenged on the
ground that the corporation lacks or lacked power to act.
(b) A corporation's power to act may be challenged in a
proceeding by:
(i) A shareholder against the corporation to enjoin
the act;
(ii) The corporation, directly, derivatively, or
through a receiver, trustee, or other legal representative,
against an incumbent or former director, officer, employee, or
agent of the corporation; or
(iii) The attorney general under W.S. 17-16-1430.
(c) In a shareholder's proceeding under paragraph (b)(i)
of this section to enjoin an unauthorized corporate act the
court may enjoin or set aside the act, if equitable and if all
affected persons are parties to the proceeding, and may award
damages for loss, other than anticipated profits, suffered by
the corporation or another party because of enjoining the
unauthorized act.
ARTICLE 4 - NAME
17-16-401. Corporate name.
(a) A corporate name may not contain language stating or
implying that the corporation is organized for a purpose other
than that permitted by W.S. 17-16-301 and its articles of
incorporation.
(b) Except as authorized by subsections (c) and (d) of
this section, a corporate name shall not be the same as, or
deceptively similar to any trademark or service mark registered
in this state and shall be distinguishable upon the records of
the secretary of state from the name of any profit or nonprofit
corporation, trade name, limited liability company, statutory
trust company, statutory foundation, limited partnership or
other business entity organized, continued or domesticated under
the laws of this state or licensed or registered as a foreign
profit or nonprofit corporation, foreign limited partnership,
foreign joint stock company, foreign statutory trust company,
foreign foundation, foreign limited liability company or other
foreign business entity in this state or any fictitious or
reserved name.
(c) A corporation may apply to the secretary of state for
authorization to use a name that is not distinguishable upon the
secretary of state's records from one (1) or more of the names
described in subsection (b) of this section. The secretary of
state shall authorize use of the name applied for if:
(i) The other person whose name is not
distinguishable from the name which the applicant desires to
register or reserve, irrevocably consents to the use in writing
and submits an undertaking in a form satisfactory to the
secretary of state to change its name to a name that is
distinguishable upon the records of the secretary of state from
the name of the applicant; or
(ii) The applicant delivers to the secretary of state
a certified copy of the final judgment of a court of competent
jurisdiction establishing the applicant's right to use the name
applied for in this state.
(d) A corporation may use the name, including the
fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign corporation that
is used in this state if the other corporation is incorporated
or authorized to transact business in this state and the
proposed user corporation:
(i) Has merged with the other corporation; or
(ii) Has been formed by reorganization of the other
corporation; or
(iii) Has acquired all or substantially all of the
assets, including the corporate name, of the other corporation;
or
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(v) Where the other corporation is affiliated with
the proposed user corporation and has consented in writing to
the use of the name by the proposed user corporation, and the
written consent also sets forth a description of a proposed
merger, consolidation, dissolution, amendment to articles of
incorporation or other intended corporate action which
establishes to the reasonable satisfaction of the secretary of
state that the coexistence of two (2) corporations using the
same name will not continue for more than one hundred twenty
(120) days.
(e) This act does not control the use of fictitious names.
(f) A name is distinguishable from other names, on the
records of the secretary of state, if it contains one (1) or
more different letters or numerals, or if it has a different
sequence of letters or numerals from the other names on the
secretary of state's records. Differences which are not
distinguishable are:
(i) The words or abbreviations of the words
"corporation," "company," "incorporated," "limited partnership,"
"L.P.," "limited," "ltd.," "limited liability company," "limited
company," "L.C." or "L.L.C.";
(ii) The presence or absence of the words or symbols
of the words "the," "and" or "a";
(iii) Differences in punctuation and special
characters;
(iv) Differences in capitalization; or
(v) Differences between singular and plural forms of
words.
(g) The secretary of state has the power and authority
reasonably necessary to interpret and efficiently administer
this section and to perform the duties imposed by this section.
17-16-402. Reserved name.
(a) A person may apply to reserve the exclusive use of a
corporate name, including a fictitious name for a foreign
corporation whose corporate name is not available, by delivering
an application to the secretary of state for filing. The
application shall set forth the name and address of the
applicant and the name proposed to be reserved. If the
secretary of state finds that the corporate name applied for is
available, he shall reserve the name for the applicant's
exclusive use for a nonrenewable one hundred twenty (120) day
period.
(b) The owner of a reserved corporate name may transfer
the reservation to another person by delivering to the secretary
of state a manually signed notice of the transfer that states
the name and address of the transferee.
17-16-403. Reserved.
ARTICLE 5 - OFFICE AND AGENT
17-16-501. Registered office and registered agent.
(a) Each corporation shall continuously maintain in this
state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111; and
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(A) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(B) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(C) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all corporations.
17-16-502. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-503. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-504. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-505. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-506. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-507. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-508. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-16-509. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
ARTICLE 6 - SHARES AND DISTRIBUTIONS
A. Shares
17-16-601. Authorized shares.
(a) The articles of incorporation shall set forth the
classes of shares and series of shares within a class, and the
number, which may be unlimited, of shares of each class and
series that the corporation is authorized to issue. If more
than one (1) class or series of shares is authorized, the
articles of incorporation shall prescribe a distinguishing
designation for each class or series, and shall prescribe, prior
to the issuance of shares of a class or series, the terms,
including preferences, rights and limitations of that class or
series. Except to the extent varied as permitted by this
section, all shares of a class or series shall have terms,
including preferences, rights and limitations that are identical
with those of other shares of the same class or series.
(b) The articles of incorporation shall authorize:
(i) One (1) or more classes or series of shares that
together have unlimited voting rights; and
(ii) One (1) or more classes or series of shares,
which may be the same class or classes as those with voting
rights, that together are entitled to receive the net assets of
the corporation upon dissolution.
(c) The articles of incorporation may authorize one (1) or
more classes or series of shares that:
(i) Have special, conditional, or limited voting
rights, or no right to vote, except to the extent otherwise
provided by this act;
(ii) Are redeemable or convertible as specified in
the articles of incorporation:
(A) At the option of the corporation, the
shareholder, or another person or upon the occurrence of a
specified event;
(B) For cash, indebtedness, securities, or other
property; and
(C) At prices and in amounts specified or
determined in accordance with a formula.
(iii) Entitle the holders to distributions calculated
in any manner, including dividends that may be cumulative,
noncumulative, or partially cumulative; or
(iv) Have preference over any other class or series
of shares with respect to distributions, including distributions
upon the dissolution of the corporation.
(d) Terms of shares may be made dependent upon facts
objectively ascertainable outside the articles of incorporation.
(e) Any of the terms of shares may vary among holders of
the same class or series so long as such variations are
expressly set forth in the articles of incorporation.
(f) The description of the preferences, rights and
limitations of classes or series of shares in subsection (c) of
this section is not exhaustive.
17-16-602. Terms of class or series determined by board of
directors.
(a) If the articles of incorporation so provide, the board
of directors is authorized, without shareholder approval, to:
(i) Classify any unissued shares into one (1) or more
classes or into one (1) or more series within a class;
(ii) Reclassify any unissued shares of any class into
one (1) or more classes or into one (1) or more series within
one (1) or more classes; or
(iii) Reclassify any unissued shares of any series of
any class into one (1) or more classes or into one (1) or more
series within a class.
(b) If the board of directors acts pursuant to subsection
(a) of this section, it shall determine the terms, including the
preferences, rights and limitations, to the same extent
permitted under W.S. 17-16-601, of:
(i) Any class of shares before the issuance of any
shares of that class; or
(ii) Any series within a class before the issuance of
any shares of that series.
(c) Before issuing any shares of a class or series created
under this section, the corporation shall deliver to the
secretary of state for filing articles of amendment effecting
the provisions of this section in accordance with article 10 of
this act and setting forth the terms determined under subsection
(a) of this section.
17-16-603. Issued and outstanding shares.
(a) A corporation may issue the number of shares of each
class or series authorized by the articles of incorporation.
Shares that are issued are outstanding shares until they are
reacquired, redeemed, converted, or cancelled.
(b) The reacquisition, redemption, or conversion of
outstanding shares is subject to the limitations of subsection
(c) of this section and to W.S. 17-16-640.
(c) At all times that shares of the corporation are
outstanding, one (1) or more shares that together have unlimited
voting rights and one (1) or more shares that together are
entitled to receive the net assets of the corporation upon
dissolution shall be outstanding.
17-16-604. Fractional shares.
(a) A corporation may:
(i) Issue fractions of a share or pay in money the
value of fractions of a share;
(ii) Arrange for disposition of fractional shares by
the shareholders; or
(iii) Issue scrip in registered or bearer form
entitling the holder to receive a full share upon surrendering
enough scrip to equal a full share.
(b) Each certificate representing scrip shall be
conspicuously labeled "scrip" and shall contain the information
required by W.S. 17-16-625(b).
(c) The holder of a fractional share is entitled to
exercise the rights of a shareholder, including the right to
vote, to receive dividends, and to participate in the assets of
the corporation upon liquidation. The holder of scrip is not
entitled to any of these rights unless the scrip provides for
them.
(d) The board of directors may authorize the issuance of
scrip subject to any condition considered desirable, including:
(i) That the scrip will become void if not exchanged
for full shares before a specified date; and
(ii) That the shares for which the scrip is
exchangeable may be sold and the proceeds paid to the
scripholders.
17-16-605. Construction of terms relating to stock and
certificate tokens.
(a) As used in this title, any reference to:
(i) Share certificate, share, stock, share of stock
or words of similar import shall be construed to include a
certificate token;
(ii) A requirement to print information on a share
certificate or words of similar import shall be construed to be
satisfied if the information satisfies the requirements set
forth in W.S. 17-16-625(g);
(iii) Certificated shares or words of similar import
shall be construed to include shares represented by certificate
tokens, and any reference to the delivery or deposit of these
shares to the corporation shall be construed to refer to any
method of granting control of the tokens to the corporation;
(iv) A certificate being duly endorsed or words of
similar import shall be construed to mean that the transaction
authorizing transfer of control of the certificate token was
signed by the lawful holder of the token with the network
signature corresponding to the lawful holder's data address to
which the certificate token was issued or last lawfully
transferred.
B. Issuance of Shares
17-16-620. Subscription for shares before incorporation.
(a) A subscription for shares entered into before
incorporation is irrevocable for six (6) months unless the
subscription agreement provides a longer or shorter period or
all the subscribers agree to revocation.
(b) The board of directors may determine the payment terms
of subscriptions for shares that were entered into before
incorporation, unless the subscription agreement specifies them.
A call for payment by the board of directors shall be uniform so
far as practicable as to all shares of the same class or series,
unless the subscription agreement specifies otherwise.
(c) Shares issued pursuant to subscriptions entered into
before incorporation are fully paid and nonassessable when the
corporation receives the consideration specified in the
subscription agreement.
(d) If a subscriber defaults in payment of money or
property under a subscription agreement entered into before
incorporation, the corporation may collect the amount owed as
any other debt. Alternatively, unless the subscription
agreement provides otherwise, the corporation may rescind the
agreement and may sell the shares if the debt remains unpaid
more than twenty (20) days after the corporation sends written
demand for payment to the subscriber.
(e) A subscription agreement entered into after
incorporation is a contract between the subscriber and the
corporation subject to W.S. 17-16-621.
17-16-621. Issuance of shares.
(a) The powers granted in this section to the board of
directors may be reserved to the shareholders by the articles of
incorporation.
(b) The board of directors may authorize shares to be
issued for consideration consisting of any tangible or
intangible property or benefit to the corporation, including
cash, promissory notes, services performed, contracts for
services to be performed, or other securities of the
corporation.
(c) Before the corporation issues shares, the board of
directors shall determine that the consideration received or to
be received for shares to be issued is adequate. That
determination by the board of directors is conclusive insofar as
the adequacy of consideration for the issuance of shares relates
to whether the shares are validly issued, fully paid, and
nonassessable.
(d) When the corporation receives the consideration for
which the board of directors authorized the issuance of shares,
the shares issued therefor are fully paid and nonassessable.
(e) The corporation may place in escrow shares issued for
a contract for future services or benefits or a promissory note,
or make other arrangements to restrict the transfer of the
shares, and may credit distributions in respect of the shares
against their purchase price, until the services are performed,
the note is paid, or the benefits received. If the services are
not performed, the note is not paid, or the benefits are not
received, the shares escrowed or restricted and the
distributions credited may be cancelled in whole or part.
(f)(i) An issuance of shares or other securities
convertible into or rights exercisable for shares, in a
transaction or a series of integrated transactions, requires
approval of the shareholders, at a meeting at which a quorum
exists, if:
(A) The shares, other securities, or rights are
issued for consideration other than cash or cash equivalents;
and
(B) The voting power of shares that are issued
and issuable as a result of the transaction or series of
integrated transactions will comprise more than twenty percent
(20%) of the voting power of the shares of the corporation that
were outstanding immediately before the transaction.
(ii) In this subsection:
(A) For purposes of determining the voting power
of shares issued and issuable as a result of a transaction or
series of integrated transactions, the voting power of shares
shall be the greater of:
(I) The voting power of the shares to be
issued; or
(II) The voting power of the shares that
would be outstanding after giving effect to the conversion of
convertible shares and other securities and the exercise of
rights to be issued.
(B) A series of transactions is integrated if
consummation of one (1) transaction is made contingent on
consummation of one (1) or more of the other transactions.
17-16-622. Liability of shareholders.
(a) A purchaser from a corporation of its own shares is
not liable to the corporation or its creditors with respect to
the shares except to pay the consideration for which the shares
were authorized to be issued pursuant to W.S. 17-16-621 or
specified in the subscription agreement pursuant to W.S.
17-16-620.
(b) Unless otherwise provided in the articles of
incorporation, a shareholder of a corporation is not personally
liable for the acts or debts of the corporation except that he
may become personally liable by reason of his own acts or
conduct.
17-16-623. Share dividends.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, shares may be issued pro rata and without
consideration to the corporation's shareholders or to the
shareholders of one (1) or more classes or series. An issuance
of shares under this subsection is a share dividend.
(b) Shares of one (1) class or series may not be issued as
a share dividend in respect of shares of another class or series
unless:
(i) The articles of incorporation so authorize;
(ii) A majority of the votes entitled to be cast by
the class or series to be issued approve the issue; or
(iii) There are no outstanding shares of the class or
series to be issued.
(c) If the board of directors does not fix the record date
for determining shareholders entitled to a share dividend, it is
the date the board of directors authorizes the share dividend.
17-16-624. Share options.
(a) A corporation may issue rights, options, or warrants
for the purchase of shares of the corporation. The board of
directors shall determine the terms upon which the rights,
options, or warrants are issued and the terms, including the
consideration for which the shares are to be issued. The
authorization by the board of directors for the corporation to
issue the rights, options or warrants constitutes authorization
of the issuance of the shares or other securities for which the
rights, options or warrants are exercisable.
(b) The terms and conditions of such rights, options or
warrants, including those outstanding on July 1, 2009, may
include, without limitation, restrictions or conditions that:
(i) Preclude or limit the exercise, transfer or
receipt of such rights, options or warrants by any person owning
or offering to acquire a specified number or percentage of the
outstanding shares or other securities of the corporation or by
any transferee of any such person; or
(ii) Invalidate or void the rights, options or
warrants held by any such person or transferee.
17-16-625. Form and content of certificates.
(a) Shares may but need not be represented by
certificates. Unless this act or another statute expressly
provides otherwise, the rights and obligations of shareholders
are identical whether or not their shares are represented by
certificates.
(b) At a minimum each share certificate shall state on its
face:
(i) The name of the issuing corporation and that it
is organized under the law of this state;
(ii) The name of the person to whom, or in the case
of a certificate token, the data address to which the token was
issued; and
(iii) The number and class of shares and the
designation of the series, if any, the certificate represents.
(c) If the issuing corporation is authorized to issue
different classes of shares or different series within a class,
the designations, relative rights, preferences, and limitations
applicable to each class and the variations in rights,
preferences, and limitations determined for each series, and the
authority of the board of directors to determine variations for
future series, shall be summarized on the front or back of each
certificate. Alternatively, each certificate may state
conspicuously on its front or back that the corporation will
furnish the shareholder this information on request in writing
and without charge.
(d) Except as otherwise provided by subsection (g) of this
section, each share certificate:
(i) Shall be signed, either manually or in facsimile,
by two (2) officers designated in the bylaws or by the board of
directors; and
(ii) May bear the corporate seal or its facsimile.
(e) If the person who signed a share certificate no longer
holds office when the certificate is issued, the certificate is
nevertheless valid.
(f) In no case shall a corporation issue share
certificates in bearer form. For purposes of this subsection
"bearer form" means a form in which the certificate is payable
to the bearer of the certificate according to its terms but not
by reason of an endorsement. If a corporation formed under this
act or qualified to do business under this act has bearer shares
outstanding, the entity shall conform those shares to comply
with this section on or before October 1, 2007. Failure to do
so shall be prima facie evidence of an ultra vires act pursuant
to W.S. 17-16-304.
(g) The articles of incorporation or bylaws of a
corporation may specify that all or a portion of the shares of
the corporation may be represented by share certificates in the
form of certificate tokens. The electronic message, command or
transaction that transmits the certificate tokens to the data
address to which a certificate token was issued shall be
authorized at the time of issuance by one (1) or more messages,
commands or transactions signed with the network signatures of
two (2) officers designated in the bylaws or by the board of
directors of the corporation.
(h) As used in this section:
(i) "Blockchain" means a digital ledger or database
which is chronological, consensus based, decentralized and
mathematically verified in nature;
(ii) "Certificate token" means a representation of
shares that is stored in an electronic format which contains the
information specified under subsections (b) and (c) of this
section, and this information is:
(A) Entered into a blockchain or other secure,
auditable database;
(B) Linked to or associated with the certificate
token; and
(C) Able to be transmitted electronically to the
issuing corporation, the person to whom the certificate token
was issued and any transferee.
17-16-626. Shares without certificates.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
otherwise, the board of directors of a corporation may authorize
the issue of some or all of the shares of any or all of its
classes or series without certificates. The authorization does
not affect shares already represented by certificates until they
are surrendered to the corporation.
(b) Within a reasonable time after the issue or transfer
of shares without certificates, the corporation shall give the
shareholder a written statement of the information required on
certificates by W.S. 17-16-625(b) and (c), and, if applicable,
W.S. 17-16-627.
17-16-627. Restriction on transfer of shares and other
securities.
(a) The articles of incorporation, bylaws, an agreement
among shareholders, or an agreement between shareholders and the
corporation may impose restrictions on the transfer or
registration of transfer of shares of the corporation. A
restriction does not affect shares issued before the restriction
was adopted unless the holders of the shares are parties to the
restriction agreement or voted in favor of the restriction.
(b) A restriction on the transfer or registration of
transfer of shares is valid and enforceable against the holder
or a transferee of the holder if the restriction is authorized
by this section and its existence is noted conspicuously on the
front or back of the certificate or is contained in the
information statement required by W.S. 17-16-626(b). Unless so
noted or contained, a restriction is not enforceable against a
person without knowledge of the restriction.
(c) A restriction on the transfer or registration of
transfer of shares is authorized:
(i) To maintain the corporation's status when it is
dependent on the number or identity of its shareholders;
(ii) To preserve exemptions under federal or state
securities law; or
(iii) For any other reasonable purpose.
(d) A restriction on the transfer or registration of
transfer of shares may:
(i) Obligate the shareholder first to offer the
corporation or other persons, separately, consecutively, or
simultaneously, an opportunity to acquire the restricted shares;
(ii) Obligate the corporation or other persons,
separately, consecutively, or simultaneously, to acquire the
restricted shares;
(iii) Require the corporation, the holders of any
class of its shares, or another person to approve the transfer
of the restricted shares, if the requirement is not manifestly
unreasonable; or
(iv) Prohibit the transfer of the restricted shares
to designated persons or classes of persons, if the prohibition
is not manifestly unreasonable.
(e) For purposes of this section, "shares" includes a
security convertible into or carrying a right to subscribe for
or acquire shares.
17-16-628. Expense of issue.
A corporation may pay the expenses of selling or underwriting
its shares, and of organizing or reorganizing the corporation,
from the consideration received for shares.
C. Subsequent Acquisition of Shares by Shareholders and
Corporation
17-16-630. Shareholders' preemptive rights.
(a) The shareholders of a corporation do not have a
preemptive right to acquire the corporation's unissued shares
except to the extent the articles of incorporation so provide.
(b) A statement included in the articles of incorporation
that "the corporation elects to have preemptive rights," or
words of similar import, means that the following principles
apply except to the extent the articles of incorporation
expressly provide otherwise:
(i) The shareholders of the corporation have a
preemptive right, granted on uniform terms and conditions
prescribed by the board of directors to provide a fair and
reasonable opportunity to exercise the right, to acquire
proportional amounts of the corporation's unissued shares upon
the decision of the board of directors to issue them;
(ii) A shareholder may waive his preemptive right. A
waiver evidenced by a writing is irrevocable even though it is
not supported by consideration;
(iii) There is no preemptive right with respect to:
(A) Shares issued as compensation to directors,
officers, agents, or employees of the corporation, its
subsidiaries or affiliates;
(B) Shares issued to satisfy conversion or
option rights created to provide compensation to directors,
officers, agents, or employees of the corporation, its
subsidiaries or affiliates;
(C) Shares authorized in articles of
incorporation that are issued within six (6) months from the
effective date of incorporation; or
(D) Shares sold otherwise than for money.
(iv) Holders of shares of any class without general
voting rights but with preferential rights to distributions or
assets have no preemptive rights with respect to shares of any
class;
(v) Holders of shares of any class with general
voting rights but without preferential rights to distributions
or assets have no preemptive rights with respect to shares of
any class with preferential rights to distributions or assets
unless the shares with preferential rights are convertible into
or carry a right to subscribe for or acquire shares without
preferential rights;
(vi) Shares subject to preemptive rights that are not
acquired by shareholders may be issued to any person for a
period of one (1) year after being offered to shareholders at a
consideration set by the board of directors that is not lower
than the consideration set for the exercise of preemptive
rights. An offer at a lower consideration or after the
expiration of one (1) year is subject to the shareholders'
preemptive rights.
(c) For purposes of this section, "shares" includes a
security convertible into or carrying a right to subscribe for
or acquire shares.
17-16-631. Corporation's acquisition of its own shares.
(a) A corporation may acquire its own shares and shares so
acquired constitute authorized but unissued shares.
(b) If the articles of incorporation prohibit the reissue
of the acquired shares, the number of authorized shares is
reduced by the number of shares acquired.
(c) The board of directors may adopt articles of amendment
effecting the provisions of this section under article 10 of
this act without shareholder action and deliver them to the
secretary of state for filing.
D. Distributions
17-16-640. Distributions to shareholders.
(a) A board of directors may authorize and the corporation
may make distributions to its shareholders subject to
restriction by the articles of incorporation and the limitation
in subsection (c) of this section.
(b) If the board of directors does not fix the record date
for determining shareholders entitled to a distribution, other
than one (1) involving a purchase, redemption, or other
acquisition of the corporation's shares, it is the date the
board of directors authorizes the distribution.
(c) No distribution may be made if, after giving it
effect:
(i) The corporation would not be able to pay its
debts as they become due in the usual course of business; or
(ii) The corporation's total assets would be less
than the sum of its total liabilities plus (unless the articles
of incorporation permit otherwise) the amount that would be
needed, if the corporation were to be dissolved at the time of
the distribution, to satisfy the preferential rights upon
dissolution of shareholders whose preferential rights are
superior to those receiving the distribution.
(d) The board of directors may base a determination that a
distribution is not prohibited under subsection (c) of this
section either on financial statements prepared on the basis of
accounting practices and principles that are reasonable in the
circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is
reasonable in the circumstances.
(e) Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section,
the effect of a distribution under subsection (c) of this
section is measured:
(i) In the case of distribution by purchase,
redemption, or other acquisition of the corporation's shares, as
of the earlier of:
(A) The date money or other property is
transferred or debt incurred by the corporation; or
(B) The date the shareholder ceases to be a
shareholder with respect to the acquired shares.
(ii) In the case of any other distribution of
indebtedness, as of the date the indebtedness is distributed;
and
(iii) In all other cases, as of:
(A) The date the distribution is authorized if
the payment occurs within one hundred twenty (120) days after
the date of authorization; or
(B) The date the payment is made if it occurs
more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date of
authorization.
(f) A corporation's indebtedness to a shareholder incurred
by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this section
is at parity with the corporation's indebtedness to its general,
unsecured creditors except to the extent subordinated by
agreement.
(g) Indebtedness of a corporation, including indebtedness
issued as a distribution, is not considered a liability for
purposes of determinations under subsection (c) of this section
if its terms provide that payment of principal and interest are
made only if and to the extent that payment of a distribution to
shareholders could then be made under this section. If the
indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of
principal or interest is treated as a distribution, the effect
of which is measured on the date the payment is actually made.
(h) This section shall not apply to distributions in
liquidation under article 14 of this act.
ARTICLE 7 - SHAREHOLDERS
A. Meetings
17-16-701. Annual meeting.
(a) Unless directors are elected by written consent in
lieu of an annual meeting as permitted by W.S. 17-16-704, a
corporation shall hold a meeting of shareholders annually at a
time stated in or fixed in accordance with the bylaws.
(b) Annual shareholders' meetings may be held in or out of
this state at the place stated in or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws. If no place is stated in or fixed in accordance
with the bylaws, annual meetings shall be held at the
corporation's principal office. The board of directors may, in
its sole discretion, determine that the meeting shall not be
held at any place, but may instead be held by means of remote
communication. The board shall take into consideration
stockholders' ability to participate by remote communication and
provide an alternative means of participation for those
stockholders unable to participate by remote communication. If
authorized by the board of directors in its sole discretion, and
subject to guidelines and procedures the board of directors may
adopt, stockholders and proxies not physically present at a
meeting of stockholders may, by means of remote communication:
(i) Participate in a meeting of stockholders; and
(ii) Be deemed present in person and vote at a
meeting of stockholders, whether the meeting is held at a
designated place or solely by means of remote communication,
provided that the corporation shall implement reasonable
measures to verify that each person deemed present and permitted
to vote at the meeting by means of remote communication is a
stockholder or proxy. The corporations shall implement
reasonable measures to provide the stockholders and proxies a
reasonable opportunity to participate in the meeting and to vote
on matters submitted to the stockholders, including an
opportunity to read or hear the proceedings of the meeting
substantially concurrently with the proceeding. If any
stockholder or proxy votes or takes other action at the meeting
by means of remote communication, a record of the vote or other
action shall be maintained by the corporation.
(c) The failure to hold an annual meeting at the time
stated in or fixed in accordance with a corporation's bylaws
does not affect the validity of any corporate action.
17-16-702. Special meeting.
(a) A corporation shall hold a special meeting of
shareholders:
(i) On call of its board of directors or the person
or persons authorized to do so by the articles of incorporation
or bylaws; or
(ii) If the holders of at least ten percent (10%) of
all the votes entitled to be cast on any issue proposed to be
considered at the proposed special meeting sign, date, and
deliver to the corporation one (1) or more written demands for
the meeting describing the purpose or purposes for which it is
to be held, provided that the articles of incorporation may fix
a lower percentage or a higher percentage not exceeding twenty-
five percent (25%) of all the votes entitled to be cast on any
issue proposed to be considered. Unless otherwise provided in
the articles of incorporation, a written demand for a special
meeting may be revoked by a writing to that effect received by
the corporation prior to the receipt by the corporation of
demands sufficient in number to require the holding of a special
meeting.
(b) If not otherwise fixed under W.S. 17-16-703 or
17-16-707, the record date for determining shareholders entitled
to demand a special meeting is the date the first shareholder
signs the demand.
(c) Special shareholders' meetings may be held in or out
of this state at the place stated in or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws. If no place is stated or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws, special meetings shall be held at the corporation's
principal office.
(d) Only business within the purpose or purposes described
in the meeting notice required by W.S. 17-16-705(c) may be
conducted at a special shareholders' meeting.
17-16-703. Court-ordered meeting.
(a) The district court of the county where a corporation's
principal office or, if none in this state, its registered
office is located may summarily order a meeting to be held:
(i) On application of any shareholder of the
corporation entitled to participate in an annual meeting if an
annual meeting was not held or action by written consent in lieu
thereof did not become effective within the earlier of six (6)
months after the end of the corporation's fiscal year or fifteen
(15) months after its last annual meeting; or
(ii) On application of a shareholder who signed a
demand for a special meeting valid under W.S. 17-16-702, if:
(A) Notice of the special meeting was not given
within thirty (30) days after the date the demand was delivered
to the corporation's secretary; or
(B) The special meeting was not held in
accordance with the notice.
(b) The court may fix the time and place of the meeting,
determine the shares entitled to participate in the meeting,
specify a record date for determining shareholders entitled to
notice of and to vote at the meeting, prescribe the form and
content of the meeting notice, fix the quorum required for
specific matters to be considered at the meeting or direct that
the votes represented at the meeting constitute a quorum for
action on those matters, and enter other orders necessary to
accomplish the purpose or purposes of the meeting.
17-16-704. Action without meeting.
(a) Action required or permitted by this act to be taken
at a shareholders' meeting may be taken without a meeting if
the action is taken by all the shareholders entitled to vote on
the action. The action shall be evidenced by one (1) or more
written consents bearing the date of signature and describing
the action taken, signed by the holders of the requisite number
of shares entitled to vote on the action, and delivered to the
corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the
corporate records.
(b) The articles of incorporation may provide that any
action required or permitted by this act to be taken at a
shareholders' meeting may be taken without a meeting, and
without prior notice, if consents in writing setting forth the
action so taken are signed by the holders of outstanding shares
having not less than the minimum number of votes that would be
required to authorize or take the action at a meeting at which
all shares entitled to vote on the action were present and
voted. The written consent shall bear the date of signature of
the shareholder who signs the consent and be delivered to the
corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the
corporate records.
(c) If not otherwise fixed under W.S. 17-16-703 or
17-16-707, and if prior board action is not required respecting
the action to be taken without a meeting, the record date for
determining shareholders entitled to take action without a
meeting shall be the first date on which a signed written
consent is delivered to the corporation. If not otherwise fixed
under W.S. 17-16-707 and if prior board action is required
respecting the action to be taken without a meeting, the record
date shall be the close of business on the day the resolution of
the board taking such prior action is adopted. No written
consent shall be effective to take the corporate action referred
to therein unless, within sixty (60) days of the earliest date
on which a consent delivered to the corporation as required by
this section was signed, written consents signed by sufficient
shareholders to take the action have been delivered to the
corporation. A written consent may be revoked by a writing to
that effect delivered to the corporation before unrevoked
written consents sufficient in number to take corporate action
are delivered to the corporation.
(d) A consent signed pursuant to the provisions of this
section has the effect of a vote taken at a meeting and may be
described as such in any document. Unless the articles of
incorporation, bylaws or a resolution of the board of directors
provides for a reasonable delay to permit tabulation of written
consents, the action taken by written consent shall be effective
when written consents signed by sufficient shareholders to take
the action are delivered to the corporation.
(e) If this act requires that notice of proposed action be
given to nonvoting shareholders and the action is to be taken by
written consent of the voting shareholders, the corporation
shall give its nonvoting shareholders written notice of the
action not more than ten (10) days after written consents
sufficient to take the action have been delivered to the
corporation or the later date that tabulation of consents is
completed pursuant to the authorization under subsection (d) of
this section. The notice shall reasonably describe the action
taken and contain or be accompanied by the same material that,
under any provision of this act, would have been required to be
sent to nonvoting shareholders in a notice of meeting at which
the proposed action would have been submitted to the
shareholders for action.
(f) If action is taken by less than unanimous written
consent of the voting shareholders, the corporation shall give
its nonconsenting voting shareholders written notice of the
action not more than ten (10) days after written consents
sufficient to take the action have been delivered to the
corporation, or the later date that tabulation of consents is
completed pursuant to an authorization under subsection (d) of
this section. The notice shall reasonably describe the action
taken and contain or be accompanied by the same material that,
under any provision of this act, would have been required to be
sent to voting shareholders in a notice of a meeting at which
the action would have been submitted to the shareholders for
action.
(g) The notice requirements in subsections (e) and (f) of
this section shall not delay the effectiveness of actions taken
by written consent, and a failure to comply with such notice
requirements shall not invalidate actions taken by written
consent, provided that this subsection shall not be deemed to
limit judicial power to fashion any appropriate remedy in favor
of a shareholder adversely affected by a failure to give the
notice within the required time period.
(h) An electronic transmission may be used to consent to
an action, if the electronic transmission contains or is
accompanied by information from which the corporation can
determine the date on which the electronic transmission was
signed and that the electronic transmission was authorized by
the shareholder, the shareholder's agent or the shareholder's
attorney-in-fact.
(i) Delivery of a written consent to the corporation under
this section is delivery to the corporation's registered agent
at its registered office or to the secretary of the corporation
at its principal office.
17-16-705. Notice of meeting.
(a) A corporation shall notify shareholders of the date,
time, place and means of communication of each annual and
special shareholders' meeting no fewer than ten (10) nor more
than sixty (60) days before the meeting date. Unless this act
or the articles of incorporation require otherwise, the
corporation is required to give notice only to shareholders
entitled to vote at the meeting.
(b) Unless this act or the articles of incorporation
require otherwise, notice of an annual meeting need not include
a description of the purpose or purposes for which the meeting
is called.
(c) Notice of a special meeting shall include a
description of the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is
called.
(d) If not otherwise fixed under W.S. 17-16-703 or
17-16-707, the record date for determining shareholders entitled
to notice of and to vote at an annual or special shareholders'
meeting is the day before the first notice is delivered to
shareholders.
(e) Unless the bylaws require otherwise, if an annual or
special shareholders' meeting is adjourned to a different date,
time, place or means of communication, notice need not be given
of the new date, time, place or means of communication if the
new date, time place or means of communication is announced at
the meeting before adjournment. If a new record date for the
adjourned meeting is or shall be fixed under W.S. 17-16-707,
however, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given under
this section to persons who are shareholders as of the new
record date.
17-16-706. Waiver of notice.
(a) A shareholder may waive any notice required by this
act, the articles of incorporation, or bylaws before or after
the date and time stated in the notice. The waiver shall be in
writing, be signed or shall be sent by electronic transmission
by the shareholder entitled to the notice, and be delivered to
the corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the
corporate records.
(b) A shareholder's attendance at a meeting:
(i) Waives objection to lack of notice or defective
notice of the meeting, unless the shareholder at the beginning
of the meeting objects to holding the meeting or transacting
business at the meeting; and
(ii) Waives objection to consideration of a
particular matter at the meeting that is not within the purpose
or purposes described in the meeting notice, unless the
shareholder objects to considering the matter when it is
presented.
17-16-707. Record date.
(a) The bylaws may fix or provide the manner of fixing the
record date for one (1) or more voting groups in order to
determine the shareholders entitled to notice of a shareholders'
meeting, to demand a special meeting, to vote, or to take any
other action. If the bylaws do not fix or provide for fixing a
record date, the board of directors of the corporation may fix a
future date as the record date.
(b) A record date fixed under this section may not be more
than seventy (70) days before the meeting or action requiring a
determination of shareholders.
(c) A determination of shareholders entitled to notice of
or to vote at a shareholders' meeting is effective for any
adjournment of the meeting unless the board of directors fixes a
new record date, which it shall do if the meeting is adjourned
to a date more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date
fixed for the original meeting.
(d) If a court orders a meeting adjourned to a date more
than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date fixed for the
original meeting, it may provide that the original record date
continues in effect or it may fix a new record date.
17-16-708. Conduct of the meeting.
(a) At each meeting of shareholders, a chair shall
preside. The chair shall be appointed as provided in the bylaws
or, in the absence of such provision, by the board.
(b) The chair, unless the articles of incorporation or
bylaws provide otherwise, shall determine the order of business
and shall have the authority to establish rules for the conduct
of the meeting.
(c) Any rules adopted for, and the conduct of, the meeting
shall be fair to shareholders.
(d) The chair of the meeting shall announce at the meeting
when the polls close for each matter voted upon. If no
announcement is made, the polls shall be deemed to have closed
upon the final adjournment of the meeting. After the polls
close, no ballots, proxies or votes nor any revocations or
changes thereto may be accepted.
B. Voting
17-16-720. Shareholders' list for meeting.
(a) After fixing a record date for a meeting, a
corporation shall prepare an alphabetical or numerical list of
the identities of all its shareholders who are entitled to
notice of a shareholders' meeting. The list shall be arranged
by voting group, and within each voting group by class or series
of shares, and show the number of shares held by each
shareholder. The list shall also show each shareholder's
physical mailing address, if the identity of a shareholder on
the list consists of the shareholder's name, and each
shareholder's authorized means of receipt for electronic
transmissions, if the identity of a shareholder on the list
consists of the shareholder's data address.
(b) The shareholders' list shall be available for
inspection by any shareholder, beginning two (2) business days
after notice of the meeting is given for which the list was
prepared and continuing through the meeting, at the
corporation's principal office or at a place identified in the
meeting notice in the city where the meeting will be held. A
shareholder, his agent, or attorney is entitled on written
demand to inspect and, subject to the requirements of W.S.
17-16-1602(c), to copy the list, during regular business hours
and at the shareholder's expense, during the period it is
available for inspection.
(c) The corporation shall make the shareholders' list
available at the meeting, and any shareholder, his agent, or
attorney is entitled to inspect the list at any time during the
meeting or any adjournment.
(d) If the corporation refuses to allow a shareholder, his
agent, or attorney to inspect the shareholders' list before or
at the meeting, or to copy the list as permitted by subsection
(b) of this section, the district court of the county where a
corporation's principal office or, if none in this state, its
registered office, is located, on application of the
shareholder, may summarily order the inspection or copying at
the corporation's expense, order payment by the corporation of
the shareholder's cost of suit including reasonable attorney
fees and may postpone the meeting for which the list was
prepared until the inspection or copying is complete.
(e) Refusal or failure to prepare or make available the
shareholders' list does not affect the validity of action taken
at the meeting.
17-16-721. Voting entitlement of shares.
(a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (d) of this
section or unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, each outstanding share, regardless of class, is
entitled to one (1) vote on each matter voted on at a
shareholders' meeting. Only shares are entitled to vote.
(b) Unless authorized by a district court, the shares of a
corporation are not entitled to vote if they are owned, directly
or indirectly, by a second corporation, domestic or foreign, and
the first corporation owns, directly or indirectly, a majority
of the shares entitled to vote for directors of the second
corporation.
(c) Subsection (b) of this section does not limit the
power of a corporation to vote any shares, including its own
shares, held by it in a fiduciary capacity.
(d) Redeemable shares are not entitled to vote after
notice of redemption is mailed to the holders and a sum
sufficient to redeem the shares has been deposited with a bank,
trust company, or other financial institution under an
irrevocable obligation to pay the holders the redemption price
on surrender of the shares.
17-16-722. Proxies.
(a) A shareholder may vote his shares in person or by
proxy.
(b) A shareholder or his agent or attorney-in-fact may
appoint a proxy to vote or otherwise act for the shareholder by
signing an appointment form or by an electronic transmission.
An electronic transmission shall contain or be accompanied by
information from which one can determine that the shareholder,
the shareholder's agent, or the shareholder's attorney-in-fact
authorized the electronic transmission.
(c) An appointment of a proxy is effective when a signed
appointment form or an electronic transmission of the
appointment is received by the inspector of election or the
officer or agent of the corporation authorized to tabulate
votes. An appointment is valid for eleven (11) months unless a
longer period is expressly provided in the appointment form.
(d) An appointment of a proxy is revocable unless the
appointment form or electronic transmission states that it is
irrevocable and the appointment is coupled with an interest.
Appointments coupled with an interest include the appointment
of:
(i) A pledgee;
(ii) A person who purchased or agreed to purchase the
shares;
(iii) A creditor of the corporation who extended it
credit under terms requiring the appointment;
(iv) An employee of the corporation whose employment
contract requires the appointment; or
(v) A party to a voting agreement created under W.S.
17-16-731.
(e) The death or incapacity of the shareholder appointing
a proxy does not affect the right of the corporation to accept
the proxy's authority unless notice of the death or incapacity
is received by the secretary or other officer or agent
authorized to tabulate votes before the proxy exercises his
authority under the appointment.
(f) An appointment made irrevocable under subsection (d)
of this section is revoked when the interest with which it is
coupled is extinguished.
(g) A transferee for value of shares subject to an
irrevocable appointment may revoke the appointment if he did not
know of its existence when he acquired the shares and the
existence of the irrevocable appointment was not noted
conspicuously on the certificate representing the shares or on
the information statement for shares without certificates.
(h) Subject to W.S. 17-16-724 and to any express
limitation on the proxy's authority stated in the appointment
form or electronic transmission, a corporation is entitled to
accept the proxy's vote or other action as that of the
shareholder making the appointment.
17-16-723. Shares held by nominees.
(a) A corporation may establish a procedure by which the
beneficial owner of shares that are registered in the name of a
nominee is recognized by the corporation as the shareholder.
The extent of this recognition may be determined in the
procedure.
(b) The procedure may set forth:
(i) The types of nominees to which it applies;
(ii) The rights or privileges that the corporation
recognizes in a beneficial owner;
(iii) The manner in which the procedure is selected
by the nominee;
(iv) The information that shall be provided when the
procedure is selected;
(v) The period for which selection of the procedure
is effective; and
(vi) Other aspects of the rights and duties created.
17-16-724. Corporation's acceptance of votes.
(a) If the name or network signature signed on a vote,
consent, waiver, or proxy appointment corresponds to the name or
data address of a shareholder, the corporation if acting in good
faith is entitled to accept the vote, consent, waiver, or proxy
appointment and give it effect as the act of the shareholder.
(b) If the name or network signature signed on a vote,
consent, waiver, or proxy appointment does not correspond to the
name or data address of its shareholder, the corporation if
acting in good faith is nevertheless entitled to accept the
vote, consent, waiver, or proxy appointment and give it effect
as the act of the shareholder if:
(i) The shareholder is an entity and the name or
network signature signed purports to be that of an officer or
agent of the entity;
(ii) The name or network signature signed purports to
be that of an administrator, executor, guardian, or conservator
representing the shareholder and, if the corporation requests,
evidence of fiduciary status acceptable to the corporation has
been presented with respect to the vote, consent, waiver, or
proxy appointment;
(iii) The name or network signature signed purports
to be that of a receiver or trustee in bankruptcy of the
shareholder and, if the corporation requests, evidence of this
status acceptable to the corporation has been presented with
respect to the vote, consent, waiver, or proxy appointment;
(iv) The name or network signature signed purports to
be that of a pledgee, beneficial owner, or attorney-in-fact of
the shareholder and, if the corporation requests, evidence
acceptable to the corporation of the signatory's authority to
sign for the shareholder has been presented with respect to the
vote, consent, waiver, or proxy appointment; or
(v) Two (2) or more persons are the shareholder as
cotenants or fiduciaries and the name or network signature
signed purports to be the name or data address of at least one
(1) of the coowners and the person signing appears to be acting
on behalf of all the coowners.
(c) The corporation is entitled to reject a vote, consent,
waiver, or proxy appointment if the secretary or other officer
or agent authorized to tabulate votes, acting in good faith, has
reasonable basis for doubt about the validity of the signature
on it or about the signatory's authority to sign for the
shareholder.
(d) The corporation and its officer or agent who accepts
or rejects a vote, consent, waiver, or proxy appointment in good
faith and in accordance with the standards of this section or
W.S. 17-16-722(b) are not liable in damages to the shareholder
for the consequences of the acceptance or rejection.
(e) Corporate action based on the acceptance or rejection
of a vote, consent, waiver, or proxy appointment under this
section or W.S. 17-16-722(b) is valid unless a court of
competent jurisdiction determines otherwise.
17-16-725. Quorum and voting requirements for voting
groups.
(a) Shares entitled to vote as a separate voting group may
take action on a matter at a meeting only if a quorum of those
shares exists with respect to that matter. Unless the articles
of incorporation or this act provide otherwise, a majority of
the votes entitled to be cast on the matter by the voting group
constitutes a quorum of that voting group for action on that
matter.
(b) Once a share is represented for any purpose at a
meeting, it is deemed present for quorum purposes for the
remainder of the meeting and for any adjournment of that meeting
unless a new record date is or shall be set for that adjourned
meeting.
(c) If a quorum exists, action on a matter other than the
election of directors by a voting group is approved if the votes
cast within the voting group favoring the action exceed the
votes cast opposing the action, unless the articles of
incorporation or this act require a greater number of
affirmative votes.
(d) An amendment of articles of incorporation adding,
changing or deleting a quorum or voting requirement for a voting
group greater or lesser than specified in subsection (a) or (c)
of this section is governed by W.S. 17-16-727.
(e) The election of directors is governed by W.S.
17-16-728.
17-16-726. Action by single and multiple voting groups.
(a) If the articles of incorporation or this act provide
for voting by a single voting group on a matter, action on that
matter is taken when voted upon by that voting group as provided
in W.S. 17-16-725.
(b) If the articles of incorporation or this act provide
for voting by two (2) or more voting groups on a matter, action
on that matter is taken only when voted upon by each of those
voting groups counted separately as provided in W.S. 17-16-725.
Action may be taken by one (1) voting group on a matter even
though no action is taken by another voting group entitled to
vote on the matter.
17-16-727. Changing quorum or voting requirements.
(a) The articles of incorporation may provide for a
greater or lesser quorum or voting requirement for shareholders,
or voting groups of shareholders, than is provided for by this
act.
(b) An amendment to the articles of incorporation that
adds, changes or deletes a quorum or voting requirement shall
meet the same quorum requirement and be adopted by the same vote
and voting groups required to take action under the quorum and
voting requirements then in effect or proposed to be adopted,
whichever is greater.
17-16-728. Voting for directors; cumulative voting.
(a) Unless otherwise provided in the articles of
incorporation, directors are elected by a plurality of the votes
cast by the shares entitled to vote in the election at a meeting
at which a quorum is present.
(b) Shareholders do not have a right to cumulate their
votes for directors unless the articles of incorporation so
provide.
(c) A statement included in the articles of incorporation
that "[all] [a designated voting group of] shareholders are
entitled to cumulate their votes for directors," or words of
similar import, means that the shareholders designated are
entitled to multiply the number of votes they are entitled to
cast by the number of directors for whom they are entitled to
vote and cast the product for a single candidate or distribute
the product among two (2) or more candidates.
(d) Shares otherwise entitled to vote cumulatively may not
be voted cumulatively at a particular meeting unless:
(i) The meeting notice or proxy statement
accompanying the notice states conspicuously that cumulative
voting is authorized; or
(ii) A shareholder who has the right to cumulate his
votes gives notice to the corporation not less than forty-eight
(48) hours before the time set for the meeting of the
shareholder's intent to cumulate his votes during the meeting.
If one (1) shareholder gives this notice all other shareholders
in the same voting group participating in the election are
entitled to cumulate their votes without giving further notice.
17-16-729. Inspectors of election.
(a) A public corporation shall, and any other corporation
may, appoint one (1) or more inspectors to act at a meeting of
shareholders and make a written report of the inspectors'
determinations. Each inspector shall take and sign an oath
faithfully to execute the duties of inspector with strict
impartiality and according to the best of the inspector's
ability.
(b) The inspectors shall:
(i) Ascertain the number of shares outstanding and
the voting power of each;
(ii) Determine the shares represented at a meeting;
(iii) Determine the validity of proxies and ballots;
(iv) Count all votes; and
(v) Determine the result.
(c) An inspector may be an officer or employee of the
corporation.
C. Voting Trusts and Agreements
17-16-730. Voting trusts.
(a) One (1) or more shareholders may create a voting
trust, conferring on a trustee the right to vote or otherwise
act for them, by signing an agreement setting out the provisions
of the trust, which may include anything consistent with its
purpose, and transferring their shares to the trustee. When a
voting trust agreement is signed, the trustee shall prepare a
list of the identities of all owners of beneficial interests in
the trust, together with the number and class of shares each
transferred to the trust. The list shall also show each
shareholder's physical mailing address, if the identity of a
shareholder on the list consists of the shareholder's name, and
each shareholder's authorized means of receipt for electronic
transmissions, if the identity of a shareholder on the list
consists of the shareholder's data address. Copies of the list
and agreement shall be delivered to the corporation's principal
office.
(b) A voting trust becomes effective on the date the first
shares subject to the trust are registered in the trustee's
name. A voting trust is valid for not more than ten (10) years
after its effective date unless extended under subsection (c) of
this section.
(c) All or some of the parties to a voting trust may
extend it for additional terms of not more than ten (10) years
each by signing written consent to the extension. An extension
is valid for ten (10) years from the date the first shareholder
signs the extension agreement. The voting trustee shall deliver
copies of the extension agreement and list of beneficial owners
to the corporation's principal office. An extension agreement
binds only those parties signing it.
17-16-731. Voting agreements.
(a) Two (2) or more shareholders may provide for the
manner in which they will vote their shares by signing an
agreement for that purpose. A voting agreement created under
this section is not subject to the provisions of W.S. 17-16-730.
(b) A voting agreement created under this section is
specifically enforceable.
17-16-732. Shareholder agreements.
(a) An agreement among the shareholders of a corporation
that complies with this section is effective among the
shareholders and the corporation even though it is inconsistent
with one (1) or more other provisions of this act in that it:
(i) Eliminates the board of directors or restricts
the discretion or powers of the board of directors;
(ii) Governs the authorization or making of
distributions whether or not in proportion to ownership of
shares, subject to the limitations in W.S. 17-16-640;
(iii) Establishes who shall be directors or officers
of the corporation, or their terms of office or manner of
selection or removal;
(iv) Governs, in general or in regard to specific
matters, the exercise or division of voting power by or between
the shareholders and directors or by or among any of them,
including use of weighted voting rights or director proxies;
(v) Establishes the terms and conditions of any
agreement for the transfer or use of property or the provision
of services between the corporation and any shareholder,
director, officer or employee of the corporation or among any of
them;
(vi) Transfers to one (1) or more shareholders or
other persons all or part of the authority to exercise the
corporate powers or to manage the business and affairs of the
corporation, including the resolution of any issue about which
there exists a deadlock among directors or shareholders;
(vii) Requires dissolution of the corporation at the
request of one (1) or more of the shareholders or upon the
occurrence of a specified event or contingency; or
(viii) Otherwise governs the exercise of the
corporate powers or the management of the business and affairs
of the corporation or the relationship among the shareholders,
the directors and the corporation, or among any of them, and is
not contrary to public policy.
(b) An agreement authorized by this section shall be:
(i) Set forth:
(A) In the articles of incorporation or bylaws
and approved by all persons who are shareholders at the time of
the agreement; or
(B) In a written agreement that is signed by all
persons who are shareholders at the time of the agreement and
which agreement is made known to the corporation.
(ii) Subject to amendment only by all persons who are
shareholders at the time of the amendment, unless the agreement
provides otherwise; and
(iii) Valid for ten (10) years, unless the agreement
provides otherwise. Nothing herein affects agreements in force
on July 1, 1997.
(c) The existence of an agreement authorized by this
section shall be noted conspicuously on the front or back of
each certificate for outstanding shares or on the information
statement required by W.S. 17-16-626(b). If at the time of the
agreement the corporation has shares outstanding represented by
certificates, the corporation shall recall the outstanding
certificates and issue substitute certificates that comply with
this subsection. The failure to note the existence of the
agreement on the certificate or information statement shall not
affect the validity of the agreement or any action taken
pursuant to it. Any purchaser of shares who, at the time of
purchase, did not have knowledge of the existence of the
agreement shall be entitled to rescission of the purchase. A
purchaser shall be deemed to have knowledge of the existence of
the agreement if its existence is noted on the certificate or
information statement for the shares in compliance with this
subsection and, if the shares are not represented by a
certificate, the information statement is delivered to the
purchaser at or prior to the time of purchase of the shares. An
action to enforce the right of rescission authorized by this
subsection must be commenced within the earlier of ninety (90)
days after discovery of the existence of the agreement or two
(2) years after the time of purchase of the shares.
(d) An agreement authorized by this section shall cease to
be effective when the corporation becomes a public corporation.
If the agreement ceases to be effective for any reason, the
board of directors may, if the agreement is contained or
referred to in the corporation's articles of incorporation or
bylaws, adopt an amendment to the articles of incorporation or
bylaws, without shareholder action, to delete the agreement and
any references to it.
(e) An agreement authorized by this section that limits
the discretion or powers of the board of directors shall relieve
the directors of, and impose upon the person or persons in whom
such discretion or powers are vested, liability for acts or
omissions imposed by law on directors to the extent that the
discretion or powers of the directors are limited by the
agreement.
(f) The existence or performance of an agreement
authorized by this section shall not be a ground for imposing
personal liability on any shareholder for the acts or debts of
the corporation even if the agreement or its performance treats
the corporation as if it were a partnership or results in
failure to observe the corporate formalities otherwise
applicable to the matters governed by the agreement.
(g) Incorporators or subscribers for shares may act as
shareholders with respect to an agreement authorized by this
section if no shares have been issued when the agreement is
made.
D. Derivative Proceedings
17-16-740. Subarticle definitions.
(a) As used in this subarticle:
(i) "Derivative proceeding" means a civil suit in the
right of a domestic corporation or, to the extent provided in
W.S. 17-16-747, in the right of a foreign corporation;
(ii) "Shareholder" includes a beneficial owner whose
shares are held in a voting trust or held by a nominee on the
beneficial owner's behalf.
17-16-741. Standing.
(a) A shareholder may not commence or maintain a
derivative proceeding unless the shareholder:
(i) Was a shareholder of the corporation at the time
of the act or omission complained of, or became a shareholder
through transfer by operation of law from one who was a
shareholder at the time; and
(ii) Fairly and adequately represents the interests
of the corporation in enforcing the right of the corporation.
17-16-742. Demand.
(a) No shareholder may commence a derivative proceeding
until:
(i) A written demand has been made upon the
corporation to take suitable action; and
(ii) Ninety (90) days have expired from the date the
demand was made unless the shareholder has earlier been notified
that the demand has been rejected by the corporation or unless
irreparable injury to the corporation would result by waiting
for the expiration of the ninety (90) day period.
17-16-743. Stay of proceedings.
If the corporation commences an inquiry into the allegations
made in the demand or complaint, the court may stay any
derivative proceeding for such period as the court deems
appropriate.
17-16-744. Dismissal.
(a) A derivative proceeding shall be dismissed by the
court on motion by the corporation if one (1) of the groups
specified in subsection (b) or (e) of this section has
determined in good faith after conducting a reasonable inquiry
upon which its conclusions are based that the maintenance of the
derivative proceeding is not in the best interests of the
corporation.
(b) Unless a panel is appointed pursuant to subsection (e)
of this section, the determination in subsection (a) of this
section shall be made by:
(i) A majority vote of qualified directors present at
a meeting of the board of directors if the qualified directors
constitute a quorum; or
(ii) A majority vote of a committee consisting of two
(2) or more qualified directors appointed by majority vote of
qualified directors present at a meeting of the board of
directors, regardless of whether such qualified directors
constitute a quorum.
(c) If a derivative proceeding is commenced after a
determination has been made rejecting a demand by a shareholder,
the complaint shall allege with particularity facts establishing
either:
(i) That a majority of the board of directors did not
consist of qualified directors at the time the determination was
made; or
(ii) That the requirements of subsection (a) of this
section have not been met.
(d) If a majority of the board of directors consisted of
qualified directors at the time the determination was made, the
plaintiff shall have the burden of proving that the requirements
of subsection (a) of this section have not been met; if not, the
corporation shall have the burden of proving that the
requirements of subsection (a) of this section have been met.
(e) Upon motion by the corporation or any interested
party, the court may appoint a panel of one (1) or more
individuals to make a determination whether the maintenance of
the derivative proceeding is in the best interests of the
corporation. In such case, the plaintiff shall have the burden
of proving that the requirements of subsection (a) of this
section have not been met.
17-16-745. Discontinuance or settlement.
A derivative proceeding may not be discontinued or settled
without the court's approval. If the court determines that a
proposed discontinuance or settlement will substantially affect
the interests of the corporation's shareholders or a class of
shareholders, the court shall direct that notice be given to the
shareholders affected.
17-16-746. Payment of expenses.
(a) On termination of the derivative proceeding the court
may:
(i) Order the corporation to pay the plaintiff's
reasonable expenses, including counsel fees, incurred in the
proceeding if it finds that the proceeding resulted in a
substantial benefit to the corporation;
(ii) Order the plaintiff to pay any defendant's
reasonable expenses, including counsel fees, incurred in
defending the proceeding if it finds that the proceeding was
commenced or maintained without reasonable cause or for an
improper purpose; or
(iii) Order a party to pay an opposing party's
reasonable expenses, including counsel fees, incurred because of
the filing of a pleading, motion or other paper, if it finds
that the pleading, motion or other paper was not well grounded
in fact, after reasonable inquiry, or warranted by existing law
or a good faith argument for the extension, modification or
reversal of existing law and was interposed for an improper
purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or
needless increase in the cost of litigation.
17-16-747. Applicability to foreign corporations.
In any derivative proceeding in the right of a foreign
corporation, the matters covered by this subarticle shall be
governed by the laws of the jurisdiction of incorporation of the
foreign corporation except for W.S. 17-16-743, 17-16-745 and
17-16-746.
E. Proceeding to Appoint Custodian or Receiver
17-16-748. Shareholder action to appoint custodian or
receiver.
(a) The district court may appoint one (1) or more persons
to be custodians, or, if the corporation is insolvent, to be
receivers, of and for a corporation in a proceeding by a
shareholder where it is established that:
(i) The directors are deadlocked in the management of
the corporate affairs, the shareholders are unable to break the
deadlock, and irreparable injury to the corporation is
threatened or being suffered; or
(ii) The directors or those in control of the
corporation are acting fraudulently and irreparable injury to
the corporation is threatened or being suffered.
(b) The court:
(i) May issue injunctions, appoint a temporary
custodian or temporary receiver with all the powers and duties
the court directs, take other action to preserve the corporate
assets wherever located, and carry on the business of the
corporation until a full hearing is held;
(ii) Shall hold a full hearing, after notifying all
parties to the proceeding and any interested persons designated
by the court, before appointing a custodian or receiver; and
(iii) Has jurisdiction over the corporation and all
of its property, wherever located.
(c) The court may appoint an individual or domestic or
foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state as a custodian or receiver and may require the custodian
or receiver to post bond, with or without sureties, in an amount
the court directs.
(d) The court shall describe the powers and duties of the
custodian or receiver in its appointing order, which may be
amended from time to time. Among other powers:
(i) A custodian may exercise all of the powers of the
corporation, through or in place of its board of directors, to
the extent necessary to manage the business and affairs of the
corporation; and
(ii) A receiver:
(A) May dispose of all or any part of the assets
of the corporation wherever located, at a public or private
sale, if authorized by the court; and
(B) May sue and defend in the receiver's own
name as receiver in all courts of this state.
(e) The court during a custodianship may redesignate the
custodian a receiver, and during a receivership may redesignate
the receiver a custodian, if doing so is in the best interests
of the corporation.
(f) The court from time to time during the custodianship
or receivership may order compensation paid and expense
disbursements or reimbursements made to the custodian or
receiver from the assets of the corporation or proceeds from the
sale of its assets.
ARTICLE 8 - DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
A. Board of Directors
17-16-801. Requirement for and functions of board of
directors.
(a) Except as provided in W.S. 17-16-732, each corporation
shall have a board of directors.
(b) All corporate powers shall be exercised by or under
the authority of the board of directors of the corporation, and
the business and affairs of the corporation shall be managed by
or under the direction, and subject to the oversight, of its
board of directors, subject to any limitation set forth in the
articles of incorporation or in an agreement authorized under
W.S. 17-16-732.
(c) In the case of a public corporation, the board's
oversight responsibilities include attention to:
(i) Business performance and plans;
(ii) Major risks to which the corporation is or may
be exposed;
(iii) The performance and compensation of the chief
executive officer;
(iv) Policies and practices to foster the
corporation's compliance with law and ethical conduct;
(v) Preparation of the corporation's financial
statements;
(vi) The effectiveness of the corporation's internal
controls;
(vii) Arrangements for providing adequate and timely
information to directors; and
(viii) The composition of the board and its
committees, taking into account the important role of
independent directors.
17-16-802. Qualifications of directors.
The articles of incorporation or bylaws may prescribe
qualifications for directors. A director need not be a resident
of this state or a shareholder of the corporation unless the
articles of incorporation or bylaws so prescribe.
17-16-803. Number and election of directors.
(a) A board of directors shall consist of one (1) or more
individuals, with the number specified in or fixed in accordance
with the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
(b) The number of directors may be increased or decreased
from time to time by amendment to, or in the manner provided in,
the articles of incorporation or the bylaws.
(c) Directors are elected at the first annual
shareholders' meeting and at each annual meeting thereafter
unless their terms are staggered under W.S. 17-16-806.
(d) The articles of incorporation or bylaws may establish
a variable range for the size of the board of directors by
fixing a minimum and maximum number of directors. If a variable
range is established, the number of directors may be fixed or
changed from time to time within the minimum and maximum, by the
shareholders or the board of directors. After shares are
issued, only the shareholders may change the range for the size
of the board or change from a fixed to a variable-range size
board or vice versa.
17-16-804. Election of directors by certain classes of
shareholders.
If the articles of incorporation authorize dividing the shares
into classes, the articles may also authorize the election of
all or a specified number of directors by the holders of one (1)
or more authorized classes of shares. A class or classes of
shares entitled to elect one (1) or more directors is a separate
voting group for purposes of the election of directors.
17-16-805. Terms of directors generally.
(a) The terms of the initial directors of a corporation
expire at the first shareholders' meeting at which directors are
elected.
(b) The terms of all other directors expire at the next,
or if their terms are staggered in accordance with W.S.
17-16-806, at the applicable second or third, annual
shareholders' meeting following their election except to the
extent:
(i) Provided in W.S. 17-16-1022 if a bylaw electing
to be governed by that section is in effect; or
(ii) A shorter term is specified in the articles of
incorporation in the event of a director nominee failing to
receive a specified vote for election.
(c) A decrease in the number of directors does not shorten
an incumbent director's term.
(d) The term of a director elected to fill a vacancy
expires at the next shareholders' meeting at which directors are
elected.
(e) Despite the expiration of a director's term, he
continues to serve until his successor is elected and qualifies
or until there is a decrease in the number of directors.
17-16-806. Staggered terms for directors.
The articles of incorporation may provide for staggering the
terms of directors by dividing the total number of directors
into two (2) or three (3) groups, with each group containing
one-half (1/2) or one-third (1/3) of the total, as near as may
be practicable. In that event, the terms of directors in the
first group expire at the first annual shareholders' meeting
after their election, the terms of the second group expire at
the second annual shareholders' meeting after their election,
and the terms of the third group, if any, expire at the third
annual shareholders' meeting after their election. At each
annual shareholders' meeting held thereafter, directors shall be
chosen for a term of two (2) years or three (3) years, as the
case may be, to succeed those whose terms expire.
17-16-807. Resignation of directors.
(a) A director may resign at any time by written notice or
by electronic transmission delivered to the board of directors,
its chairman, or to the corporation.
(b) A resignation is effective when the resignation is
delivered unless the resignation specifies a later effective
date or an effective date determined upon the happening of an
event or events. A resignation that is conditioned upon failing
to receive a specified vote for election as a director may
provide that it is irrevocable.
17-16-808. Removal of directors by shareholders.
(a) The shareholders may remove one (1) or more directors
with or without cause unless the articles of incorporation
provide that directors may be removed only for cause.
(b) If a director is elected by a voting group of
shareholders, only the shareholders of that voting group may
participate in the vote to remove that director.
(c) If cumulative voting is authorized, a director may not
be removed if the number of votes sufficient to elect the
director under cumulative voting is voted against his removal.
If cumulative voting is not authorized, a director may be
removed only if the number of votes cast to remove the director
exceeds the number of votes cast not to remove the director.
(d) A director may be removed by the shareholders only at
a meeting called for the purpose of removing the director and
the meeting notice shall state that the purpose, or one (1) of
the purposes, of the meeting is removal of the director.
17-16-809. Removal of directors by judicial proceeding.
(a) The district court of the county where a corporation's
principal office, or if none in this state, its registered
office, is located may remove a director of the corporation from
office in a proceeding commenced by or in the right of the
corporation if the court finds that:
(i) The director engaged in fraudulent conduct with
respect to the corporation or its shareholders, grossly abused
the position of director, or intentionally inflicted harm on the
corporation; and
(ii) Considering the director's course of conduct and
the inadequacy of other available remedies, removal would be in
the best interest of the corporation.
(b) A shareholder proceeding on behalf of the corporation
under subsection (a) of this section shall comply with all of
the requirements of W.S. 17-16-740 through 17-16-747 excluding
W.S. 17-16-741(a)(i).
(c) The court in addition to removing a director may bar
the director from reelection for a period prescribed by the
court.
(d) Nothing in this section limits the equitable powers of
the court to order other relief including, but not limited to,
an award of expenses.
17-16-810. Vacancy on board.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, if a vacancy occurs on a board of directors,
including a vacancy resulting from an increase in the number of
directors:
(i) The shareholders may fill the vacancy;
(ii) The board of directors may fill the vacancy; or
(iii) If the directors remaining in office constitute
fewer than a quorum of the board, they may fill the vacancy by
the affirmative vote of a majority of all the directors
remaining in office.
(b) If the vacant office was held by a director elected by
a voting group of shareholders, only the holders of shares of
that voting group are entitled to vote to fill the vacancy if it
is filled by the shareholders, and only the directors elected by
that voting group are entitled to fill the vacancy if it is
filled by the directors.
(c) A vacancy that will occur at a later date, by reason
of a resignation effective at a later date under W.S.
17-16-807(b) or otherwise, may be filled before the vacancy
occurs but the new director may not take office until the
vacancy occurs.
17-16-811. Compensation of directors.
Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
otherwise, the board of directors may fix the compensation of
directors.
B. Meetings and Action of the Board
17-16-820. Meetings.
(a) The board of directors may hold regular or special
meetings within or outside of this state.
(b) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
otherwise, the board of directors may permit any or all
directors to participate in a regular or special meeting by, or
conduct the meeting through the use of, any means of
communication, including electronic transmission by which all
directors participating may communicate with each other during
the meeting. A director participating in a meeting by this
means is deemed to be present in person at the meeting.
17-16-821. Action without meeting.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
otherwise, action required or permitted by this act to be taken
at a board of directors' meeting may be taken without a meeting
if the action is taken by the requisite number of members of the
board. The action shall be evidenced by one (1) or more written
consents describing the action taken, signed by the requisite
number of directors, or shall be sent by electronic transmission
by the requisite number of directors, and shall be included in
the minutes or filed with the corporate records reflecting the
action taken.
(b) Action taken under this section is the act of the
board of directors when one (1) or more consents signed by the
requisite number of directors are delivered to the corporation.
The consent may specify the time at which the action taken
thereunder is to be effective. A director's consent may be
withdrawn by a revocation signed by the director and delivered
to the corporation prior to delivery to the corporation of
unrevoked written consents signed by the requisite number of
directors. If action is taken by less than unanimous written
consent of the directors, the corporation shall give the
nonconsenting or nonvoting directors written notice of the
action not more than ten (10) days after written consents
sufficient to take the action have been delivered to the
corporation. The notice shall reasonably describe the action
taken. The requirement to give the notice shall not delay the
effectiveness of actions taken by the written consent, and a
failure to comply with the notice requirements shall not
invalidate actions taken by written consent, provided that this
subsection shall not be deemed to limit judicial power to
fashion any appropriate remedy in favor of a director adversely
affected by a failure to give the notice within the required
time period.
(c) A consent signed under this section has the effect of
action taken at a meeting of the board of directors and may be
described as such in any document.
17-16-822. Notice of meeting.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
otherwise, regular meetings of the board of directors may be
held without notice of the date, time, place or purpose of the
meeting.
(b) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide
for a longer or shorter period, special meetings of the board of
directors shall be preceded by at least two (2) days notice of
the date, time and place of the meeting. The notice need not
describe the purpose of the special meeting unless required by
the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
17-16-823. Waiver of notice.
(a) A director may waive any notice required by this act,
the articles of incorporation, or bylaws before or after the
date and time stated in the notice. Except as provided by
subsection (b) of this section, the waiver shall be in writing,
signed by the director entitled to the notice, and filed with
the minutes or corporate records.
(b) A director's attendance at or participation in a
meeting waives any required notice to the director of the
meeting unless the director at the beginning of the meeting or
promptly upon his arrival objects to holding the meeting or
transacting business at the meeting and does not thereafter vote
for or assent to action taken at the meeting.
17-16-824. Quorum and voting.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws require
a greater number or unless otherwise specifically provided in
this act, a quorum of a board of directors consists of:
(i) A majority of the fixed number of directors if
the corporation has a fixed board size; or
(ii) A majority of the number of directors
prescribed, or if no number is prescribed the number in office
immediately before the meeting begins, if the corporation has a
variable-range size board.
(b) The articles of incorporation or bylaws may authorize
a quorum of a board of directors to consist of no fewer than
one-third (1/3) of the fixed or prescribed number of directors
determined under subsection (a) of this section.
(c) If a quorum is present when a vote is taken, the
affirmative vote of a majority of directors present is the act
of the board of directors unless the articles of incorporation
or bylaws require the vote of a greater number of directors.
(d) The right to dissent or abstention is not available to
a director who votes in favor of the action taken. A director
who is present at a meeting of the board of directors or a
committee of the board of directors when corporate action is
taken is deemed to have assented to the action taken unless:
(i) The director objects at the beginning of the
meeting or promptly upon his arrival to holding the meeting or
transacting business at the meeting;
(ii) The director's dissent or abstention from the
action taken is entered in the minutes of the meeting; or
(iii) The director delivers written notice of his
dissent or abstention to the presiding officer of the meeting
before its adjournment or to the corporation immediately after
adjournment of the meeting.
17-16-825. Committees.
(a) Unless this act, the articles of incorporation or
bylaws provide otherwise, a board of directors may create one
(1) or more committees and appoint one (1) or more members of
the board of directors to serve on any committee.
(b) The creation of a committee and appointment of members
to it shall be approved by the greater of:
(i) A majority of all the directors in office when
the action is taken; or
(ii) The number of directors required by the articles
of incorporation or bylaws to take action under W.S. 17-16-824.
(c) W.S. 17-16-820 through 17-16-824 apply to committees
and their members as well.
(d) To the extent specified by the board of directors or
in the articles of incorporation or bylaws, each committee may
exercise the authority of the board of directors under W.S.
17-16-801.
(e) A committee may not, unless specifically authorized by
the board of directors:
(i) Authorize or approve distributions except
according to a formula or method, or within limits, prescribed
by the board of directors;
(ii) Approve or propose to shareholders action that
this act requires to be approved by shareholders;
(iii) Fill vacancies on the board of directors or,
subject to subsection (g) of this section, on any of its
committees;
(iv) Adopt, amend or repeal bylaws.
(f) The creation of, delegation of authority to, or action
by a committee does not alone constitute compliance by a
director with the standards of conduct described in W.S.
17-16-830.
(g) The board of directors may appoint one (1) or more
directors as alternate members of any committee to replace any
absent or disqualified member during the member's absence or
disqualification. Unless the articles of incorporation or the
bylaws or the resolution creating the committee provide
otherwise, in the event of the absence or disqualification of a
member of a committee, the member or members present at any
meeting and not disqualified from voting, unanimously, may
appoint another director to act in place of the absent or
disqualified member.
C. Standards of Conduct
17-16-830. General standards for directors.
(a) Each member of the board of directors, when
discharging the duties of a director, shall act:
(i) In good faith; and
(ii) In a manner he reasonably believes to be in or
at least not opposed to the best interests of the corporation.
(b) The members of the board of directors or a committee
of the board, when becoming informed in connection with their
decision making function or devoting attention to their
oversight function, shall discharge their duties with the care
that a person in a like position would reasonably believe
appropriate under similar circumstances.
(c) In discharging board or committee duties a director
shall disclose, or cause to be disclosed, to the other board or
committee members information not already known by them but
known by the director to be material to the discharge of their
decision making or oversight functions, except that disclosure
is not required to the extent that the director reasonably
believes that doing so would violate a duty imposed under law, a
legally enforceable obligation of confidentiality or a
professional ethics rule.
(d) In discharging board or committee duties a director
who does not have knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is
entitled to rely on the performance by any of the persons
specified in paragraph (f)(i) or (iii) of this section to whom
the board may have delegated, formally or informally by course
of conduct, the authority or duty to perform one (1) or more of
the board's functions that are delegable under applicable law.
(e) In discharging board or committee duties a director
who does not have knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is
entitled to rely on information, opinions, reports or
statements, including financial statements and other financial
data, prepared or presented by any of the persons specified in
subsection (f) of this section.
(f) A director is entitled to rely in accordance with
subsections (d) and (e) of this section on:
(i) One (1) or more officers or employees of the
corporation whom the director reasonably believes to be reliable
and competent in the functions performed or the information,
opinions, reports or statements provided;
(ii) Legal counsel, public accountants or other
persons retained by the corporation as to matters involving
skills or expertise the director reasonably believes are
matters:
(A) Within the person's professional or expert
competence; or
(B) As to which the particular person merits
confidence; or
(iii) A committee of the board of directors of which
he is not a member if the director reasonably believes the
committee merits confidence.
(g) For purposes of subsection (a) of this section, a
director, in determining what he reasonably believes to be in or
not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, shall
consider the interests of the corporation's shareholders and, in
his discretion, may consider any of the following:
(i) The interests of the corporation's employees,
suppliers, creditors and customers;
(ii) The economy of the state and nation;
(iii) The impact of any action upon the communities
in or near which the corporation's facilities or operations are
located;
(iv) The long-term interests of the corporation and
its shareholders, including the possibility that those interests
may be best served by the continued independence of the
corporation; and
(v) Any other factors relevant to promoting or
preserving public or community interests.
17-16-831. Standards of liability for directors.
(a) A director shall not be liable to the corporation or
its shareholders for any decision to take or not to take action,
or any failure to take any action including abstaining from
voting after full disclosure, as a director, unless the party
asserting liability in a proceeding establishes that:
(i) No defense interposed by the director based on
the following precludes liability:
(A) Any provision in the articles of
incorporation authorized by W.S. 17-16-202(b)(iv); or
(B) The protection afforded by W.S. 17-16-861
for action taken in compliance with W.S. 17-16-862 or 17-16-863;
or
(C) The protection afforded by W.S. 17-16-870;
and
(ii) The challenged conduct consisted or was the
result of:
(A) Action not in good faith; or
(B) A decision:
(I) Which the director did not reasonably
believe to be in or at least not opposed to the best interests
of the corporation; or
(II) As to which the director was not
informed to an extent the director reasonably believed
appropriate in the circumstances; or
(C) Lack of objectivity due to the director's
familial, financial or business relationship with, or a lack of
independence due to the director's domination or control by,
another person having a material interest in the challenged
conduct:
(I) Which relationship or which domination
or control could reasonably be expected to have affected the
director's judgment respecting the challenged conduct in a
manner adverse to the corporation; and
(II) After a reasonable expectation to such
effect has been established, the director shall not have
established that the challenged conduct was reasonably believed
by the director to be in or at least not opposed to the best
interests of the corporation; or
(D) A sustained failure of the director to
devote attention to ongoing oversight of the business and
affairs of the corporation, or a failure to devote timely
attention, by making or causing to be made appropriate inquiry,
when particular facts and circumstances of significant concern
materialize that would alert a reasonably attentive director to
the need therefore; or
(E) Receipt of a financial benefit to which the
director was not entitled or any other breach of the director's
duties to deal fairly with the corporation and its shareholders
that is actionable under applicable law.
(b) The party seeking to hold the director liable:
(i) For money damages, shall also have the burden of
establishing that:
(A) Harm to the corporation or its shareholders
has been suffered; and
(B) The harm suffered was proximately caused by
the director's challenged conduct.
(ii) For other money payment under a legal remedy,
such as compensation for the unauthorized use of corporate
assets, shall also have whatever burden of proof may be called
for to establish that the payment sought is appropriate in the
circumstances; or
(iii) For other money payment under an equitable
remedy, such as profit recovery by or disgorgement to the
corporation, shall also have whatever burden of proof may be
called for to establish that the equitable remedy sought is
appropriate in the circumstances.
(c) Nothing contained in this section shall:
(i) In any instance where fairness is at issue, such
as consideration of the fairness of a transaction to the
corporation under W.S. 17-16-861(b)(iii), alter the burden of
proving the fact or lack of fairness otherwise applicable;
(ii) Alter the fact or lack of liability of a
director under another section of this act, such as the
provisions governing the consequences of an unlawful
distribution under W.S. 17-16-833 or a transactional interest
under W.S. 17-16-861; or
(iii) Affect any rights to which the corporation or a
shareholder may be entitled under another statute of this state
or the United States.
17-16-832. Reserved.
17-16-833. Director's liability for unlawful
distributions.
(a) A director who votes for or assents to a distribution
in excess of what may be authorized and made pursuant to W.S.
17-16-640 or 17-16-1409(a) is personally liable to the
corporation for the amount of the distribution that exceeds what
could have been distributed without violating W.S. 17-16-640 or
17-16-1409(a) if the party asserting liability establishes that
when taking the action the director did not comply with W.S.
17-16-830.
(b) A director held liable under subsection (a) of this
section for an unlawful distribution is entitled to:
(i) Contribution from every other director who could
be held liable under subsection (a) of this section for the
unlawful distribution; and
(ii) Recoupment from each shareholder of the pro-rata
portion of the amount of the unlawful distribution the
shareholder accepted knowing the distribution was made in
violation of W.S. 17-16-640 or 17-16-1409(a).
(c) A proceeding to enforce:
(i) The liability of a director under subsection (a)
of this section is barred unless it is commenced within two (2)
years after the date:
(A) On which the effect of the distribution was
measured under W.S. 17-16-640(e) or (g);
(B) As of which the violation of W.S.
17-16-640(a) occurred as the consequence of disregard of a
restriction in the articles of incorporation; or
(C) On which the distribution of assets to
shareholders under W.S. 17-16-1409(a) was made.
(ii) Contribution or recoupment under subsection (b)
of this section is barred unless it is commenced within one (1)
year after the liability of the claimant has been finally
adjudicated under subsection (a) of this section.
D. Officers
17-16-840. Required officers.
(a) A corporation has the officers described in its bylaws
or appointed by the board of directors in accordance with the
bylaws.
(b) The board of directors may elect individuals to fill
one (1) or more offices of the corporation. An officer may
appoint one (1) or more officers if authorized by the bylaws or
the board of directors.
(c) The bylaws or the board of directors shall assign to
one (1) of the officers responsibility for preparing minutes of
the directors' and shareholders' meetings and for maintaining
and authenticating records of the corporation required to be
kept under W.S. 17-16-1601(a) and (e).
(d) The same individual may simultaneously hold more than
one (1) office in a corporation.
17-16-841. Functions of officers.
Each officer has the authority and shall perform the functions
set forth in the bylaws or, to the extent consistent with the
bylaws, the functions prescribed by the board of directors or by
direction of an officer authorized by the board of directors to
prescribe the functions of other officers.
17-16-842. Standards of conduct for officers.
(a) An officer when performing in such capacity, has the
duty to act:
(i) In good faith;
(ii) With the care that a person in a like position
would reasonably exercise under similar circumstances; and
(iii) In a manner the officer reasonably believes to
be in or at least not opposed to the best interests of the
corporation.
(b) The duty of an officer includes the obligation:
(i) To inform the superior officer to whom, or the
board of directors or the committee thereof to which, the
officer reports of information about the affairs of the
corporation known to the officer, within the scope of the
officer's functions, and known to the officer to be material to
the superior officer, board or committee; and
(ii) To inform the officer's superior officer, or
another appropriate person within the corporation, or the board
of directors, or a committee thereof, of any actual or probable
material violation of law involving the corporation or material
breach of duty to the corporation by an officer, employee or
agent of the corporation, that the officer believes has occurred
or is likely to occur.
(c) In discharging his duties an officer who does not have
knowledge that makes reliance unwarranted is entitled to rely
on:
(i) The performance of properly delegated
responsibilities by one (1) or more employees of the corporation
whom the officer reasonably believes to be reliable and
competent in performing the responsibilities delegated; or
(ii) Information, opinions, reports or statements,
including financial statements and other financial data,
prepared or presented by one (1) or more employees of the
corporation whom the officer reasonably believes to be reliable
and competent in the matters presented or by legal counsel,
public accountants or other persons retained by the corporation
as to matters involving skills or expertise the officer
reasonably believes are matters:
(A) Within the particular person's professional
or expert competence; or
(B) As to which the particular person merits
confidence.
(d) An officer shall not be liable to the corporation or
its shareholders for any decisions to take or not to take action
as an officer, or any failure to take any action, if he
performed the duties of his office in compliance with this
section. Whether an officer who does not comply with this
section shall have liability shall depend in such instance on
applicable law, including those principles of W.S. 17-16-831
that have relevance.
(e) For purposes of subsection (a) of this section, an
officer, in determining what he reasonably believes to be in or
not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, shall
consider the interests of the corporation's shareholders and, in
his discretion, may consider any of the following:
(i) The interests of the corporation's employees,
suppliers, creditors and customers;
(ii) The economy of the state and nation;
(iii) The impact of any action upon the communities
in or near which the corporation's facilities or operations are
located;
(iv) The long-term interests of the corporation and
its shareholders, including the possibility that those interests
may be best served by the continued independence of the
corporation; and
(v) Any other factors relevant to promoting or
preserving public or community interests.
17-16-843. Resignation and removal of officers.
(a) An officer may resign at any time by delivering notice
to the corporation. A resignation is effective when the notice
is delivered unless the notice specifies a later effective time.
If a resignation is made effective at a later time and the board
or appointing officer accepts the future effective time, the
board or appointing officer may fill the pending vacancy before
the effective time if the board or appointing officer provides
that the successor does not take office until the effective
time.
(b) An officer may be removed at any time with or without
cause by:
(i) The board of directors;
(ii) The officer who appointed such officer, unless
the bylaws or the board of directors provide otherwise; or
(iii) Any other officer if authorized by the bylaws
or the board of directors.
(c) In this section, "appointing officer" means the
officer, including any successor to that officer, who appointed
the officer resigning or being removed.
17-16-844. Contract rights of officers.
(a) The appointment of an officer does not itself create
contract rights.
(b) An officer's removal does not affect the officer's
contract rights, if any, with the corporation. An officer's
resignation does not affect the corporation's contract rights,
if any, with the officer.
E. Indemnification
17-16-850. Subarticle definitions.
(a) In this subarticle:
(i) "Corporation" includes any domestic or foreign
predecessor entity of a corporation in a merger;
(ii) "Director" or "officer" means an individual who
is or was a director or officer, respectively, of a corporation
or who, while a director or officer of the corporation, is or
was serving at the corporation's request as a director, officer,
manager, partner, trustee, employee or agent of another entity
or employee benefit plan. A director or officer is considered
to be serving an employee benefit plan at the corporation's
request if the individual's duties to the corporation also
impose duties on, or otherwise involve services by, the
individual to the plan or to participants in or beneficiaries of
the plan. "Director" or "officer" includes, unless the context
requires otherwise, the estate or personal representative of a
director or officer;
(iii) "Liability" means the obligation to pay a
judgment, settlement, penalty, fine (including an excise tax
assessed with respect to an employee benefit plan), or
reasonable expenses incurred with respect to a proceeding.
17-16-851. Permissible indemnification.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a
corporation may indemnify an individual who is a party to a
proceeding because the individual is a director against
liability incurred in the proceeding if:
(i)(A) The director conducted himself in good
faith; and
(B) He reasonably believed that his conduct was
in or at least not opposed to the corporation's best interests;
and
(C) In the case of any criminal proceeding, the
director had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct was
unlawful; or
(ii) The director engaged in conduct for which
broader indemnification has been made permissible or obligatory
under a provision of the articles of incorporation, as
authorized by W.S. 17-16-202(b)(v).
(b) A director's conduct with respect to an employee
benefit plan for a purpose the director reasonably believed to
be in the interests of the participants in and beneficiaries of
the plan is conduct that satisfies the requirement of
subparagraph (a)(i)(B) of this section.
(c) The termination of a proceeding by judgment, order,
settlement, conviction, or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its
equivalent is not, of itself, determinative that the director
did not meet the standard of conduct described in this section.
(d) Unless ordered by a court under W.S. 17-16-854(a)(iii)
a corporation may not indemnify a director under this section:
(i) In connection with a proceeding by or in the
right of the corporation, except for reasonable expenses
incurred in connection with the proceeding if it is determined
that the director has met the standard of conduct under
subsection (a) of this section; or
(ii) In connection with any proceeding with respect
to conduct for which he was adjudged liable on the basis that he
received a financial benefit to which he was not entitled,
whether or not involving action in the director's capacity.
(e) Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 190, § 3.
17-16-852. Mandatory indemnification.
A corporation shall indemnify a director who was wholly
successful, on the merits or otherwise, in the defense of any
proceeding to which the director was a party because he was a
director of the corporation against reasonable expenses incurred
by the director in connection with the proceeding.
17-16-853. Advance for expenses.
(a) A corporation may, before final disposition of a
proceeding, advance funds to pay for or reimburse the expenses
incurred in connection with the proceeding by an individual who
is a party to a proceeding because that individual is a member
of the board of directors if he delivers to the corporation:
(i) A written affirmation of his good faith belief
that the standard of conduct described in W.S. 17-16-851 has
been met by the director or that the proceeding involves conduct
for which liability has been eliminated under a provision of the
articles of incorporation as authorized by W.S.
17-16-202(b)(iv); and
(ii) His written undertaking to repay any funds
advanced if the director is not entitled to mandatory
indemnification under W.S. 17-16-852 and it is ultimately
determined under W.S. 17-16-854 or 17-16-855 that he has not met
the standard of conduct described in W.S. 17-16-851.
(iii) Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 190, § 3.
(b) The undertaking required by paragraph (a)(ii) of this
section shall be an unlimited general obligation of the director
but need not be secured and may be accepted without reference to
the financial ability of the director to make repayment.
(c) Authorizations under this section shall be made:
(i) By the board of directors:
(A) If there are two (2) or more qualified
directors, by a majority vote of all the qualified directors (a
majority of whom shall for such purpose constitute a quorum) or
by a majority of the members of a committee of two (2) or more
qualified directors appointed by such a vote; or
(B) If there are fewer than two (2) qualified
directors, by the vote necessary for action by the board in
accordance with W.S. 17-16-824(c), in which authorization
directors who are not qualified directors may participate; or
(ii) By the shareholders, but shares owned by or
voted under the control of a director who at the time is not a
qualified director may not be voted on the authorization.
17-16-854. Court-ordered indemnification and advance for
expenses.
(a) A director who is a party to a proceeding because he
is a director may apply for indemnification or an advance for
expenses to the court conducting the proceeding or to another
court of competent jurisdiction. After receipt of an
application and after giving any notice it considers necessary,
the court shall:
(i) Order indemnification if the court determines
that the director is entitled to mandatory indemnification under
W.S. 17-16-852;
(ii) Order indemnification or advance for expenses if
the court determines that the director is entitled to
indemnification or advance for expenses pursuant to a provision
authorized by W.S. 17-16-858(a); or
(iii) Order indemnification or advance for expenses
if the court determines, in view of all the relevant
circumstances, that it is fair and reasonable:
(A) To indemnify the director; or
(B) To advance expenses to the director, even if
he has not met the standard of conduct set forth in W.S.
17-16-851(a), failed to comply with W.S. 17-16-853 or was
adjudged liable in a proceeding referred to in W.S.
17-16-851(d)(i) or (ii), but if the director was adjudged so
liable his indemnification shall be limited to expenses incurred
in connection with the proceeding.
(b) If the court determines that the director is entitled
to indemnification under paragraph (a)(i) of this section or to
indemnification or advance for expenses under paragraph (a)(ii)
of this section, it shall also order the corporation to pay the
director's expenses incurred in connection with obtaining
court-ordered indemnification or advance for expenses. If the
court determines that the director is entitled to
indemnification or advance for expenses under paragraph (a)(iii)
of this section, it may also order the corporation to pay the
director's expenses to obtain court-ordered indemnification or
advance for expenses.
17-16-855. Determination and authorization of
indemnification.
(a) A corporation may not indemnify a director under W.S.
17-16-851 unless authorized for a specific proceeding after a
determination has been made that indemnification of the director
is permissible because the director has met the standard of
conduct set forth in W.S. 17-16-851.
(b) The determination shall be made:
(i) If there are two (2) or more qualified directors,
by the board of directors by majority vote of all the qualified
directors (a majority of whom shall for such purpose constitute
a quorum), or by a majority of the members of a committee of two
(2) or more qualified directors appointed by such a vote;
(ii) By special legal counsel:
(A) Selected in the manner prescribed in
paragraph (i) of this subsection; or
(B) If there are fewer than two (2) qualified
directors, selected by the board of directors (in which
selection directors who are not qualified directors may
participate); or
(iii) By the shareholders, but shares owned by or
voted under the control of a director who at the time is not a
qualified director may not be voted on the determination.
(c) Authorization of indemnification shall be made in the
same manner as the determination that indemnification is
permissible, except that if there are fewer than two (2)
qualified directors, authorization of indemnification shall be
made by those entitled under paragraph (b)(ii) of this section
to select special legal counsel.
17-16-856. Indemnification of officers.
(a) A corporation may indemnify and advance expenses under
this subarticle to an officer of the corporation who is a party
to a proceeding because he is an officer of the corporation:
(i) To the same extent as a director; and
(ii) If he is an officer but not a director, to such
further extent as may be provided by the articles of
incorporation, the bylaws, a resolution of the board of
directors or contract, except for:
(A) Liability in connection with a proceeding by
or in the right of the corporation other than for expenses
incurred in connection with the proceeding; or
(B) Liability arising out of conduct that
constitutes:
(I) Receipt by the officer of a financial
benefit to which he is not entitled;
(II) An intentional infliction of harm on
the corporation or the shareholders; or
(III) An intentional violation of criminal
law.
(iii) A corporation may also indemnify and advance
expenses to a current or former officer, employee or agent who
is not a director to the extent, consistent with public policy,
that may be provided by its articles of incorporation, bylaws,
general or specific action of its board of directors or
contract.
(b) The provisions of paragraph (a)(ii) of this section
shall apply to an officer who is also a director if the basis on
which he is made a party to the proceeding is an act or omission
solely as an officer.
(c) An officer of a corporation who is not a director is
entitled to mandatory indemnification under W.S. 17-16-852, and
may apply to a court under W.S. 17-16-854 for indemnification or
an advance for expenses, in each case to the same extent to
which a director may be entitled to indemnification or advance
for expenses under those provisions.
17-16-857. Insurance.
A corporation may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of
an individual who is a director or officer of the corporation,
or who, while a director or officer of the corporation, serves
at the corporation's request as a director, officer, partner,
trustee, employee or agent of another domestic or foreign
corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit
plan, or other entity, against liability asserted against or
incurred by the individual in that capacity or arising from his
status as a director or officer whether or not the corporation
would have power to indemnify or advance expenses to the
individual against the same liability under this subarticle.
17-16-858. Variation by corporate action; application of
subarticle.
(a) A corporation may, by a provision in its articles of
incorporation or bylaws or in a resolution adopted or a contract
approved by its board of directors or shareholders, obligate
itself in advance of the act or omission giving rise to a
proceeding to provide indemnification in accordance with W.S.
17-16-851 or advance funds to pay for or reimburse expenses in
accordance with W.S. 17-16-853. Any such obligatory provision
shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements for authorization
referred to in W.S. 17-16-853(c) and 17-16-855(c). Any
provision that obligates the corporation to provide
indemnification to the fullest extent permitted by law shall be
deemed to obligate the corporation to advance funds to pay for
or reimburse expenses in accordance with W.S. 17-16-853 to the
fullest extent permitted by law, unless the provision
specifically provides otherwise.
(b) Any provision pursuant to subsection (a) of this
section shall not obligate the corporation to indemnify or
advance expenses to a director of a predecessor of the
corporation, pertaining to conduct with respect to the
predecessor, unless otherwise specifically provided. Any
provision for indemnification or advance for expenses in the
articles of incorporation, bylaws, or a resolution of the board
of directors or shareholders of a predecessor of the corporation
in a merger or in a contract to which the predecessor is a
party, existing at the time the merger takes effect, shall be
governed by W.S. 17-16-1107(a)(iv).
(c) A corporation may, by provision in its articles of
incorporation, limit any of the rights to indemnification or
advance for expenses created by or pursuant to this subarticle.
(d) This subarticle does not limit a corporation's power
to pay or reimburse expenses incurred by a director or officer
in connection with his appearance as a witness in a proceeding
at a time when he is not a party.
(e) This subarticle does not limit a corporation's power
to indemnify, advance expenses to or provide or maintain
insurance on behalf of an employee or agent.
17-16-859. Exclusivity of subarticle.
A corporation may provide indemnification or advance expenses to
a director or an officer only as permitted by this subarticle.
F. Directors' Conflicting Interest Transactions
17-16-860. Subarticle definitions.
(a) In this subarticle:
(i) "Control", including the term "controlled by",
means:
(A) Having the power, directly or indirectly, to
elect or remove a majority of the members of the board of
directors or other governing body of an entity, whether through
the ownership of voting shares or interests, by contract or
otherwise; or
(B) Being subject to a majority of the risk of
loss from the entity's activities or entitled to receive a
majority of the entity's residual returns.
(ii) "Director's conflicting interest transaction"
means a transaction effected or proposed to be effected by the
corporation, or by an entity controlled by the corporation:
(A) To which, at the relevant time, the director
is a party; or
(B) Respecting which, at the relevant time, the
director had knowledge and a material financial interest known
to the director; or
(C) Respecting which, at the relevant time, the
director knew that a related person was a party or had a
material financial interest.
(iii) "Fair to the corporation" means, for purposes
of W.S. 17-16-861(b)(iii), that the transaction as a whole was
beneficial to or at least not harmful to the corporation, taking
into appropriate account whether it was:
(A) Fair in terms of the director's dealings
with the corporation; and
(B) Comparable to what might have been
obtainable in an arm's length transaction, given the
consideration paid or received by the corporation.
(iv) "Material financial interest" means a financial
interest in a transaction that would reasonably be expected to
impair the objectivity of the director's judgment when
participating in action on the authorization of the transaction;
(v) "Related person" means:
(A) The director's spouse;
(B) A child, stepchild, grandchild, parent,
stepparent, grandparent, sibling, stepsibling, half sibling,
aunt, uncle, niece or nephew, or spouse of any thereof, of the
director or of the director's spouse;
(C) An individual living in the same home as the
director;
(D) An entity, other than the corporation or an
entity controlled by the corporation, controlled by the director
or any person specified above in this paragraph;
(E) A domestic or foreign:
(I) Business or nonprofit corporation,
other than the corporation or an entity controlled by the
corporation, of which the director is a director;
(II) Unincorporated entity of which the
director is a general partner or a member of the governing body;
or
(III) Individual, trust or estate for whom
or of which the director is a trustee, guardian, personal
representative or like fiduciary; or
(F) A person that is, or an entity that is
controlled by, an employer of the director.
(vi) "Relevant time" means:
(A) The time at which directors' action
respecting the transaction is taken in compliance with W.S.
17-16-862; or
(B) If the transaction is not brought before the
board of directors of the corporation or its committee for
action under W.S. 17-16-862, at the time the corporation or an
entity controlled by the corporation becomes legally obligated
to consummate the transaction.
(vii) "Required disclosure" means disclosure of:
(A) The existence and nature of the director's
conflicting interest; and
(B) All facts known to the director respecting
the subject matter of the transaction that a director free of
such conflicting interest would reasonably believe to be
material in deciding whether to proceed with the transaction.
17-16-861. Judicial action.
(a) A transaction effected or proposed to be effected by
the corporation, or by an entity controlled by the corporation,
may not be the subject of equitable relief, or give rise to an
award of damages or other relief against a director of the
corporation, in a proceeding by a shareholder or by or in the
right of the corporation, on the ground that the director has an
interest respecting the transaction, if it is not a director's
conflicting interest transaction.
(b) A director's conflicting interest transaction may not
be the subject of equitable relief, or give rise to an award of
damages or other relief against a director of the corporation,
in a proceeding by a shareholder or by or in the right of the
corporation, on the ground that the director has an interest
respecting the transaction, if:
(i) Directors' action respecting the transaction was
taken in compliance with W.S. 17-16-862 at any time; or
(ii) Shareholders' action respecting the transaction
was taken in compliance with W.S. 17-16-863 at any time; or
(iii) The transaction, judged according to the
circumstances at the relevant time, is established to have been
fair to the corporation.
17-16-862. Directors' action.
(a) Directors' action respecting a director's conflicting
interest transaction is effective for purposes of W.S.
17-16-861(b)(i) if the transaction has been authorized by the
affirmative vote of a majority, but no fewer than two (2), of
the qualified directors who voted on the transaction, after
required disclosure by the conflicted director of information
not already known by such qualified directors, or after modified
disclosure in compliance with subsection (b) of this section,
provided that:
(i) The qualified directors have deliberated and
voted outside the presence of and without the participation by
any other director; and
(ii) Where the action has been taken by a committee,
all members of the committee were qualified directors, and
either:
(A) The committee was composed of all the
qualified directors on the board of directors; or
(B) The members of the committee were appointed
by the affirmative vote of a majority of the qualified directors
on the board.
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this section, when a
transaction is a director's conflicting interest transaction
only because a related person described in W.S.
17-16-860(a)(v)(E) or (F) is a party to or has a material
financial interest in the transaction, the conflicted director
is not obligated to make required disclosure to the extent that
the director reasonably believes that doing so would violate a
duty imposed under law, a legally enforceable obligation of
confidentiality, or a professional ethics rule, provided that
the conflicted director discloses to the qualified directors
voting on the transaction:
(i) All information required to be disclosed that is
not so violative;
(ii) The existence and nature of the director's
conflicting interest; and
(iii) The nature of the conflicted director's duty
not to disclose the confidential information.
(c) A majority, but no fewer than two (2), of all the
qualified directors on the board of directors, or on the
committee, constitutes a quorum for purposes of action that
complies with this section.
(d) Where directors' action under this section does not
satisfy a quorum or voting requirement applicable to the
authorization of the transaction by reason of the articles of
incorporation, the bylaws or a provision of law, independent
action to satisfy those authorization requirements shall be
taken by the board of directors or a committee, in which action
directors who are not qualified directors may participate.
17-16-863. Shareholders' action.
(a) Shareholders' action respecting a director's
conflicting interest transaction is effective for purposes of
W.S. 17-16-861(b)(ii) if a majority of the votes cast by the
holders of all qualified shares are in favor of the transaction
after:
(i) Notice to shareholders describing the action to
be taken respecting the transaction;
(ii) Provision to the corporation of the information
referred to in subsection (b) of this section; and
(iii) Communication to the shareholders entitled to
vote on the transaction of the information that is the subject
of required disclosure, or modified disclosure as described in
W.S. 17-16-862(b) if the director's conflicting interest
transaction is of the type described in that subsection, to the
extent the information is not known by them.
(b) A director who has a conflicting interest respecting
the transaction shall, before the shareholders' vote, inform the
secretary or other officer or agent of the corporation
authorized to tabulate votes, in writing, of the number of
shares that the director knows are not qualified shares under
subsection (c) of this section and the identity of the holders
of those shares.
(c) For purposes of this section:
(i) "Holder" means and "held by" refers to shares
held by both a record shareholder, as defined in W.S.
17-16-1301(a)(vi), and a beneficial shareholder as defined in
W.S. 17-16-1301(a)(i);
(ii) "Qualified shares" means all shares entitled to
be voted with respect to the transaction except for shares that
the secretary or other officer or agent of the corporation
authorized to tabulate votes either knows, or under subsection
(b) of this section is notified, are held by:
(A) A director who has a conflicting interest
respecting the transaction; or
(B) A related person of the director, excluding
a person described in W.S. 17-16-860(a)(v)(F).
(d) A majority of the votes entitled to be cast by the
holders of all qualified shares constitutes a quorum for
purposes of compliance with this section. Subject to the
provisions of subsection (e) of this section, shareholders'
action that otherwise complies with this section is not affected
by the presence of holders, or by the voting, of shares that are
not qualified shares.
(e) If a shareholders' vote does not comply with
subsection (a) of this section solely because of a director's
failure to comply with subsection (b) of this section, and if
the director establishes that the failure was not intended to
influence and did not in fact determine the outcome of the vote,
the court may give the effect, if any, to the shareholders'
vote, as the court considers appropriate in the circumstances.
(f) Where shareholders' action under this section does not
satisfy a quorum or voting requirement applicable to the
authorization of the transaction by reason of the articles of
incorporation, the bylaws or a provision of law, independent
action to satisfy those authorization requirements must be taken
by the shareholders, in which action shares that are not
qualified shares may participate.
G. Business Opportunities
17-16-870. Business opportunities.
(a) A director's taking advantage, directly or indirectly,
of a business opportunity may not be the subject of equitable
relief, or give rise to an award of damages or other relief
against the director, in a proceeding by or in the right of the
corporation on the ground that the opportunity should have first
been offered to the corporation, if before becoming legally
obligated respecting the opportunity the director brings it to
the attention of the corporation and:
(i) Action by qualified directors disclaiming the
corporation's interest in the opportunity is taken in compliance
with the procedures set forth in W.S. 17-16-862, as if the
decision being made concerned a director's conflicting interest
transaction; or
(ii) Shareholders' action disclaiming the
corporation's interest in the opportunity is taken in compliance
with the procedures set forth in W.S. 17-16-863, as if the
decision being made concerned a director's conflicting interest
transaction, except that, rather than making required disclosure
as defined in W.S. 17-16-860, in each case the director shall
have made prior disclosure to those acting on behalf of the
corporation of all material facts concerning the business
opportunity that are then known to the director.
(b) In any proceeding seeking equitable relief or other
remedies based upon an alleged improper taking advantage of a
business opportunity by a director, the fact that the director
did not employ the procedure described in subsection (a) of this
section before taking advantage of the opportunity shall not
create an inference that the opportunity should have been first
presented to the corporation or alter the burden of proof
otherwise applicable to establish that the director breached a
duty to the corporation in the circumstances.
ARTICLE 9 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 10 - AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION AND BYLAWS
A. Amendment of Articles of Incorporation
17-16-1001. Authority to amend.
(a) A corporation may amend its articles of incorporation
at any time to add or change a provision that is required or
permitted in the articles of incorporation as of the effective
date of the amendment or to delete a provision that is not
required to be contained in the articles of incorporation.
(b) A shareholder of the corporation does not have a
vested property right resulting from any provision in the
articles of incorporation, including provisions relating to
management, control, capital structure, dividend entitlement or
purpose, or duration of the corporation.
17-16-1002. Amendment before issuance of shares.
If a corporation has not yet issued shares, its board of
directors, or its incorporators if it has no board of directors,
may adopt one (1) or more amendments to the corporation's
articles of incorporation.
17-16-1003. Amendment by board of directors and
shareholders.
(a) If a corporation has issued shares, an amendment to
the articles of incorporation shall be adopted in the following
manner:
(i) The proposed amendment shall be adopted by the
board of directors;
(ii) Except as provided in W.S. 17-16-1005,
17-16-1007 and 17-16-1008, after adopting the proposed amendment
the board of directors shall submit the amendment to the
shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall
also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the
shareholders approve the amendment, unless the board of
directors makes a determination that because of conflict of
interest or other special circumstances it should not make such
a recommendation in which case the board of directors shall
transmit the basis for that determination to the shareholders;
(iii) The board of directors may condition its
submission of the amendment to the shareholders on any basis;
(iv) If the amendment is required to be approved by
the shareholders and the approval is to be given at a meeting,
the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not
entitled to vote, of the shareholders' meeting at which the
amendment is to be submitted for approval. The notice shall
state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the amendment and shall contain or be
accompanied by a copy of the amendment;
(v) Unless the articles of incorporation, or the
board of directors acting pursuant to paragraph (iii) of this
subsection require a greater vote or a greater number of shares
to be present, approval of the amendment requires the approval
of the shareholders at a meeting at which a quorum exists, and,
if any class or series of shares is entitled to vote as a
separate group on the amendment, except as provided in W.S.
17-16-1004(c), the approval of each such separate voting group
at a meeting at which a quorum of the voting group exists.
17-16-1004. Voting on amendments by voting groups.
(a) If a corporation has more than one (1) class of shares
outstanding, the holders of the outstanding shares of a class
are entitled to vote as a separate voting group, if shareholder
voting is otherwise required by this act, on a proposed
amendment to the articles of incorporation if the amendment
would:
(i) Effect an exchange or reclassification of all or
part of the shares of the class into shares of another class;
(ii) Effect an exchange or reclassification, or
create the right of exchange, of all or part of the shares of
another class into shares of the class;
(iii) Change the rights, preferences, or limitations
of all or part of the shares of the class;
(iv) Change the shares of all or part of the class
into a different number of shares of the same class;
(v) Create a new class of shares having rights or
preferences with respect to distributions or to dissolution that
are prior or superior to the shares of the class;
(vi) Increase the rights, preferences, or number of
authorized shares of any class that, after giving effect to the
amendment, have rights or preferences with respect to
distributions or to dissolution that are prior or superior to
the shares of the class;
(vii) Limit or deny any existing preemptive right of
all or part of the shares of the class; or
(viii) Cancel or otherwise affect rights to
distributions that have accumulated but not yet been authorized
on all or part of the shares of the class.
(b) If a proposed amendment would affect a series of a
class of shares in one (1) or more of the ways described in
subsection (a) of this section, the holders of shares of that
series are entitled to vote as a separate voting group on the
proposed amendment.
(c) If a proposed amendment that entitles two (2) or more
classes or series of shares to vote as separate voting groups
under this section would affect those two (2) or more classes or
series in the same or a substantially similar way, the holders
of shares of all the classes or series so affected shall vote
together as a single voting group on the proposed amendment,
unless otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation or
required by the board of directors.
(d) A class or series of shares is entitled to the voting
rights granted by this section although the articles of
incorporation provide that the shares are nonvoting shares.
17-16-1005. Amendment by board of directors.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, a corporation's board of directors may adopt
amendments to the corporation's articles of incorporation
without shareholder approval:
(i) To extend the duration of the corporation if it
was incorporated at a time when limited duration was required by
law;
(ii) To delete the names and addresses of the initial
directors;
(iii) To delete the name and address of the initial
registered agent or registered office, if a statement of change
is on file with the secretary of state;
(iv) If the corporation has only one (1) class of
shares outstanding:
(A) To change each issued and unissued
authorized share of the class into a greater number of whole
shares of that class; or
(B) To increase the number of authorized shares
of the class to the extent necessary to permit the issuance of
shares as a share dividend.
(v) To change the corporate name by substituting the
word "corporation," "incorporated," "company," "limited," or the
abbreviation "corp.," "inc.," "co.," or "ltd.," for a similar
word or abbreviation in the name, or by adding, deleting, or
changing a geographical attribution for the name;
(vi) To reflect a reduction in authorized shares, as
a result of the operation of W.S. 17-16-631(b), when the
corporation has acquired its own shares and the articles of
incorporation prohibit the reissue of the acquired shares;
(vii) To delete a class of shares from the articles
of incorporation, as a result of the operation of W.S.
17-16-631(b), when there are no remaining shares of the class
because the corporation has acquired all shares of the class and
the articles of incorporation prohibit the reissue of the
acquired shares; or
(viii) To make any change expressly permitted by W.S.
17-16-602(a) or (b) to be made without shareholder approval.
17-16-1006. Articles of amendment.
(a) After an amendment to the articles of incorporation
has been adopted and approved in the manner required by this act
and by the articles of incorporation, the corporation shall
deliver to the secretary of state for filing articles of
amendment setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The text of each amendment adopted;
(iii) If an amendment provides for an exchange,
reclassification, or cancellation of issued shares, provisions
for implementing the amendment if not contained in the amendment
itself which may be made dependent upon facts objectively
ascertainable outside the articles of amendment;
(iv) The date of each amendment's adoption; and
(v) If an amendment:
(A) Was adopted by the incorporators or board of
directors without shareholder approval, a statement that the
amendment was duly approved by the incorporators or by the board
of directors as the case may be and that shareholder approval
was not required; or
(B) Required approval by the shareholders, a
statement that the amendment was duly approved by the
shareholders in the manner required by this act and by the
articles of incorporation;
(C) Reserved.
(vi) Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 82, § 2.
17-16-1007. Restated articles of incorporation.
(a) A corporation's board of directors may restate its
articles of incorporation at any time with or without
shareholder approval, to consolidate all amendments into a
single document.
(b) If the restated articles include one (1) or more new
amendments requiring shareholder approval, the amendments shall
be adopted and approved as provided in W.S. 17-16-1003.
(c) A corporation restating its articles of incorporation
shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing articles of
restatement setting forth the name of the corporation and the
text of the restated articles of incorporation together with a
certificate which states that the restated articles consolidate
all amendments into a single document and, if a new amendment is
included in the restated articles, which also includes the
statements required under W.S. 17-16-1006.
(d) Duly adopted restated articles of incorporation
supersede the original articles of incorporation and all
amendments to them.
(e) The secretary of state may certify restated articles
of incorporation, as the articles of incorporation currently in
effect, without including the certificate information required
by subsection (c) of this section.
17-16-1008. Amendment pursuant to court-ordered
reorganization.
(a) A corporation's articles of incorporation may be
amended without action by the board of directors or shareholders
to carry out a plan of reorganization ordered or decreed by a
court of competent jurisdiction under the authority of a law of
the United States.
(b) The individual or individuals designated by the court
shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing articles of
amendment setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The text of each amendment approved by the
court;
(iii) The date of the court's order or decree
approving the articles of amendment;
(iv) The title of the reorganization proceeding in
which the order or decree was entered; and
(v) A statement that the court had jurisdiction of
the proceeding under federal statute.
(c) This section does not apply after entry of a final
decree in the reorganization proceeding even though the court
retains jurisdiction of the proceeding for limited purposes
unrelated to consummation of the reorganization plan.
17-16-1009. Effect of amendment.
An amendment to articles of incorporation does not affect a
cause of action existing against or in favor of the corporation,
a proceeding to which the corporation is a party, or the
existing rights of persons other than shareholders of the
corporation. An amendment changing a corporation's name does
not abate a proceeding brought by or against the corporation in
its former name.
B. Amendment of Bylaws
17-16-1020. Amendment by board of directors or
shareholders.
(a) A corporation's shareholders may amend or repeal the
corporation's bylaws.
(b) A corporation's board of directors may amend or repeal
the corporation's bylaws unless:
(i) The articles of incorporation, W.S. 17-16-1021 or
if applicable W.S. 17-16-1022 reserve this power exclusively to
the shareholders in whole or part; or
(ii) The shareholders in amending, repealing or
adopting a bylaw provide expressly that the board of directors
may not amend, repeal or reinstate that bylaw.
17-16-1021. Bylaw increasing quorum or voting requirement
for directors.
(a) A bylaw that increases a quorum or voting requirement
for the board of directors may be amended or repealed:
(i) If originally adopted by the shareholders, only
by the shareholders, unless the bylaw otherwise provides;
(ii) If adopted by the board of directors, either by
the shareholders or by the board of directors.
(b) A bylaw adopted or amended by the shareholders that
increases a quorum or voting requirement for the board of
directors may provide that it may be amended or repealed only by
a specified vote of either the shareholders or the board of
directors.
(c) Action by the board of directors under subsection (a)
of this section to amend or repeal a bylaw that changes the
quorum or voting requirement for the board of directors shall
meet the same quorum requirement and be adopted by the same vote
required to take action under the quorum and voting requirement
then in effect or proposed to be adopted, whichever is greater.
17-16-1022. Bylaw provisions relating to the election of
directors.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation specifically
prohibit the adoption of a bylaw pursuant to this section, alter
the vote specified in W.S. 17-16-728(a) or provide for
cumulative voting, a public corporation may elect in its bylaws
to be governed in the election of directors as follows:
(i) Each vote entitled to be cast may be voted for or
against up to that number of candidates that is equal to the
number of directors to be elected, or a shareholder may indicate
an abstention, but without cumulating the votes;
(ii) To be elected, a nominee shall have received a
plurality of the votes cast by holders of shares entitled to
vote in the election at a meeting at which a quorum is present,
provided that a nominee who is elected but receives more votes
against than for election shall serve as a director for a term
that shall terminate on the date that is the earlier of ninety
(90) days from the date on which the voting results are
determined pursuant to W.S. 17-16-729(b)(v) or is the date on
which an individual is selected by the board of directors to
fill the office held by such director, which selection shall be
deemed to constitute the filling of a vacancy by the board to
which W.S. 17-16-810 applies. Subject to paragraph (iii) of
this subsection, a nominee who is elected but receives more
votes against than for election shall not serve as a director
beyond the ninety (90) day period referenced above; and
(iii) The board of directors may select any qualified
individual to fill the office held by a director who received
more votes against than for election.
(b) Subsection (a) of this section does not apply to an
election of directors by a voting group if at the expiration of
the time fixed under a provision requiring advance notification
of director candidates, or absent such a provision, at a time
fixed by the board of directors which is not more than fourteen
(14) days before notice is given of the meeting at which the
election is to occur, there are more candidates for election by
the voting group than the number of directors to be elected, one
(1) or more of whom are properly proposed by shareholders. An
individual shall not be considered a candidate for purposes of
this subsection if the board of directors determines before the
notice of meeting is given that such individual's candidacy does
not create a bona fide election contest.
(c) A bylaw electing to be governed by this section may be
repealed:
(i) If originally adopted by the shareholders, only
by the shareholders, unless the bylaw otherwise provides; or
(ii) If adopted by the board of directors, by the
board of directors or the shareholders.
ARTICLE 11 - MERGER, SHARE EXCHANGE, CONSOLIDATION AND
CONVERSION
Subarticle A. Merger and Share Exchange
17-16-1101. Reserved.
17-16-1102. Merger.
(a) One (1) or more domestic business corporations may
merge with one (1) or more domestic or foreign business
corporations or eligible entities pursuant to a plan of merger,
or two (2) or more foreign business corporations or domestic or
foreign eligible entities may merge into a new domestic business
corporation to be created in the merger in the manner provided
in this chapter.
(b) A foreign business corporation, or a foreign eligible
entity, may be a party to a merger with a domestic business
corporation, or may be created by the terms of the plan of
merger, only if the merger is permitted by the foreign business
corporation or eligible entity. If Wyoming law does not
otherwise provide procedures for the approval of a merger, a
plan of merger may be adopted and approved, the merger
effectuated, and appraisal rights exercised in accordance with
the procedures in this article and article 13 of this chapter.
For the purposes of applying this article and article 13 of this
chapter:
(i) The eligible entity, its members or interest
holders, eligible interests and organic documents taken together
shall be deemed to be a domestic business corporation,
shareholders, shares and articles of incorporation, respectively
and vice versa as the context may require; and
(ii) If the business and affairs of the eligible
entity are managed by a group of persons that is not identical
to the members or interest holders, that group shall be deemed
to be the board of directors.
(c) The plan of merger shall include:
(i) The name of each domestic or foreign business
corporation or eligible entity that will merge and the name of
the domestic or foreign business corporation or eligible entity
that will be the survivor of the merger;
(ii) The terms and conditions of the merger;
(iii) The manner and basis of the disposition, if
any, of the shares of each domestic or foreign business
corporation and eligible interests of each domestic or foreign
eligible entity;
(iv) The articles of incorporation of any domestic or
foreign business or nonprofit corporation, or the organic
documents of any domestic or foreign unincorporated entity, to
be created by the merger, or if a new domestic or foreign
business or nonprofit corporation or unincorporated entity is
not to be created by the merger, any amendments to the
survivor's articles of incorporation or organic documents; and
(v) Any other provisions required by the laws under
which any party to the merger is organized or by which it is
governed, or by the articles of incorporation or organic
document of any party to the merger.
(d) The terms of the plan of merger may be made dependent
on facts objectively ascertainable outside the plan.
(e) The plan of merger may also include a provision that
the plan may be amended prior to filing articles of merger, but
if the shareholders of a domestic corporation that is a party to
the merger are required or permitted to vote on the plan, the
plan must provide that subsequent to approval of the plan by the
shareholders the plan may not be amended to change:
(i) The disposition of shares or other securities,
eligible interests, obligations, rights to acquire shares, other
securities or eligible interests, cash, or other property, if
any, to be received under the plan by the shareholders of or
owners of eligible interests in any party to the merger;
(ii) The articles of incorporation of any
corporation, or the organic documents of any unincorporated
entity, that will survive or be created as a result of the
merger, except for changes permitted by W.S. 17-16-1005 or by
comparable provisions of the organic laws of any such foreign
corporation or domestic or foreign unincorporated entity; or
(iii) Any of the other terms or conditions of the
plan if the change would adversely affect such shareholders in
any material respect.
(f) Property held in trust or for charitable purposes
under the laws of this state by a domestic or foreign eligible
entity shall not be diverted by a merger from the objects for
which it was donated, granted or devised, unless and until the
eligible entity obtains an order of the district court
specifying the disposition of the property to the extent
required by and pursuant to the laws of this state.
17-16-1103. Share exchange.
(a) Through a share exchange:
(i) A domestic corporation may acquire all of the
shares of one (1) or more classes or series of shares of another
domestic or foreign corporation, or all of the interests of one
(1) or more classes or series of interests of a domestic or
foreign other entity, in exchange for shares or other
securities, interests, obligations, rights to acquire shares or
other securities, cash, other property, or any combination of
the foregoing, pursuant to a plan of share exchange; or
(ii) All of the shares of one (1) or more classes or
series of shares of a domestic corporation may be acquired by
another domestic or foreign corporation or other entity, in
exchange for shares or other securities, interests, obligations,
rights to acquire shares or other securities, cash, other
property, or any combination of the foregoing, pursuant to a
plan of share exchange.
(b) A foreign corporation or eligible entity, may be a
party to a share exchange only if the share exchange is
permitted by the organic law under which the corporation or
other entity is organized or by which it is governed. If
Wyoming law does not otherwise provide procedures for the
approval of a share exchange, a plan of share exchange may be
adopted and approved, and the share exchange effectuated, in
accordance with the procedures, if any, for a merger. If
Wyoming law does not otherwise provide procedures for the
approval of either a share exchange or a merger, a plan of share
exchange may be adopted and approved, the share exchange
effectuated, and appraisal rights exercised, in accordance with
the procedures in this article and article 13 of this chapter.
For the purposes of applying this article and article 13 of this
chapter:
(i) The other entity, its interest holders, interests
and organic documents taken together shall be deemed to be a
domestic business corporation, shareholders, shares and articles
of incorporation, respectively and vice versa as the context may
require; and
(ii) If the business and affairs of the other entity
are managed by a group of persons that is not identical to the
interest holders, that group shall be deemed to be the board of
directors.
(c) The plan of exchange shall include:
(i) The name of each corporation or other entity
whose shares or interests will be acquired and the name of the
corporation or other entity that will acquire those shares or
interests;
(ii) The terms and conditions of the share exchange;
(iii) The manner and basis of exchanging the shares
of a corporation or interests in any other entity whose shares
or interests will be acquired under the share exchange into
shares or other securities, interests, obligations, rights to
acquire shares, other securities or interests, cash, other
property or any combination of the foregoing; and
(iv) Any other provisions required by the laws under
which any party to the share exchange is organized or by the
articles of incorporation or organic document of any party to
the share exchange.
(d) Terms of a plan of share exchange may be made
dependent on facts objectively ascertainable outside the plan.
(e) The plan of share exchange may also include a
provision that the plan may be amended prior to filing articles
of share exchange, but if the shareholders of a domestic
corporation that is a party to the share exchange are required
or permitted to vote on the plan, the plan shall provide that
subsequent to approval of the plan by the shareholders the plan
may not be amended to change:
(i) The amount or kind of shares or other securities,
interests, obligations, rights to acquire shares, other
securities or interests, cash, or other property to be issued by
the corporation or to be received under the plan by the
shareholders of or owners of interests in any party to the share
exchange; or
(ii) Any of the other terms or conditions of the plan
if the change would adversely affect the shareholders of the
domestic corporation in any material respect.
(f) This section does not limit the power of a domestic
corporation to acquire shares of another corporation or
interests in another entity in a transaction other than a share
exchange.
17-16-1104. Action on plan of merger or share exchange.
(a) In the case of a domestic corporation that is a party
to a merger or share exchange, the plan of merger or share
exchange shall be adopted by the board of directors. After
adopting a plan of merger or share exchange, the board of
directors except as provided in subsection (g) of this section
and W.S. 17-16-1105, shall submit the plan to the shareholders
for their approval. The board of directors shall also transmit
to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders
approve the plan, unless the board of directors makes a
determination that because of conflicts of interest or other
special circumstances it should not make such a recommendation,
in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the
shareholders the basis for that determination.
(b) Reserved.
(c) The board of directors may condition its submission of
the proposed merger or share exchange to the shareholders on any
basis.
(d) If the plan of merger or share exchange is required to
be approved by the shareholders and if the approval is to be
given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each
shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the
shareholders' meeting at which the plan is to be submitted for
approval. The notice shall state that the purpose, or one (1)
of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the plan and
contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. If
the corporation is to be merged into an existing corporation or
other entity, the notice shall also include or be accompanied by
a copy or summary of the articles of incorporation or
organizational documents of that corporation or other entity.
If the corporation is to be merged into a corporation or other
entity that is to be created pursuant to the merger, the notice
shall include or be accompanied by a copy or a summary of the
articles of incorporation or organizational documents of the new
corporation or other entity.
(e) Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of
directors acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section
require a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be
present, approval of the plan of merger or share exchange
requires the approval of the shareholders at a meeting at which
a quorum exists, and, if any class or series of shares is
entitled to vote as a separate group on the plan of merger or
share exchange, the approval of each such separate voting group
at a meeting at which a quorum of the voting group is present.
(f) Separate voting by voting groups is required:
(i) On a plan of merger by each class or series of
shares that:
(A) Are to be converted under the plan of merger
into other securities, interests, obligations, rights to acquire
shares, other securities or interests, cash, other property, or
any combination of the foregoing; or
(B) Would be entitled to vote as a separate
group on a provision in the plan that, if contained in a
proposed amendment to articles of incorporation, would require
action by separate voting groups under W.S. 17-16-1004;
(ii) On a plan of share exchange by each class or
series of shares included in the exchange, with each class or
series constituting a separate voting group; and
(iii) On a plan of merger or share exchange, if the
voting group is entitled under the articles of incorporation to
vote as a voting group to approve a plan of merger or share
exchange.
(g) Unless the articles of incorporation otherwise
provide, approval by the corporation's shareholders of a plan of
merger or share exchange is not required if:
(i) The corporation will survive the merger or is the
acquiring corporation in a share exchange;
(ii) Except for amendments permitted by W.S.
17-16-1005, its articles of incorporation will not be changed;
(iii) Each shareholder of the corporation whose
shares were outstanding immediately before the effective date of
the merger or share exchange will hold the same number of
shares, with identical preferences, limitations, and relative
rights, immediately after the effective date of change; and
(iv) The issuance in the merger or share exchange of
shares or other securities convertible into or rights
exercisable for shares does not require a vote under W.S.
17-16-621(f).
(h) If as a result of a merger or share exchange one (1)
or more shareholders of a domestic corporation would become
subject to owner liability for the debts, obligations or
liabilities of any other person or entity, approval of the plan
of merger or share exchange shall require the execution, by each
shareholder of the domestic corporation, of a separate written
consent to become subject to owner liability.
(j) After a merger or share exchange is authorized, and at
any time before articles of merger or share exchange are filed,
the planned merger or share exchange may be abandoned, subject
to any contractual rights, without further shareholder action,
in accordance with the procedure set forth in the plan of merger
or share exchange or, if none is set forth, in the manner
determined by the board of directors.
17-16-1105. Merger between parent and subsidiary or
between subsidiaries.
(a) A domestic parent corporation that owns shares of a
domestic or foreign subsidiary corporation that carry at least
eighty percent (80%) of the voting power of each class and
series of the outstanding shares of a subsidiary that have
voting power may merge the subsidiary into itself or into
another such subsidiary, or merge itself into the subsidiary,
without approval of the board of directors or shareholders of
the subsidiary, unless the articles of incorporation of any of
the corporations otherwise provide, and unless, in the case of a
foreign subsidiary, approval by the subsidiary's board of
directors or shareholders is required by the laws under which
the subsidiary is organized.
(b) If under subsection (a) of this section approval of a
merger by the subsidiary's shareholders is not required, the
parent corporation shall, within ten (10) days after the
effective date of the merger, notify each of the subsidiary's
shareholders that the merger has become effective.
(c) Except as provided in subsections (a) and (b) of this
section, a merger between a parent and a subsidiary shall be
governed by the provisions of this article applicable to mergers
generally.
17-16-1106. Articles of merger or share exchange.
(a) After a plan of merger or share exchange has been
adopted and approved as required by this act, articles of merger
or share exchange shall be executed on behalf of the surviving
or acquiring corporation by any officer or other duly authorized
representative. The articles shall set forth:
(i) The names of the parties to the merger or share
exchange;
(ii) If the articles of incorporation of the survivor
of a merger are amended, or if a new corporation is created as a
result of a merger, the amendments to the survivor's articles of
incorporation or the articles of incorporation of the new
corporation;
(iii) If the plan of merger or share exchange
required approval by the shareholders of a domestic corporation
that was a party to the merger or share exchange, a statement
that the plan was duly approved by the shareholders and, if
voting by any separate voting group was required, by each such
separate voting group, in the manner required by this act and
the articles of incorporation;
(iv) If the plan of merger or share exchange did not
require approval by the shareholders of a domestic corporation
that was a party to the merger or share exchange, a statement to
that effect; and
(v) As to each foreign corporation or eligible entity
that was a party to the merger or share exchange, a statement
that the participation of the foreign corporation or eligible
entity was duly authorized as required by the organic law of the
corporation or eligible entity.
(b) Articles of merger or share exchange shall be
delivered to the secretary of state for filing by the survivor
of the merger or the acquiring corporation in a share exchange,
and shall take effect upon the effective time provided in W.S.
17-16-123. Articles of merger or share exchange filed under
this section may be combined with any filing required under any
other provision of Wyoming law if the combined filing satisfies
the requirements of both this section and any other provision of
Wyoming law.
17-16-1107. Effect of merger or share exchange.
(a) When a merger becomes effective:
(i) The corporation or eligible entity that is
designated in the plan of merger as the survivor continues or
comes into existence, as the case may be and the separate
existence of every corporation or eligible entity that is merged
into the survivor ceases;
(ii) Reserved;
(iii) All property owned by, and every contract right
possessed by, each corporation or eligible entity that merges
into the survivor is vested in the survivor without reversion or
impairment;
(iv) All liabilities of each corporation or eligible
entity that is merged into the survivor are vested in the
survivor;
(v) The name of the survivor may, but need not be,
substituted in any pending proceeding for the name of any party
to the merger whose separate existence ceased in the merger;
(vi) The articles of incorporation or organic
documents of the survivor are amended to the extent provided in
the plan of merger;
(vii) The shares of each corporation that is a party
to the merger, and the interests in an eligible entity that is a
party to a merger, that are to be converted under the plan of
merger into shares, eligible interests, obligations, rights to
acquire securities, other securities, or eligible interests,
cash, other property, or any combination of the foregoing, are
converted, and the former holders of the shares or eligible
interests are entitled only to the rights provided in the plan
of merger or to any rights they may have under article 13 of
this chapter or the organic law of the eligible entity; and
(viii) The articles of incorporation or organic
documents of a survivor that is created by the merger become
effective.
(b) When a share exchange becomes effective, the shares of
each domestic corporation that are to be exchanged for shares or
other securities, interests, obligations, rights to acquire
shares or other securities, cash, other property, or any
combination of the foregoing, are entitled only to the rights
provided to them in the plan of share exchange or to any rights
they may have under article 13 of this chapter.
(c) A person who becomes subject to owner liability for
some or all of the debts, obligations or liabilities of any
entity as a result of a merger or share exchange shall have
owner liability only to the extent provided in the organic law
of the entity and only for those debts, obligations and
liabilities that arise after the effective time of the articles
of merger or share exchange.
(d) Upon a merger becoming effective, a foreign
corporation, or a foreign eligible entity, that is the survivor
of the merger is deemed to:
(i) Appoint the secretary of state as its agent for
service of process in a proceeding to enforce the rights of
shareholders of each domestic corporation that is a party to the
merger who exercise appraisal rights; and
(ii) Agree that it will promptly pay the amount, if
any, to which such shareholders are entitled under article 13.
(e) The effect of a merger or share exchange on the owner
liability of a person who had owner liability for some or all of
the debts, obligations or liabilities of a party to the merger
or share exchange shall be as follows:
(i) The merger or share exchange does not discharge
any owner liability under the organic law of the entity in which
the person was a shareholder or interest holder to the extent
any owner liability arose before the effective time of the
articles of merger or share exchange;
(ii) The person shall not have owner liability under
the organic law of the entity in which the person was a
shareholder or interest holder prior to the merger or share
exchange for any debt, obligation or liability that arises after
the effective time of the articles of merger or share exchange;
(iii) The provisions of the organic law of any entity
for which the person had owner liability before the merger or
share exchange shall continue to apply to the collection or
discharge of any owner liability preserved by paragraph (i) of
this subsection, as if the merger or share exchange had not
occurred;
(iv) The person shall have whatever rights of
contribution from other persons are provided by the organic law
of the entity for which the person had owner liability with
respect to any owner liability preserved by paragraph (i) of
this subsection, as if the merger or share exchange had not
occurred.
17-16-1108. Abandonment of a merger or share exchange.
(a) Unless otherwise provided in a plan of merger or share
exchange or in the laws under which a foreign business
corporation or a domestic or foreign eligible entity that is a
party to a merger or a share exchange is organized or by which
it is governed, after the plan has been adopted and approved as
required by this chapter, and at any time before the merger or
share exchange has become effective, it may be abandoned by a
domestic business corporation that is a party thereto without
action by its shareholders in accordance with any procedures set
forth in the plan of merger or share exchange or, if no such
procedures are set forth in the plan, in the manner determined
by the board of directors, subject to any contractual rights of
other parties to the merger or share exchange.
(b) If a merger or share exchange is abandoned under
subsection (a) of this section after articles of merger or share
exchange have been filed with the secretary of state but before
the merger or share exchange has become effective, a statement
that the merger or share exchange has been abandoned in
accordance with this section, executed on behalf of a party to
the merger or share exchange by an officer or other duly
authorized representative, shall be delivered to the secretary
of state for filing prior to the effective date of the merger or
share exchange. Upon filing, the statement shall take effect and
the merger or share exchange shall be deemed abandoned and shall
not become effective.
Subarticle B. Consolidation
17-16-1110. Consolidation.
(a) Any two (2) or more domestic corporations may
consolidate into a new corporation pursuant to a plan of
consolidation approved in the manner provided in this act.
(b) The board of directors of each corporation shall, by a
resolution adopted by each board, approve a plan of
consolidation setting forth:
(i) The names of the corporations proposing to
consolidate, and the name of the new corporation into which they
proposed to consolidate, which is hereinafter designated as the
new corporation;
(ii) The terms and conditions of the proposed
consolidation;
(iii) The manner and basis of converting the shares
of each corporation into shares or other securities or
obligations of the new corporation or of any other corporation
or, in whole or in part, into cash or other property;
(iv) With respect to the new corporation, all of the
statements required to be set forth in articles of incorporation
for corporations organized under this act; and
(v) Such other provisions with respect to the
proposed consolidation as are deemed necessary or desirable.
17-16-1111. Approval by shareholders; abandonment of plan.
(a) The board of directors of each corporation, upon
approving the plan of consolidation, shall, by resolution,
direct that the plan be submitted to a vote at a meeting of
shareholders, which may be either an annual or a special
meeting. Written or printed notice shall be given to each
shareholder of record whether or not entitled to vote at the
meeting, not less than twenty (20) days before the meeting, in
the manner provided in this act for the giving of notice of
meetings of shareholders, and shall state that the purpose or
one (1) of the purposes of the meeting is to consider the
proposed plan of consolidation, whether the meeting be an annual
or a special meeting. A copy of a summary of the plan of
consolidation shall be included in or enclosed with the notice.
(b) At the shareholder's meeting for each corporation, a
vote of the shareholders shall be taken on the proposed plan.
The plan shall be approved upon receiving the affirmative vote
of the holders of at least a majority of the shares entitled to
vote. However, if any class of shares of each corporation is
entitled to vote as a class, the plan shall be approved upon
receiving the affirmative vote of the holders of at least a
majority of the shares of each class of shares entitled to vote
as a class. Any class of shares of each corporation shall be
entitled to vote as a class if the plan contains any provision
which, if contained in a proposed amendment to articles of
incorporation, would entitle the class of shares to vote as a
class.
(c) After approval by a vote of the shareholders of each
corporation, and at any time prior to the filing of the articles
of consolidation, the consolidation may be abandoned pursuant to
provisions of the articles of consolidation, if any, set forth
in the plan.
17-16-1112. Articles of consolidation.
(a) Upon approval, articles of consolidation shall be
delivered to the secretary of state for filing. The articles of
consolidation shall set forth:
(i) The plan of consolidation;
(ii) As to each corporation the shareholders of which
were required to vote on the plan, the number of shares
outstanding, and, if the shares of any class are entitled to
vote as a class, the designation and number of outstanding
shares of each class;
(iii) As to each corporation the shareholders of
which were required to vote on the plan, the number of shares
voted for and against the plan, respectively, and, if the shares
of any class are entitled to vote as a class, the number of
shares of each class voted for and against the plan
respectively.
17-16-1113. Effect of consolidation.
(a) A consolidation becomes effective upon filing by the
secretary of state, or on a later date, not more than thirty
(30) days subsequent to filing the plan with the secretary of
state, as shall be provided in the plan.
(b) When a consolidation takes effect:
(i) The several corporations party to the plan of
consolidation are a single corporation, which is the new
corporation provided for in the plan of consolidation;
(ii) The separate existence of all corporations party
to the plan of consolidation except the new corporation ceases;
(iii) The new corporation has all the rights,
privileges, immunities and powers and is subject to all the
duties and liabilities of a corporation organized under this
act;
(iv) The new corporation has all the rights,
privileges, immunities and franchises, public or private, of
each corporation party to the plan of consolidation. The title
to all real estate and other property owned by each corporation
party to the plan of consolidation is vested in the new
corporation without reversion or impairment;
(v) The new corporation has all the liabilities and
obligations of each corporation party to the plan of
consolidation. Any claim existing or proceeding pending by or
against any corporation party to the plan of consolidation may
be continued as if the consolidation did not occur or the new
corporation may be substituted for the corporation whose
existence ceased. Neither the rights of creditors nor any liens
upon the property of any corporation party to the plan of
consolidation shall be impaired by the consolidation;
(vi) The statements set forth in the articles of
consolidation and which are required or permitted to be set
forth in the articles of incorporation of corporations organized
under this act shall be deemed to be the original articles of
incorporation of the new corporation;
(vii) The shares of each corporation party to the
plan of consolidation that are to be converted into shares,
obligations or other securities of the new corporation or into
cash or other property are converted, and the former holders of
the shares are entitled only to the rights provided in the plan
of consolidation or to their rights under article 13 of this
act.
17-16-1114. Consolidation of domestic and foreign
corporations.
(a) One (1) or more foreign corporations and one (1) or
more domestic corporations may be consolidated in the following
manner, if the consolidation is permitted by the laws of the
state under which each foreign corporation is organized:
(i) Each domestic corporation shall comply with the
provisions of this act with respect to the consolidation of
domestic corporations and each foreign corporation shall comply
with the applicable provisions of the laws of the state under
which it is organized;
(ii) If the new corporation in a consolidation is to
be governed by the laws of any state other than Wyoming, it
shall comply with the provisions of this act with respect to
foreign corporations if it is to transact business in Wyoming,
and in every case it shall file with the secretary of state of
Wyoming:
(A) An agreement that it may be served with
process in Wyoming in any proceeding for the enforcement of any
obligation of any domestic corporation which is a party to such
consolidation and in any proceeding for the enforcement of the
rights of a dissenting shareholder of any such domestic
corporation against the new corporation;
(B) An irrevocable appointment of the secretary
of state of Wyoming as its agent to accept service of process in
any such proceeding; and
(C) An agreement that it will promptly pay to
the dissenting shareholders of any such domestic corporation the
amount, if any, to which they shall be entitled under the
provisions of this act with respect to the rights of dissenting
shareholders.
Subarticle C. Conversion
17-16-1115. Conversion of corporation to limited liability
company.
(a) A domestic corporation may be converted to a domestic
limited liability company pursuant to chapter 26 of this title.
(b) A foreign corporation may be converted to a domestic
limited liability company pursuant to chapter 26 of this title.
(c) Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
(d) After the conversion is approved by the shareholders,
the limited liability company shall file articles of
organization which satisfy the requirements of W.S. 17-29-201
and include:
(i) A statement that the corporation was converted to
a limited liability company;
(ii) Its former name;
(iii) The state of formation and the date of
organization; and
(iv) A statement of the number of votes cast by the
shareholders for and against conversion and if the vote is less
than unanimous, the number or percentage required to approve the
conversion under the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
(e) The conversion takes effect when the articles of
organization are filed or at any later date specified in the
articles.
17-16-1116. Effect of conversion.
(a) Upon conversion:
(i) All property owned by the corporation remains in
the limited liability company;
(ii) All obligations of the converting corporation
continue as obligations of the resulting limited liability
company; and
(iii) An action or proceeding pending against the
converting corporation may be continued as if the conversion had
not occurred.
ARTICLE 12 - SALE OF ASSETS
17-16-1201. Disposition of assets not requiring
shareholder approval.
(a) No approval of the shareholders of a corporation is
required unless the articles of incorporation otherwise provide:
(i) To sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise dispose of
any or all of the corporation's assets in the usual and regular
course of business;
(ii) To mortgage, pledge, dedicate to the repayment
of indebtedness, whether with or without recourse, or otherwise
encumber any or all of the corporation's assets whether or not
in the usual and regular course of business; or
(iii) To transfer any or all of the corporation's
assets to one (1) or more corporations or other entities all of
the shares or interests of which are owned by the corporation;
or
(iv) To distribute assets pro rata to the holders of
one (1) or more classes or series of the corporation's shares.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
17-16-1202. Shareholder approval of certain dispositions.
(a) A sale, lease, exchange, or other disposition of
assets, other than a disposition described in W.S. 17-16-1201,
requires approval of the corporation's shareholders if the
disposition would leave the corporation without a significant
continuing business activity. If a significant business
activity of the corporation prior to any such disposition of
assets was the active or passive holding, maintenance or
management of investments, then such holding, maintenance or
management of investments shall be considered a significant
continuing business activity. If a corporation retains a
business activity that represented at least twenty-five percent
(25%) of total assets at the end of the most recently completed
fiscal year, and twenty-five percent (25%) of either income from
continuing operations before taxes or revenues from continuing
operations for that fiscal year, in each case of the corporation
and its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, the corporation
will conclusively be deemed to have retained a significant
continuing business activity.
(b) A disposition that requires approval of the
shareholders under subsection (a) of this section shall be
initiated by a resolution by the board of directors authorizing
the disposition. After adoption of such a resolution, the board
of directors shall submit the proposed disposition to the
shareholders for their approval. The board of directors shall
also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the
shareholders approve the proposed disposition, unless the board
of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of
interest or other special circumstances it should not make such
a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall
transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination.
(c) The board of directors may condition its submission of
a disposition to the shareholders under subsection (b) of this
section on any basis.
(d) If a disposition is required to be approved by the
shareholders under subsection (a) of this section and if the
approval is to be given at a meeting, the corporation shall
notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the
meeting of shareholders at which the disposition is to be
submitted for approval. The notice shall state that the
purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is to
consider the disposition and shall contain a description of the
disposition, including the terms and conditions thereof and the
consideration to be received by the corporation.
(e) Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of
directors, acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section,
require a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be
present, the approval of a disposition by the shareholders shall
require the approval of the shareholders at a meeting at which a
quorum exists.
(f) After a disposition has been approved by the
shareholders under subsection (b) of this section and at any
time before the disposition has been consummated, it may be
abandoned by the corporation without action by the shareholders,
subject to any contractual rights of other parties to the
disposition.
(g) A disposition of assets in the course of dissolution
under article 14 is not governed by this section.
(h) For purposes of this section, the ownership interests
of a parent corporation in its subsidiaries, whether owned
directly by the parent corporation or indirectly through other
subsidiaries shall be valued at the net asset values of such
subsidiaries, without application of any discount to the
valuation of such ownership interests because of a lack of
marketability or otherwise.
ARTICLE 13 - APPRAISAL RIGHTS
A. Right to Dissent and Obtain Payment for Shares
17-16-1301. Definitions.
(a) As used in this article:
(i) "Beneficial shareholder" means the person who is
the beneficial owner of shares held in a voting trust or by a
nominee on the beneficial owner's behalf;
(ii) "Corporation" means the issuer of the shares
held by a shareholder demanding appraisal and, for matters
covered in W.S. 17-16-1322 through 17-16-1331, includes the
surviving entity in a merger;
(iii) Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
(iv) "Fair value" means the value of the
corporation's shares determined:
(A) Immediately before the effectuation of the
corporate action to which the shareholder objects;
(B) Using customary and current valuation
concepts and techniques generally employed for similar
businesses in the context of the transaction requiring
appraisal; and
(C) Without discounting for lack of
marketability or minority status except, if appropriate, for
amendments to the articles pursuant to W.S 17-16-1302(a)(v).
(v) "Interest" means interest from the effective date
of the corporate action until the date of payment, at the
average rate currently paid by the corporation on its principal
bank loans, or, if none, at a rate that is fair and equitable
under all the circumstances;
(vi) "Record shareholder" means the person in whose
names shares are registered in the records of a corporation or
the beneficial owner of shares to the extent of the rights
granted by a nominee certificate on file with a corporation;
(vii) "Shareholder" means the record shareholder or
the beneficial shareholder.
(viii) "Affiliate" means a person that directly or
indirectly through one (1) or more intermediaries controls, is
controlled by, or is under common control with another person or
is a senior executive thereof;
(ix) "Beneficial owner" means any person who,
directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, or
understanding, other than a revocable proxy, has or shares the
power to vote, or to direct the voting of, shares; except that a
member of a national securities exchange is not deemed to be a
beneficial owner of securities held directly or indirectly by it
on behalf of another person solely because the member is the
record holder of the securities if the member is precluded by
the rules of the exchange from voting without instruction on
contested matters or matters that may affect substantially the
rights or privileges of the holders of the securities to be
voted. When two (2) or more persons agree to act together for
the purpose of voting their shares of the corporation, each
member of the group formed thereby is deemed to have acquired
beneficial ownership, as of the date of the agreement, of all
voting shares of the corporation beneficially owned by any
member of the group;
(x) "Preferred shares" means a class or series of
shares whose holders have preference over any other class or
series with respect to distributions.
17-16-1302. Right to appraisal.
(a) A shareholder is entitled to appraisal rights, and to
obtain payment of the fair value of his shares in the event of,
any of the following corporate actions:
(i) Consummation of a plan of merger or consolidation
to which the corporation is a party if:
(A) Shareholder approval is required for the
merger or the consolidation by W.S. 17-16-1104 or 17-16-1111 and
the shareholder is entitled to vote on the merger or
consolidation, except that appraisal rights shall not be
available to any shareholder of the corporation with respect to
shares of any class or series that remain outstanding after
consummation of the merger; or
(B) The corporation is a subsidiary that is
merged with its parent under W.S. 17-16-1105.
(ii) Consummation of a share exchange to which the
corporation is a party as the corporation whose shares will be
acquired, if the shareholder is entitled to vote on the
exchange, except that appraisal rights shall not be available to
any shareholder of the corporation with respect to any class or
series of shares of the corporation that is not exchanged;
(iii) Consummation of a disposition of assets
pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1202 if the shareholder is entitled to
vote on the disposition;
(iv) An amendment of the articles of incorporation
with respect to a class or series of shares that:
(A) Alters or abolishes a preferential right of
the shares;
(B) Creates, alters or abolishes a right in
respect of redemption, including a provision respecting a
sinking fund for the redemption or repurchase, of the shares;
(C) Alters or abolishes a preemptive right of
the holder of the shares to acquire shares or other securities;
(D) Excludes or limits the right of the shares
to vote on any matter, or to cumulate votes, other than a
limitation by dilution through issuance of shares or other
securities with similar voting rights; or
(E) Reduces the number of shares of a class or
series owned by the shareholder to a fraction of a share if the
corporation has the obligation or right to repurchase the
fractional share so created.
(v) Any other amendment to the articles of
incorporation, merger, share exchange or disposition of assets
if specifically provided in the articles of incorporation,
bylaws or a resolution of the board of directors;
(vi) Consummation of a transfer or domestication if
the shareholder does not receive shares in the foreign
corporation resulting from the transfer or domestication that
have terms as favorable to the shareholder in all material
respects, and represent at least the same percentage interest of
the total voting rights of the outstanding shares of the
corporation, as the shares held by the shareholder before the
transfer or domestication;
(vii) Consummation of a conversion of the corporation
to nonprofit status; or
(viii) Consummation of a conversion of the
corporation to an unincorporated entity.
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this section, the
availability of appraisal rights under paragraphs (a)(i), (ii),
(iii), (iv), (vi) and (viii) of this section shall be limited in
accordance with the following provisions:
(i) Appraisal rights shall not be available for the
holders of shares of any class or series of shares which is:
(A) A covered security under section 18(b)(1)(A)
or (B) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended; or
(B) Traded in an organized market and has at
least two thousand (2,000) shareholders and a market value of at
least twenty million dollars ($20,000,000.00), exclusive of the
value of such shares held by the corporation's subsidiaries,
senior executives, directors and beneficial shareholders owning
more than ten percent (10%) of such shares; or
(C) Issued by an open end management investment
company registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and may be redeemed at
the option of the holder at net asset value.
(ii) The applicability of paragraph (i) of this
subsection shall be determined as of:
(A) The record date fixed to determine the
shareholders entitled to receive notice of, and to vote at, the
meeting of shareholders to act upon the corporate action
requiring appraisal rights; or
(B) The day before the effective date of such
corporate action if there is no meeting of shareholders.
(iii) Paragraph (i) of this subsection shall not be
applicable and appraisal rights shall be available pursuant to
subsection (a) of this section for the holders of any class or
series of shares who are required by the terms of the corporate
action requiring appraisal rights to accept for such shares
anything other than cash or shares of any class or any series of
shares of any corporation, or any other proprietary interest of
any other entity, that satisfies the standards set forth in
paragraph (i) of this subsection at the time the corporate
action becomes effective;
(iv) Reserved.
17-16-1303. Assertion of rights by nominees and beneficial
owners.
(a) A record shareholder may assert appraisal rights as to
fewer than all the shares registered in the record shareholder's
name but owned by a beneficial shareholder only if the record
shareholder objects with respect to all shares of the class or
series owned by the beneficial shareholder and notifies the
corporation in writing of the name and address of each
beneficial shareholder on whose behalf appraisal rights are
being asserted. The rights of a record shareholder who asserts
appraisal rights for only part of the shares held of record in
the record shareholder's name under this subsection shall be
determined as if the shares as to which the record shareholder
objects and the record shareholder's other shares were
registered in the names of different record shareholders.
(b) A beneficial shareholder may assert appraisal rights
as to shares of any class or series held on behalf of the
shareholder only if the shareholder:
(i) Submits to the corporation the record
shareholder's written consent to the assertion of those rights
not later than the date provided in W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(ii)(B);
and
(ii) Does so with respect to all shares of the class
or series that are beneficially owned by the beneficial
shareholder.
B. Procedure for Exercise of Dissenters' Rights
17-16-1320. Notice of appraisal rights.
(a) If proposed corporate action described in W.S.
17-16-1302 is to be submitted to a vote at a shareholders'
meeting, the meeting notice shall state that corporation has
concluded that shareholders are, are not or may be entitled to
assert appraisal rights under this article. If the corporation
concludes that appraisal rights are or may be available, a copy
of this article shall accompany the meeting notice sent to those
record shareholders entitled to exercise appraisal rights.
(b) In a merger pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1105, the parent
corporation shall notify in writing all record shareholders of
the subsidiary who are entitled to assert appraisal rights that
the corporate action became effective. The notice shall be sent
within ten (10) days after the corporate action became effective
and include the materials described in W.S. 17-16-1322.
(c) Where any corporate action specified in W.S.
17-16-1302(a) is to be approved by written consent of the
shareholders pursuant to W.S. 17-16-704:
(i) Written notice that appraisal rights are, are not
or may be available shall be given to each record shareholder
from whom a consent is solicited at the time consent of such
shareholder is first solicited and, if the corporation has
concluded that appraisal rights are or may be available, shall
be accompanied by a copy of this article; and
(ii) Written notice that appraisal rights are, are
not or may be available shall be delivered together with the
notice to nonconsenting and nonvoting shareholders required by
W.S. 17-16-704(e) and (f), may include the materials described
in W.S. 17-16-1322 and, if the corporation has concluded that
appraisal rights are or may be available, shall be accompanied
by a copy of this article.
(d) Where corporate action described in W.S. 17-16-1302(a)
is proposed, or a merger pursuant to W.S 17-16-1105 is effected,
the notice referred to in subsection (a) or (c) of this section,
if the corporation concludes that appraisal rights are or may be
available, and in subsection (b) of this section shall be
accompanied by:
(i) The annual financial statements specified in W.S.
17-16-1620(a) of the corporation that issued the shares that may
be subject to appraisal, which shall be as of a date ending not
more than sixteen (16) months before the date of the notice and
shall comply with W.S. 17-16-1620(b); provided that, if the
annual financial statements are not reasonably available, the
corporation shall provide reasonably equivalent financial
information; and
(ii) The latest available quarterly financial
statements of such corporation, if any.
(e) The right to receive the information described in
subsection (d) of this section may be waived in writing by a
shareholder before or after the corporate action.
17-16-1321. Notice of intent to demand payment and
consequences of voting or consenting.
(a) If proposed corporate action requiring appraisal under
W.S. 17-16-1302 is submitted to a vote at a shareholders'
meeting, a shareholder who wishes to assert appraisal rights
with respect to any class or series of shares:
(i) Shall deliver to the corporation before the vote
is taken written notice of the shareholder's intent to demand
payment if the proposed action is effectuated; and
(ii) Shall not vote or cause or permit to be voted
any shares of the class or series in favor of the proposed
action.
(b) If a corporate action specified in W.S. 17-16-1302(a)
is to be approved by written consent, a shareholder who wishes
to assert appraisal rights with respect to any class or series
of shares shall not execute a consent in favor of the proposed
action with respect to that class or series of shares.
(c) A shareholder who does not satisfy the requirements of
subsection (a) or (b) of this section is not entitled to payment
for his shares under this article.
17-16-1322. Appraisal notice and form.
(a) If corporate action requiring appraisal under W.S.
17-16-1302(a) becomes effective, the corporation shall deliver a
written appraisal notice to all shareholders who satisfied the
requirements of W.S. 17-16-1321(a) or (b). In the case of a
merger under W.S. 17-16-1105, the parent shall deliver a written
appraisal notice and form to all record shareholders who may be
entitled to assert appraisal rights.
(b) The appraisal notice shall be sent no later than ten
(10) days after the corporate action specified in W.S.
17-16-1302(a) became effective, and shall:
(i) Supply a form that:
(A) Specifies the first date of any announcement
to shareholders made prior to the date the corporate action
became effective of the principal terms of the proposed
corporate action; and
(B) If such announcement was made, requires that
the shareholder asserting appraisal rights certify whether
beneficial ownership of the shares for which appraisal rights
are asserted was acquired before that date; and
(C) Requires the shareholder asserting appraisal
rights to certify that such shareholder did not vote for or
consent to the transaction.
(ii) State:
(A) Where the form shall be sent and where
certificates for certificated shares shall be deposited and the
date by which those certificates shall be deposited, which date
may not be earlier than the date for receiving the required form
under subparagraph (B) of this paragraph;
(B) Date by which the corporation shall receive
the form, which date may not be fewer than forty (40) nor more
than sixty (60) days after the date the appraisal notice and
form are sent pursuant to subsection (a) of this section, and
state that the shareholder shall have waived the right to demand
appraisal with respect to the shares unless the form is received
by the corporation by such specified date;
(C) The corporation's estimate of the fair value
of the shares;
(D) That, if requested in writing, the
corporation will provide, to the shareholder so requesting,
within ten (10) days after the date specified in subparagraph
(B) of this paragraph the number of shareholders who return the
forms by the specified date and the total number of shares owned
by them; and
(E) The date by which the notice to withdraw
under W.S. 17-16-1323 must be received, which date shall be
within twenty (20) days after the date specified in subparagraph
(B) of this paragraph.
(iii) Be accompanied by a copy of this article.
17-16-1323. Perfection of rights; right to withdraw.
(a) A shareholder who receives notice pursuant to W.S.
17-16-1322 and who wishes to exercise appraisal rights shall
sign and return the form sent by the corporation and, in the
case of certificated shares, deposit his certificates in
accordance with the terms of the notice by the date referred to
in the notice pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(ii)(B). In
addition, if applicable, the shareholder shall certify on the
form whether the beneficial owner of such shares acquired
beneficial ownership of the shares before the date required to
be set forth in the notice pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(i).
If a shareholder fails to make this certification, the
corporation may elect to treat the shareholder's shares as after
acquired shares under W.S. 17-16-1324. Once a shareholder
deposits that shareholder's certificates or, in the case of
uncertificated shares, returns the signed forms, that
shareholder loses all rights as a shareholder, unless the
shareholder withdraws pursuant to subsection (b) of this
section.
(b) The shareholder who has complied with subsection (a)
of this section may nevertheless decline to exercise appraisal
rights and withdraw from the appraisal process by so notifying
the corporation in writing by the date set forth in the
appraisal notice pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(ii)(E). A
shareholder who fails to so withdraw from the appraisal process
may not thereafter withdraw without the corporation's written
consent.
(c) A shareholder who does not sign and return the form
and, in the case of certificated shares, deposit his share
certificates where required, each by the date set forth in the
notice described in W.S. 17-16-1322(b), is not entitled to
payment under this article.
17-16-1324. Payment.
(a) Except as provided in W.S. 17-16-1325, within one
hundred twenty (120) days after the form required by W.S.
17-16-1322(b)(ii)(B) is due, the corporation shall pay in cash
or other agreed upon consideration to those shareholders who
complied with W.S. 17-16-1323 the amount the corporation
estimates to be the fair value of his shares, plus interest.
(b) The payment to each shareholder pursuant to subsection
(a) of this section shall be accompanied by:
(i) The annual financial statements specified in W.S.
17-16-1620(a) of the corporation that issued the shares to be
appraised, which shall be of a date ending not more than sixteen
(16) months before the date of payment and shall comply with
W.S. 17-16-1620(b), provided that if such annual financial
statements are not reasonably available, the corporation shall
provide reasonably equivalent financial information. The
corporation shall also provide the latest available quarterly
financial statements, if any;
(ii) A statement of the corporation's estimate of the
fair value of the shares which estimate shall equal or exceed
the corporation's estimate given pursuant to W.S.
17-16-1322(b)(ii)(C);
(iii) A statement that shareholders described in
subsection (a) of this section have the right to demand further
payment under W.S. 17-16-1326 and that if any shareholder does
not do so within the time period specified therein, the
shareholder shall be deemed to have accepted such payment in
full satisfaction of the corporation's obligations under this
article.
17-16-1325. After-acquired shares.
(a) A corporation may elect to withhold payment required
by W.S. 17-16-1324 from any shareholder who was required to, but
did not certify that beneficial ownership of all of the
shareholder's shares for which appraisal rights are asserted was
acquired before the date set forth in the appraisal notice sent
pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(i).
(b) If the corporation elected to withhold payment under
subsection (a) of this section, it shall, within thirty (30)
days after the form required by W.S. 17-16-1322(b)(ii)(B) is
due, notify all shareholders described in subsection (a) of this
section:
(i) Of the information required by W.S.
17-16-1324(b)(i);
(ii) Of the corporation's estimate of fair value
pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1324(b)(ii);
(iii) That they may accept the corporation's estimate
of fair value, plus interest, in full satisfaction of their
demands or demand appraisal under W.S. 17-16-1326;
(iv) That those shareholders who wish to accept the
offer shall so notify the corporation of their acceptance of the
corporation's offer within thirty (30) days after receiving the
offer; and
(v) That those shareholders who do not satisfy the
requirements for demanding appraisal under W.S. 17-16-1326 shall
be deemed to have accepted the corporation's offer.
(c) Within ten (10) days after receiving the shareholder's
acceptance pursuant to subsection (b) of this section, the
corporation shall pay in cash or other agreed upon consideration
the amount it offered under paragraph (b)(ii) of this section to
each shareholder who agreed to accept the corporation's offer in
full satisfaction of the shareholder's demand.
(d) Within one hundred thirty (130) days after sending the
notice described in subsection (b) of this section, the
corporation shall pay in cash the amount it offered to pay under
paragraph (b)(ii) of this section to each shareholder described
in paragraph (b)(v) of this section.
17-16-1326. Procedure if shareholder dissatisfied with
payment or offer.
(a) A shareholder paid pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1324 who is
dissatisfied with the amount of the payment may notify the
corporation in writing of that shareholder's estimate of the
fair value of his shares and demand payment of his estimate plus
interest, less any payment under W.S. 17-16-1324. A shareholder
offered payment under W.S. 17-16-1325 who is dissatisfied with
that offer shall reject the offer and demand payment of the
shareholder's stated estimate of the fair value of the shares
plus interest.
(b) A shareholder who fails to notify the corporation in
writing of that shareholder's demand to be paid the
shareholder's stated estimate of the fair value plus interest
under subsection (a) of this section within thirty (30) days
after receiving the corporation's payment or offer of payment
under W.S. 17-16-1324 or 17-16-1325, respectively, waives the
right to demand payment under this section and shall be entitled
only to the payment made or offered pursuant to those respective
sections.
C. Judicial Appraisal of Shares
17-16-1330. Court action.
(a) If a shareholder makes a demand for payment under W.S.
17-16-1326 which remains unsettled, the corporation shall
commence a proceeding within sixty (60) days after receiving the
payment demand and petition the court to determine the fair
value of the shares and accrued interest. If the corporation
does not commence the proceeding within the sixty (60) day
period, it shall pay each shareholder demanding appraisal rights
whose demand remains unsettled the amount demanded pursuant to
W.S. 17-16-1326 plus interest.
(b) The corporation shall commence the proceeding in the
district court of the county where a corporation's principal
office, or if none in this state, its registered office, is
located. If the corporation is a foreign corporation without a
registered office in this state, it shall commence the
proceeding in the county in this state where the principal
office or registered office of the domestic corporation merged
with or whose shares were acquired by the foreign corporation
was located at the time of the transaction.
(c) The corporation shall make all shareholders, whether
or not residents of this state, whose demands remain unsettled
parties to the proceeding as in an action against their shares
and all parties shall be served with a copy of the petition.
Nonresidents may be served by registered or certified mail or by
publication as provided by law.
(d) The jurisdiction of the court in which the proceeding
is commenced under subsection (b) of this section is plenary and
exclusive. The court may appoint one (1) or more persons as
appraisers to receive evidence and recommend decision on the
question of fair value. The appraisers have the powers
described in the order appointing them, or in the amendment to
it. The shareholders demanding appraisal rights are entitled to
the same discovery rights as parties in other civil proceedings.
(e) Each shareholder made a party to the proceeding is
entitled to judgment for:
(i) The amount, if any, by which the court finds the
fair value of his shares, plus interest, exceeds the amount paid
by the corporation to the shareholder for those shares; or
(ii) The fair value, plus accrued interest, of his
after-acquired shares for which the corporation elected to
withhold payment under W.S. 17-16-1325.
17-16-1331. Court costs and counsel fees.
(a) The court in an appraisal proceeding commenced under
W.S. 17-16-1330 shall determine all costs of the proceeding,
including the reasonable compensation and expenses of appraisers
appointed by the court. The court shall assess the costs
against the corporation, except that the court may assess costs
against all or some of the shareholders demanding appraisal, in
amounts the court finds equitable, to the extent the court finds
the shareholders demanding appraisal rights acted arbitrarily,
vexatiously, or not in good faith with respect to the rights
provided by this article.
(b) The court in an appraisal proceeding may also assess
the fees and expenses of counsel and experts for the respective
parties, in amounts the court finds equitable:
(i) Against the corporation and in favor of any or
all shareholders demanding appraisal if the court finds the
corporation did not substantially comply with the requirements
of W.S. 17-16-1320 through 17-16-1326; or
(ii) Against either the corporation or a shareholder
demanding appraisal, in favor of any other party, if the court
finds that the party against whom the fees and expenses are
assessed acted arbitrarily, vexatiously, or not in good faith
with respect to the rights provided by this article.
(c) If the court in an appraisal proceeding finds that the
services of counsel and any other expenses incurred for any
shareholder demanding appraisal were of substantial benefit to
other shareholders similarly situated, and that the fees for
those services and other expenses should not be assessed against
the corporation, the court may direct that those fees and
expenses be paid out of the amounts awarded the shareholders who
were benefited.
(d) To the extent the corporation fails to make a required
payment pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1324, 17-16-1325 or 17-16-1326,
the shareholder may sue directly for the amount owed, and to the
extent successful, shall be entitled to recover from the
corporation all expenses of the suit.
17-16-1340. Other remedies limited.
(a) The legality of a proposed or completed corporate
action described in W.S. 17-16-1302(a) may not be contested, nor
may the corporate action be enjoined, set aside or rescinded, in
a legal or equitable proceeding by a shareholder after the
shareholders have approved the corporate action.
(b) Subsection (a) of this section does not apply to a
corporate action that:
(i) Was not authorized and approved in accordance
with the applicable provisions of:
(A) Article 9, 10, 11 or 12 of this act;
(B) The articles of incorporation or bylaws; or
(C) The resolution of the board of directors
authorizing the corporate action.
(ii) Was procured as a result of fraud, a material
misrepresentation or an omission of a material fact necessary to
make statements made, in light of the circumstances in which
they were made, not misleading;
(iii) Reserved;
(iv) Is approved by less than unanimous consent of
the voting shareholders pursuant to W.S. 17-16-704 if:
(A) The challenge to the corporate action is
brought by a shareholder who did not consent and as to whom
notice of the approval of the corporate action was not effective
at least ten (10) days before the corporate action was effected;
and
(B) The proceeding challenging the corporate
action is commenced within ten (10) days after notice of the
approval of the corporate action is effective as to the
shareholder bringing the proceeding.
ARTICLE 14 - DISSOLUTION
A. Voluntary Dissolution
17-16-1401. Dissolution by incorporators or initial
directors.
(a) A majority of the incorporators or initial directors
of a corporation that has not issued shares or has not commenced
business may dissolve the corporation by delivering to the
secretary of state for filing articles of dissolution that set
forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The date of its incorporation;
(iii) Either:
(A) That none of the corporation's shares has
been issued; or
(B) That the corporation has not commenced
business.
(iv) That no debt of the corporation remains unpaid;
(v) That the net assets of the corporation remaining
after winding up have been distributed to the shareholders, if
shares were issued; and
(vi) That a majority of the incorporators or initial
directors authorized the dissolution.
17-16-1402. Dissolution by board of directors and
shareholders.
(a) A corporation's board of directors may propose
dissolution for submission to the shareholders.
(b) For a proposal to dissolve to be adopted:
(i) The board of directors shall recommend
dissolution to the shareholders, unless the board of directors
determines that because of conflict of interest or other special
circumstances it should make no recommendation and communicates
the basis for its determination to the shareholders; and
(ii) The shareholders entitled to vote shall approve
the proposal to dissolve as provided in subsection (e) of this
section.
(c) The board of directors may condition its submission of
the proposal for dissolution on any basis.
(d) The corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether
or not entitled to vote, of the proposed shareholders' meeting
in accordance with W.S. 17-16-705. The notice shall also state
that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is
to consider dissolving the corporation.
(e) Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of
directors, acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section,
require a greater vote or a vote by voting groups, adoption of
the proposal to dissolve shall require the approval of the
shareholders at a meeting at which a quorum consisting of at
least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast exists.
17-16-1403. Articles of dissolution.
(a) At any time after dissolution is authorized, the
corporation may dissolve by delivering to the secretary of state
for filing articles of dissolution setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The date dissolution was authorized;
(iii) If dissolution was approved by the shareholders
a statement that the proposal to dissolve was duly approved by
the shareholders in the manner required by this act and by the
articles of incorporation.
(b) A corporation is dissolved upon the effective date of
its articles of dissolution.
(c) For purposes of this article, "dissolved corporation"
means a corporation whose articles of dissolution have become
effective and includes a successor entity to which the remaining
assets of the corporation are transferred subject to its
liabilities for purposes of liquidation.
17-16-1404. Revocation of dissolution.
(a) A corporation may revoke its dissolution within one
hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of the
dissolution.
(b) Revocation of dissolution shall be authorized in the
same manner as the dissolution was authorized unless that
authorization permitted revocation by action of the board of
directors alone, in which event the board of directors may
revoke the dissolution without shareholder action.
(c) After the revocation of dissolution is authorized, the
corporation may revoke the dissolution by delivering to the
secretary of state for filing articles of revocation of
dissolution, together with a copy of its articles of
dissolution, that set forth:
(i) The name of the corporation which shall satisfy
the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401;
(ii) The effective date of the dissolution that was
revoked;
(iii) The date that the revocation of dissolution was
authorized;
(iv) If the corporation's board of directors or
incorporators revoked the dissolution, a statement to that
effect;
(v) If the corporation's board of directors revoked a
dissolution authorized by the shareholders, a statement that
revocation was permitted by action by the board of directors
alone pursuant to that authorization; and
(vi) If shareholder action was required to revoke the
dissolution, the information required by W.S.
17-16-1403(a)(iii).
(d) Revocation of dissolution is effective upon the
effective date of the articles of revocation of dissolution.
(e) When the revocation of dissolution is effective, it
relates back to and takes effect as if the effective date of the
dissolution and the corporation resumes carrying on its business
as if dissolution had never occurred, except the corporation may
be required to adopt some other name by amending its articles of
incorporation in the manner provided by this act so its name
satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401.
17-16-1405. Effect of dissolution.
(a) A dissolved corporation continues its corporate
existence but may not carry on any business except that
appropriate to wind up and liquidate its business and affairs,
including:
(i) Collecting its assets;
(ii) Disposing of its properties that will not be
distributed in kind to its shareholders;
(iii) Discharging or making provision for discharging
its liabilities;
(iv) Distributing its remaining property among its
shareholders according to their interests; and
(v) Doing every other act necessary to wind up and
liquidate its business and affairs.
(b) Dissolution of a corporation does not:
(i) Transfer title to the corporation's property;
(ii) Prevent transfer of its shares or securities,
although the authorization to dissolve may provide for closing
the corporation's share transfer records;
(iii) Subject its directors or officers to standards
of conduct different from those prescribed in article 8;
(iv) Change quorum or voting requirements for its
board of directors or shareholders; change provisions for
selection, resignation, or removal of its directors or officers
or both; or change provisions for amending its bylaws;
(v) Prevent commencement of a proceeding by or
against the corporation in its corporate name;
(vi) Abate or suspend a proceeding pending by or
against the corporation on the effective date of dissolution; or
(vii) Terminate the authority of the registered agent
of the corporation.
17-16-1406. Known claims against dissolved corporation.
(a) A dissolved corporation may dispose of the known
claims against it by notifying its known claimants in writing of
the dissolution at any time after its effective date.
(b) The written notice shall:
(i) Describe information that shall be included in a
claim;
(ii) Provide a mailing address where a claim may be
sent;
(iii) State the deadline, which may not be fewer than
one hundred twenty (120) days from the effective date of the
written notice, by which the dissolved corporation shall receive
the claim; and
(iv) State that the claim will be barred if not
received by the deadline.
(c) A claim against the dissolved corporation is barred:
(i) If a claimant who was given written notice under
subsection (b) of this section does not deliver the claim to the
dissolved corporation by the deadline; or
(ii) If a claimant whose claim was rejected by the
dissolved corporation does not commence a proceeding to enforce
the claim within ninety (90) days from the effective date of the
rejection notice.
(d) For purposes of this section, "claim" does not include
a contingent liability or a claim based on an event occurring
after the effective date of dissolution.
(e) A claim that is not barred by this section may be
enforced in accordance with W.S. 17-16-1407(d).
17-16-1407. Other claims against dissolved corporation.
(a) A dissolved corporation may also publish notice of its
dissolution and request that persons with claims against the
corporation present them in accordance with the notice.
(b) The notice shall:
(i) Be published one (1) time in a newspaper of
general circulation in the county where the dissolved
corporation's principal office, or, if none in this state, its
registered office, is or was last located;
(ii) Describe the information that shall be included
in a claim and provide a mailing address where the claim may be
sent; and
(iii) State that a claim against the corporation will
be barred unless a proceeding to enforce the claim is commenced
within three (3) years or the applicable statute of limitations,
whichever is less, after the publication of the notice.
(c) If the dissolved corporation publishes a newspaper
notice in accordance with subsection (b) of this section, the
claim of each of the following claimants is barred unless the
claimant commences a proceeding to enforce the claim against the
dissolved corporation within three (3) years after the
publication date of the newspaper notice:
(i) A claimant who did not receive written notice
under W.S. 17-16-1406;
(ii) A claimant whose claim was timely sent to the
dissolved corporation but not acted on; or
(iii) A claimant whose claim is contingent or based
on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution.
(d) A claim that is not barred by W.S. 17-16-1406(c) or
subsection (c) of this section may be enforced:
(i) Against the dissolved corporation, to the extent
of its undistributed assets; or
(ii) Except as provided in W.S. 17-16-1408(d), if the
assets have been distributed in liquidation, against a
shareholder of the dissolved corporation to the extent of his
pro rata share of the claim or the corporate assets distributed
to him in liquidation, whichever is less, but a shareholder's
total liability for all claims under this section may not exceed
the total amount of assets distributed to the shareholder.
17-16-1408. Court proceedings.
(a) A dissolved corporation that has published a notice
under W.S. 17-16-1407 may file an application with the district
court of the county where the dissolved corporation's principal
office, or, if none in this state, its registered office is
located for a determination of the amount and form of security
to be provided for payment of claims that are contingent or have
not been made known to the dissolved corporation or that are
based on an event occurring after the effective date of
dissolution but that, based on the facts known to the dissolved
corporation, are reasonably estimated to arise after the
effective date of dissolution. Provision need not be made for
any claim that is or is reasonably anticipated to be barred
under W.S. 17-16-1407(c).
(b) Within ten (10) days after the filing of the
application, notice of the proceeding shall be given by the
dissolved corporation to each claimant holding a contingent
claim whose contingent claim is shown on the records of the
dissolved corporation.
(c) The court may appoint a guardian ad litem to represent
all claimants whose identities are unknown in any proceeding
brought under this section. The reasonable fees and expenses of
the guardian, including all reasonable expert witness fees,
shall be paid by the dissolved corporation.
(d) Provision by the dissolved corporation for security in
the amount and the form ordered by the court under subsection
(a) of this section shall satisfy the dissolved corporation's
obligations with respect to claims that are contingent, have not
been made known to the dissolved corporation or are based on an
event occurring after the effective date of dissolution, and
such claims may not be enforced against a shareholder who
received assets in liquidation.
17-16-1409. Directors' duties.
(a) Directors shall cause the dissolved corporation to
discharge or make reasonable provision for the payment of claims
and make distributions of assets to shareholders after payment
or provision for claims.
(b) Directors of a dissolved corporation which has
disposed of claims under W.S. 17-16-1406, 17-16-1407 or
17-16-1408 shall not be liable for breach of this section with
respect to claims against the dissolved corporation.
B. Administrative Dissolution
17-16-1420. Grounds for administrative dissolution.
(a) The secretary of state may commence a proceeding under
W.S. 17-16-1421 to administratively dissolve a corporation if
any of the following has occurred:
(i) The corporation does not deliver its annual
reports or pay the annual license taxes to the secretary of
state when due pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1630;
(ii) Reserved;
(iii) The corporation is without a registered agent
or registered office in this state;
(iv) The corporation does not notify the secretary of
state within thirty (30) days that its registered agent or
registered office has been changed, that its registered agent
has resigned, or that its registered office has been
discontinued;
(v) The corporation's period of duration stated in
its articles of incorporation expires;
(vi) It is in the public interest and the
corporation:
(A) Failed to provide records to the registered
agent as required in W.S. 17-28-107;
(B) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing under this act with the
secretary of state; or
(C) Cannot be served by either the secretary of
state or the registered agent at its address provided pursuant
to W.S. 17-28-107.
(vii) An incorporator, director, officer or agent of
the corporation signed a document he knew was false in any
material respect with intent that the document be delivered to
the secretary of state for filing;
(viii) The corporation has failed to respond to a
valid and enforceable subpoena;
(ix) The corporation is in violation of W.S.
17-16-401(d)(v) or 17-16-1506(d)(v);
(x) The corporation has failed to pay any penalties
imposed under W.S. 17-28-109.
(b) Prior to commencing a proceeding under W.S. 17-16-1421
the secretary of state may classify a corporation as delinquent
awaiting administrative dissolution if the corporation meets any
of the criteria in subsection (a) of this section.
17-16-1421. Procedure for and effect of administrative
dissolution.
(a) If the secretary of state determines that one (1) or
more grounds exist under W.S. 17-16-1420 for dissolving a
corporation, he shall serve the corporation with written notice
of his determination under W.S. 17-28-104, except for W.S.
17-16-1420(a)(v) in which case dissolution is by choice and
therefore automatic.
(b) If the corporation does not correct each ground for
dissolution or demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the
secretary of state that each ground determined by the secretary
of state does not exist within sixty (60) days after service of
the notice is perfected under W.S. 17-28-104, the secretary of
state shall administratively dissolve the corporation by
signing, either manually or in facsimile, a certificate of
dissolution that recites the ground or grounds for dissolution
and its effective date. The secretary of state shall file the
original of the certificate and serve a copy on the corporation
under W.S. 17-28-104.
(c) A corporation administratively dissolved under W.S.
17-16-1420 continues its corporate existence but may not carry
on any business except that necessary to wind up and liquidate
its business and affairs under W.S. 17-16-1405 and notify
claimants under W.S. 17-16-1406 and 17-16-1407.
(d) The administrative dissolution of a corporation does
not terminate the authority of its registered agent.
17-16-1422. Reinstatement following administrative
dissolution.
(a) An officer or other person with proper authority at
the time a corporation was administratively dissolved under W.S.
17-16-1421 may apply to the secretary of state for reinstatement
within two (2) years after the effective date of dissolution.
Reinstatement may be denied by the secretary of state if the
corporation has been the subject of secretary of state and law
enforcement investigation pertaining to fraud or any other
violation of state or federal law, or if there is other reason
to believe the corporation was engaged in illegal operations.
The application shall:
(i) Recite the name of the corporation and the
effective date of its administrative dissolution;
(ii) State that the ground or grounds for dissolution
either did not exist or have been eliminated;
(iii) Reserved;
(iv) If the corporation was administratively
dissolved for failing to deliver its annual report or pay the
annual license taxes to the secretary of state when due pursuant
to W.S. 17-16-1630, include payment of fees and taxes then
delinquent and a reinstatement certificate fee prescribed
pursuant to W.S. 17-16-122; and
(v) If the corporation was administratively dissolved
for failure to maintain a registered agent, include payment of a
two hundred fifty dollar ($250.00) reinstatement fee and payment
of any fees and taxes then delinquent.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section and that the information is correct, he shall
cancel the certificate of dissolution and prepare a certificate
of reinstatement that recites his determination and the
effective date of reinstatement, file the original of the
certificate, and serve a copy on the corporation under W.S.
17-28-104.
(c) When the reinstatement is effective, it relates back
to and takes effect as of the effective date of the
administrative dissolution and the corporation resumes carrying
on its business as if the administrative dissolution had never
occurred.
(d) The corporation shall retain its registered corporate
name during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
(e) A person who files any document under this section
without proper corporate authority to do so is in violation of
W.S. 6-5-308.
17-16-1423. Appeal from denial of reinstatement.
(a) If the secretary of state denies a corporation's
application for reinstatement following administrative
dissolution, he shall serve the corporation under W.S. 17-28-104
with a written notice that explains the reason or reasons for
denial.
(b) The corporation may appeal the denial of reinstatement
to the district court within thirty (30) days after service of
the notice of denial is perfected. The corporation appeals by
petitioning the court to set aside the dissolution and attaching
to the petition copies of the secretary of state's certificate
of dissolution, the corporation's application for reinstatement,
and the secretary of state's notice of denial.
(c) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to reinstate the dissolved corporation or may take other action
the court considers appropriate.
(d) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
C. Judicial Dissolution
17-16-1430. Grounds for judicial dissolution.
(a) The district court may dissolve a corporation:
(i) In a proceeding by the attorney general if it is
established that:
(A) The corporation obtained its articles of
incorporation through fraud; or
(B) The corporation has continued to exceed or
abuse the authority conferred upon it by law.
(ii) In a proceeding by a shareholder if it is
established that:
(A) The directors are deadlocked in the
management of the corporate affairs, the shareholders are unable
to break the deadlock, and irreparable injury to the corporation
is threatened or being suffered, or the business and affairs of
the corporation can no longer be conducted to the advantage of
the shareholders generally, because of the deadlock;
(B) The directors or those in control of the
corporation have acted, are acting, or will act in a manner that
is illegal, oppressive or fraudulent;
(C) The shareholders are deadlocked in voting
power and have failed, for a period that includes at least two
(2) consecutive annual meeting dates, to elect successors to
directors whose terms have expired; or
(D) The corporate assets are being misapplied or
wasted.
(iii) In a proceeding by a creditor if it is
established that:
(A) The creditor's claim has been reduced to
judgment, the execution on the judgment returned unsatisfied,
and the corporation is insolvent; or
(B) The corporation has admitted in writing that
the creditor's claim is due and owing and the corporation is
insolvent.
(iv) In a proceeding by the corporation to have its
voluntary dissolution continued under court supervision;
(v) In a proceeding by a shareholder, if the
corporation has abandoned its business and has failed within a
reasonable time to liquidate and distribute its assets and
dissolve.
(b) Reserved.
(c) Reserved.
17-16-1431. Procedure for judicial dissolution.
(a) Venue for a proceeding by the attorney general to
dissolve a corporation lies in Laramie county district court.
Venue for a proceeding brought by any other party named in W.S.
17-16-1430 lies in the county where a corporation's principal
office, or, if none in this state, its registered office, is or
was last located.
(b) It is not necessary to make shareholders parties to a
proceeding to dissolve a corporation unless relief is sought
against them individually.
(c) A court in a proceeding brought to dissolve a
corporation may issue injunctions, appoint a receiver or
custodian pendente lite with all powers and duties the court
directs, take other action required to preserve the corporate
assets wherever located, and carry on the business of the
corporation until a full hearing can be held.
(d) Within ten (10) days of the commencement of a
proceeding under W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii) to dissolve a
corporation that has no shares listed on a national securities
exchange or regularly traded in a market maintained by one (1)
or more members of a national or affiliated securities
association, the corporation must send to all shareholders,
other than the petitioner, a notice stating that the
shareholders are entitled to avoid the dissolution of the
corporation by electing to purchase the petitioner's shares
under W.S. 17-16-1434 and accompanied by a copy of W.S.
17-16-1434.
17-16-1432. Receivership or custodianship.
(a) A court in a judicial proceeding brought to dissolve a
corporation may appoint one (1) or more receivers to wind up and
liquidate, or one (1) or more custodians to manage, the business
and affairs of the corporation. The court shall hold a hearing,
after notifying all parties to the proceeding and any interested
persons designated by the court, before appointing a receiver or
custodian. The court appointing a receiver or custodian has
exclusive jurisdiction over the corporation and all of its
property wherever located.
(b) The court may appoint an individual or a domestic or
foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state as a receiver or custodian. The court may require the
receiver or custodian to post bond, with or without sureties, in
an amount the court directs.
(c) The court shall describe the powers and duties of the
receiver or custodian in its appointing order, which may be
amended from time to time. Among other powers:
(i) The receiver may:
(A) Dispose of all or any part of the assets of
the corporation wherever located, at a public or private sale,
if authorized by the court; and
(B) Sue and defend in his own name as receiver
of the corporation in all Wyoming courts.
(ii) The custodian may exercise all of the powers of
the corporation, through or in place of its board of directors
or officers, to the extent necessary to manage the affairs of
the corporation in the best interests of its shareholders and
creditors.
(d) The court during a receivership may redesignate the
receiver a custodian, and during a custodianship may redesignate
the custodian a receiver, if doing so is in the best interests
of the corporation, its shareholders and creditors.
(e) The court from time to time during the receivership or
custodianship may order compensation paid and expense
disbursements or reimbursements made to the receiver or
custodian and his counsel from the assets of the corporation or
proceeds from the sale of the assets.
17-16-1433. Decree of dissolution.
(a) If after a hearing the court determines that one (1)
or more grounds for judicial dissolution described in W.S.
17-16-1430 exist, it may enter a decree dissolving the
corporation and specifying the effective date of the
dissolution, and the clerk of the court shall deliver a
certified copy of the decree to the secretary of state, who
shall file it.
(b) After entering the decree of dissolution, the court
shall direct the winding up and liquidation of the corporation's
business and affairs in accordance with W.S. 17-16-1405 and the
notification of claimants in accordance with W.S. 17-16-1406 and
17-16-1407.
17-16-1434. Election to purchase in lieu of dissolution.
(a) In a proceeding under W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii) to
dissolve a corporation that has no shares listed on a national
securities exchange or regularly traded in a market maintained
by one (1) or more members of a national or affiliated
securities association, the corporation may elect or, if it
fails to elect, one (1) or more shareholders may elect to
purchase all shares owned by the petitioning shareholder at the
fair value of the shares. An election pursuant to this section
shall be irrevocable unless the court determines that it is
equitable to set aside or modify the election.
(b) An election to purchase pursuant to this section may
be filed with the court at any time within ninety (90) days
after the filing of the petition under W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii) or
at such later time as the court in its discretion may allow. If
the election to purchase is filed by one (1) or more
shareholders, the corporation shall, within ten (10) days
thereafter, give written notice to all shareholders, other than
the petitioner. The notice must state the name and number of
shares owned by the petitioner and the name and number of shares
owned by each electing shareholder and must advise the
recipients of their right to join in the election to purchase
shares in accordance with this section. Shareholders who wish
to participate must file notice of their intention to join in
the purchase no later than thirty (30) days after the effective
date of the notice to them. All shareholders who have filed an
election or notice of their intention to participate in the
election to purchase thereby become parties to the proceeding
and shall purchase in proportion to their ownership of shares as
of the date the first election was filed, unless they otherwise
agree or the court otherwise directs. After an election has
been filed by the corporation or one (1) or more shareholders,
the proceeding under W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii) may not be
discontinued or settled, nor may the petitioning shareholder
sell or otherwise dispose of his shares, unless the court
determines that it would be equitable to the corporation and the
shareholders, other than the petitioner, to permit such
discontinuance, settlement, sale or other disposition.
(c) If, within sixty (60) days of the filing of the first
election, the parties reach agreement as to the fair value in
terms of purchase of the petitioner's shares, the court shall
enter an order directing the purchase of petitioner's shares
upon the terms and conditions agreed to by the parties.
(d) If the parties are unable to reach an agreement as
provided for in subsection (c) of this section, the court, upon
application of any party, shall stay the W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii)
proceedings and determine the fair value of the petitioner's
shares as of the day before the date on which the petition under
W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii) was filed or as of such other date as the
court deems appropriate under the circumstances.
(e) Upon determining the fair value of the shares, the
court shall enter an order directing the purchase upon such
terms and conditions as the court deems appropriate, which may
include payment of the purchase price in installments, where
necessary in the interest of equity, provision for security to
assure payment of the purchase price and any additional costs,
fees and expenses as may have been awarded, and, if the shares
are to be purchased by the shareholders, the allocation of
shares among them. In allocating petitioner's shares among
holders of different classes of shares, the court should attempt
to preserve the existing distribution of voting rights among
holders of different classes insofar as practicable and may
direct that the holders of a specific class or classes shall not
participate in the purchase. Interest may be allowed at the
rate and from the date determined by the court to be equitable,
but if the court finds that the refusal of the petitioning
shareholder to accept an offer of payment was arbitrary or
otherwise not in good faith, no interest shall be allowed. If
the court finds that the petitioning shareholder had probable
grounds for relief under W.S. 17-16-1430(a)(ii)(B) or (D), it
may award to the petitioning shareholder reasonable fees and
expenses of counsel and of any experts employed by him.
(f) Upon entry of an order under subsection (c) or (e) of
this section, the court shall dismiss the petition to dissolve
the corporation under W.S. 17-16-1430, and the petitioning
shareholder shall no longer have any rights or status as a
shareholder of the corporation, except the right to receive the
amounts awarded to him by the order of the court which shall be
enforceable in the same manner as any other judgment.
(g) The purchase order pursuant to subsection (e) of this
section shall be made within ten (10) days after the date the
order becomes final unless before that time the corporation
files with the court a notice of its intention to adopt articles
of dissolution pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1402 and 17-16-1403, which
articles must then be adopted and filed within fifty (50) days
thereafter. Upon filing of such articles of dissolution, the
corporation shall be dissolved in accordance with provisions of
W.S. 17-16-1405 through 17-16-1407, and the order entered
pursuant to subsection (e) of this section shall no longer be of
any force or effect, except that the court may award the
petitioning shareholder reasonable fees and expenses in
accordance with the provisions of the last sentence of
subsection (e) of this section and the petitioner may continue
to pursue any claims previously asserted on behalf of the
corporation.
(h) Any payment by the corporation pursuant to an order
under subsection (c) or (e) of this section, other than an award
of fees and expenses pursuant to subsection (e) of this section,
is subject to the provisions of W.S. 17-16-640.
D. Miscellaneous
17-16-1440. Deposit with state treasurer.
Assets of a dissolved corporation that should be transferred to
a creditor, claimant or shareholder of the corporation who
cannot be found or who is not competent to receive them shall be
reduced to cash and deposited with the state treasurer for
safekeeping. When the creditor, claimant or shareholder
furnishes satisfactory proof of entitlement to the amount
deposited, the state treasurer shall pay him or his
representative that amount.
ARTICLE 15 - FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
A. Certificate of Authority
17-16-1501. Authority to transact business required.
(a) A foreign corporation may not transact business in
this state until it obtains a certificate of authority from the
secretary of state.
(b) The following activities, among others, do not
constitute transacting business within the meaning of subsection
(a) of this section:
(i) Maintaining, defending or settling any
proceeding;
(ii) Holding meetings of the board of directors or
shareholders or carrying on other activities concerning internal
corporate affairs;
(iii) Maintaining bank accounts;
(iv) Maintaining offices or agencies for the
transfer, exchange and registration of the corporation's own
securities or maintaining trustees or depositaries with respect
to those securities;
(v) Selling through independent contractors;
(vi) Soliciting or obtaining orders, whether by mail
or through employees or agents or otherwise, if the orders
require acceptance outside this state before they become
contracts;
(vii) Creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages
and security interests in real or personal property;
(viii) Securing or collecting debts or enforcing
mortgages and security interests in property securing the debts;
(ix) Owning, without more, real or personal property;
(x) Conducting an isolated transaction that is
completed within thirty (30) days and that is not one in the
course of repeated transactions of a like nature; or
(xi) Transacting business in interstate commerce.
(c) The list of activities in subsection (b) of this
section is not exhaustive.
(d) A foreign corporation, foreign limited partnership or
foreign limited liability company which is either an organizer,
a manager or member of a company is not required to obtain a
certificate of authority to undertake its duties in these
capacities.
17-16-1502. Consequences of transacting business without
authority.
(a) A foreign corporation transacting business in this
state without a certificate of authority may not maintain a
proceeding in any court in this state until it obtains a
certificate of authority.
(b) The successor to a foreign corporation that transacted
business in this state without a certificate of authority and
the assignee of a cause of action arising out of that business
may not maintain a proceeding based on that cause of action in
any court in this state until the foreign corporation or its
successor obtains a certificate of authority.
(c) A court may stay a proceeding commenced by a foreign
corporation, its successor or assignee until it determines
whether the foreign corporation or its successor requires a
certificate of authority. If it so determines, the court may
further stay the proceeding until the foreign corporation or its
successor obtains the certificate.
(d) A foreign corporation which transacts business in this
state without a certificate of authority shall be liable to this
state, for the years or parts thereof during which it transacted
business in this state without a certificate of authority, in an
amount equal to all fees and license taxes, plus interest of
eighteen percent (18%), which would have been imposed by law
upon such corporation had it duly applied for and received a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state as
required by this act and thereafter filed all reports required
by law, and in addition shall be liable for a penalty in the
amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00), reasonable audit
expenses and reasonable attorney fees. The secretary of state
may refuse to issue a certificate of authority until all taxes,
fees, interest, expenses and penalties due under this section
have been paid to him. The attorney general may collect all
penalties and other sums due under this subsection.
(e) Notwithstanding subsections (a) and (b) of this
section, the failure of a foreign corporation to obtain a
certificate of authority does not impair the validity of its
corporate acts or prevent it from defending any proceeding in
this state.
17-16-1503. Application for certificate of authority.
(a) A foreign corporation may apply for a certificate of
authority to transact business in this state by delivering an
application to the secretary of state for filing. The
application shall set forth:
(i) The name of the foreign corporation or, if its
name is unavailable for use in this state, a corporate name that
satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-16-1506;
(ii) The name of the state or country under whose law
it is incorporated;
(iii) Its date of incorporation and period of
duration;
(iv) The street address of its principal office and
an email address for the foreign corporation;
(v) The address of its registered office in this
state and the name of its registered agent at that office;
(vi) The names and usual business addresses of its
current directors and officers; and
(vii) Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
(viii) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of the state of Wyoming in compliance with the
requirement of article 10, section 5 of the Wyoming
constitution.
(ix) Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
(b) The foreign corporation shall deliver with the
completed application a certificate of existence, or a document
of similar import, dated not more than sixty (60) days prior to
filing in Wyoming, duly authenticated by the secretary of state
or other official having custody of corporate records in the
state or country under whose law it is incorporated.
(c) The application for certificate of authority shall be
accompanied by a written consent to appointment executed by the
registered agent.
17-16-1504. Amended certificate of authority.
(a) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state shall obtain an amended certificate of authority
from the secretary of state if it changes:
(i) Its corporate name;
(ii) The period of its duration; or
(iii) The state or country of its incorporation.
(b) The requirements of W.S. 17-16-1503 for obtaining an
original certificate of authority apply to obtaining an amended
certificate under this section.
17-16-1505. Effect on certificate of authority.
(a) A certificate of authority authorizes the foreign
corporation to which it is issued to transact business in this
state subject, however, to the right of the state to revoke the
certificate as provided in this act.
(b) A foreign corporation with a valid certificate of
authority has the same but no greater rights and has the same
but no greater privileges as, and except as otherwise provided
by this act is subject to the same duties, restrictions,
penalties and liabilities now or later imposed on, a domestic
corporation of like character.
(c) This act does not authorize this state to regulate the
organization or internal affairs of a foreign corporation
authorized to transact business in this state.
17-16-1506. Corporate name of foreign corporation.
(a) If the corporate name of a foreign corporation does
not satisfy the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401, the foreign
corporation to obtain or maintain a certificate of authority to
transact business in this state may use a fictitious name to
transact business in this state if its real name is unavailable
and it delivers to the secretary of state for filing a copy of
the resolution of its board of directors, certified by its
secretary, adopting the fictitious name.
(b) Except as authorized by subsections (c) and (d) of
this section, the corporate name, including a fictitious name,
of a foreign corporation shall not be the same as, or
deceptively similar to the name of any trademark or service mark
registered in this state and shall be distinguishable upon the
records of the secretary of state from other business names as
required by W.S. 17-16-401.
(c) A foreign corporation may apply to the secretary of
state for authorization to use in this state the name of another
corporation, incorporated or authorized to do business in this
state, that is not distinguishable in accordance with the
provisions of W.S. 17-16-401(c).
(i) Reserved;
(ii) Reserved.
(d) A foreign corporation may use in this state the name,
including the fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign
corporation that is used in this state if the other corporation
is incorporated or authorized to transact business in this state
and the foreign corporation has:
(i) Merged with the other corporation; or
(ii) Been formed by reorganization of the other
corporation; or
(iii) Acquired all or substantially all of the
assets, including the corporate name, of the other corporation;
or
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(v) Has received the written consent of the other
corporation, which written consent also sets forth a description
of a proposed merger, consolidation, dissolution, amendment to
articles of incorporation or other intended corporate action
which establishes to the reasonable satisfaction of the
secretary of state that the coexistence of two (2) corporations
using the same name will not continue for more than one hundred
twenty (120) days.
(e) If a foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state changes its corporate name to one that
does not satisfy the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401, it may not
transact business in this state under the changed name until it
adopts a name satisfying the requirements of W.S. 17-16-401 and
obtains an amended certificate of authority under W.S.
17-16-1504.
17-16-1507. Registered office and registered agent of
foreign corporation.
(a) Each foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state shall continuously maintain in this
state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111; and
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(A) Reserved;
(B) Reserved;
(C) Reserved.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all foreign corporations.
17-16-1508. Reserved.
17-16-1509. Reserved.
17-16-1510. Reserved.
17-16-1511. Merger of foreign corporation authorized to
transact business in this state.
(a) Whenever a foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state shall be a party to a statutory merger
permitted by the laws of the state or country of incorporation,
it shall, within thirty (30) days after a merger becomes
effective, file with the secretary of state a current
certificate of evidence issued by the proper officer of the
state or country of incorporation which sets forth:
(i) The date of filing;
(ii) The names of each corporation involved and the
states of incorporation; and
(iii) The name of the surviving corporation.
(b) It shall not be necessary for the corporation to
procure either a new or amended certificate of authority to
transact business in this state unless the name of the
corporation is changed by merger or unless the corporation
desires to pursue in this state other or additional purposes
than those which it is then authorized to transact in this
state.
B. Withdrawal
17-16-1520. Withdrawal of foreign corporation.
(a) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state may not withdraw from this state until it obtains
a certificate of withdrawal from the secretary of state.
(b) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state may apply for a certificate of withdrawal by
delivering an application to the secretary of state for filing.
The application shall set forth:
(i) The name of the foreign corporation and the name
of the state or country under whose law it is incorporated;
(ii) That it is not transacting business in this
state and that it surrenders its authority to transact business
in this state;
(iii) That it revokes the authority of its registered
agent to accept service on its behalf and appoints the secretary
of state as its agent for service of process in any proceeding
based on a cause of action arising during the time it was
authorized to transact business in this state;
(iv) A mailing address and an email address to which
the secretary of state may provide a copy of any process served
on him under paragraph (iii) of this subsection; and
(v) A commitment to notify the secretary of state in
the future of any change in its mailing address and email
address.
(c) After the withdrawal of the corporation is effective,
service of process on the secretary of state under this section
is service on the foreign corporation. Upon receipt of process,
the secretary of state shall provide a copy of the process to
the foreign corporation at the mailing address or email address
set forth under subsection (b) of this section.
17-16-1521. Reserved.
17-16-1522. Reserved.
17-16-1523. Reserved.
C. Revocation of Certificate of Authority
17-16-1530. Grounds for revocation.
(a) The secretary of state may commence a proceeding under
W.S. 17-16-1531 to revoke the certificate of authority of a
foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state if:
(i) The corporation does not deliver its annual
reports or pay the annual license taxes to the secretary of
state when due pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1630;
(ii) Reserved;
(iii) The foreign corporation is without a registered
agent or registered office in this state;
(iv) The foreign corporation does not inform the
secretary of state under W.S. 17-28-102 or 17-28-103 that its
registered agent or registered office has changed, that its
registered agent has resigned, or that its registered office has
been discontinued within thirty (30) days of the change,
resignation or discontinuance;
(v) An incorporator, director, officer or agent of
the foreign corporation signed a document he knew was false in
any material respect with intent that the document be delivered
to the secretary of state for filing;
(vi) Reserved;
(vii) The corporation has failed to respond to a
valid and enforceable subpoena; or
(A) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing under this act with the
secretary of state; or
(B) Cannot be served either by the registered
agent or by mail or electronically by the secretary of state
acting as the agent for process.
(viii) It is in the public interest and the
corporation:
(A) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing under this act with the
secretary of state; or
(B) Cannot be served either by the registered
agent or by mail or electronically by the secretary of state
acting as the agent for process.
(ix) The foreign corporation has failed to pay any
penalties imposed under W.S. 17-28-109.
(b) Prior to commencing a proceeding under W.S. 17-16-1531
the secretary of state may classify a foreign corporation as
delinquent awaiting administrative revocation if the foreign
corporation meets any of the criteria in subsection (a) of this
section.
17-16-1531. Procedure for and effect of revocation.
(a) If the secretary of state determines that one (1) or
more grounds exist under W.S. 17-16-1530 for revocation of a
certificate of authority, he shall serve the foreign corporation
with written notice of his determination under W.S. 17-28-104.
(b) If the foreign corporation does not correct each
ground for revocation or demonstrate to the reasonable
satisfaction of the secretary of state that each ground
determined by the secretary of state does not exist within sixty
(60) days after service of the notice is perfected under W.S.
17-28-104, the secretary of state may revoke the foreign
corporation's certificate of authority by signing, either
manually or in facsimile, a certificate of revocation that
recites the ground or grounds for revocation and its effective
date. The secretary of state shall file the original of the
certificate and serve a copy on the foreign corporation under
W.S. 17-28-104.
(c) The authority of a foreign corporation to transact
business in this state ceases on the date shown on the
certificate revoking its certificate of authority.
(d) The secretary of state's revocation of a foreign
corporation's certificate of authority appoints the secretary of
state the foreign corporation's agent for service of process in
any proceeding based on a cause of action which arose during the
time the foreign corporation was authorized to transact business
in this state. Service of process on the secretary of state
under this subsection is service on the foreign corporation.
Upon receipt of process, the secretary of state shall either:
(i) Mail a copy of the process to the secretary of
the foreign corporation at its principal office shown in its
most recent annual report or in any subsequent communication
received from the corporation stating the current mailing
address of its principal office, or, if none are on file, in its
application for a certificate of authority; or
(ii) Electronically submit a copy of the process to
the foreign corporation's email address.
(e) Revocation of a foreign corporation's certificate of
authority does not terminate the authority of the registered
agent of the corporation.
17-16-1532. Appeal from revocation.
(a) A foreign corporation may appeal the secretary of
state's revocation of its certificate of authority pursuant to
W.S. 16-3-114, within thirty (30) days after service of the
certificate of revocation is perfected under W.S. 17-28-104.
The foreign corporation appeals by petitioning the court to set
aside the revocation and attaching to the petition copies of its
certificate of authority and the secretary of state's
certificate of revocation.
(b) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to reinstate the certificate of authority or may take any other
action the court considers appropriate.
(c) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
17-16-1533. Applicability of chapter to foreign limited
liability companies.
To the extent not inconsistent with the Wyoming Limited
Liability Company Act, W.S. 17-29-101 through 17-29-1105 and the
provisions of this chapter, a limited liability company
organized in another jurisdiction shall do business in Wyoming
by complying with the applicable provisions of this article.
The certificate of authority of a limited liability company
organized in another jurisdiction shall be revoked and
reinstated as provided in this act.
17-16-1534. Applicability of chapter 23 to foreign
statutory trust companies.
To the extent not inconsistent with the Wyoming Statutory Trust
Act, W.S. 17-23-101 through 17-23-302, a statutory trust as
defined in W.S. 17-23-102(a)(v), which is organized in another
jurisdiction may do business in Wyoming by complying with W.S.
17-16-1501 through 17-16-1507, 17-16-1520 and 17-16-1530 through
17-16-1532.
D. Reinstatement
17-16-1535. Reinstatement following revocation of
certificate of authority.
(a) An officer or other person with proper authority at
the time a foreign corporation had its certificate of authority
revoked under W.S. 17-16-1531 may apply to the secretary of
state for reinstatement of its certificate of authority within
two (2) years after the effective date of revocation.
Reinstatement may be denied by the secretary of state if the
corporation has been the subject of a secretary of state and law
enforcement investigation pertaining to fraud or any other
violation of state or federal law, or if there is other reason
to believe the corporation was engaged in illegal operations.
The application shall:
(i) Recite the name of the corporation and the
effective date of the revocation of its certificate of
authority;
(ii) State that the ground or grounds for revocation
either did not exist or have been eliminated;
(iii) Reserved;
(iv) If the foreign corporation's certificate of
authority was revoked for failing to deliver its annual report
or pay the annual license taxes to the secretary of state when
due pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1630, include payment of fees and
taxes then delinquent and a reinstatement certificate fee
prescribed pursuant to W.S. 17-16-122;
(v) If the foreign corporation's certificate of
authority was revoked for failure to maintain a registered
agent, include payment of a two hundred fifty dollar ($250.00)
reinstatement fee and payment of any fees and taxes then
delinquent; and
(vi) Include proof that the foreign corporation is
currently in good standing in the state of formation.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section and that the information is correct, he shall
cancel the certificate of revocation and prepare a certificate
of reinstatement that recites his determination and the
effective date of reinstatement, file the original of the
certificate, and serve a copy on the corporation under W.S.
17-28-104.
(c) When the reinstatement is effective, it relates back
to and takes effect as of the effective date of the revocation
of the certificate of authority and the foreign corporation
resumes carrying on its business as if the revocation had never
occurred.
(d) The foreign corporation shall retain its registered
corporate name during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
(e) If more than two (2) years has elapsed since the
revocation of a foreign corporation's certificate of authority,
the foreign corporation may reapply for a certificate of
authority to transact business pursuant to W.S. 17-16-1503. If
the foreign corporation continues transacting business in
Wyoming after the two (2) year period elapsed, the foreign
corporation shall be subject to the penalty for transacting
business without authority as set forth in W.S. 17-16-1502(d).
(f) A person who files any document under this section
without proper corporate authority to do so is in violation of
W.S. 6-5-308.
17-16-1536. Appeal from denial of reinstatement.
(a) If the secretary of state denies a foreign
corporation's application for reinstatement following
administrative revocation, he shall serve the corporation under
W.S. 17-28-104 with a written notice that explains the reason or
reasons for denial.
(b) The foreign corporation may appeal the denial of
reinstatement to the district court within thirty (30) days
after service of the notice of denial is perfected. The foreign
corporation appeals by petitioning the court to set aside the
revocation and attaching to the petition copies of the secretary
of state's certificate of revocation, the foreign corporation's
application for reinstatement and the secretary of state's
notice of denial.
(c) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to reinstate the foreign corporation's certificate of authority
or may take other action the court considers appropriate.
(d) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
ARTICLE 16 - RECORDS AND REPORTS
A. Records
17-16-1601. Corporate records.
(a) A corporation shall keep as permanent records minutes
of all meetings of its shareholders and board of directors, a
record of all actions taken by the shareholders or board of
directors without a meeting, and a record of all actions taken
by a committee of the board of directors in place of the board
of directors on behalf of the corporation.
(b) A corporation shall maintain appropriate accounting
records.
(c) A record of shareholders administered by or on behalf
of a corporation shall be kept in a form that permits
preparation of a list of the identities of all shareholders, in
alphabetical or numerical order by class of shares showing the
number and class of shares held by each. The list shall also
show each shareholder's physical mailing address, if the
identity of a shareholder on the list consists of the
shareholder's name, and each shareholder's authorized means of
receipt for electronic transmissions, if the identity of a
shareholder on the list consists of the shareholder's data
address. A record of shareholders may show both the
shareholder's name and data address.
(d) Records administered by or on behalf of, or maintained
by, a corporation may be kept on, or by means of, or be in the
form of any information storage device or method or any one (1)
or more distributed or other electronic networks or databases
provided that the records are kept in written form or in another
form capable of conversion into written form within a reasonable
time.
(e) A corporation shall keep a copy of the following
records at its principal office:
(i) Its articles or restated articles of
incorporation and all amendments to them currently in effect;
(ii) Its bylaws or restated bylaws and all amendments
to them currently in effect;
(iii) Resolutions adopted by its board of directors
creating one (1) or more classes or series of shares, and fixing
their relative rights, preferences and limitations, if shares
issued pursuant to those resolutions are outstanding;
(iv) The minutes of all shareholders' meetings, and
records of all action taken by shareholders without a meeting,
for the past three (3) years;
(v) All written communications to shareholders
generally within the past three (3) years, including the
financial statements furnished for the past three (3) years
under W.S. 17-16-1620;
(vi) A list of the names and business addresses of
its current directors and officers; and
(vii) Its most recent annual report delivered to the
secretary of state under W.S. 17-16-1630.
17-16-1602. Inspection of records by shareholders.
(a) A shareholder of a corporation is entitled to inspect
and copy, during regular business hours at the corporation's
principal office, any of the records of the corporation
described in W.S. 17-16-1601(e) if the shareholder gives the
corporation written notice of the shareholder's demand at least
five (5) business days before the date on which the shareholder
wishes to inspect and copy.
(b) A shareholder who has been of record for at least six
(6) months immediately preceding his demand and who shall be the
holder of record of at least five percent (5%) of all the
outstanding shares of a corporation is entitled to inspect and
copy, during regular business hours at a reasonable location
specified by the corporation, any of the following records of
the corporation if the shareholder meets the requirements of
subsection (c) of this section and gives the corporation written
notice of the shareholder's demand at least five (5) business
days before the date on which the shareholder wishes to inspect
and copy:
(i) Excerpts from minutes of any meeting of the board
of directors, records of any action of a committee of the board
of directors while acting in place of the board of directors on
behalf of the corporation, minutes of any meeting of the
shareholders, and records of action taken by the shareholders or
board of directors without a meeting, to the extent not subject
to inspection under W.S. 17-16-1602(a);
(ii) Accounting records of the corporation; and
(iii) The record of shareholders.
(c) A shareholder may inspect and copy the records
described in subsection (b) of this section only if:
(i) The shareholder's demand is made in good faith
and for a proper purpose;
(ii) The shareholder describes with reasonable
particularity his purpose and the records he desires to inspect;
and
(iii) The records are directly connected with the
shareholder's purpose.
(d) The right of inspection granted by this section may
not be abolished or limited, but may be expanded, by a
corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws.
(e) This section does not affect:
(i) The right of a shareholder to inspect records
under W.S. 17-16-720 or, if the shareholder is in litigation
with the corporation, to the same extent as any other litigant;
or
(ii) The power of a court, independently of this act,
to compel the production of corporate records for examination.
(f) For purposes of this section, "shareholder" includes a
beneficial owner whose shares are held in a voting trust or by a
nominee on his behalf.
17-16-1603. Scope of inspection right.
(a) A shareholder's agent or attorney has the same
inspection and copying rights as the shareholder he represents.
(b) The right to copy records under W.S. 17-16-1602
includes, if reasonable, the right to receive copies by
xerographic or other means, including copies through an
electronic transmission if available and so requested by the
shareholder.
(c) The corporation may comply with a shareholder's demand
to inspect the record of shareholders under W.S.
17-16-1602(b)(iii) by providing the shareholder with a list of
its shareholders that was compiled no earlier than the date of
the shareholder's demand.
(d) The corporation may impose a reasonable charge,
covering the costs of labor and material, for copies of any
documents provided to the shareholder. The charge may not
exceed the estimated cost of production, reproduction or
transmission of the records.
17-16-1604. Court ordered inspection.
(a) If a corporation does not allow a shareholder who
complies with W.S. 17-16-1602(a) to inspect and copy any records
required by that subsection to be available for inspection, the
district court of the county where the corporation's principal
office, or, if none in this state, its registered office, is
located may summarily order inspection and copying of the
records demanded at the corporation's expense upon application
of the shareholder.
(b) If a corporation does not within a reasonable time
allow a shareholder to inspect and copy any other record, the
shareholder who complies with W.S. 17-16-1602(b) and (c) may
apply to the district court in the county where the
corporation's principal office, or, if none in this state, its
registered office, is located for an order to permit inspection
and copying of the records demanded. The court shall dispose of
an application under this subsection on an expedited basis.
(c) If the court orders inspection and copying of the
records demanded, it shall also order the corporation to pay the
shareholder's expenses, including reasonable counsel fees,
incurred to obtain the order unless the corporation proves that
it refused inspection in good faith because it had a reasonable
basis for doubt about the right of the shareholder to inspect
the records demanded.
(d) If the court orders inspection and copying of the
records demanded, it may impose reasonable restrictions on the
use or distribution of the records by the demanding shareholder.
17-16-1605. Inspection of records by directors.
(a) A director of a corporation is entitled to inspect and
copy the books, records and documents of the corporation at any
reasonable time to the extent reasonably related to the
performance of the director's duties as a director, including
duties as a member of a committee, but not for any other purpose
or in any manner that would violate any duty to the corporation.
(b) The district court of the county where the
corporation's principal office, or if none in this state, its
registered office, is located may order inspection and copying
of the books, records and documents at the corporation's
expense, upon application of a director who has been refused
inspection rights, unless the corporation establishes that the
director is not entitled to those inspection rights. The court
shall dispose of an application under this subsection on an
expedited basis.
(c) If an order is issued, the court may include
provisions protecting the corporation from undue burden or
expense, and prohibiting the director from using information
obtained upon exercise of the inspection rights in a manner that
would violate a duty to the corporation, and may also order the
corporation to reimburse the director for the director's
expenses, including reasonable counsel fees, incurred in
connection with the application unless the corporation proves
that it refused inspection in good faith because it had a
reasonable basis for doubt about the right of the director to
inspect the records demanded.
17-16-1606. Exception to notice requirement.
(a) Whenever notice is required to be given under any
provision of this act to any shareholder, the notice shall not
be required to be given if:
(i) Notice of two (2) consecutive annual meetings,
and all notices of meetings during the period between the two
(2) consecutive annual meetings, have been sent to the
shareholder at the shareholder's address as shown on the records
of the corporation and have been returned undeliverable; or
(ii) All, but not less than two (2), payments of
dividends on securities during a twelve (12) month period, or
two (2) consecutive payments of dividends on securities during a
period of more than twelve (12) months, have been sent to the
shareholder at the shareholder's address as shown on the records
of the corporation and have been returned undeliverable.
(b) If any shareholder shall deliver to the corporation a
written notice setting forth the shareholder's then current
address, the requirement that notice be given to the shareholder
shall be reinstated.
B. Reports
17-16-1620. Financial statements for shareholders.
(a) A corporation shall furnish, upon request, to its
shareholders annual financial statements, which may be
consolidated or combined statements of the corporation and one
(1) or more of its subsidiaries, as appropriate, that include a
balance sheet as of the end of the fiscal year, an income
statement for that year, and a statement of changes in
shareholders' equity for the year unless that information
appears elsewhere in the financial statements. If financial
statements are prepared for the corporation on the basis of
generally accepted accounting principles, the annual financial
statements shall also be prepared on that basis. If detailed
financial statements are not prepared for the corporation on an
annual basis, then a copy of its federal income tax return will
satisfy the requirements of this section.
(b) If the annual financial statements are reported upon
by a public accountant, his report shall accompany them. If
not, the statements shall be accompanied by a statement of the
president or the person responsible for the corporation's
accounting records:
(i) Stating his reasonable belief whether the
statements were prepared on the basis of generally accepted
accounting principles and, if not, describing the basis of
preparation; and
(ii) Describing any respects in which the statements
were not prepared on a basis of accounting consistent with the
statements prepared for the preceding year.
(c) A corporation shall mail, upon request, the annual
financial statements to each shareholder within one hundred
twenty (120) days after the close of each fiscal year.
Thereafter, on written request from a shareholder who was not
mailed the statements, the corporation shall mail the
shareholder the latest financial statements.
17-16-1621. Reserved.
17-16-1622. Other reports to shareholders.
(a) If a corporation indemnifies or advances expenses to a
director under W.S. 17-16-851 through 17-16-854 in connection
with a proceeding by or in the right of the corporation, the
corporation shall report the indemnification or advance in
writing to the shareholders with or before the notice of the
next shareholders' meeting.
(b) If a corporation issues or authorizes the issuance of
shares for promissory notes or for promises to render services
in the future, the corporation shall report in writing to the
shareholders the number of shares authorized or issued, and the
consideration received by the corporation, with or before the
notice of the next shareholders' meeting.
C. Annual Reports and License Taxes
17-16-1630. Filing of reports and payment of tax required;
amount of tax; exemptions; records.
(a) Every corporation organized under the laws of this
state and every foreign corporation which obtains the right to
transact and carry on business within this state (except banks,
insurance companies and savings and loan associations) shall
file with the secretary of state on or before the first day of
the month of registration of every year a certification, under
the penalty of perjury, by its treasurer or other fiscal agent
setting forth its capital, property and assets located and
employed in the state of Wyoming. The statement shall give the
names and addresses of its officers and directors and the
address of its principal office. On or before the first day of
the month of registration of every year the corporation shall
pay to the secretary of state in addition to all other statutory
taxes and fees a license tax based upon the sum of its capital,
property and assets reported, of sixty dollars ($60.00) or two-
tenths of one mill on the dollar ($.0002), whichever is greater.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-16-1630(a) shall be modified
as follows:
(i) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(ii) Any corporation engaged in the public calling of
carrying goods, passengers or information interstate is not
required to comply with the provisions of W.S. 17-16-1630(a)
except to the extent of capital, property and assets used in
intrastate business in this state;
(iii) The value of all mines and mining claims from
which gold, silver and other precious metals, soda, saline,
coal, mineral oil or other valuable deposit, is or shall be
produced is deemed equivalent to the assessed value of the gross
product thereof, for the previous year;
(iv) The assessed value of any property shall be its
actual value.
(c) Financial information in the annual report shall be
current as of the end of the corporation's fiscal year
immediately preceding the date the annual report is executed on
behalf of the corporation. All other information in the annual
report shall be current as of the date the annual report is
executed on behalf of the corporation.
(d) If an annual report does not contain the information
required by this section, the secretary of state shall promptly
notify the reporting domestic or foreign corporation in writing
and return the report to it for correction.
(e) Every corporation registered or authorized to do
business in the state of Wyoming shall preserve for three (3)
years at its principal place of business, suitable records and
books as may be necessary to determine the amount of tax for
which it is liable under this act. All records and books shall
be available for examination by the secretary of state or his
designee during regular business hours except as arranged by
mutual consent.
(f) In addition to other fees provided under this section,
each corporation shall pay one hundred dollars ($100.00), except
for foreign corporations which shall pay one hundred fifty
dollars ($150.00), to the secretary of state for initial
incorporation or qualification to do business in Wyoming.
17-16-1631. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
17-16-1632. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
17-16-1633. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
ARTICLE 17 - TRANSITION PROVISIONS
17-16-1701. Application to existing domestic corporations.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
this act applies to domestic corporations in existence on its
effective date that were incorporated under any general statute
of this state providing for incorporation of corporations for
profit if power to amend or repeal the statute under which the
corporation was incorporated was reserved.
(b) For corporations incorporated in Wyoming prior to the
effective date of this act, the cumulative voting and
shareholder preemptive rights provisions contained in former
W.S. 17-1-123 and 17-1-130 are continued for a period of four
(4) years from the effective date of this act unless the
corporation amends its articles of incorporation to provide
otherwise.
17-16-1702. Applications to qualified foreign
corporations.
A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state on the effective date of this act is subject to this act
but is not required to obtain a new certificate of authority to
transact business under this act.
17-16-1703. Saving provisions.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the repeal of a statute by this act does not affect:
(i) The operation of the statute or any action taken
under it before its repeal;
(ii) Any ratification, right, remedy, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under the
statute before its repeal;
(iii) Any violation of the statute, or any penalty,
forfeiture or punishment incurred because of the violation,
before its repeal; or
(iv) Any proceeding, reorganization or dissolution
commenced under the statute before its repeal, and the
proceeding, reorganization or dissolution may be completed in
accordance with the statute as if it had not been repealed.
(b) If a penalty or punishment imposed for violation of a
statute repealed by this act is reduced by this act, the penalty
or punishment if not already imposed shall be imposed in
accordance with this act.
17-16-1704. Reserved.
17-16-1705. Reserved.
17-16-1706. Reserved.
17-16-1720. Transfer of a Wyoming corporation to another
jurisdiction.
(a) A corporation incorporated, domesticated or continued
under this act may, if authorized by resolution duly adopted as
set forth in subsection (g) of this section, and by the laws of
any other jurisdiction, within or without the United States,
apply to the proper officer of the other jurisdiction for a
certificate of registration, and to the secretary of state of
this state for a certificate of transfer. The application for
certificate of transfer shall set forth the following:
(i) The name of the corporation immediately prior to
the transfer, and if that name is unavailable for use in the
foreign jurisdiction or the corporation desires to change its
name in connection with the transfer, the name by which the
corporation will be known in the foreign jurisdiction;
(ii) A statement of the jurisdiction to which the
corporation is to be transferred;
(iii) A statement that the corporation shall
surrender its certificate of incorporation under this act upon
the effectiveness of the transfer;
(iv) A statement that the transfer was duly approved
by the directors and the shareholders in the manner required
under subsection (g) of this section; and
(v) Any other terms and conditions of the transfer,
including any desired amendments to the articles of
incorporation of the corporation following its transfer.
(b) The secretary of state shall require that the
corporation maintain within the state an agent for service of
process for at least one (1) year after the transfer is effected
and shall impose any conditions he considers appropriate for the
protection of creditors and stockholders, including the
provision of notice to the public of the application described
in subsection (a) of this section, the provision of a bond or a
deposit of funds in an appropriate depository located in Wyoming
and subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of Wyoming, and if
such conditions are not met, the secretary of state may refuse
to issue a certificate of transfer.
(c) The secretary of state, upon compliance by the
applicant and the secretary with subsections (a) and (b) of this
section and receipt of payment of the special toll charge
prescribed by subsection (e) of this section shall immediately
transmit a notice of issuance of a certificate of transfer to
the proper officer of the jurisdiction to which the corporation
is transferred.
(d) Upon issuance of a certificate of transfer, the
corporation shall be continued as if it had been incorporated
under the laws of the other jurisdiction and becomes a
corporation under the laws of the other jurisdiction upon
issuance by such jurisdiction of a certificate of registration.
(e) Every corporation organized, domesticated or continued
under the laws of this state in order to receive a certificate
of transfer pursuant to subsection (c) of this section shall pay
to the secretary of state, in addition to all other statutory
taxes and fees, a special toll charge of sixty dollars ($60.00).
(f) Repealed By Laws 2009, Ch. 115, § 3.
(g) A resolution to transfer the corporation to another
jurisdiction shall be adopted by the board of directors, and
shall thereafter be submitted to the shareholders for their
approval. The board of directors shall also transmit to the
shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the
resolution, unless the board of directors makes a determination
that because of conflicts of interest or other special
circumstances it should not make such a recommendation, in which
case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders
the basis for that determination. The board of directors may
condition its submission of the resolution to the shareholders
on any basis. If the approval of the shareholders is to be
given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each
shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of
shareholders at which the resolution for transfer is to be
submitted for approval. The notice shall contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the resolution and of the
articles of incorporation of the corporation as they will be in
effect in the new jurisdiction immediately after the transfer.
Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of directors
requires a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be
present, approval of the resolution requires the affirmative
vote of a majority of the shareholders at a meeting at which a
quorum, consisting of a majority of the votes entitled to be
cast, is present, and, if any class or series of shares is
entitled to vote as a separate group on the resolution, the
approval of each such separate voting group at a meeting at
which a quorum of the voting group consisting of at least a
majority of the votes entitled to be cast on the resolution by
that voting group exists. Separate voting by voting groups is
required to the extent the same would be required for a proposed
amendment to the articles of incorporation.
(h) The corporation may represent to the proper officer of
the jurisdiction to which the corporation is transferred that
the laws of the state of Wyoming permit such transfer, and may
describe the permission extended by this section as authorizing
the domestication, continuance or other transfer of domicile as
may be required by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction in order
for the corporation to be accepted in that jurisdiction,
provided that the corporation may not misrepresent the
requirements or effects of the provisions of this section.
ARTICLE 18 - DOMESTICATION AND CONTINUANCE OF FOREIGN
CORPORATIONS; TRANSFER OF DOMESTIC CORPORATIONS
A. Domestication
17-16-1801. Domestication of foreign corporations.
Any corporation incorporated under the laws of any of the
several states of the United States for any purpose except
acting as an insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi), or
acting as a financial institution as described by W.S.
13-1-101(a)(ix) may become a domestic corporation of this state
by delivering or causing to be delivered to the secretary of
state articles of domestication. Upon filing the articles of
domestication, the secretary of state shall issue to the foreign
corporation a certificate of domestication which shall continue
the corporation as if it had been incorporated under this act.
The articles of domestication, upon being filed by the secretary
of state, constitute the articles of the domesticated foreign
corporation and it shall thereafter have all the powers and
privileges and be subjected to all the duties and limitations
granted and imposed upon domestic corporations under the
provisions of the Wyoming Business Corporation Act. A
corporation does not become a resident for the purpose of W.S.
16-6-101 through 16-6-118 solely because it becomes a domestic
corporation under this section.
17-16-1802. Application for certificate of domestication;
articles of domestication.
(a) A foreign corporation, in order to procure a
certificate of domestication shall file articles of
domestication with the secretary of state, which articles shall
include and set forth:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
incorporation and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization, and a certificate of
good standing not more than thirty (30) days old;
(ii) The name of the corporation and the jurisdiction
under the laws of which it is incorporated;
(iii) The date of incorporation and the period of
duration of the corporation;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
corporation and the jurisdiction under the laws of which it is
incorporated;
(v) The address of the proposed registered office of
the corporation in this state, and the name of its proposed
registered agent in this state at that address;
(vi) The purpose or purposes of the corporation which
it proposes to pursue in the transaction of business in this
state;
(vii) The names and addresses of the directors and
officers of the corporation;
(viii) A statement of the aggregate number of shares
or other ownership units which the corporation has authority to
issue, itemized by classes, par value of shares, shares without
par value and series, if any, within a class;
(ix) A statement of the aggregate number of issued
shares or other ownership units itemized by classes, par value
of shares, shares without par value and series, if any, within a
class;
(x) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of this state in compliance with the requirement of
article 10, section 5 of the Wyoming constitution;
(xi) Any additional information as may be necessary
or appropriate to enable the secretary of state to determine
whether the corporation is entitled to a certificate of
domestication evidencing its authority to transact business in
this state, and to determine and assess the fees and license
taxes under the laws of this state.
B. Continuance
17-16-1810. Continuance of foreign corporations.
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, any
corporation incorporated for any purpose except acting as an
insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi), or acting as a
financial institution as described by W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix) under
the laws of any jurisdiction other than this state may, if the
jurisdiction will acknowledge the corporation's termination of
domicile in the foreign jurisdiction, apply to the secretary of
state for registration under this act, thus continuing the
foreign corporation in Wyoming as if it had been incorporated in
this state. The secretary of state may issue a certificate of
registration upon receipt of an application supported by
articles of continuance as provided by this act together with
the statements, information and documents set out in subsection
(c) of this section. The certificate of registration may then be
issued subject to any limitations and conditions and may contain
any provisions as may appear proper to the secretary of state.
(b) The secretary of state shall cause notice of issuance
of a certificate of registration to be given forthwith to the
proper officer of the jurisdiction in which the corporation was
previously incorporated.
(c) The articles of continuance filed by a foreign
corporation with the secretary of state shall contain:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
incorporation and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization;
(ii) The name of the corporation and the jurisdiction
under the laws of which it is incorporated;
(iii) The date of incorporation and the period of
duration of the corporation;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
corporation;
(v) The address of the proposed registered office of
the corporation in this state and the name of its proposed
registered agent in this state at the address;
(vi) The purpose or purposes of the corporation which
it proposes to pursue in the transaction of business in this
state;
(vii) The names and respective business addresses of
the directors and officers of the corporation;
(viii) A statement of the aggregate number of shares
or other ownership units which the corporation has authority to
issue, itemized by classes, par value of shares, shares without
par value and series, if any, within a class;
(ix) A statement of the aggregate number of issued
shares or other ownership units itemized by classes, par value
of shares, shares without par value and series, if any, within a
class;
(x) Such additional information concerning capital
structure or financial status as the secretary of state deems
necessary to establish fees;
(xi) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of this state in compliance with the requirements
of article 10, section 5 of the Wyoming constitution;
(xii) Any additional information necessary or
appropriate to enable the secretary of state to determine
whether the corporation is entitled to a certificate of
registration evidencing its authority to transact business in
the state and to determine and to assess any fees and taxes
under the laws of this state;
(xiii) Any additional information permitted in
articles of incorporation under W.S. 17-16-202.
(d) The application shall be executed by the corporation
by its president or other officer, director, trustee, manager or
person performing functions equivalent to those of a president
and who is authorized to execute the application on behalf of
the corporation and shall be verified by the officer signing the
application.
(e) The provisions of the articles of continuance may,
without expressly so stating, vary from the provisions of the
corporation's articles of incorporation or equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization, if the variation is
one which a corporation incorporated under the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act could effect by way of amendment to its articles
of incorporation. Upon issuance of a certificate of continuance
by the secretary of state, the articles of continuance shall be
deemed to be the articles of incorporation of the continued
corporation. The corporation may elect to incorporate by
reference in the articles of continuance its basic corporate
charter or other authorization which had been adopted by the
corporation in the foreign jurisdiction, in order to permit the
same to continue to act as the articles of incorporation of the
corporation, provided, however, that such basic corporate
charter or other authorization shall be deemed amended to the
extent necessary to make the same conform to the laws of Wyoming
and to the provisions of the articles of continuance.
(f) Except for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through
16-6-118, the existence of any corporation heretofore or
hereafter issued a certificate of continuation under this act
shall be deemed to have commenced on the date the corporation
commenced its existence in the jurisdiction in which the
corporation was first formed, incorporated or otherwise came
into being. The laws of Wyoming shall apply to a corporation
continuing under this act to the same extent as if the
corporation had been incorporated under the laws of Wyoming from
and after the issuance of a certificate of continuation under
this act by the secretary of state to the corporation. When a
foreign corporation is continued as a corporation under this
act, such continuance shall not affect the corporation's
ownership of its property or liability for any existing
obligations, causes of action, claims, pending or threatened
prosecutions or civil or administrative actions, convictions,
rulings, orders, judgments, or any other characteristics or
aspects of the corporation and its existence.
(g) A share of stock of a foreign corporation issued
before the corporation's continuance in Wyoming is deemed to
have been issued in compliance with the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act and the provisions of the articles of
continuance, irrespective of whether the share is fully paid and
nonassessable, and irrespective of any designation, rights,
privileges, restrictions or conditions set out on or referred to
in the certificate representing the share, and irrespective of
whether the certificate is in registered or bearer form.
Continuance under this act does not deprive a stockholder of any
right or privilege that he claims under, or relieve the
stockholder of any liability in respect of, an issued share.
(h) As used in this section, the term "corporation" shall
include any incorporated organization, foundation, trust,
association, or similar entity which appears to the secretary of
state to possess characteristics sufficiently similar to those
of a corporation organized under the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act.
(j) This act applies to all corporations continued in
Wyoming on the effective date of this act. The repeal of any
statute or part thereof by this act shall have such effect as is
provided in W.S. 17-16-1703.
CHAPTER 17 - CLOSE CORPORATION SUPPLEMENT
ARTICLE 1 - PROVISIONS
Subarticle A. Creation
17-17-101. Short title.
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Statutory Close Corporation Supplement."
17-17-102. Application of Wyoming Business Corporation Act
and the provisions of W.S. 17-3-101 through 17-3-104.
(a) The Wyoming Business Corporation Act applies to
statutory close corporations to the extent not inconsistent with
the provisions of this chapter.
(b) This chapter applies to a professional corporation
organized under W.S. 17-3-101 through 17-3-104 whose articles of
incorporation contain the statement required by W.S.
17-17-103(a), except insofar as W.S. 17-3-101 through 17-3-104
contain inconsistent provisions.
(c) This chapter does not repeal or modify any statute or
rule of law that is or would apply to a corporation that is
organized under the Wyoming Business Corporation Act and the
provisions of W.S. 17-3-101 through 17-3-104 and that does not
elect to become a statutory close corporation under W.S.
17-17-103.
17-17-103. Definition and election of statutory close
corporation status.
(a) A statutory close corporation is a corporation whose
articles of incorporation contain a statement that the
corporation is a statutory close corporation.
(b) A corporation having thirty-five (35) or fewer
shareholders may become a statutory close corporation by
amending its articles of incorporation to include the statement
required by subsection (a) of this section. For corporations
formed prior to January 1, 1990, the amendment shall be approved
by all of the holders of the votes of each class or series of
shares of the corporation, whether or not otherwise entitled to
vote on amendments. For corporations formed on or after January
1, 1990, the amendment must be approved by the holders of at
least two-thirds (2/3) of the votes of each class or series of
shares of the corporation, voting as separate voting groups,
whether or not otherwise entitled to vote on amendments. If the
amendment is adopted, a shareholder who voted against the
amendment is entitled to assert dissenters' rights under W.S.
17-16-1301 through 17-16-1331.
Subarticle B. Shares
17-17-110. Notice of statutory close corporations status
on issued shares.
(a) The following statement must appear conspicuously on
each share certificate issued by a statutory close corporation:
The rights of shareholders in a statutory close corporation may
differ materially from the rights of shareholders in other
corporations. Copies of the articles of incorporation and
bylaws, shareholders' agreements, and other documents, any of
which may restrict transfers and affect voting and other rights,
may be obtained by a shareholder on written request to the
corporation.
(b) Within a reasonable time after the issuance or
transfer of uncertificated shares, the corporation shall send to
the shareholders a written notice containing the information
required by subsection (a) of this section.
(c) The notice required by this section satisfies all
requirements of this chapter and of W.S. 17-16-627 that notice
of share transfer restrictions be given.
(d) A person claiming an interest in shares of a statutory
close corporation which has complied with the notice requirement
of this section is bound by the documents referred to in the
notice. A person claiming an interest in shares of a statutory
close corporation which has not complied with the notice
requirement of this section is bound by any documents of which
he, or a person through whom he claims, has knowledge or notice.
(e) A corporation shall provide to any shareholder upon
his written request and without charge copies of provisions that
restrict transfer or affect voting or other rights of
shareholders appearing in articles of incorporation, bylaws, or
shareholders' or voting trust agreements filed with the
corporation.
17-17-111. Share transfer prohibition.
(a) An interest in shares of a statutory close corporation
may not be voluntarily or involuntarily transferred, by
operation of law or otherwise, except to the extent permitted by
the articles of incorporation or under W.S. 17-17-112 or
pursuant to a buy-sell agreement entered into by all the
shareholders.
(b) Except to the extent the articles of incorporation
provide otherwise, this section does not apply to a transfer:
(i) To the corporation or to any other holder of the
same class or series of shares;
(ii) To members of the shareholder's immediate
family, or to a trust, all of whose beneficiaries are members of
the shareholder's immediate family, which immediate family
consists of his spouse, parents, lineal descendants, including
adopted children and stepchildren, and the spouse of any lineal
descendant, and brothers and sisters;
(iii) That has been approved in writing by all of the
holders of the corporation's shares having general voting
rights;
(iv) To a personal representative upon the death of a
shareholder or to a trustee or receiver as the result of a
bankruptcy, insolvency, dissolution or similar proceeding
brought by or against a shareholder;
(v) By merger, consolidation or share exchange under
W.S. 17-16-1101 through 17-16-1114, or an exchange of existing
shares for other shares of a different class or series in the
corporation;
(vi) By a pledge as collateral for a loan that does
not grant the pledgee any voting rights possessed by the
pledgor; or
(vii) Made after termination of the corporation's
status as a statutory close corporation.
17-17-112. Share transfer after first refusal by
corporation.
(a) A person desiring to transfer shares of a statutory
close corporation subject to the transfer prohibition of W.S.
17-17-111 must first offer them to the corporation by obtaining
an offer to purchase the shares for cash from a third person who
is eligible to purchase the shares under subsection (b) of this
section. The offer by the third person must be in writing and
state the offeror's name and address, the number and class, or
series, of shares offered, the offering price per share, and the
other terms of the offer.
(b) A third person is eligible to purchase the shares if:
(i) He is eligible to become a qualified shareholder
under any federal or state tax statute the corporation has
adopted and he agrees in writing not to terminate his
qualification without the approval of the remaining
shareholders; and
(ii) His purchase of the shares will not impose a
personal holding company tax or similar federal or state penalty
tax on the corporation.
(c) The person desiring to transfer shares shall deliver
the offer to the corporation, and by doing so offers to sell the
shares to the corporation on the terms of the offer. Within
twenty (20) days after the corporation receives the offer, the
corporation shall call a special shareholders' meeting, to be
held not more than forty (40) days after the call, to decide
whether the corporation should purchase all, but not less than
all, of the offered shares. The offer must be approved by the
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of votes entitled
to be cast at the meeting, excluding votes in respect of the
shares covered by the offer.
(d) The corporation must deliver to the offering
shareholder written notice of acceptance within seventy-five
(75) days after receiving the offer or the offer is rejected.
If the corporation makes a counteroffer, the shareholder must
deliver to the corporation written notice of acceptance within
fifteen (15) days after receiving the counteroffer or the
counteroffer is rejected. If the corporation accepts the
original offer or the shareholder accepts the corporation's
counteroffer, the shareholder shall deliver to the corporation
duly endorsed certificates for the shares, or instruct the
corporation in writing to transfer the shares if uncertificated,
within twenty (20) days after the effective date of the notice
of acceptance. The corporation may specifically enforce the
shareholder's delivery or instruction obligation under this
subsection.
(e) A corporation accepting an offer to purchase shares
under this section may allocate some or all of the shares to one
(1) or more of its shareholders or to other persons if all the
shareholders voting in favor of the purchase approve the
allocation. If the corporation has more than one (1) class or
series of shares, however, the remaining holders of the class or
series of shares being purchased are entitled to a first option
to purchase the shares not purchased by the corporation in
proportion to their shareholdings or in some other proportion
agreed to by all the shareholders participating in the purchase.
(f) If an offer to purchase shares under this section is
rejected, the offering shareholder, for a period of one hundred
twenty (120) days after the corporation received his offer, is
entitled to transfer to the third person offeror all, but not
less than all, of the offered shares in accordance with the
terms of his offer to the corporation.
17-17-113. Attempted share transfer in breach of
prohibition.
(a) An attempt to transfer shares in a statutory close
corporation in violation of a prohibition against transfer
binding on the transferee is ineffective.
(b) An attempt to transfer shares in a statutory close
corporation in violation of a prohibition against transfer that
is not binding on the transferee, either because the notice
required by W.S. 17-17-110 was not given or because the
prohibition is held unenforceable by a court, gives the
corporation an option to purchase the shares from the transferee
for the same price and on the same terms that he purchased them.
To exercise its option, the corporation must give the transferee
written notice within thirty (30) days after they are presented
for registration in the transferee's name. The corporation may
specifically enforce the transferee's sale obligation upon
exercise of its purchase option.
17-17-114. Compulsory purchase of shares after death of
shareholder.
(a) This section, and W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117,
apply to a statutory close corporation only if so provided in
its articles of incorporation. If these sections apply, the
personal representative of the estate or the surviving joint
tenant of a deceased shareholder may require the corporation to
purchase or cause to be purchased all, but not less than all, of
the decedent's shares or jointly owned shares or to be
dissolved.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117 may
be modified only if the modification is set forth or referred to
in the articles of incorporation.
(c) An amendment to the articles of incorporation to
provide for application of W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117, or
to modify or delete the provisions of these sections, must be
approved by the holders of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the
votes of each class or series of shares of the statutory close
corporation, voting as separate voting groups, whether or not
otherwise entitled to vote on amendments. If the corporation
has no shareholders when the amendment is proposed, it must be
approved by at least two-thirds (2/3) of the subscribers for
shares, if any, or, if none, by all of the incorporators.
(d) A shareholder who votes against an amendment to modify
or delete the provisions of W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117 is
entitled to dissenters' rights under W.S. 17-16-1301 through
17-16-1331 if the amendment upon adoption terminates or
substantially alters his existing rights under these sections to
have his shares purchased.
(e) A shareholder may waive his and his estate's rights
under W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117 by a signed writing.
(f) W.S. 17-17-115 through 17-17-117 do not prohibit any
other agreement providing for the purchase of shares upon a
shareholder's death, nor do they prevent a shareholder from
enforcing any remedy he has independent of these sections.
17-17-115. Exercise of compulsory purchase right.
(a) A person entitled and desiring to exercise the
compulsory purchase right described in W.S. 17-17-114 must
deliver a written notice to the corporation, within one hundred
twenty (120) days after the death of the shareholder, describing
the number and class or series of shares beneficially owned by
the decedent and requesting that the corporation offer to
purchase the shares.
(b) Within twenty (20) days after the effective date of
the notice, the corporation shall call a special shareholders'
meeting, to be held not more than forty (40) days after the
call, to decide whether the corporation should offer to purchase
the shares. A purchase offer must be approved by the
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of votes entitled
to be cast at the meeting, excluding votes in respect of the
shares covered by the notice.
(c) The corporation must deliver a purchase offer to the
person requesting it within seventy-five (75) days after the
effective date of the request notice. A purchase offer must be
accompanied by the corporation's balance sheet as of the end of
a fiscal year ending not more than sixteen (16) months before
the effective date of the request notice, an income statement
for that year, a statement of changes in shareholders' equity
for that year, and the latest available interim financial
statements, if any. The person must accept the purchase offer
in writing within fifteen (15) days after receiving it or the
offer is rejected.
(d) A corporation agreeing to purchase shares under this
section may allocate some or all of the shares to one (1) or
more of its shareholders or to other persons if all the
shareholders voting in favor of the purchase offer approve the
allocation. If the corporation has more than one (1) class or
series of shares, however, the remaining holders of the class or
series of shares being purchased are entitled to a first option
to purchase the shares not purchased by the corporation in
proportion to their shareholdings or in some other proportion
agreed to by all the shareholders participating in the purchase.
(e) If price and other terms of a compulsory purchase of
shares are fixed or are to be determined by the articles of
incorporation, bylaws, or a written agreement, the price and
terms so fixed or determined govern the compulsory purchase
unless the purchaser defaults, in which event the buyer is
entitled to commence a proceeding for dissolution under W.S.
17-17-116.
17-17-116. Court action to compel purchase.
(a) If an offer to purchase shares made under W.S.
17-17-115 is rejected, or if no offer is made, the person
exercising the compulsory purchase right may commence a
proceeding against the corporation to compel the purchase in the
district court of the county where the corporation's principal
office, or, if none in this state, its registered office, is
located. The corporation at its expense shall notify in writing
all of its shareholders, and any other person the court directs,
of the commencement of the proceeding. The jurisdiction of the
court in which the proceeding is commenced under this subsection
is plenary and exclusive.
(b) The court shall determine the fair value of the shares
subject to compulsory purchase in accordance with the standards
set forth in W.S. 17-17-142 together with terms for the
purchase. Upon making these determinations the court shall
order the corporation to purchase or cause the purchase of the
shares or empower the person exercising the compulsory purchase
right to have the corporation dissolved.
(c) After the purchase order is entered, the corporation
may petition the court to modify the terms of purchase and the
court may do so if it finds that changes in the financial or
legal ability of the corporation or other purchaser to complete
the purchase justify a modification.
(d) If the corporation or other purchaser does not make a
payment required by the court's order within thirty (30) days of
its due date, the seller may petition the court to dissolve the
corporation and, absent a showing of good cause for not making
the payment, the court shall do so.
(e) A person making a payment to prevent or cure a default
by the corporation or other purchaser is entitled to recover the
payment from the defaulter.
17-17-117. Court costs and other expenses.
(a) The court in a proceeding commenced under W.S.
17-17-116 shall determine the total costs of the proceeding,
including the reasonable compensation and expenses of appraisers
appointed by the court and of counsel and experts employed by
the parties. Except as provided in subsection (b) of this
section, the court shall assess these costs equally against the
corporation and the party exercising the compulsory purchase
right.
(b) The court may assess all or a portion of the total
costs of the proceeding:
(i) Against the person exercising the compulsory
purchase right if the court finds that the fair value of the
shares does not substantially exceed the corporation's last
purchase offer made before commencement of the proceeding and
that the person's failure to accept the offer was arbitrary, or
otherwise not in good faith; or
(ii) Against the corporation if the court finds that
the fair value of the shares substantially exceeds the
corporation's last sale offer made before commencement of the
proceeding and that the offer was arbitrary, or otherwise not
made in good faith.
Subarticle C. Governance
17-17-120. Shareholder agreements.
(a) All the shareholders of a statutory close corporation
may agree in writing to regulate the exercise of the corporate
powers and the management of the business and affairs of the
corporation or the relationship among the shareholders of the
corporation.
(b) An agreement authorized by this section is effective
although:
(i) It eliminates a board of directors;
(ii) It restricts the discretion or powers of the
board or authorizes director proxies or weighted voting rights;
(iii) Its effect is to treat the corporation as a
partnership; or
(iv) It creates a relationship among the shareholders
or between the shareholders and the corporation that would
otherwise be appropriate only among partners.
(c) If the corporation has a board of directors, an
agreement authorized by this section restricting the discretion
or powers of the board relieves directors of liability imposed
by law, and imposes that liability on each person in whom the
board's discretion or power is vested, to the extent that the
discretion or powers of the board of directors are governed by
the agreement.
(d) A provision eliminating a board of directors in an
agreement authorized by this section is not effective unless the
articles of incorporation contain a statement to that effect as
required by W.S. 17-17-121.
(e) A provision entitling one (1) or more shareholders to
dissolve the corporation under W.S. 17-17-133 is effective only
if a statement of this right is contained in the articles of
incorporation.
(f) To amend an agreement authorized by this section, all
the shareholders must approve the amendment in writing unless
the agreement provides otherwise.
(g) Subscribers for shares may act as shareholders with
respect to an agreement authorized by this section if shares are
not issued when the agreement was made.
(h) This section does not prohibit any other agreement
between or among shareholders in a statutory close corporation.
17-17-121. Elimination of board of directors.
(a) A statutory close corporation may operate without a
board of directors if its articles of incorporation contain a
statement to that effect.
(b) An amendment to articles of incorporation eliminating
a board of directors must be approved by all the shareholders of
the corporation, whether or not otherwise entitled to vote on
amendments, or if no shares have been issued, by all the
subscribers for shares, if any, or if none, by all the
incorporators.
(c) While a corporation is operating without a board of
directors as authorized by subsection (a) of this section:
(i) All corporate powers shall be exercised by or
under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the
corporation managed under the direction of, the shareholders;
(ii) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise:
(A) Action requiring director approval or both
director and shareholder approval is authorized if approved by
the shareholders; and
(B) Action requiring a majority or greater
percentage vote of the board of directors is authorized if
approved by the majority or greater percentage of the votes of
shareholders entitled to vote on the action.
(iii) A shareholder is not liable for his act or
omission, although a director would be, unless the shareholder
was entitled to vote on the action;
(iv) A requirement by a state or the United States
that a document delivered for filing contain a statement that
specified action has been taken by the board of directors is
satisfied by a statement that the corporation is a statutory
close corporation without a board of directors and that the
action was approved by the shareholders; and
(v) The shareholders by resolution may appoint one
(1) or more shareholders to sign documents as "designated
directors."
(d) An amendment to articles of incorporation deleting the
statement eliminating a board of directors must be approved by
the holders of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the votes of each
class or series of shares of the corporation, voting as separate
voting groups, whether or not otherwise entitled to vote on
amendments. The amendment must also specify the number, names
and addresses of the corporation's directors or describe who
will perform the duties of a board under W.S. 17-16-801.
17-17-122. Bylaws.
(a) A statutory close corporation need not adopt bylaws if
provisions required by law to be contained in bylaws are
contained in either the articles of incorporation or a
shareholder agreement authorized by W.S. 17-17-120.
(b) If a corporation does not have bylaws when its
statutory close corporation status terminates under W.S.
17-17-131, the corporation shall immediately adopt bylaws under
W.S. 17-16-206.
17-17-123. Annual meeting.
(a) The annual meeting date for a statutory close
corporation is the last business day of the third month
following the close of the business year unless its articles of
incorporation, bylaws, or a shareholder agreement authorized by
W.S. 17-17-120 fixes a different date.
(b) A statutory close corporation need not hold an annual
meeting unless one (1) or more shareholders deliver written
notice to the corporation requesting a meeting at least thirty
(30) days before the meeting date determined under subsection
(a) of this section.
17-17-124. Execution of documents in more than one
capacity.
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, an individual who holds
more than one (1) office in a statutory close corporation may
execute, acknowledge or verify in more than one (1) capacity any
document required to be executed, acknowledged or verified by
the holders of two (2) or more offices.
17-17-125. Limited liability.
The failure of a statutory close corporation to observe the
usual corporate formalities or requirements relating to the
exercise of its corporate powers or management of its business
and affairs is not a ground for imposing personal liability on
the shareholders for liabilities of the corporation.
Subarticle D. Reorganization and Termination
17-17-130. Merger, consolidation, share exchange and sale
of assets.
(a) A plan of merger, consolidation or share exchange
that:
(i) If effected would terminate statutory close
corporation status must be approved by the holders of at least
two-thirds (2/3) of the votes of each class or series of shares
of the statutory close corporation, voting as separate voting
groups, whether or not the holders are otherwise entitled to
vote on the plan;
(ii) If effected would create the surviving or new
corporation as a statutory close corporation must be approved by
the holders of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the votes of each
class or series of shares of the surviving corporation, voting
as separate voting groups, whether or not the holders are
otherwise entitled to vote on the plan.
(b) A sale, lease, exchange, mortgage, encumbrance or
other disposition of all or substantially all of the property,
with or without the good will, of a statutory close corporation,
if not made in the usual and regular course of business, must be
approved by the holders of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the
votes of each class or series of shares of the corporation,
voting as separate voting groups, whether or not the holders are
otherwise entitled to vote on the transaction.
17-17-131. Termination of statutory close corporation
status.
(a) A statutory close corporation may terminate its
statutory close corporation status by amending its articles of
incorporation to delete the statement that it is a statutory
close corporation. If the statutory close corporation has
elected to operate without a board of directors under W.S.
17-17-121, the amendment must either comply with W.S. 17-16-801
or delete the statement dispensing with the board of directors
from its articles of incorporation.
(b) An amendment terminating statutory close corporation
status must be approved by the holders of at least two-thirds
(2/3) of the votes of each class or series of shares of the
corporation, voting as separate voting groups, whether or not
the holders are otherwise entitled to vote on amendments.
(c) If an amendment to terminate statutory close
corporation status is adopted, each shareholder who voted
against the amendment is entitled to assert dissenters' rights
under W.S. 17-16-1301 through 17-16-1331.
17-17-132. Effect of termination of statutory close
corporation status.
(a) A corporation that terminates its status as a
statutory close corporation is thereafter subject to all
provisions of the Wyoming Business Corporation Act and, if
incorporated under W.S. 17-3-101 through 17-3-104, to all
provisions of those statutes.
(b) Termination of statutory close corporation status does
not affect any right of a shareholder or of the corporation
under an agreement or the articles of incorporation unless this
chapter, the Wyoming Business Corporation Act, or another law of
this state invalidates the right.
17-17-133. Shareholder option to dissolve corporation.
(a) The articles of incorporation of a statutory close
corporation may authorize one (1) or more shareholders, or the
holders of a specified number or percentage of shares of any
class or series, to dissolve the corporation at will or upon the
occurrence of a specified event or contingency. The shareholder
or shareholders exercising this authority must give written
notice of the intent to dissolve to all the other shareholders.
Sixty (60) days after the effective date of the notice, the
corporation shall begin to wind up and liquidate its business
and affairs and file articles of dissolution under W.S.
17-16-1403 through 17-16-1407.
(b) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, an amendment to the articles of incorporation to add,
change or delete the authority to dissolve described in
subsection (a) of this section must be approved by the holders
of all the outstanding shares, whether or not otherwise entitled
to vote on amendments, or if no shares have been issued, by all
the subscribers for shares, if any, or if none, by all the
incorporators.
Subarticle E. Judicial Supervision
17-17-140. Court action to protect shareholders.
(a) Subject to satisfying the conditions of subsections
(c) and (d) of this section, a shareholder of a statutory close
corporation may petition the district court for any of the
relief described in W.S. 17-17-141 through 17-17-143 if:
(i) The directors or those in control of the
corporation have acted, are acting, or will act in a manner that
is illegal, oppressive, fraudulent or unfairly prejudicial to
the petitioner, whether in his capacity as shareholder, director
or officer of the corporation;
(ii) The directors or those in control of the
corporation are deadlocked in the management of the
corporation's affairs, the shareholders are unable to break the
deadlock, and the corporation is suffering or will suffer
irreparable injury or the business and affairs of the
corporation can no longer be conducted to the advantage of the
shareholders generally because of the deadlock; or
(iii) There exists one (1) or more grounds for
judicial dissolution of the corporation under W.S. 17-16-1430.
(b) A shareholder must commence a proceeding under
subsection (a) of this section in the district court of the
county where the corporation's principal office, or, if none in
this state, its registered office, is located. The jurisdiction
of the court in which the proceeding is commenced is plenary and
exclusive.
(c) If a shareholder has agreed in writing to pursue a
nonjudicial remedy to resolve disputed matters, he may not
commence a proceeding under this section with respect to the
matters until he has exhausted the nonjudicial remedy.
1
(d) If a shareholder has dissenters' rights under this
chapter or W.S. 17-16-1301 through 17-16-1331 with respect to
proposed corporate action, he must commence a proceeding under
this section before he is required to give notice of his intent
to demand payment under W.S. 17-16-1321 or to demand payment
under W.S. 17-16-1323 or the proceeding is barred.
(e) Except as provided in subsections (c) and (d) of this
section, a shareholder's right to commence a proceeding under
this section and the remedies available under W.S. 17-17-141
through 17-17-143 are in addition to any other right or remedy
he may have.
17-17-141. Ordinary relief.
(a) If the court finds that one (1) or more of the grounds
for relief described in W.S. 17-17-140(a) exist, it may order
such relief as it deems appropriate including one (1) or more of
the following types of relief:
(i) The performance, prohibition, alteration or
setting aside of any action of the corporation or of its
shareholders, directors, or officers or of any other party to
the proceeding;
(ii) The cancellation or alteration of any provision
in the corporation's articles of incorporation or bylaws;
(iii) The removal from office of any director or
officer;
(iv) The appointment of any individual as a director
or officer;
(v) An accounting with respect to any matter in
dispute;
(vi) The appointment of a custodian to manage the
business and affairs of the corporation;
(vii) The appointment of a provisional director who
has all the rights, powers and duties of a duly elected director
to serve for the term and under the conditions prescribed by the
court;
(viii) The payment of dividends; or
(ix) The award of damages to any aggrieved party.
(b) If the court finds that a party to the proceeding
acted arbitrarily, or otherwise not in good faith, it may award
one (1) or more other parties their reasonable expenses,
including counsel fees and the expenses of appraisers or other
experts, incurred in the proceeding.
17-17-142. Extraordinary relief; share purchase.
(a) If the court finds that the ordinary relief described
in W.S. 17-17-141(a) is or would be inadequate or inappropriate,
it may order the corporation dissolved under W.S. 17-17-143
unless the corporation or one (1) or more of its shareholders
purchases all the shares of the shareholder for their fair value
and on terms determined under subsection (b) of this section.
(b) If the court orders a share purchase, it shall:
(i) Determine the fair value of the shares,
considering among other relevant evidence the going concern
value of the corporation, any agreement among some or all of the
shareholders fixing the price or specifying a formula for
determining share value for any purpose, the recommendations of
appraisers, if any, appointed by the court, and any legal
constraints on the corporation's ability to purchase the shares;
(ii) Specify the terms of the purchase, including if
appropriate terms for installment payments, subordination of the
purchase obligation to the rights of the corporation's other
creditors, security for a deferred purchase price, and a
covenant not to compete or other restriction on the seller;
(iii) Require the seller to deliver all his shares to
the purchaser upon receipt of the purchase price or the first
installment of the purchase price;
(iv) Provide that after the seller delivers his
shares he has no further claim against the corporation, its
directors, officers or shareholders, other than a claim to any
unpaid balance of the purchase price and a claim under any
agreement with the corporation or the remaining shareholders
that is not terminated by the court; and
(v) Provide that if the purchase is not completed in
accordance with the specified terms, the corporation is to be
dissolved under W.S. 17-17-143.
(c) After the purchase order is entered, any party may
petition the court to modify the terms of the purchase and the
court may do so if it finds that changes in the financial or
legal ability of the corporation or other purchaser to complete
the purchase justify a modification.
(d) If the corporation is dissolved because the share
purchase was not completed in accordance with the court's order,
the selling shareholder has the same rights and priorities in
the corporation's assets as if the sale had not been ordered.
17-17-143. Extraordinary relief; dissolution.
(a) The court may dissolve the corporation if it finds:
(i) There are one (1) or more grounds for judicial
dissolution under W.S. 17-16-1430; or
(ii) All other relief ordered by the court under W.S.
17-17-141 or 17-17-142 has failed to resolve the matters in
dispute.
(b) In determining whether to dissolve the corporation,
the court shall consider among other relevant evidence the
financial condition of the corporation but may not refuse to
dissolve solely because the corporation has accumulated earnings
or current operating profits.
Subarticle F. Transition Provisions
17-17-150. Application to existing corporations.
This chapter applies to all corporations electing statutory
close corporation status under W.S. 17-17-103 after its
effective date.
17-17-151. Reservation of power to amend or repeal.
The legislature has power to amend or repeal all or part of this
chapter at any time and all corporations subject to this chapter
are governed by the amendment or repeal.
CHAPTER 18 - WYOMING MANAGEMENT STABILITY ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-18-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Management Stability Act".
17-18-102. Definitions.
(a) The definitions used in the Wyoming Business
Corporations Act (W.S. 17-16-101 through 17-16-1810) shall apply
to this act unless inconsistent with the definitions in this
section.
(b) As used in this act:
(i) "Affiliate" means a person that directly, or
indirectly through one (1) or more intermediaries, controls, or
is controlled by, or is under common control with, another
person;
(ii) "Associate," when used to indicate a
relationship with any person, means:
(A) Any entity of which the person is a
director, officer or partner or is, directly or indirectly, the
owner of ten percent (10%) or more of any class of voting stock
or similar securities of the entity;
(B) Any trust or other estate in which the
person has at least a ten percent (10%) beneficial interest or
as to which such person serves as trustee or in a similar
fiduciary capacity; or
(C) Any relative or spouse of the person, or any
relative of the spouse, who has the same residence as the person
or who is a director or officer of the person or any of its
affiliates.
(iii) "Beneficial owner of a security" means any
person who, directly or indirectly, has the power to vote or
direct the voting of all or part of the voting rights of the
security, or has the power to dispose of or direct the
disposition of the security;
(iv) "Business combination," when used in reference
to any corporation and any interested stockholder of that
corporation, means:
(A) Any merger, consolidation or share exchange
of the corporation or any subsidiary with:
(I) The interested stockholder;
(II) A foreign or domestic corporation that
is, or after the merger, consolidation or share exchange would
be, an affiliate or associate of the interested stockholder; or
(III) Another corporation, if the merger,
consolidation or share exchange is caused by an interested
stockholder, and as a result of the merger, consolidation or
share exchange any section of this act does not apply to the
surviving corporation.
(B) Any sale, lease, exchange, mortgage, pledge,
transfer or other disposition, in one (1) transaction or a
series of transactions, except proportionately as a stockholder
of the corporation, to or with the interested stockholder or any
affiliate or associate of the interested stockholder, whether as
part of a dissolution or otherwise, of assets of the corporation
or of any subsidiary which assets:
(I) Have an aggregate market value equal to
ten percent (10%) or more of either the aggregate market value
of all the assets of the corporation determined on a
consolidated basis or the aggregate market value of all the
outstanding stock of the corporation;
(II) Have an aggregate book value equal to
ten percent (10%) or more of either the aggregate book value of
all the assets of the corporation determined on a consolidated
basis or of the aggregate stockholders equity of the
corporation; or
(III) Represent ten percent (10%) or more
of the earning power or net income, determined on a consolidated
basis, of the corporation.
(C) Any transaction or series of transactions
which results in the issuance or transfer by the corporation, or
by any subsidiary, of any stock of the corporation or of the
subsidiary to the interested stockholder except:
(I) Any transaction pursuant to the
exercise, exchange or conversion of securities into stock of the
corporation or any subsidiary, which securities before the
stockholder became an interested stockholder were outstanding
and exercisable for or convertible into the stock; or
(II) Any of the following transactions
provided there is no increase in the interested stockholder's
proportionate share of the corporation's stock of any class or
series or of the corporation's voting stock:
(1) Pursuant to a distribution made,
or the exercise, exchange or conversion of securities into stock
of the corporation or any subsidiary of securities distributed,
pro rata to all holders of a class or series of stock of the
corporation, after the stockholder became an interested
stockholder;
(2) Pursuant to an exchange offer by
the corporation to purchase stock made on the same terms to all
holders of the stock; or
(3) Any issuance or transfer of stock
by the corporation.
(D) Any transaction involving the corporation or
any subsidiary which has the effect, directly or indirectly, of
increasing the proportionate share of the corporation's or a
subsidiary's stock of any class or series, or securities
convertible into the stock of any class or series, owned by the
interested stockholder, except as a result of immaterial changes
due to fractional share adjustments or as a result of any
purchase or redemption of any shares of stock not caused,
directly or indirectly, by the interested stockholder;
(E) Any receipt by the interested stockholder of
the benefit, directly or indirectly, except proportionately as a
stockholder of the corporation, of any loans, advances,
guarantees, pledges or other financial assistance, or a tax
credit or other tax advantage, other than those expressly
permitted in subparagraphs (A) through (D) of this paragraph,
provided by or through the corporation or any subsidiary; or
(F) The adoption of a plan or a proposal for the
liquidation and dissolution of the corporation proposed by, or
pursuant to an agreement, arrangement, or understanding, whether
or not in writing, with an interested stockholder or an
affiliate or associate of the interested stockholder.
(v) "Control," including the term "controlling,"
"controlled by" and "under common control with," means the
possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or
cause the direction of the management and policies of a person,
whether through the ownership of voting stock, by contract or
otherwise. A person who is the owner of ten percent (10%) or
more of an entity's outstanding voting stock or similar
interests shall be presumed to have control of the entity, in
the absence of proof by a preponderance of the evidence to the
contrary. A presumption of control shall not apply where the
person holds voting stock or similar interests, in good faith
and not for the purpose of circumventing this act, as an agent,
bank, broker, nominee, custodian or trustee for one (1) or more
owners who do not individually or as a group have control of the
other person;
(vi) "Equity security" means:
(A) Any share or similar security carrying, at
the time of the takeover offer, the right to vote on any matter
by virtue of the articles of incorporation, bylaws, or governing
instrument of the target company or the right to vote for
directors or persons performing substantially similar functions
by operation of law;
(B) Any security convertible into a security
described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph or any warrant
or right to purchase that security; or
(C) Any other security which, for the protection
of investors, is an equity security pursuant to regulation of
the secretary of state.
(vii) "Interested stockholder":
(A) Means any person and the affiliates and
associates of the person, other than the corporation and any
subsidiary, that:
(I) Is the owner of fifteen percent (15%)
or more of the outstanding voting stock of the corporation; or
(II) Is an affiliate or associate of the
corporation and was the owner of fifteen percent (15%) or more
of the outstanding voting stock of the corporation at any time
within the three (3) year period immediately before it is to be
determined whether the person is an interested stockholder.
(B) But does not mean:
(I) Any person who:
(1) Owned shares in excess of the
fifteen percent (15%) limitation as of January 1, 1990, acquired
shares pursuant to a tender offer commenced prior to January 1,
1989, or owned shares pursuant to an exchange offer announced
prior to January 1, 1989 and commenced within ninety (90) days;
and
(2) Continued to own shares in excess
of the fifteen percent (15%) limitation or would have but for
action by the corporation.
(II) Any person who acquired the shares
from a person described in subdivision (B)(I) of this paragraph
by gift, inheritance or in a transaction in which no
consideration was exchanged; or
(III) Any person whose ownership of shares
in excess of the fifteen percent (15%) limitation is the result
of action taken solely by the corporation provided that the
person shall be an interested stockholder if, after the
corporate action, he acquires additional voting stock of the
corporation, except as a result of further corporate action not
caused, directly or indirectly, by that person.
(viii) "Large publicly traded corporation" means a
corporation which had assets at the end of its most recent
fiscal year of at least ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00)
according to generally accepted accounting principles and which:
(A) Has a class of voting stock listed on a
national securities exchange;
(B) Has a class of voting stock authorized for
quotation on an inter dealer quotation system of a registered
national securities association; or
(C) Has a class of voting stock held of record
by more than one thousand (1,000) stockholders.
(ix) "Offeree" means a record or beneficial owner of
equity securities of the class which an offeror acquires or
offers to acquire in connection with a takeover offer;
(x) "Offeror" means a person who makes or in any way
participates in making a takeover offer. The term includes all
affiliates of that person and all persons who act jointly or in
concert with that person for the purpose of acquiring, holding
or disposing of, or exercising any voting rights attached to,
the equity securities of a target company. It also includes the
target company with respect to acquisitions of its own equity
securities and with respect to periods of time when it is
controlled by or under common control with the offeror. It does
not include a financial institution or broker-dealer loaning
funds or extending credit to any offeror in the ordinary course
of its business, or any accountant, attorney, financial
institution, broker-dealer, newspaper or magazine of general
circulation, consultant, or other person furnishing information,
services, or advice to or performing ministerial or
administrative duties for an offeror and not otherwise
participating in the takeover offer;
(xi) "Owner" including the terms "own" and "owned"
when used with respect to any stock means a person that
individually or with or through any of its affiliates or
associates:
(A) Beneficially owns the stock, directly or
indirectly;
(B) Has the right to acquire the stock, whether
the right is exercisable immediately or only after the passage
of time, pursuant to any agreement, arrangement or
understanding, or upon the exercise of conversion rights,
exchange rights, warrants or options, or otherwise. A person
shall not be deemed the owner of stock tendered pursuant to a
tender or exchange offer made by that person or any of that
person's affiliates or associates until the tendered stock is
accepted for purchase or exchange;
(C) Has the right to vote the stock pursuant to
any agreement, arrangement or understanding. A person shall not
be deemed the owner of any stock because of the person's right
to vote the stock if the agreement, arrangement or understanding
to vote the stock arises solely from a revocable proxy or
consent given in response to a proxy or consent solicitation
made to ten (10) or more persons; or
(D) Has any agreement, arrangement or
understanding for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting,
except voting pursuant to a revocable proxy or consent as
described in subparagraph (C) of this paragraph, or disposing of
that stock with any other person that beneficially owns, or
whose affiliates or associates beneficially own, directly or
indirectly, that stock.
(xii) "Qualified corporation" means any large
publicly traded corporation, incorporated in Wyoming, and which
has substantial business operations within Wyoming;
(xiii) "Stockholder" means "shareholder" as defined
by W.S. 17-16-140(a)(xxxix);
(xiv) "Subsidiary" means a corporation or other
person of which a majority of the outstanding voting stock or
similar securities are owned, directly or indirectly, by the
corporation;
(xv) "Substantial business operations within the
state of Wyoming" means:
(A) At least ten percent (10%) of the
corporation's full-time permanent employees are employed within
the state;
(B) At least one hundred (100) full-time
permanent employees are employed within the state;
(C) At least ten million dollars
($10,000,000.00) in fair market value of the corporation's
assets are deposited within Wyoming financial institutions;
(D) The principal operating headquarters and the
primary offices of the chief executive officer are within
Wyoming; or
(E) The corporation has a combination of assets
deposited within Wyoming financial institutions, assets assessed
for ad valorem taxation within Wyoming, and assets within
Wyoming not subject to ad valorem taxation which are sufficient
to cause the corporation to pay the tax required by W.S.
17-16-1630(a). The payment of the tax required by W.S.
17-16-1630(a) shall be deemed conclusive evidence of substantial
business operations within Wyoming.
(xvi) "Substantially equivalent terms" means terms
under which the fair market value of the consideration offered
any offeree of a class of equity securities of the target
company, determined on a per share or a per unit basis, are
equal to the highest consideration offered in connection with a
takeover offer to any other offeree of that class, determined on
a per share or per unit basis;
(xvii) "Takeover offer" means an offer to acquire or
an acquisition of any equity security of a target company
pursuant to a tender offer or request or invitation for tenders,
if, after the acquisition, the offeror is or will be directly or
indirectly a record or beneficial owner of more than ten percent
(10%) of any class of the outstanding equity securities of the
target company;
(xviii) "Target company" means a qualified
corporation other than:
(A) A financial institution subject to
regulation by the state banking commissioner, if the takeover
offer is subject to approval by the state banking commissioner;
(B) A corporation subject to regulation by the
public service commission, if the takeover offer is subject to
approval of the public service commission; or
(C) A public utility, public utility holding
company, bank holding company, or savings and loan association
subject to regulation by a federal agency if the takeover offer
is subject to the approval by that federal agency.
(xix) "Voting stock" means:
(A) For purposes other than determining whether
a person is an interested stockholder, stock of any class or
series entitled to vote generally in the election of directors;
(B) For purposes of determining whether a person
is an interested stockholder, stock deemed to be owned by the
person but shall not include any other unissued stock of the
corporation which may be issuable pursuant to any agreement,
arrangement or understanding, or upon exercise of conversion
rights, warrants or options, or otherwise.
(xx) "This act" means W.S. 17-18-101 through
17-18-403.
(c) For the purpose of determining whether a person is an
interested stockholder as defined in paragraph (b)(vii) of this
section, the number of voting stock of the corporation
considered outstanding includes stock considered owned by that
person, but does not include other unissued voting stock of the
qualified corporation that may be issuable pursuant to an
agreement, arrangement or understanding, or upon exercise of
conversion rights, warrants or options, or otherwise.
17-18-103. Requirements to choose options.
(a) Any qualified corporation may elect to exercise or not
to exercise any of the options set forth in articles 1 and 2 of
this act. No elections for an option shall be made if the
corporation does not meet the criteria of a qualified
corporation at the time of the election. Any elections made
under articles 1 and 2 of this act may be terminated in the same
manner as the elections are made subject to the restrictions of
this act.
(b) If a corporation ceases to have substantial business
operations within Wyoming, any election made under articles 1
and 2 of this act shall be null and void until the substantial
business operations are restored and maintained for at least
ninety (90) days. If the corporation terminates substantial
business operations in Wyoming for the purpose of terminating an
election under articles 1 and 2 of this act, the election shall
remain in effect. If a corporation terminates substantial
business operations within Wyoming for the purpose of voiding
the restrictions on business combinations with interested
stockholders provided by W.S. 17-18-104, the restrictions shall
remain in effect.
(c) If a corporation ceases to be a qualified corporation
because it is no longer a large publicly traded corporation due
to insufficient assets required by the definition provided in
W.S. 17-18-102(b)(viii), at the end of a fiscal year any
election made under articles 1 and 2 of this act and the
requirements of W.S. 17-18-104 and article 3 of this act shall
be null and void sixty (60) days after the end of the following
fiscal year unless sufficient assets are again present at the
end of that fiscal year.
(d) If a corporation ceases to be a qualified corporation
because it is no longer a large publicly traded corporation due
to failure to meet the class of voting stock requirements
required by the definition provided in W.S. 17-18-102(b)(viii),
the corporation shall continue to be subject to W.S. 17-18-104
and article 3 of this act for five (5) years and any election
made under articles 1 and 2 of this act prior to the failure to
meet the criteria shall be null and void five (5) years from the
date of the failure to meet the criteria. If the criteria are
again met the election shall become effective and the
corporation shall continue to be subject to W.S. 17-18-104.
17-18-104. Option; restrictions on business combinations.
(a) Every qualified corporation is subject to the
restrictions on business combinations with interested
stockholders provided in this section unless the corporation
elects not to be subject to the restrictions. A corporation
which is not a qualified corporation may elect not to be subject
to the restrictions on business combinations in the event it
becomes a qualified corporation. The election shall be made
either:
(i) Through a specific provision in the articles of
incorporation;
(ii) Through a statement in the bylaws that the
corporation elects not to be subject to the restrictions in W.S.
17-18-104(b). This election shall be effective immediately upon
adoption of the bylaws, unless the articles of incorporation
provide otherwise; or
(iii) By filing a statement making the election with
the secretary of state. This election shall be authorized by
the corporation's board of directors and shall be effective from
the date of filing with the secretary of state.
(b) A qualified corporation shall not, directly or
indirectly, enter into or engage in any business combination
with any interested stockholder or any affiliate or associate of
the interested stockholder for a period of three (3) years after
the date the stockholder became an interested stockholder,
unless:
(i) Prior to the time the stockholder became an
interested stockholder, the board of directors of the
corporation approved either the business combination or the
transaction which resulted in the stockholder becoming an
interested stockholder; or
(ii) Repealed by Laws 1990, ch. 62, §§ 2, 3.
(iii) On or after the time the stockholder became an
interested stockholder, the business combination is approved by
the board of directors and authorized at an annual or special
meeting of stockholders, and not by written consent, by the
affirmative vote of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the outstanding
voting stock which is not owned by the interested stockholder.
(c) The restrictions contained in this section shall not
apply if:
(i) A stockholder becomes an interested stockholder
inadvertently and as soon as practical divests sufficient stocks
so that he ceases to be an interested stockholder, and would
not, at any time within the three (3) year period immediately
before a business combination between the corporation and the
stockholder, have been an interested stockholder but for the
inadvertent acquisition;
(ii) Repealed by Laws 1990, ch. 62, §§ 2, 3.
(d) The election not to be subject to the restrictions on
business combinations may be revoked in the same manner as the
elections are made. With respect to any interested stockholder
the election not to be subject to the restrictions shall not be
effective for a period of three (3) years after the date that
the stockholder became an interested stockholder.
17-18-105. Option; shareholder takeover protection
provisions.
(a) Any qualified corporation is subject to the
shareholder takeover protection provisions listed in W.S.
17-18-105 through 17-18-111 unless the corporation elects not to
be subject to the restrictions. A corporation which is not a
qualified corporation may elect not to be subject to the
shareholder takeover provisions in the event it becomes a
qualified corporation. The election shall be made either:
(i) Through a specific provision in the articles of
incorporation;
(ii) Through a statement in the bylaws that the
corporation elects not to be subject to the restrictions in W.S.
17-18-105 through 17-18-111. This election shall be effective
immediately upon adoption of the bylaws, unless the articles of
incorporation provide otherwise; or
(iii) By filing a statement making the election with
the secretary of state. This election shall be authorized by
the corporation's board of directors and shall be effective from
the date of filing with the secretary of state.
(b) If a takeover offer is outstanding and in progress at
the time the election becomes effective, all further acquisition
of stock by the offeror shall cease until the offer is in
compliance with the stockholder takeover protection provision of
W.S. 17-18-105 through 17-18-111. The offeror may take any
steps necessary to comply with these provisions before the
election becomes effective.
(c) The election not to be subject to the shareholder
takeover provisions of W.S. 17-18-105 through 17-18-111 may be
revoked by the same method employed under subsection (a) of this
section for making the election.
17-18-106. Statement; consent to service of process;
filing fee; copy to target company.
(a) The offeror, before making a takeover offer, shall
file with the secretary of state a statement in compliance with
subsection (b) of this section and a consent to service of
process. The offeror shall pay a filing fee of seven hundred
fifty dollars ($750.00) and shall, not later than the filing
date of the statement, deliver a copy of the statement to the
target company at its principal office and, if different, to its
Wyoming registered agent for service of process.
(b) If a takeover offer is subject to any federal law, the
statement shall be one (1) copy of each document required to be
filed with the securities and exchange commission and any other
federal agency. If the takeover offer is not subject to any
requirement of federal law, the statement shall be filed on
forms prescribed by the secretary of state and shall contain the
following information:
(i) The identity of and material information
concerning the offeror, including:
(A) If the offeror is a corporation, information
concerning its organization, including the year and jurisdiction
of its organization, a description of each class of its capital
stock and long-term debt, a description of the business done by
the offeror and its affiliates and any material changes of its
business during the past three (3) years, a description of the
location and character of the principal properties of the
offeror and its affiliates, a description of any material
pending legal or administrative proceedings in which the offeror
or any of its affiliates is a party, the names of all directors
and executive officers of the offeror and their material
business activities and affiliations during the past three (3)
years, and audited financial statements of the offeror and its
affiliates for its three (3) most recent annual accounting
periods and interim financial statements for any current period;
(B) If the offeror is not a corporation,
information concerning the person's background, including his
material business activities and affiliations during the past
three (3) years, and a description of any material pending legal
or administrative proceeding in which he is a party.
(ii) The source and amount of funds or other
consideration used or to be used in acquiring any equity
security, including a statement describing any securities which
are being offered in exchange for the equity securities of the
target company, and, if any part of the acquisition price is or
will be represented by borrowed funds or other consideration, a
description of the transaction and the names of all the parties;
(iii) If the purpose of the acquisition is to gain
control of the target company, a statement of any plans or
proposals or negotiations with respect to the acquisition which
the offeror has upon gaining control to liquidate the target
company, sell its assets, effect its merger or consolidation, or
make any other major change in its business, corporate
structure, management or personnel;
(iv) The number of shares or units of any equity
security of the target company of which each offeror is the
record or beneficial owner or which the offeror has a right to
acquire, directly or indirectly;
(v) Information as to any contracts, arrangements,
understandings or negotiations with any person concerning any
equity security of the target company, including transfers of
any equity security, joint ventures, loan or option
arrangements, puts and calls, guarantees of loan, guarantees
against loss, guarantees of profits, division of losses or
profits, or the giving or withholding of proxies, naming the
persons with whom those contracts, arrangements or
understandings have been entered;
(vi) Information as to any contracts, arrangements,
understandings or negotiations, with any person who is an
officer, director, administrator, manager, executive employee,
or record or beneficial owner of equity securities of the target
company with respect to the tender of any equity securities of
the target company, the purchase by the offeror of any equity
securities owned by that person otherwise than pursuant to the
takeover offer, the retention of any person in his present
position or in any other management position or with respect to
that person giving or withholding a favorable recommendation to
the takeover offer;
(vii) A description of the provisions made or to be
made for providing all material information concerning the
takeover offer to the offerees, including a description of the
proposed takeover offer in the form proposed to be published or
sent to the offerees initially disclosing the takeover offer;
and
(viii) Any other information which the secretary of
state prescribes by regulation.
17-18-107. Takeover offers; substantially equivalent terms
to all offerees of same class.
No takeover offer shall be made which is not made to all
offerees holding the same class of equity securities of the
target company on substantially equivalent terms. A takeover
offer to purchase less than all equity securities of the same
class of the outstanding equity securities of the target company
is not considered as having been made to all offerees of that
class on substantially equivalent terms if the pro rata portion
of equity securities of that class tendered by any offeree which
will be accepted by the offeror is not equal to the highest pro
rata portion of equity securities of that class tendered by any
other offeree which will be accepted by the offeror. A takeover
offer permitting offerees to elect to receive one (1) or more
differing kinds of consideration is not considered as having
been made to all offerees holding the same class of equity
securities of the target company on substantially equivalent
terms if proration occurs and the pro rata share of any one (1)
or more differing kinds of consideration which is allocable to
any offeree is not equal to the highest pro rata share allocable
to any other offeree.
17-18-108. Waiting period after offer; no purchase or
payment in violation of order.
No stock shall be contracted for, purchased or paid for pursuant
to a takeover offer within the first twenty (20) business days
after the offer is made. No shares shall be purchased or paid
for in violation of any order of the secretary of state.
17-18-109. Waiting period after takeover; no acquisitions
of equity securities of target company.
No offeror may acquire in any manner any equity security of any
class of a target company at any time within two (2) years
following the conclusion of a takeover offer with respect to
that class, including but not limited to acquisitions made by
purchase, exchange, merger, consolidation, partial or complete
liquidation, redemption, reverse stock split, and any other
recapitalization or reorganization, unless the holder of that
equity security is also afforded, at the time of that
acquisition, a reasonable opportunity to dispose of that
security to the offeror upon substantially equivalent terms. If
a takeover offer is made or concluded while the election to be
subject to the shareholder takeover protection provisions is in
effect, the requirement of this section shall remain in effect
for two (2) years following the conclusion of the takeover offer
even if the election is subsequently terminated.
17-18-110. Takeover offer; untrue statements or omission
of material facts unlawful.
In connection with any takeover offer, or any solicitation of
offerees in opposition to or in favor of any takeover offer, it
is unlawful for any person to make any untrue statement of a
material fact or to omit to state any material fact necessary in
order to make the statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they are made, not misleading, or to
engage in any fraudulent, deceptive or manipulative acts or
practices.
17-18-111. Exemptions to takeover requirements; burden of
establishing entitlement.
(a) Even if a corporation has elected to be subject to the
provisions of W.S. 17-18-106 through 17-18-110 do not apply to
the following:
(i) An acquisition by an offeror, if the instant
transaction and all acquisitions of equity securities of the
same class during the preceding twelve (12) months by the
offeror or any of its affiliates do not exceed two percent (2%)
of that class; or
(ii) An acquisition determined by order of the
secretary of state to be a takeover offer that is not made for
the purpose of, and not having the effect of, changing or
influencing the control of a target company.
(b) An order may only be adopted under paragraph (a)(ii)
of this section after a hearing pursuant to W.S. 17-18-113.
(c) The burden of establishing entitlement to any
exemption is on the offeror.
17-18-112. Administration; regulations; rulemaking
authority; individual liability of state officers or employees
prohibited.
(a) This act shall be administered by the secretary of
state of Wyoming.
(b) The secretary of state may promulgate reasonable rules
and regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.
(c) Neither the secretary of state, nor any of his
employees, shall be liable in their individual capacity, except
to the state of Wyoming, for any act done or omitted in
connection with the performance of their respective duties under
the provisions of this act.
17-18-113. Hearing; order of secretary of state
prohibiting or conditioning purchase.
(a) Whenever it appears to the secretary of state that any
person has acted or is about to act in a manner constituting a
violation of any provision of this act or any rule or regulation
adopted pursuant to this act, the secretary of state shall call
a hearing to investigate the matter. Any interested person may
petition the secretary of state for a hearing if that person
reasonably believes a violation of W.S. 17-18-105 through
17-18-111 has or is about to occur, or for purposes of W.S.
17-18-111(b).
(b) At least five (5) days notice that a hearing will be
held under this section shall be given to the target company,
the offeror, and other persons as the secretary of state may
designate.
(c) The expenses, including the cost of transcripts and
all expenses of the state, of all hearings held under this
section shall be borne by the offeror. As security for the
payment of these expenses, the offeror shall file with the
secretary of state an acceptable bond or other deposit in an
amount to be determined by the secretary of state.
(d) The target company, the offeror, any offeree, and any
other person whose interests may be affected have the right to
appear at any hearing held pursuant to this section, and to
become a party to the proceeding. Any person appearing at or
party to the hearing has the rights granted in the Wyoming
Administrative Procedure Act.
(e) If the secretary of state finds by a preponderance of
the evidence that the takeover statement fails to provide full
and fair disclosure to the offerees of all material information
concerning the takeover offer or that the takeover offer is not
made to all offerees of the same class of equity securities of
the target company on substantially equivalent terms, he shall
by order prohibit the purchase of shares tendered in response to
the takeover offer or condition purchase upon changes or
modifications.
(f) In the case of a takeover offer subject to the
approval of the insurance commissioner, the offeror within five
(5) days after the statement is filed shall mail a notice to all
offerees of the target company advising them of the general
terms and conditions of the takeover offer and the date of the
hearing at which they may appear. No shares shall be contracted
for, purchased or paid for until after approval by both the
secretary of state and the insurance commissioner. All expenses
of notifying the offerees shall be paid by the offeror.
17-18-114. Remedies of secretary of state, offerors,
target companies and equity security owners for violations of
law.
(a) Whenever it appears to the secretary of state that any
person has engaged or is about to engage in any act or practice
constituting a violation of any provision of this act or any
rule or regulation or order adopted under this act, the
secretary of state may investigate and issue orders and notices,
including temporary ex parte cease and desist orders without
notice. In addition to all other remedies, he may bring an
action in any district court in the name and on behalf of the
state of Wyoming against any person or persons participating in
or about to participate in a violation of this act to enjoin
those persons from continuing or doing any act in violation of
this act or to enforce compliance with this act. In any court
proceedings the Wyoming Rules of Civil Procedure shall apply.
(b) Whenever it is reasonably believed that any person has
engaged or is about to engage in any act or practice
constituting a violation of this act or any regulation or order
adopted under this act, the offeror, target company or any
record or beneficial owner of an equity security of the target
company may bring an action in the district court of the county
where the target company has its principal office or Natrona
county to enjoin that person from continuing or doing any act in
violation of this act or to enforce compliance with this act.
(c) Upon a proper showing, the court may grant a permanent
or preliminary injunction or temporary restraining order or may
order rescission of any sales, tenders for sale, purchases or
tenders for purchase of equity securities determined to be
unlawful under this act or any rule or regulation or order of
the secretary of state. The court shall not require the
secretary of state to post a bond.
17-18-115. Judicial review.
An appeal may be taken by any offeror, target company, or other
party to any proceeding before the secretary of state from any
final order of the secretary of state by filing a petition for
review within thirty (30) days after entry of the final order
complained of pursuant to the provisions of the Wyoming
Administrative Procedure Act (W.S. 16-3-101 through 16-3-115).
17-18-116. Proxies.
(a) Any qualified corporation may in its articles of
incorporation restrict or prohibit the use of proxies to vote
shares. The restriction or prohibition may be effective for:
(i) All meetings;
(ii) All meetings and issues with any specific
exceptions the board of directors authorizes; or
(iii) Any meetings or any issues or both that the
board of directors specifies.
(b) The restriction or prohibitions on the use of proxies
apply only to meetings including adjournments of meetings held
within the state of Wyoming.
(c) Notwithstanding any prohibition or restriction on the
use of proxies, the beneficial owner of any shares entitled to
vote shall always be entitled to vote the shares in person. If
the beneficial owner of the shares is a minor or is incompetent,
the shares may be voted in person by a trustee, a guardian, or a
parent acting as trustee under the Wyoming Uniform Transfers to
Minors Act or a similar act. If the beneficial owner of the
shares is an entity other than a natural person, the shares may
be voted by any duly authorized officer of that entity.
(d) Any restrictions imposed on persons who may be
appointed to act as proxies shall not discriminate on their face
in favor of management and against any shareholders opposed to
management.
(e) The board may restrict appointment as proxies to
specific individuals designated by the corporation provided:
(i) Shareholders are given the opportunity to give
binding instructions as to how the shares are to be voted on any
issues or in any elections that management is aware of at least
thirty (30) days before it mails materials seeking proxies;
(ii) The corporation serves notice in writing on any
shareholder who has requested in writing the notice within the
past year of the deadline for submission of material on any
issue that may arise at the meeting. The notice shall be given
at least ten (10) days before the deadline;
(iii) The individuals designated for appointment as
proxies agree to vote all valid proxies according to the
shareholder instructions given; and
(iv) A meeting may not be adjourned sine die to
prevent a vote on an issue if a quorum is present and the
required majority either by proxy or in person has had an
opportunity to indicate and has indicated an intention to vote
against the recommendation of the board or management of the
corporation on that issue.
(f) If the articles of incorporation permit the board to
impose restrictions on the use of proxies and a court orders a
shareholder's meeting, the board may still impose the
restrictions provided if it does so within ten (10) days of the
meeting or within half the total number of days between the date
of the court order and the date of the meeting, whichever is
less. The time periods for notice of issues and mailing
deadlines set forth in subsection (e) of this section shall not
apply to court ordered meetings.
17-18-117. Voting indirectly owned shares.
Effective January 1, 1990, notwithstanding W.S. 17-16-721(b) a
qualified corporation may elect to allow the voting of shares
which are owned directly or indirectly by a second corporation,
a majority of whose shares entitled to vote for directors of the
second corporation are owned by the first corporation. The
election shall be made in the articles of incorporation as
amended. The number of such shares that may be voted is limited
to forty percent (40%) of the total shares of that class
outstanding.
17-18-118. Shareholder lists.
(a) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-16-720 a qualified corporation
in its bylaws may restrict access to the shareholder's list to a
period beginning two (2) days after the notice of the meeting
for which the list was prepared or ten (10) days before the date
of the meeting whichever is less.
(b) A qualified corporation in its bylaws may deny
shareholders the right to copy the list of shareholders prior to
the meeting provided that:
(i) Arrangements are made for an independent firm to
provide to shareholders any information any stockholder wants to
send them relative to the matters to be considered at the
meeting provided the stockholder pays for the mailing and
provides the material in a timely fashion; and
(ii) The list is made available at the shareholder's
expense to any shareholder at or after the meeting who is
bringing a legal challenge to the right of any other shareholder
to vote at the meeting; and
(iii) The list is available for inspection but not
copying as provided by subsection (a) of this section and at the
meeting. The making of handwritten copies by the shareholder or
his attorney of the names and addresses of individual
shareholders shall not be construed as copying within the
meaning of this subsection.
(c) A qualified corporation may take any other steps it
deems reasonable or necessary to prevent the use of its
shareholder lists for purposes not related to issues under
consideration at a shareholder meeting.
17-18-119. Special meeting request exceptions.
(a) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-16-702 and 17-16-703 a
qualified corporation may in its bylaws:
(i) Set a higher percentage of shares not to exceed
fifty percent (50%) that must petition in order to call a
special meeting than is provided by W.S. 17-16-702;
(ii) Provide a longer period between the receipt of
the request for a special meeting and the date that notice of
the meeting is given than is allowed by W.S.
17-16-703(a)(ii)(A);
(iii) Give the board discretion to require that the
issues for which a special meeting is requested be considered
instead at the next annual meeting if the request for the
special meeting is made within a number of days of the annual
meeting specified in the bylaws.
17-18-120. Annual meeting purposes.
In addition to the limitations on the matters that may be
considered at annual meetings otherwise allowed by statute a
qualified corporation may in its bylaws authorize the board to
further limit the matters which an annual meeting may consider.
The limitations shall not include elimination of the election of
directors whose terms expire at the annual meeting. The
limitations may take the form of excluding specified matters
from consideration, allowing consideration of only certain
specified matters, or requiring advance notice of the
consideration of certain matters.
17-18-121. Action by less than a quorum.
(a) Stockholders present or represented by proxy at an
annual or special meeting of a qualified corporation at which a
quorum is not present may take only the following actions:
(i) Ratify or reject the independent auditors
selected by the board if the corporation's bylaws or articles of
incorporation require approval of the auditors by a
stockholder's meeting;
(ii) With the consent of the officer presiding at the
meeting, receive or hear any reports on the affairs of the
corporation that may be presented;
(iii) Within the constraints of the time allowed on
the agenda, ask questions concerning the affairs of the
corporation of any officer or board member present;
(iv) Adjourn or recess the meeting to allow time to
assemble a quorum, but they may not adjourn or recess to a
different city and the total of all the adjournments and
recesses may not exceed two (2) business days without the
consent of the board of directors;
(v) If a quorum is not present, may adjourn the
meeting sine die, provided the motion to adjourn sine die shall
not be in order until at least two (2) hours have passed since
the time specified for the start of the meeting and the time at
which the meeting was called to order.
(b) If an annual meeting of a qualified corporation is
adjourned sine die without achieving a quorum, the requirement
of W.S. 17-16-701 to hold an annual meeting is satisfied. The
board of directors may call a second annual meeting to take the
place of the one adjourned without a quorum, but the board is
not obligated to do so unless required to do so by the bylaws or
articles of incorporation.
(c) If a special meeting of a qualified corporation is
adjourned sine die without achieving a quorum or without
achieving the quorum necessary to do all or part of the business
for which the meeting was required, the board of directors may
call another special meeting, but is not obligated to do so
unless required by the bylaws or articles of incorporation. The
remedy of a stockholder aggrieved by a failure of the board to
call another special meeting shall be to follow the procedures
necessary for calling a new special meeting.
(d) If different quorums are required for different
matters, the absence of a quorum on one (1) issue shall not
affect the ability of the meeting to act on other issues where a
quorum is present.
ARTICLE 2 - BONDHOLDER PROTECTION PROVISIONS
17-18-201. Protection provisions; applicability; defined.
(a) A qualified corporation may, if its articles of
incorporation authorize it to utilize the bondholder protection
provisions of this act, utilize any of the provisions set forth
in subsection (b) of this section. These protections shall
apply only to bonds, debentures or other debt instruments whose
original aggregate value at maturity is equal to or greater than
five million dollars ($5,000,000.00) and whose original term is
two (2) years or greater. Any number of bondholder protection
provisions may be in effect at any time.
(b) A qualified corporation may provide bondholder
protection by requiring any or all of the following:
(i) Bondholder approval of the replacement of more
than twenty-four percent (24%) of the directors in any twelve
(12) month period. The filling of vacancies created by the
death or resignation of directors shall not be counted against
the twenty-four percent (24%) limit provided that those
vacancies are filled by nominees of the board of directors. If
more than twenty-four percent (24%) of the directors are to be
replaced, the approval of holders of a majority of the bonds
shall be obtained in writing at the meeting where the directors
are to be replaced or no more than thirty (30) days prior to the
meeting. The consent of the bondholders shall be obtained to
exceeding the twenty-four percent (24%) limit rather than to the
individual directors to be replaced. If consent is denied,
which directors are to be replaced shall be determined by the
relative number of votes for each director by shares entitled to
vote;
(ii) Bondholder consent to any merger or acquisition
which the corporation may be subject to or which the corporation
may make, subject to the following:
(A) The notice of bondholder protection shall
specify the size of merger or acquisition at or above which the
bondholder consent is required. The size may vary depending on
whether the company is the acquiring party or is being acquired.
In a merger the relative memberships on the board of directors
of the surviving corporation may be used to determine whether or
not bondholder consent is required;
(B) The term acquisition shall be deemed to
include the purchase of more than a specified percentage of the
shares entitled to vote for directors by a person or combination
of persons under common ownership or control or acting in
concert. If a person or combination of persons acquires more
than the specified percentage of shares, they shall be entitled
to vote only the specified percentage until bondholder consent
is acquired. The specified percentage shall be set in the
notice of bondholder protection and shall not be less than ten
percent (10%);
(C) The bondholder consent shall be to a
specific merger or acquisition rather than the general concept
of mergers and acquisitions.
(iii) Bondholder consent to the sale or disposal of
certain assets, or assets exceeding a certain percentage of the
corporation's total assets, or assets exceeding a set total
value or any combination of these factors. The specifics of
what requires bondholder consent shall be set forth in the
notice of bondholder protection. Disposal of assets shall be
construed to include the disposition of the assets to the
shareholders either directly or through distribution of shares
in a new or subsidiary corporation;
(iv) Bondholder consent to the acquisition of debt
above a specified percentage of total assets, a specified
percentage of the net worth of the corporation, a specific
amount, or any combination of these factors. The consent may be
required generally or may be required only if the debt is to be
used to pay for a merger or acquisition or a distribution to
shareholders. The notice of bondholder protection shall specify
the conditions under which bondholder consent is required.
17-18-202. Bondholder protection provision; adoption
requirements; revocation.
(a) The corporation utilizes a bondholder protection
provision by adopting and filing with the secretary of state a
notice of bondholder protection as provided in this section.
(b) The notice of bondholder protection shall specify the
percentage of bondholders whose consent is required for any
action on that protection. The percentage may be different for
different purposes. The percentage shall be not less than fifty
percent (50%) nor greater than ninety percent (90%). The
percentage shall be a percentage of the value at maturity of the
bonds or other debt instruments issued and outstanding.
(c) Notices of bondholder protection shall be approved by
the corporation in the same manner as changes in corporate
bylaws except that the articles of incorporation may specify a
different manner of approval. The notices shall be filed with
the trustee or transfer agent, if any, for the bonds and with
the secretary of state. The notice filed with the secretary of
state shall be accompanied by the administrative fee specified
by regulation to recover the administrative costs of the state
of Wyoming. The notice shall be effective as of the date of
filing with the secretary of state. The corporation shall send
to each known bondholder by first class mail either the full
notice of bondholder protection or a summary of the notice and
information as to how the full notice may be obtained from the
company. This notice to the bondholders shall be given no later
than the due date of the first interest payment due more than
thirty (30) days after the bondholder protection notice is filed
with the secretary of state and may be included with the mailing
of the interest payment.
(d) Bondholder protections may be revoked by the
corporation in the same manner that notices of bondholder
protection are issued and filed except that the revocation is
effective as of a date specified in the notice filed with the
secretary of state. The effective date shall be at least two
(2) years and not more than six (6) years after filing the
notice of revocation with the secretary of state.
17-18-203. Bondholder protection provision; amendments.
(a) At any time any amendment may be made to the
bondholder protection provisions with the consent of the
percentage of bondholders required for action as stated in the
notice of bondholder protection. Such an amendment shall be
effective upon filing the bondholder's consent and notice of
amendment with the secretary of state. However, the effective
date shall be specified in the notice and shall be at least two
(2) years and not more than six (6) years after filing the
bondholder's consent and notice of the amendment with the
secretary of state for amendments which:
(i) Change the time period for revocations to be
effective;
(ii) Decrease the percentage of bondholders required
for approval of an action;
(iii) Eliminate the requirement of bondholder
approval for a specific action; or
(iv) Otherwise decrease the protection available to
bondholders.
(b) The bondholder's consent shall be in writing signed by
the bondholder or his lawful agent or trustee. Unless otherwise
specified in W.S. 17-18-201 through 17-18-206 the consent is
valid until revoked by the bondholder. The sale of the bond or
debt instrument by the bondholder revokes the consent effective
upon notification of the corporation or transfer agent of the
sale.
17-18-204. Limitations of the bondholder protection
provisions.
(a) Nothing in the bondholder protection provisions shall
be construed or applied to abridge or prohibit any contract,
covenant or restriction made between any corporation and its
bondholders, or any holder of any other debt instrument provided
the contract, covenant or restriction would be lawful in the
absence of W.S. 17-18-201 through 17-18-206. Unless
specifically prohibited by prior contract any eligible
corporation may extend to the holders of any bond or debt
instrument described in W.S. 17-18-201(a) the opportunity to
receive any bondholder protection provisions. If a corporation
represents to potential purchasers of bonds in any prospectus or
other written advice to potential purchasers that it has
extended or intends to extend any bondholder protection
provisions, it shall also state in the same document that the
protections may be revoked as provided by W.S. 17-18-201 through
17-18-206.
(b) Protections under W.S. 17-18-201 through 17-18-206
shall be extended uniformly to all holders of the same class of
bond or debt instrument but need not be extended uniformly to
all classes of bonds or debt instruments.
17-18-205. Bondholder definition.
The term bondholder shall include the owners of any debt
instrument to which bondholder protections are extended.
17-18-206. Additional bondholder protection provisions
allowed.
Any other bondholder protection provisions may be provided in
the notice of bondholder protection, and shall be valid unless
inconsistent with the provisions of W.S. 17-18-201 through
17-18-206 or other law.
ARTICLE 3 - CONTROL SHARE ACQUISITIONS
17-18-301. Definitions.
(a) As used in this article:
(i) "Acquiring person" means a person who makes or
proposes to make a control share acquisition. If two (2) or
more persons act as a partnership, limited partnership,
syndicate or other group pursuant to any agreement, arrangement,
relationship, understanding or otherwise, whether or not in
writing, for the purposes of acquiring, owning or voting shares
of an issuing public corporation, all members of the
partnership, syndicate or other group constitute a person;
(ii) "Control shares" means shares that, except for
this article, would have voting power with respect to shares of
an issuing public corporation that, when added to all other
shares of the issuing public corporation owned by a person or
with respect to which that person may exercise or direct the
exercise of voting power, would entitle that person, immediately
after acquisition of the shares directly or indirectly, alone or
as a part of a group, to exercise or direct the exercise of the
voting power of the issuing public corporation in the election
of directors within any of the following ranges of voting power:
(A) One-fifth (1/5) or more but less than
one-third (1/3) of all voting power;
(B) One-third (1/3) or more but less than a
majority of all voting power; or
(C) A majority or more of all voting power.
(iii) "Control share acquisition" means the
acquisition directly or indirectly by any person of ownership
of, or the power to direct the exercise of voting power with
respect to, issued and outstanding control shares. Shares
acquired within ninety (90) days or shares acquired pursuant to
a plan to make a control share acquisition are considered to
have been acquired in the same acquisition. Control share
acquisition does not include the acquisition of shares:
(A) In the ordinary course of business for the
benefit of others if:
(I) They are acquired in good faith and not
for the purpose of circumventing this article; and
(II) The person who acquires the shares is
not able to exercise or direct the exercise of votes without
further instruction from others.
(B) Of an issuing public corporation
consummated:
(I) Before July 1, 1990;
(II) Pursuant to a contract existing before
July 1, 1990;
(III) Pursuant to a transfer by gift, will
or the laws of descent and distribution;
(IV) Pursuant to the satisfaction of a
pledge or other security interest created in good faith and not
for the purpose of circumventing this article;
(V) Pursuant to a merger, share exchange
or consolidation effected in compliance with W.S. 17-16-1101
through 17-16-1114 or an agreement or plan for a merger, share
exchange or consolidation, if the issuing public corporation is
a party to the agreement or plan of merger, share exchange or
consolidation;
(VI) Pursuant to a transfer of shares by
the issuing public corporation to its shareholders in the form
of a dividend on a class or series of the issuing public
corporation's outstanding shares;
(VII) Pursuant to an order or decree of a
court of competent jurisdiction;
(VIII) Pursuant to a transfer to a plan or
trust for the benefit of employees of the issuing public
corporation;
(IX) Pursuant to a direct issue by or
transfer from the issuing public corporation of its own shares,
other than shares issued or transferred upon the conversion of a
convertible security or on the exercise of an option, warrant or
other right to purchase shares unless the convertible security,
option, warrant or other right was acquired directly from the
corporation by the acquiring person; or
(X) In good faith and not for the purpose
of circumventing this article, by a person whose voting rights
over control shares have been authorized under W.S. 17-18-306,
if the person's voting power after the acquisition would be
within the same range of voting power previously authorized
under W.S. 17-18-306 for the person.
(iv) "Interested shares" means the shares of an
issuing public corporation of which any of the following persons
may exercise or direct the exercise of the voting power of the
corporation in the election of directors:
(A) An acquiring person;
(B) Any officer of the issuing public
corporation or of the acquiring person; or
(C) Any employee of the issuing public
corporation or of the acquiring person who is also a director of
the corporation or of the acquiring person, except shares over
which a plan or trust for the benefit of employees of the
corporation or of the acquiring person has voting power are not
interested shares except to the extent the voting of the shares
is directed by the employee.
(v) "Issuing public corporation" means a qualified
corporation as defined by W.S. 17-18-102(b)(xii);
(vi) "Range of voting power" means a range of voting
power provided by paragraph (ii) of this subsection;
(vii) "Voting power" means the sole or shared power
to vote or direct the voting of shares, directly or indirectly,
other than under an immediately revocable proxy that authorizes
the person named proxy to vote at a meeting of shareholders that
was called before the proxy is delivered or at an adjournment of
the meeting.
17-18-302. Control share voting rights.
(a) Control shares of an issuing public corporation
acquired in a control share acquisition do not have voting
rights unless conferred by a vote of shareholders pursuant to
W.S. 17-18-306.
(b) Control shares for which voting rights have not been
conferred under W.S. 17-18-306 are not considered outstanding
shares for the purposes of determining whether a quorum is
present or whether an action requiring the affirmative vote of
the holders of a specified percentage of the corporation's
outstanding shares has received the requisite affirmative vote.
17-18-303. Notice of control share acquisition; acquiring
person statement.
(a) Any person who proposes to make a control share
acquisition may, and any person who has made a control share
acquisition shall, deliver an acquiring person statement to the
issuing public corporation at the issuing public corporation's
principal office. The acquiring person statement shall contain
the following:
(i) The identity of the acquiring person, including
the identity of each member of any partnership, limited
partnership, syndicate or other group which constitutes a part
of the acquiring person for purposes of W.S. 17-18-301(a)(i);
(ii) A statement that the acquiring person statement
is delivered pursuant to this article;
(iii) A statement of the number of shares of the
issuing public corporation owned directly or indirectly by the
acquiring person or with respect to which the acquiring person
may exercise or direct the exercise of voting power;
(iv) The range of voting power for which the
acquiring person seeks voting rights; and
(v) Any undertaking to pay expenses made pursuant to
W.S. 17-18-304(a) or any requests made pursuant to W.S.
17-18-304(d).
(b) If the control share acquisition has not taken place
the acquiring person statement shall, in addition to the
requirements stated in subsection (a) of this section, contain:
(i) A description in reasonable detail of the terms
and conditions of the proposed control share acquisition,
including without limitation the amount and class or classes of
shares to be acquired, the price or prices to be offered for the
shares and the form of the consideration to be offered; and
(ii) Representations by the acquiring person,
together with a statement in reasonable detail of the facts upon
which they are based and other supporting evidence reasonably
sufficient to establish the representations, that:
(A) The proposed control share acquisition will
not be contrary to law;
(B) The acquiring person has the financial
capacity to make, and will make, the proposed control share
acquisition forthwith after the shareholder vote if voting
rights are accorded.
(iii) An affidavit of the acquiring person that:
(A) States that the acquiring person statement
contains all of the information required by this section;
(B) States that the information contained in the
acquiring person statement is true, correct and complete; and
(C) Is signed by the acquiring person if the
acquiring person is an individual or by the chief executive
officer or similar representative of the acquiring person if the
acquiring person is not an individual.
17-18-304. Shareholder special meeting.
(a) If the acquiring person requests a special meeting at
the time of delivery of an acquiring person statement pursuant
to W.S. 17-18-303 and agrees to pay the corporation's expenses
of a special meeting, the directors of the issuing public
corporation shall call a special meeting of shareholders of the
issuing public corporation within ten (10) days after the date
of the corporation's receipt of the request for the purpose of
considering whether the shares acquired or to be acquired in the
control share acquisition will be accorded voting rights.
(b) Unless the acquiring person agrees in writing to
another date, a special meeting of shareholders shall be held
within fifty (50) days after receipt by the issuing public
corporation of the request.
(c) If no request is made for a special meeting, the issue
of whether the shares acquired in the control share acquisition
will be accorded voting rights shall be presented at the next
special or annual meeting of shareholders.
(d) If requested in writing by the acquiring person when
the acquiring person statement is delivered pursuant to W.S.
17-18-303, the special meeting shall not be held sooner than
thirty (30) days after receipt by the issuing public corporation
of the acquiring person statement.
17-18-305. Notice of shareholder meeting.
(a) The issuing public corporation shall give notice of a
special meeting of shareholders requested pursuant to W.S.
17-18-304 as promptly as practicable to each shareholder of
record as of the record date set for the meeting, whether or not
the shareholder is entitled to vote at the meeting.
(b) Notice of the special or annual shareholder meeting at
which the voting rights are to be considered shall include or be
accompanied by:
(i) A copy of the acquiring person statement
delivered to the issuing public corporation pursuant to this
article; and
(ii) A statement by the board of directors of the
issuing public corporation which:
(A) Is authorized by its directors; and
(B) Contains the position or recommendation of
the board of directors or states that the board of directors
takes no position or makes no recommendation concerning the
proposed control share acquisition; and
(C) Contains a statement of any dissenters'
rights accorded to shareholders of the issuing public
corporation under W.S. 17-18-308.
17-18-306. Voting rights; resolution.
(a) Control shares acquired in a control share acquisition
have the same voting rights accorded the shares before the
control share acquisition only to the extent granted by
resolution approved by the shareholders of the issuing public
corporation.
(b) The resolution required by subsection (a) of this
section shall be approved both by a majority of:
(i) All outstanding voting shares, including
interested shares; and
(ii) All outstanding shares, excluding interested
shares.
(c) In addition to the vote required by subsection (b) of
this section, in the event the holders of the outstanding shares
of a class are entitled to vote as a separate voting group and
the proposed control share acquisition would, if fully carried
out, result in any of the changes described in W.S.
17-16-1004(a), the resolution required by subsection (a) of this
section shall be approved both by:
(i) Each voting group entitled to vote separately on
a proposal by a majority of all votes entitled to be cast by
that voting group, including all interested shares; and
(ii) Each voting group entitled to vote separately on
a proposal by a majority vote of all the votes entitled to be
cast by that voting group excluding all interested shares.
17-18-307. Redemption.
(a) Control shares acquired in a control share acquisition
may be redeemed by the corporation at fair value pursuant to the
procedures adopted by the corporation at any time during the
period ending sixty (60) days after the last acquisition of
control shares by the acquiring person if the control shares are
not accorded voting rights by the shareholders pursuant to W.S.
17-18-306.
(b) For purposes of this section, the procedures to be
adopted by the corporation for determining the fair value to be
paid for a share upon redemption are not required to take into
account and may expressly disregard any increase or proposal for
any increase in the price of the shares following the
announcement or commencement of the control share acquisition or
any proposal. The provisions of W.S. 17-18-308(b) do not apply
to this section.
(c) The provisions of this section shall not apply to a
control share acquisition to which the provisions of this
article otherwise apply if, at the time the issuing public
corporation receives an acquiring person statement with respect
to the control share acquisition, the articles of incorporation
or bylaws of the issuing public corporation contain a provision
expressly electing not to be governed by this section.
17-18-308. Rights of dissenters; "fair value" defined.
(a) A shareholder of the issuing public corporation, other
than the acquiring person, who does not vote in favor of the
control share acquisition may dissent from any proposal to
accord voting rights to the control shares over which voting
power was or is to be acquired in the control share acquisition.
Each shareholder dissenting from the proposal is entitled to
receive the fair value of the shareholder's shares under W.S.
17-16-1301 through 17-16-1331 if the control shares acquired or
to be acquired in the control share acquisition are accorded
voting rights under W.S. 17-18-306 and the acquiring person has
or is authorized to have a majority of all voting power.
(b) For purposes of this section, the fair value to be
paid for a share of a dissenting shareholder may not be less
than the highest price paid for a share by the acquiring person
in the control share acquisition.
(c) The provisions of this section shall not apply to a
control share acquisition to which the provisions of this
article otherwise apply if, at the time the issuing public
corporation receives an acquiring person statement with respect
to the control share acquisition, the articles of incorporation
or bylaws of the issuing public corporation contain a provision
expressly electing not to be governed by this section.
17-18-309. Application.
(a) The provisions of this article shall not apply to a
control share acquisition if, at the time the issuing public
corporation receives an acquiring person statement with respect
to the control share acquisition, the articles of incorporation
or bylaws of the issuing public corporation contain a provision
expressly electing not to be governed by this article.
(b) A corporation which is not an issuing public
corporation may provide in its articles of incorporation or
bylaws that this article does not apply to control share
acquisitions of shares of the corporation in the event it
becomes an issuing public corporation.
ARTICLE 4 - MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
17-18-401. No effect on other actions; no liability.
This act does not effect, directly or indirectly, the validity
of another action by the board of directors of a corporation,
nor does it preclude the board of directors from taking other
action in accordance with law. The board of directors incurs no
liability for elections made or not made under this act.
17-18-402. Conflict of laws.
If a provision of this act conflicts with another provision of
the Wyoming Business Corporation Act, the provision of this act
controls.
17-18-403. Prohibition against waivers.
A condition, stipulation or other provision in an agreement or
transaction between any shareholders of a corporation that
purports to waive compliance with or the rights afforded
stockholders under this act is void.
CHAPTER 19 - WYOMING NONPROFIT CORPORATION ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
A. Short Title and Reservation of Power
17-19-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Nonprofit Corporation Act."
17-19-102. Reservation of power to amend or repeal.
The legislature shall have the power to amend or repeal all or
part of this act at any time and all domestic and foreign
corporations subject to this act shall be governed by the
amendment or repeal.
B. Filing Documents
17-19-120. Filing requirements.
(a) A document shall satisfy the requirements of this
section, and of any other section that adds to or varies these
requirements, to be entitled to filing by the secretary of
state.
(b) This act shall require or permit filing the document
in the office of the secretary of state.
(c) The document shall contain the information required by
this act. It may contain other information as well.
(d) The document shall be typewritten or printed.
(e) The document shall be in the English language.
However, a corporate name need not be in English if written in
English letters or Arabic or Roman numerals, and the certificate
of existence required of foreign corporations need not be in
English if accompanied by an English translation acceptable to
the secretary of state.
(f) The document shall be executed:
(i) By the chairman of the board of directors of a
domestic or foreign corporation, by its president or by another
of its officers;
(ii) If directors have not been selected or the
corporation has not been formed, by an incorporator; or
(iii) If the corporation is in the hands of a
receiver, trustee or other court-appointed fiduciary, by that
fiduciary.
(g) The person executing a document shall sign it manually
and shall state beneath or opposite the signature his name and
the capacity in which he signs. The document may, but need not,
contain:
(i) The corporate seal;
(ii) An attestation by the secretary or an assistant
secretary; or
(iii) An acknowledgment, verification or proof.
(h) If the secretary of state has prescribed a mandatory
form for a document under W.S. 17-19-121, the document shall be
in or on the prescribed form.
(j) The document shall be delivered to the office of the
secretary of state for filing and shall be accompanied by:
(i) One (1) exact or conformed copy (except as
provided in W.S. 17-28-103);
(ii) The correct filing fee; and
(iii) Any past due or currently due franchise tax,
license fee, other fee or penalty required by this act or other
law.
17-19-121. Forms.
(a) If the secretary of state so requires, use of forms
provided by the secretary of state pursuant to this subsection
is mandatory. The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish
on request forms for:
(i) An application for a certificate of existence;
(ii) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state;
(iii) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of withdrawal;
(iv) The annual report;
(v) A foreign corporation's application for a
certificate of continuance; and
(vi) A foreign corporation's application for
certificate of domestication.
(b) The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish on
request forms for other documents required or permitted to be
filed by this act but their use is not mandatory.
17-19-122. Filing, service and copying fees.
(a) The secretary of state shall collect the following
fees when the documents described in this subsection are
delivered for filing:
Document Fee
(i) Articles of Incorporation......$50.00
(ii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(iii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(iv) Amendment of articles of
incorporation.................................$25.00
(v) Application for certificate of authority
..............................................$50.00
(vi) Application for certificate of existence or
authorization.................................$20.00
(vii) Application for conversion..........$75.00
(b) The secretary of state shall collect a fee of five
dollars ($5.00) upon being served with process under this act.
(c) The secretary of state shall set and collect
comparable filing, service and copying fees for those documents
not listed in subsection (a) of this section.
17-19-123. Effective date of document.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
a document is effective:
(i) At the time of filing on the date it is filed, as
evidenced by the secretary of state's endorsement on the
original document; or
(ii) At the time specified in the document as its
effective time on the date it is filed.
(b) A document may specify a delayed effective time and
date, and if it does so the document becomes effective at the
time and date specified. If a delayed effective date but no
time is specified, the document is effective at the close of
business on that date. A delayed effective date for a document
may not be later than the 90th day after the date filed.
17-19-124. Correcting filed document.
(a) A domestic or foreign corporation may correct a
document filed by the secretary of state if the document:
(i) Contains an incorrect statement; or
(ii) Was defectively executed, attested, sealed,
verified or acknowledged.
(b) A document is corrected:
(i) By preparing articles of correction that:
(A) Describe the document, including its filing
date, or attach a copy of the document to the articles of
correction;
(B) Specify the incorrect statement and the
reason it is incorrect or the manner in which the execution was
defective; and
(C) Correct the incorrect statement or defective
execution.
(ii) By delivering the articles of correction to the
secretary of state for filing.
(c) Articles of correction are effective on the effective
date of the document they correct except as to persons relying
on the uncorrected document and adversely affected by the
correction. As to those persons, articles of correction are
effective when filed.
17-19-125. Filing duty of secretary of state.
(a) If a document delivered to the office of the secretary
of state for filing satisfies the requirements of W.S.
17-19-120, the secretary of state shall file it.
(b) The secretary of state files a document by stamping or
otherwise endorsing "Filed," together with his name and official
title and the date and the time of filing, on both the original
and copy of the document and on the receipt for the filing fee.
After filing a document, except as provided in W.S. 17-28-103,
the secretary of state shall deliver the document copy, with the
filing fee receipt (or acknowledgment of receipt if no fee is
required) attached, to the domestic or foreign corporation or
its representative. The secretary of state, in his discretion,
may issue a certificate evidencing the filing of a document upon
the payment of the requisite fee.
(c) If the secretary of state refuses to file a document
he shall return it to the domestic or foreign corporation or its
representative within fifteen (15) days after the document was
delivered, together with a brief, written explanation of the
reason or reasons for his refusal.
(d) The secretary of state's duty to file documents under
this section is ministerial. Filing or refusal to file a
document does not:
(i) Affect the validity or invalidity of the document
in whole or in part;
(ii) Relate to the correctness or incorrectness of
information contained in the document; or
(iii) Create a presumption that the document is valid
or invalid or that information contained in the document is
correct or incorrect.
17-19-126. Appeal from secretary of state's refusal to
file document.
(a) If the secretary of state refuses to file a document
delivered to his office for filing, the domestic or foreign
corporation may, within thirty (30) days after the return of the
document, appeal the refusal to the district court of the county
where the corporation's principal office is located in the state
or, if the corporation does not have a principal office in the
state, the district court of the county where its registered
office is or will be located, or the district court of the
county of residence of an incorporator for a domestic
corporation, or in the district court of Laramie county. The
appeal is commenced by petitioning the court to compel filing
the document and by attaching to the petition the document and
the secretary of state's explanation of his refusal to file.
(b) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to file the document or take other action the court considers
appropriate.
(c) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
17-19-127. Evidentiary effect of copy of filed document.
A certificate attached to a copy of a document filed by the
secretary of state, bearing his signature (which may be in
facsimile) and the seal of this state, is conclusive evidence
that the original document is on file with the secretary of
state.
17-19-128. Certificate of existence.
(a) Any person may apply to the secretary of state to
furnish a certificate of existence for a domestic or foreign
corporation.
(b) The certificate of existence sets forth:
(i) The domestic corporation's corporate name or the
foreign corporation's corporate name used in this state;
(ii) That:
(A) The domestic corporation is duly
incorporated under the law of this state, the date of its
incorporation, and the period of its duration if less than
perpetual; or
(B) The foreign corporation is authorized to
transact business in this state.
(iii) That all fees, taxes and penalties owed to this
state have been paid, if:
(A) Payment is reflected in the records of the
secretary of state; and
(B) Nonpayment affects the good standing of the
domestic or foreign corporation.
(iv) That its most recent annual report required by
W.S. 17-19-1630 has been delivered to the secretary of state;
(v) That articles of dissolution have not been filed;
and
(vi) Other facts of record in the office of the
secretary of state that may be requested by the applicant.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the
certificate, a certificate of existence issued by the secretary
of state may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the
domestic or foreign corporation is in existence or is authorized
to transact business in this state.
(d) The term "certificate of existence" is synonymous with
the term "certificate of good standing."
17-19-129. Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
C. Secretary of State
17-19-130. Powers.
The secretary of state has the power reasonably necessary to
perform the duties required of him by this act. The secretary
of state shall promulgate reasonable forms, rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.
D. Definitions
17-19-140. General definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Approved by (or approval by) the members" means
approved or ratified by the affirmative vote of a majority of
the votes represented and voting at a duly held meeting at which
a quorum is present (which affirmative votes also constitute a
majority of the required quorum) or by a written ballot or
written consent in conformity with this act or by the
affirmative vote, written ballot or written consent of such
greater proportion, including the votes of all the members of
any class, unit or grouping as may be provided in the articles,
bylaws or this act for any specified member action;
(ii) "Articles of incorporation" or "articles"
include amended and restated articles of incorporation and
articles of merger;
(iii) "Board" or "board of directors" means the board
of directors except that no person or group of persons are the
board of directors because of powers delegated to that person or
group pursuant to W.S. 17-19-801, and includes any person or
group under whose authority corporate powers are exercised and
under whose direction the affairs of the corporation are
managed, regardless of the name of the person or group whether
it be trustees, regents, overseers or some other name;
(iv) "Bylaws" means the code or codes of rules (other
than the articles) adopted pursuant to this act for the
regulation or management of the affairs of the corporation
irrespective of the name or names by which such rules are
designated;
(v) "Certificate of existence" means a certificate
issued pursuant to W.S. 17-19-128;
(vi) "Class" refers to a group of memberships which
have the same rights with respect to voting, dissolution,
redemption and transfer. For the purpose of this section,
rights shall be considered the same if they are determined by a
formula applied uniformly;
(vii) "Corporation" means public benefit, mutual
benefit and religious corporation;
(viii) "Delegates" means those persons elected or
appointed to vote in a representative assembly for the election
of a director or directors or on other matters;
(ix) "Deliver" includes mail;
(x) "Directors" means individuals, designated in the
articles or bylaws or elected by the incorporators, and their
successors and individuals elected or appointed by any other
name or title to act as members of the board;
(xi) "Distribution" means the payment of a dividend
or any part of the income or profit of a corporation to its
members, directors or officers;
(xii) "Domestic corporation" means a corporation;
(xiii) "Effective date of notice" is defined in W.S.
17-19-141;
(xiv) "Employee" does not include an officer or
director who is not otherwise employed by the corporation;
(xv) "Entity" includes corporation and foreign
corporation, business corporation and foreign business
corporation, profit and nonprofit unincorporated association,
corporation sole, business trust, estate, partnership, trust,
and two (2) or more persons having a joint or common economic
interest, and state, United States and foreign government;
(xvi) "File," "filed," or "filing" means filed in the
office of the secretary of state;
(xvii) "Foreign corporation" means the corporation
organized under a law other than the law of this state which
would be a nonprofit corporation if formed under the laws of
this state;
(xviii) "Governmental subdivision" includes
authority, county, district, municipality and any other
political subdivision;
(xix) "Includes" denotes a partial definition;
(xx) "Individual" includes the estate of an
incompetent individual;
(xxi) "Means" denotes a complete definition;
(xxii) "Member" means (without regard to what a
person is called in the articles or bylaws) any person or
persons who on more than one (1) occasion, pursuant to a
provision of a corporation's articles or bylaws, have the right
to vote for the election of a director or directors, subject to
the following:
(A) A person is not a member by virtue of any of
the following:
(I) Any rights the person has as a
delegate;
(II) Any rights the person has to designate
a director or directors; or
(III) Any rights the person has as a
director.
(B) All members or all members of a class of
members shall have the same number of votes unless the articles
of incorporation specify otherwise.
(xxiii) "Membership" refers to the rights and
obligations a member or members have pursuant to a corporation's
articles, bylaws and this act;
(xxiv) "Mutual benefit corporation" means a domestic
corporation which is formed as a mutual benefit corporation
pursuant to article 2 of this act or is required to be a mutual
benefit corporation pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1804;
(xxv) "Notice" is defined in W.S. 17-19-141;
(xxvi) "Person" includes any individual or entity;
(xxvii) "Principal office" means the office (within
or outside this state) so designated in the annual report;
(xxviii) "Proceeding" includes civil suit and
criminal, administrative, and investigatory action;
(xxix) "Public benefit corporation" means a domestic
corporation which is formed as a public benefit corporation
pursuant to article 2 of this act or is required to be a public
benefit corporation pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1804;
(xxx) "Record date" means the date established under
article 6 or 7 of this act on which a corporation determines the
identity of its members for the purposes of this act;
(xxxi) "Religious corporation" means a domestic
corporation which is formed as a religious corporation pursuant
to article 2 of this act or is required to be a religious
corporation pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1804;
(xxxii) "Secretary" means the corporate officer to
whom the board of directors has delegated responsibility under
W.S. 17-19-840(b) for custody of the minutes of the directors'
and members' meetings and for authenticating the records of the
corporation;
(xxxiii) "State," when referring to a part of the
United States, includes a state and commonwealth (and their
agencies and governmental subdivisions) and a territory, and
insular possession (and their agencies and governmental
subdivisions) of the United States;
(xxxiv) "United States" includes district, authority,
bureau, commission, department and any other agency of the
United States;
(xxxv) "Vote" includes authorization by written
ballot and written consent;
(xxxvi) "Voting power" means the total number of
votes entitled to be cast for the election of directors at the
time the determination of voting power is made, excluding a vote
which is contingent upon the happening of a condition or event
that has not occurred at the time. Where a class is entitled to
vote as a class for directors, the determination of voting power
of the class shall be based on the percentage of the number of
directors the class is entitled to elect out of the total number
of authorized directors;
(xxxvii) "Registered agent" means as provided in W.S.
17-28-101 through 17-28-111;
(xxxviii) "This act" means W.S. 17-19-101 through
17-19-1807.
17-19-141. Notice.
(a) Notice under this act shall be in writing unless oral
notice is reasonable under the circumstances.
(b) Notice may be communicated in person; by telephone,
telegraph, teletype or other form of wire or wireless
communication; or by mail or private carrier. If these forms of
personal notice are impracticable, notice may be communicated by
a newspaper of general circulation in the area where published;
or by radio, television or other form of public broadcast
communication.
(c) Oral notice is effective when communicated if
communicated in a comprehensible manner.
(d) Written notice, if in a comprehensible form, is
effective at the earliest of the following:
(i) When received;
(ii) Five (5) days after its deposit in the United
States mail, as evidenced by the postmark, if mailed correctly
addressed and with first class postage affixed;
(iii) On the date shown on the return receipt, if
sent by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested,
and the receipt is signed by or on behalf of the addressee;
(iv) Thirty (30) days after its deposit in the United
States mail, as evidenced by the postmark, if mailed correctly
addressed and with other than first class, registered or
certified postage affixed.
(e) Written notice is correctly addressed to a member of a
domestic or foreign corporation if addressed to the member's
address shown in the corporation's current list of members.
(f) A written notice or report delivered as part of a
newsletter, magazine or other publication regularly sent to
members shall constitute a written notice or report if addressed
or delivered to the member's address shown in the corporation's
current list of members, or in the case of members who are
residents of the same household and who have the same address in
the corporation's current list of members, if addressed or
delivered to one (1) of such members, at the address appearing
on the current list of members.
(g) Written notice is correctly addressed to a domestic or
foreign corporation (authorized to transact business in this
state), other than in its capacity as a member, if addressed to
its registered agent or to its secretary at its principal office
shown in its most recent annual report or, in the case of a
foreign corporation that has not yet delivered an annual report,
in its application for a certificate of authority.
(h) If W.S. 17-19-705(b) or any other provision of this
act prescribes notice requirements for particular circumstances,
those requirements govern. If articles or bylaws prescribe
notice requirements, not inconsistent with this section or other
provisions of this act, those requirements govern.
E. Private Foundations
17-19-150. Private foundations.
(a) Except where otherwise determined by a court of
competent jurisdiction, a corporation that is a private
foundation as defined in section 509(a) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986:
(i) Shall distribute such amounts for each taxable
year at such time and in such manner as not to subject the
corporation to tax under section 4942 of the code;
(ii) Shall not engage in any act of self-dealing as
defined in section 4941(d) of the code;
(iii) Shall not retain any excess business holdings
as defined in section 4943(c) of the code;
(iv) Shall not make any taxable expenditures as
defined in section 4944 of the code;
(v) Shall not make any taxable expenditures as
defined in section 4945(d) of the code.
(b) All references in this section to sections of the code
shall be to such sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
as amended from time to time, or to corresponding provisions of
subsequent internal revenue laws of the United States.
F. Judicial Relief
17-19-160. Judicial relief.
(a) If for any reason it is impractical or impossible for
any corporation to call or conduct a meeting of its members,
delegates or directors, or otherwise obtain their consent, in
the manner prescribed by its articles, bylaws or this act, then
upon petition of a director, officer, delegate, member or the
attorney general, the district court of the county where the
corporation's principal office is located in the state or, if
the corporation does not have a principal office in this state,
of the county where its registered office is located, may order
that such a meeting be called or that a written ballot or other
form of obtaining the vote of members, delegates or directors be
authorized, in such a manner as the court finds fair and
equitable under the circumstances.
(b) The court shall, in an order issued pursuant to this
section, provide for a method of notice reasonably designed to
give actual notice to all persons who would be entitled to
notice of a meeting held pursuant to the articles, bylaws and
this act, whether or not the method results in actual notice to
all such persons or conforms to the notice requirements that
would otherwise apply. In a proceeding under this section the
court may determine who the members or directors are.
(c) The order issued pursuant to this section may dispense
with any requirement relating to the holding of or voting at
meetings or obtaining votes, including any requirement as to
quorums or as to the number or percentage of votes needed for
approval, that would otherwise be imposed by the articles,
bylaws or this act.
(d) Whenever practical any order issued pursuant to this
section shall limit the subject matter of meetings or other
forms of consent authorized to items, including amendments to
the articles or bylaws, the resolution of which will or may
enable the corporation to continue managing its affairs without
further resort to this section; provided, however, that an order
under this section may also authorize the obtaining of whatever
votes and approvals are necessary for the dissolution, merger,
consolidation or sale of assets.
(e) Any meeting or other method of obtaining the vote of
members, delegates or directors conducted pursuant to an order
issued under this section, and that complies with all the
provisions of such order, is for all purposes a valid meeting or
vote, as the case may be, and shall have the same force and
effect as if it complied with every requirement imposed by the
articles, bylaws and this act.
G. Attorney General
17-19-170. Attorney general.
(a) The secretary of state shall be given notice of the
commencement of any proceeding that this act authorizes the
attorney general to bring but that has been commenced by another
person.
(b) Whenever any provision of this act requires that
notice be given to the secretary of state before or after
commencing a proceeding or permits the attorney general to
commence a proceeding:
(i) If no proceeding has been commenced, the attorney
general may take appropriate action including, but not limited
to, seeking injunctive relief;
(ii) If a proceeding has been commenced by a person
other than the attorney general, the attorney general, as of
right, may intervene in such proceeding.
H. Religious Corporations
17-19-180. Constitutional protections.
If religious doctrine governing the affairs of a religious
corporation is inconsistent with the provisions of this act on
the same subject, the religious doctrine shall control to the
extent required by the constitution of the United States or the
constitution of this state or both.
ARTICLE 2 - ORGANIZATION
17-19-201. Incorporators.
One (1) or more persons may act as the incorporator or
incorporators of a corporation by delivering articles of
incorporation to the secretary of state for filing.
17-19-202. Articles of incorporation.
(a) The articles of incorporation shall set forth:
(i) A corporate name for the corporation that
satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-19-401;
(ii) One (1) of the following statements:
(A) This corporation is a public benefit
corporation;
(B) This corporation is a mutual benefit
corporation;
(C) This corporation is a religious corporation.
(iii) The street address of the corporation's initial
registered office and the name of its initial registered agent
at that office;
(iv) The name and address of each incorporator;
(v) Whether or not the corporation will have members;
and
(vi) Provisions not inconsistent with law regarding
the distribution of assets on dissolution. These provisions may
be consistent with the requirements of the Internal Revenue
Code, as amended, for tax exempt status.
(b) The articles of incorporation may set forth:
(i) Any provision required by the Internal Revenue
Code, as amended, for tax exempt or other tax status;
(ii) The purpose or purposes for which the
corporation is organized, which may be, either alone or in
combination with other purposes, the transaction of any lawful
activity;
(iii) The names and addresses of the individuals who
are to serve as the initial directors;
(iv) Provisions not inconsistent with law regarding:
(A) Managing and regulating the affairs of the
corporation;
(B) Defining, limiting and regulating the powers
of the corporation, its board of directors and members (or any
class of members); and
(C) The characteristics, qualifications, rights,
limitations and obligations attaching to each or any class of
members.
(v) Any provision that under this act is required or
permitted to be set forth in the bylaws;
(vi) Any provision giving members different numbers
of votes on all questions or particular classes of questions,
unequal assessments, or in the case of mutual benefit
corporations, unequal rights to assets upon dissolution. These
provisions may include the basis upon which these inequalities
are to be determined. For mutual benefit corporations, the
provisions may include rights of dissent if these rights or
inequalities are changed.
(c) Each incorporator and director named in the articles
shall sign the articles.
(d) The articles of incorporation need not set forth any
of the corporate powers enumerated in this act.
(e) The articles of incorporation shall be accompanied by
a written consent to appointment manually signed by the
registered agent.
17-19-203. Incorporation.
(a) Unless a delayed effective date is specified, the
corporate existence begins when the articles of incorporation
are filed.
(b) The secretary of state's filing of the articles of
incorporation is conclusive proof that the incorporators
satisfied all conditions precedent to incorporation except in a
proceeding by the state to cancel or revoke the incorporation or
involuntarily dissolve the corporation.
17-19-204. Liability for preincorporation transactions.
All persons purporting to act as or on behalf of a corporation
formed under this act, knowing there was no incorporation under
this act, are jointly and severally liable for all liabilities
created while so acting.
17-19-205. Organization of corporation.
(a) After incorporation:
(i) If initial directors are named in the articles of
incorporation, the initial directors shall hold an
organizational meeting, at the call of a majority of the
directors, to complete the organization of the corporation by
appointing officers, adopting bylaws and carrying on any other
business brought before the meeting;
(ii) If initial directors are not named in the
articles, the incorporator or incorporators shall hold an
organizational meeting at the call of a majority of the
incorporators:
(A) To elect directors and complete the
organization of the corporation; or
(B) To elect a board of directors who shall
complete the organization of the corporation.
(b) Action required or permitted by this act to be taken
by incorporators at an organizational meeting may be taken
without a meeting if the action taken is evidenced by one (1) or
more written consents describing the action taken and signed
either manually or in facsimile by each incorporator.
(c) An organizational meeting may be held in or out of
this state.
17-19-206. Bylaws.
(a) The incorporators or board of directors of a
corporation shall adopt initial bylaws for the corporation.
(b) The bylaws may contain any provision for regulating
and managing the affairs of the corporation that is not
inconsistent with law or the articles of incorporation.
(c) If bylaws are not adopted:
(i) An annual meeting shall be held within three (3)
months after the close of the corporation's fiscal year;
(ii) The required officers shall be the president,
the secretary and the treasurer; and
(iii) Bylaws may be adopted at any director or member
meeting.
17-19-207. Emergency bylaws and powers.
(a) Unless the articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, the board of directors of a corporation may adopt
bylaws to be effective only in an emergency defined in
subsection (d) of this section. The emergency bylaws, which are
subject to amendment or repeal by the members, may make all
provisions necessary for managing the corporation during the
emergency, including:
(i) Procedures for calling a meeting of the board of
directors;
(ii) Quorum requirements for the meeting; and
(iii) Designation of additional or substitute
directors.
(b) All provisions of the regular bylaws consistent with
the emergency bylaws remain effective during the emergency. The
emergency bylaws are not effective after the emergency ends.
(c) Corporate action taken in good faith in accordance
with the emergency bylaws:
(i) Binds the corporation; and
(ii) Shall not be used to impose liability on a
corporate director, officer, employee or agent unless the action
violates standards otherwise set forth in this act.
(d) An emergency exists for purposes of this section if a
quorum of the corporation's directors cannot readily be
assembled because of some extraordinary event.
ARTICLE 3 - PURPOSES AND POWERS
17-19-301. Purposes.
(a) Every corporation incorporated under this act has the
purpose of engaging in any lawful activity unless a more limited
purpose is set forth in the articles of incorporation.
(b) A corporation engaging in an activity that is subject
to regulation under another statute of this state may
incorporate under this act only if permitted by, and subject to
all limitations of, the other statute.
17-19-302. General powers.
(a) Unless its articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, every corporation has perpetual duration and
succession in its corporate name and has the same powers as an
individual to do all things necessary or convenient to carry out
its affairs including, without limitation, power:
(i) To sue and be sued, complain and defend in its
corporate name;
(ii) To have a corporate seal, which may be altered
at will, and to use it, or a facsimile of it, by impressing or
affixing or in any other manner reproducing it;
(iii) To make and amend bylaws not inconsistent with
its articles of incorporation or with the laws of this state,
for regulating and managing the affairs of the corporation;
(iv) To purchase, receive, lease or otherwise
acquire, and own, hold, improve, use and otherwise deal with,
real or personal property or any legal or equitable interest in
property, wherever located;
(v) To sell, convey, mortgage, pledge, lease,
exchange and otherwise dispose of all or any part of its
property;
(vi) To purchase, receive, subscribe for or otherwise
acquire, own, hold, vote, use, sell, mortgage, lend, pledge or
otherwise dispose of, and deal in and with, shares or other
interests in, or obligations of any entity;
(vii) To make contracts and guaranties, incur
liabilities, borrow money, issue notes, bonds and other
obligations, and secure any of its obligations by mortgage or
pledge of any of its property, franchises or income;
(viii) To lend money, invest and reinvest its funds
and receive and hold real and personal property as security for
repayment, except as limited by W.S. 17-19-832;
(ix) To be a promoter, partner, member, associate or
manager of any partnership, joint venture, trust or other
entity;
(x) To conduct its activities, locate offices and
exercise the powers granted by this act within or without this
state;
(xi) To elect or appoint directors, officers,
employees and agents of the corporation, define their duties and
fix their compensation;
(xii) To pay pensions and establish pension plans,
pension trusts and other benefit and incentive plans for any or
all of its current or former directors, officers, employees and
agents;
(xiii) To make donations not inconsistent with law
for the public welfare or for charitable, religious, scientific
or educational purposes and for other purposes that further the
corporate interest;
(xiv) To impose dues, assessments, admission and
transfer fees upon its members;
(xv) To establish conditions for admission of
members, admit members and issue memberships;
(xvi) To carry on a business;
(xvii) To do all things necessary or convenient, not
inconsistent with law, to further the activities and affairs of
the corporation.
17-19-303. Emergency powers.
(a) In anticipation of or during an emergency defined in
subsection (d) of this section, the board of directors of a
corporation may:
(i) Modify lines of succession to accommodate the
incapacity of any director, officer, employee or agent; and
(ii) Relocate the principal office, designate
alternative principal offices or regional offices, or authorize
the officers to do so.
(b) During an emergency defined in subsection (d) of this
section, unless emergency bylaws provide otherwise:
(i) Notice of a meeting of the board of directors
need be given only to those directors whom it is practicable to
reach and may be given in any practicable manner, including by
publication and radio; and
(ii) One (1) or more officers of the corporation
present at a meeting of the board of directors may be deemed to
be directors for the meeting, in order of rank and within the
same rank in order of seniority, as necessary to achieve a
quorum.
(c) Corporate action taken in good faith during an
emergency under this section to further the ordinary affairs of
the corporation:
(i) Binds the corporation; and
(ii) May not be used to impose liability on a
corporate director, officer, employee or agent unless the action
violates standards otherwise set forth in this act.
(d) An emergency exists for the purposes of this section
if a quorum of the corporation's directors cannot readily be
assembled because of some extraordinary event.
17-19-304. Ultra vires.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the validity of corporate action may not be challenged on the
ground that the corporation lacks or lacked power to act.
(b) A corporation's power to act may be challenged in a
proceeding against the corporation to enjoin an act where a
third party has not acquired rights. The proceeding may be
brought by the attorney general, a director or by a member or
members in a derivative proceeding.
(c) A corporation's power to act may be challenged in a
proceeding against an incumbent or former director, officer,
employee or agent of the corporation. The proceeding may be
brought by a director, the corporation, directly, derivatively,
or through a receiver, a trustee or other legal representative,
or in the case of a public benefit corporation, by the attorney
general.
ARTICLE 4 - NAMES
17-19-401. Corporate name.
(a) A corporate name may not contain language stating or
implying that the corporation is organized for a purpose other
than that permitted by W.S. 17-19-301 and its articles of
incorporation.
(b) Except as authorized by subsections (c) and (d) of
this section, a corporate name shall not be the same as, or
deceptively similar to the name of any trademark or service mark
registered in this state and shall be distinguishable upon the
records of the secretary of state from other business names as
required by W.S. 17-16-401.
(c) A corporation may apply to the secretary of state for
authorization to use a name that is not distinguishable in
accordance with the provisions of W.S. 17-16-401(c).
(i) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(ii) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(d) A corporation may use the name, including the
fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign corporation that
is used in this state if the other corporation is incorporated
or authorized to transact business in this state and the
proposed user corporation:
(i) Has merged with the other corporation; or
(ii) Has been formed by reorganization of the other
corporation; or
(iii) Has acquired all or substantially all of the
assets, including the corporate name, of the other corporation.
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(e) This act does not control the use of fictitious names.
17-19-402. Reserved name.
(a) A person may apply to reserve the exclusive use of a
corporate name, including a fictitious name for a foreign
corporation whose corporate name is not available, by delivering
an application to the secretary of state for filing. The
application shall set forth the name and address of the
applicant and the name proposed to be reserved. If the
secretary of state finds that the corporate name applied for is
available, he shall file the application pursuant to W.S.
17-19-125 and reserve the name for the applicant's exclusive use
for a nonrenewable one hundred twenty (120) day period.
(b) The owner of a reserved corporate name may transfer
the reservation to another person by delivering to the secretary
of state a manually signed notice of the transfer that states
the name and address of the transferee.
ARTICLE 5 - OFFICE AND AGENT
17-19-501. Registered office and registered agent.
(a) Each corporation shall continuously maintain in this
state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111; and
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(A) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(B) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(C) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all nonprofit corporations.
17-19-502. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-19-503. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-19-504. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
ARTICLE 6 - MEMBERS AND MEMBERSHIPS
A. Admission of Members
17-19-601. Admission.
(a) The articles or bylaws may establish criteria or
procedures for admission of members.
(b) No person shall be admitted as a member without his
consent.
17-19-602. Consideration.
Except as provided in its articles or bylaws, a corporation may
admit members for no consideration or for any consideration as
is determined by the board.
17-19-603. No requirement of members.
A corporation is not required to have members.
B. Types of Memberships - Members' Rights and Obligations
17-19-610. Differences in rights and obligations of
members.
All members shall have the same rights and obligations with
respect to voting, dissolution, redemption and transfer, unless
the articles or bylaws establish classes of membership with
different rights or obligations. All members shall have the
same rights and obligations with respect to any other matters,
except as set forth in or authorized by the articles or bylaws.
17-19-611. Transfers.
(a) Except as set forth in or authorized by the articles
or bylaws, no member of a mutual benefit corporation may
transfer a membership or any right arising therefrom.
(b) No member of a public benefit or religious corporation
may transfer a membership or any right arising therefrom.
(c) Where transfer rights have been provided, no
restriction on them shall be binding with respect to a member
holding a membership issued prior to the adoption of the
restriction unless the restriction is approved by the members
and the affected member.
17-19-612. Member's liability to third parties.
A member of a corporation is not, as such, personally liable for
the acts, debts, liabilities or obligations of the corporation.
17-19-613. Member's liability for dues, assessments and
fees.
A member may become liable to the corporation for dues,
assessments or fees as a condition for remaining a member. An
article, bylaw or corporate resolution authorizing dues,
assessments or fees is not, by itself, sufficient to impose
liability without the consent or acquiescence of the member.
17-19-614. Creditor's action against member.
(a) No proceeding may be brought by a creditor to reach
the liability, if any, of a member to the corporation unless
final judgment has been rendered in favor of the creditor
against the corporation and execution has been returned
unsatisfied in whole or in part or unless such proceeding would
be useless.
(b) All creditors of the corporation, with or without
reducing their claims to judgment, may intervene in any
creditor's proceeding brought under subsection (a) of this
section to reach and apply unpaid amounts due the corporation.
Any or all members who owe amounts to the corporation may be
joined in such proceeding.
C. Resignation and Termination
17-19-620. Resignation.
(a) A member may resign at any time.
(b) The resignation of a member does not relieve the
member from any obligations the member may have to the
corporation as a result of obligations incurred or commitments
made prior to resignation.
17-19-621. Termination, expulsion and suspension.
(a) No member of a public benefit or mutual benefit
corporation may be expelled or suspended, and no membership or
memberships in such corporations may be terminated or suspended
except pursuant to a procedure that is fair and reasonable and
is carried out in good faith.
(b) A procedure is fair and reasonable when either:
(i) The articles or bylaws set forth a procedure that
provides:
(A) Not less than fifteen (15) days prior
written notice of the expulsion, suspension or termination and
the reasons therefor; and
(B) An opportunity for the member to be heard,
orally or in writing, not less than five (5) days before the
effective date of the expulsion, suspension or termination by a
person or persons authorized to decide that the proposed
expulsion, termination or suspension not take place; or
(ii) It is fair and reasonable taking into
consideration all of the relevant facts and circumstances.
(c) Any written notice given by mail shall be given by
first class, return receipt requested, sent to the last address
of the member shown on the corporation's records.
(d) Any proceeding challenging an expulsion, suspension or
termination, including a proceeding in which defective notice is
alleged, shall be commenced within one (1) year after the
effective date of the expulsion, suspension or termination.
(e) A member who has been expelled or suspended may be
liable to the corporation for dues, assessments or fees as a
result of obligations incurred or commitments made prior to
expulsion or suspension.
17-19-622. Purchase of memberships.
(a) A public benefit or religious corporation may not
purchase any of its memberships or any right arising therefrom.
(b) A mutual benefit corporation may purchase the
membership of a member who resigns or whose membership is
terminated for the amount and pursuant to the conditions set
forth in or authorized by its articles or bylaws. No payment
shall be made in violation of article 13 of this act.
D. Derivative Suits
17-19-630. Derivative suits.
(a) A proceeding may be brought in the right of a domestic
or foreign corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by:
(i) Any member or members having five percent (5%) or
more of the voting power or by fifty (50) members, whichever is
less; or
(ii) Any director.
(b) In any proceeding under this section, each complainant
shall be a member or director at the time of bringing the
proceeding.
(c) A complaint in a proceeding brought in the right of a
corporation shall be verified and allege with particularity the
demand made, if any, to obtain action by the directors and
either why the complainants could not obtain the action or why
they did not make the demand. If a demand for action was made
and the corporation's investigation of the demand is in progress
when the proceeding is filed, the court may stay the suit until
the investigation is completed.
(d) On termination of the proceeding the court may require
the complainants to pay any defendant's reasonable expenses,
including counsel fees, incurred in defending the suit if it
finds that the proceeding was commenced frivolously or in bad
faith.
(e) If the proceeding on behalf of the corporation results
in the corporation taking some action requested by the
complainants or otherwise was successful, in whole or in part,
or if anything was received by the complainants as the result of
a judgment, compromise or settlement of an action or claim, the
court may award the complainants reasonable expenses, including
counsel fees.
(f) The complainants shall notify the secretary of state
within ten (10) days after commencing any proceeding under this
section if the proceeding involves a public benefit corporation
or assets held in charitable trust by a mutual benefit
corporation. The secretary of state shall then notify the
attorney general.
E. Delegates
17-19-640. Delegates.
(a) A corporation may provide in its articles or bylaws
for delegates having some or all of the authority of members.
(b) The articles or bylaws may set forth provisions
relating to:
(i) The characteristics, qualifications, rights,
limitations and obligations of delegates including their
selection and removal;
(ii) Calling, noticing, holding and conducting
meetings of delegates; and
(iii) Carrying on corporate activities during and
between meetings of delegates.
ARTICLE 7 - MEMBERS' MEETINGS AND VOTING
A. Meetings and Action without Meetings
17-19-701. Annual and regular meetings.
(a) A corporation with members shall hold a membership
meeting annually at a time stated in or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws.
(b) A corporation with members may hold regular membership
meetings at the times stated in or fixed in accordance with the
bylaws.
(c) Annual and regular membership meetings may be held in
or out of this state at the place stated in or fixed in
accordance with the bylaws. If no place is stated in or fixed
in accordance with the bylaws, annual and regular meetings shall
be held at the corporation's principal office.
(d) At the annual meeting:
(i) The president and chief financial officer shall
report on the activities and financial condition of the
corporation; and
(ii) The members shall consider and act upon such
other matters as may be raised consistent with the notice
requirements of W.S. 17-19-705 and 17-19-723(b).
(e) At regular meetings the members shall consider and act
upon such matters as may be raised consistent with the notice
requirements of W.S. 17-19-705 and 17-19-723(b).
(f) The failure to hold an annual or regular meeting at a
time stated in or fixed in accordance with a corporation's
bylaws does not affect the validity of any corporate action.
17-19-702. Special meeting.
(a) A corporation with members shall hold a special
meeting of members:
(i) On call of its board or the person or persons
authorized to do so by the articles or bylaws; or
(ii) Except as provided in the articles or bylaws of
a religious corporation if the holders of at least five percent
(5%) of the voting power of any corporation sign, date, and
deliver to any corporate officer one (1) or more written demands
for the meeting describing the purpose or purposes for which it
is to be held.
(b) The close of business on the 30th day before delivery
of the demand or demands for a special meeting to any corporate
officer is the record date for the purpose of determining
whether the five percent (5%) requirement of subsection (a) of
this section has been met.
(c) If a notice for a special meeting demanded under
paragraph (a)(ii) of this section is not given pursuant to W.S.
17-19-705 within thirty (30) days after the date the written
demand or demands are delivered to a corporate officer,
regardless of the requirements of subsection (d) of this
section, a person signing the demand or demands may set the time
and place of the meeting and give notice pursuant to W.S.
17-19-705.
(d) Special meetings of members may be held in or out of
this state at the place stated in or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws. If no place is stated or fixed in accordance with
the bylaws, special meetings shall be held at the corporation's
principal office.
(e) Only those matters that are within the purpose or
purposes described in the meeting notice required by W.S.
17-19-705 shall be conducted at a special meeting of members.
17-19-703. Court-ordered meeting.
(a) The district court of the county where a corporation's
principal office or, if none in this state, its registered
office is located may summarily order a meeting to be held:
(i) On application of any member or other person
entitled to participate in an annual or regular meeting, and in
the case of a public benefit corporation, the attorney general,
if an annual meeting was not held within fifteen (15) months
after its last annual meeting;
(ii) On application of any member or other person
entitled to participate in a regular meeting, and in the case of
a public benefit corporation, the attorney general, if a regular
meeting is not held within forty (40) days after the date it was
required to be held; or
(iii) On application of a member who signed a demand
for a special meeting valid under W.S. 17-19-702, a person or
persons entitled to call a special meeting and, in the case of a
public benefit corporation, the attorney general, if:
(A) Notice of the special meeting was not given
within thirty (30) days after the date the demand was delivered
to a corporate officer; or
(B) The special meeting was not held in
accordance with the notice.
(b) The court may fix the time and place of the meeting,
specify a record date for determining members entitled to notice
of and to vote at the meeting, prescribe the form and content of
the meeting notice, fix the quorum required for specific matters
to be considered at the meeting or direct that the votes
represented at the meeting constitute a quorum for action on
those matters, and enter other orders necessary to accomplish
the purpose or purposes of the meeting.
(c) If the court orders a meeting, it may also order the
corporation to pay the member's costs, including reasonable
counsel fees, incurred to obtain the order.
17-19-704. Action by written consent.
(a) Unless limited or prohibited by the articles or
bylaws, action required or permitted by this act to be taken at
a members' meeting may be taken without a meeting if notice of
the proposed action is given to all voting members and the
action is approved by ninety percent (90%) of the members
entitled to vote on the action. The action shall be evidenced by
one (1) or more written consents describing the action approved,
signed either manually or in facsimile, by the requisite number
of members entitled to vote on the action, and delivered to the
corporation for inclusion in the minutes or filing with the
corporate records.
(b) If not otherwise determined under W.S. 17-19-703 or
17-19-707, the record date for determining members entitled to
take action without a meeting is the date the first member signs
the consent under subsection (a) of this section.
(c) A consent signed under this section has the effect of
a meeting vote and may be described as such in any document
filed with the secretary of state.
17-19-705. Notice of meeting.
(a) A corporation shall give notice consistent with its
bylaws of meetings of members in a fair and reasonable manner.
(b) Any notice that conforms to the requirements of
subsection (c) of this section is fair and reasonable, but other
means of giving notice may also be fair and reasonable when all
the circumstances are considered; provided, however, that notice
of matters referred to in paragraph (c)(ii) of this section
shall be given as provided in subsection (c) of this section.
(c) Notice is fair and reasonable if:
(i) The corporation notifies its members of the
place, date and time of each annual, regular and special meeting
of members no fewer than ten (10) nor more than sixty (60) days
before the meeting date;
(ii) Notice of an annual or regular meeting includes
a description of any matter or matters that shall be approved by
the members under W.S. 17-19-831, 17-19-856, 17-19-1003,
17-19-1021, 17-19-1104, 17-19-1202, 17-19-1401 or 17-19-1402;
and
(iii) Notice of a special meeting includes a
description of the matter or matters for which the meeting is
called.
(d) Unless the bylaws require otherwise, if an annual,
regular or special meeting of members is adjourned to a
different date, time or place, notice need not be given of the
new date, time or place, if the new date, time or place is
announced at the meeting before adjournment. If a new record
date for the adjourned meeting is or shall be fixed under W.S.
17-19-707, however, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be
given under this section to the members of record as of the new
record date.
(e) When giving notice of an annual, regular or special
meeting of members, a corporation shall give notice of a matter
a member intends to raise at the meeting if:
(i) Requested in writing to do so by a person
entitled to call a special meeting; and
(ii) The request is received by the secretary or
president of the corporation at least ten (10) days before the
corporation gives notice of the meeting.
17-19-706. Waiver of notice.
(a) A member may waive any notice required by this act,
the articles, or bylaws before or after the date and time stated
in the notice. The waiver shall be in writing, be signed
manually or in facsimile by the member entitled to the notice,
and be delivered to the corporation for inclusion in the minutes
or filing with the corporate records.
(b) A member's attendance at a meeting:
(i) Waives objection to lack of notice or defective
notice of the meeting, unless the member at the beginning of the
meeting objects to holding the meeting or transacting business
at the meeting; and
(ii) Waives objection to consideration of a
particular matter at the meeting that is not within the purpose
or purposes described in the meeting notice, unless the member
objects to considering the matter when it is presented.
17-19-707. Record date; determining members entitled to
notice and vote.
(a) The bylaws of a corporation may fix or provide the
manner of fixing a date as the record date for determining the
members entitled to notice of a members' meeting. If the bylaws
do not fix or provide for fixing a record date, the board may
fix a future date as the record date. If no record date is
fixed, members at the close of business on the business day
preceding the day on which notice is given, or if notice is
waived, at the close of business on the business day preceding
the day on which the meeting is held, are entitled to notice of
the meeting.
(b) The bylaws of a corporation may fix or provide the
manner of fixing a date as the record date for determining the
members entitled to vote at a members' meeting. If the bylaws
do not fix or provide for fixing a record date, the board may
fix a future date as the record date. If no record date is
fixed, members on the date of the meeting who are otherwise
eligible to vote are entitled to vote at the meeting.
(c) The bylaws may fix or provide the manner for
determining a date as the record date for the purpose of
determining the members entitled to exercise any rights in
respect of any other lawful action. If the bylaws do not fix or
provide for fixing a record date, the board may fix in advance a
record date. If no record date is fixed, members at the close
of business on the day on which the board adopts the resolution
relating thereto, or the 60th day prior to the date of such
other action, whichever is later, are entitled to exercise
rights.
(d) A record date fixed under this section shall not be
more than seventy (70) days before the meeting or action
requiring a determination of members occurs.
(e) A determination of members entitled to notice of or to
vote at a membership meeting is effective for any adjournment of
the meeting unless the board fixes a new date for determining
the right to notice or the right to vote, which it shall do if
the meeting is adjourned to a date more than seventy (70) days
after the record date for determining members entitled to notice
of the original meeting.
(f) If a court orders a meeting adjourned to a date more
than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date fixed for the
original meeting, it may provide that the original record date
for notice or voting continues in effect or it may fix a new
record date for notice or voting.
17-19-708. Action by written ballot.
(a) Unless prohibited or limited by the articles or
bylaws, any action that may be taken at any annual, regular or
special meeting of members may be taken without a meeting if the
corporation delivers a written ballot to every member entitled
to vote on the matter.
(b) A written ballot shall:
(i) Set forth each proposed action; and
(ii) Provide an opportunity to vote for or against
each proposed action.
(c) Approval by written ballot pursuant to this section
shall be valid only when the number of votes cast by ballot
equals or exceeds the quorum required to be present at a meeting
authorizing the action, and the number of approvals equals or
exceeds the number of votes that would be required to approve
the matter at a meeting at which the total number of votes cast
was the same as the number of votes cast by ballot.
(d) All solicitations for votes by written ballot shall:
(i) Indicate the number of responses needed to meet
the quorum requirements;
(ii) State the percentage of approvals necessary to
approve each matter other than election of directors; and
(iii) Specify the time by which a ballot shall be
received by the corporation in order to be counted.
(e) Except as otherwise provided in the articles or
bylaws, a written ballot shall not be revoked.
B. Voting
17-19-720. Members' list for meeting.
(a) After fixing a record date for a notice of a meeting,
a corporation shall prepare an alphabetical list of the names of
all its members who are entitled to notice of the meeting. The
list shall show the address and number of votes each member is
entitled to vote at the meeting. The corporation shall prepare
on a current basis through the time of the membership meeting a
list of members, if any, who are entitled to vote at the
meeting, but not entitled to notice of the meeting. This list
shall be prepared on the same basis and be part of the list of
members.
(b) The list of members shall be available for inspection
by any member for the purpose of communication with other
members concerning the meeting, beginning two (2) business days
after notice is given of the meeting for which the list was
prepared and continuing through the meeting, at the
corporation's principal office or at a reasonable place
identified in the meeting notice in the city where the meeting
will be held. A member, a member's agent or attorney is
entitled on written demand to inspect and, subject to the
limitations of W.S. 17-19-1602(c) and 17-19-1605, to copy the
list, at a reasonable time and at the member's expense, during
the period it is available for inspection.
(c) The corporation shall make the list of members
available at the meeting, and any member, a member's agent or
attorney is entitled to inspect the list at any time during the
meeting or any adjournment.
(d) If the corporation refuses to allow a member, a
member's agent or attorney to inspect the list of members before
or at the meeting, or copy the list as permitted by subsection
(b) of this section, the district court of the county where a
corporation's principal office, or if none in this state, its
registered office is located, on application of the member, may
summarily order the inspection or copying at the corporation's
expense and may postpone the meeting for which the list was
prepared until the inspection or copying is complete and may
order the corporation to pay the member's costs, including
reasonable counsel fees, incurred to obtain the order.
(e) Unless a written demand to inspect and copy a
membership list has been made under subsection (b) of this
section prior to the membership meeting and a corporation
improperly refuses to comply with the demand, refusal or failure
to comply with this section does not affect the validity of
action taken at the meeting.
(f) The articles or bylaws of a religious corporation may
limit or abolish the rights of a member under this section to
inspect and copy any corporate record.
17-19-721. Voting entitlement generally.
(a) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, each
member is entitled to one (1) vote on each matter voted on by
the members.
(b) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, if a
membership stands of record in the names of two (2) or more
persons, their acts with respect to voting shall have the
following effect:
(i) If only one (1) votes, such act binds all; and
(ii) If more than one (1) votes, the vote shall be
divided on a pro rata basis.
17-19-722. Quorum requirements.
(a) Unless this act, the articles or bylaws provide for a
higher or lower quorum, ten percent (10%) of the votes entitled
to be cast on a matter shall be represented at a meeting of
members to constitute a quorum on that matter.
(b) A bylaw amendment to decrease the quorum for any
member action may be approved by the members or, unless
prohibited by the bylaws, by the board.
(c) A bylaw amendment to increase the quorum required for
any member action shall be approved by the members.
(d) Unless one-third (1/3) or more of the voting power is
present in person or by proxy, the only matters that can be
voted upon at an annual or regular meeting of members are those
matters that are described in the meeting notice.
17-19-723. Voting requirements.
(a) Unless this act, the articles or the bylaws require a
greater vote or voting by class, if a quorum is present, the
affirmative vote of the votes represented and voting (which
affirmative votes also constitute a majority of the required
quorum) is the act of the members.
(b) A bylaw amendment to increase or decrease the vote
required for any member action shall be approved by the members.
17-19-724. Proxies.
(a) As used in this act and in this section:
(i) "Appointment" means the grant of authority to
vote;
(ii) "Appointment form" means the document appointing
the proxy;
(iii) "Proxy" means the person to whom the authority
to vote is granted.
(b) Unless the articles or bylaws prohibit or limit proxy
voting, a member may appoint a proxy to vote or otherwise act
for the member by signing an appointment form either personally
or by an attorney-in-fact.
(c) An appointment of a proxy is effective when received
by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized to
tabulate votes. An appointment is valid for eleven (11) months
unless a different period is expressly provided in the
appointment form; provided however that no proxy shall be valid
for more than three (3) years from its date of execution.
(d) An appointment of a proxy is revocable by the member.
(e) The death or incapacity of the member appointing a
proxy does not affect the right of the corporation to accept the
proxy's authority unless notice of the death or incapacity is
received by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized
to tabulate votes before the proxy exercises authority under the
appointment.
(f) Appointment of a proxy is revoked by the person
appointing the proxy:
(i) Attending any meeting and voting in person; or
(ii) Signing and delivering to the secretary or other
officer or agent authorized to tabulate proxy votes either a
writing stating that the appointment of the proxy is revoked or
a subsequent appointment form.
(g) Subject to W.S. 17-19-727 and any express limitation
on the proxy's authority appearing on the face of the
appointment form, a corporation is entitled to accept the
proxy's vote or other action as that of the member making the
appointment.
17-19-725. Cumulative voting for directors.
(a) If the articles or bylaws provide for cumulative
voting by members, members may so vote, by multiplying the
number of votes the members are entitled to cast by the number
of directors for whom they are entitled to vote, and cast the
product for a single candidate or distribute the product among
two (2) or more candidates.
(b) Cumulative voting is not authorized at a particular
meeting unless:
(i) The meeting notice or statement accompanying the
notice states that cumulative voting will take place; or
(ii) A member gives notice during the meeting and
before the vote is taken of the member's intent to cumulate
votes, and if one (1) member gives this notice all other members
participating in the election are entitled to cumulate their
votes without giving further notice.
(c) A director elected by cumulative voting may be removed
by the members without cause if the requirements of W.S.
17-19-808 are met unless the votes cast against removal, or not
consenting in writing to removal, would be sufficient to elect
the director if voted cumulatively at an election at which the
same total number of votes were cast (or, if such action is
taken by written ballot, all memberships entitled to vote were
voted) and the entire number of directors authorized at the time
of the director's most recent election were then being elected.
(d) Members shall not cumulatively vote if the directors
and members are identical.
17-19-726. Other methods of electing directors.
(a) A corporation may provide in its articles or bylaws
for election of directors by members or delegates:
(i) On the basis of chapter or other organizational
unit;
(ii) By region or other geographic unit;
(iii) By preferential voting; or
(iv) By any other reasonable method.
17-19-727. Corporation's acceptance of votes.
(a) If the name signed on a vote, consent, waiver or proxy
appointment corresponds to the name of a member, the corporation
if acting in good faith is entitled to accept the vote, consent,
waiver or proxy appointment and give it effect as the act of the
member.
(b) If the name signed on a vote, consent, waiver or proxy
appointment does not correspond to the record name of a member,
the corporation if acting in good faith is nevertheless entitled
to accept the vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment and
give it effect as the act of the member if:
(i) The member is an entity and the name signed
purports to be that of an officer or agent of the entity;
(ii) The name signed purports to be that of an
attorney-in-fact of the member and if the corporation requests,
evidence acceptable to the corporation of the signatory's
authority to sign for the member has been presented with respect
to the vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment;
(iii) Two (2) or more persons hold the membership as
cotenants or fiduciaries and the name signed purports to be the
name of at least one (1) of the coholders and the person signing
appears to be acting on behalf of all the coholders; and
(iv) In the case of a mutual benefit corporation:
(A) The name signed purports to be that of an
administrator, executor, guardian or conservator representing
the member and, if the corporation requests, evidence of
fiduciary status acceptable to the corporation has been
presented with respect to the vote, consent, waiver or proxy
appointment;
(B) The name signed purports to be that of a
receiver or trustee in bankruptcy of the member, and, if the
corporation requests, evidence of this status acceptable to the
corporation has been presented with respect to the vote,
consent, waiver or proxy appointment.
(c) The corporation is entitled to reject a vote, consent,
waiver or proxy appointment if the secretary or other officer or
agent authorized to tabulate votes, acting in good faith, has
reasonable basis for doubt about the validity of the signature
on it or about the signatory's authority to sign for the member.
(d) The corporation and its officer or agent who accepts
or rejects a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment in good
faith and in accordance with the standards of this section are
not liable in damages to the member for the consequences of the
acceptance or rejection.
(e) Corporate action based on the acceptance or rejection
of a vote, consent, waiver or proxy appointment under this
section is valid unless a court of competent jurisdiction
determines otherwise.
(f) In the case where a member is an entity or where
approval is required by a third party which is an entity, the
corporation is entitled to accept the vote provided the
individual who casts the vote for the entity presents the
corporation with a written resolution or other written
authorization to vote for the entity.
C. Voting Agreements
17-19-730. Voting agreements.
(a) Two (2) or more members may provide for the manner in
which they will vote by signing an agreement for that purpose.
Agreements under this section may be valid for a period of up to
ten (10) years. For public benefit corporations such agreements
shall have a reasonable purpose not inconsistent with the
corporation's public or charitable purposes.
(b) A voting agreement created under this section is
specifically enforceable.
ARTICLE 8 - DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
A. Board of Directors
17-19-801. Requirement for and duties of board.
(a) Each corporation shall have a board of directors.
(b) Except as provided in this act or subsection (c) of
this section, all corporate powers shall be exercised by or
under the authority of, and the affairs of the corporation
managed under the direction of, its board.
(c) The articles may authorize a person or persons to
exercise some or all of the powers which would otherwise be
exercised by a board. To the extent so authorized any such
person or persons shall have the duties and responsibilities of
the directors, and the directors shall be relieved to that
extent from such duties and responsibilities.
17-19-802. Qualifications of directors.
All directors shall be individuals. The articles or bylaws may
prescribe additional qualifications for directors.
17-19-803. Number of directors.
(a) A board of directors shall consist of three (3) or
more individuals, with the number specified in or fixed in
accordance with the articles or bylaws.
(b) The number of directors may be increased or decreased,
but to no fewer than three (3), from time to time by amendment
to or in the manner prescribed in the articles or bylaws.
17-19-804. Election, designation and appointment of
directors.
(a) If the corporation has members, all the directors,
except the initial directors, shall be elected at the first
annual meeting of members, and at each annual meeting
thereafter, unless the articles or bylaws provide some other
time or method of election, or provide that some of the
directors are appointed by some other person or designated.
(b) If the corporation does not have members, all the
directors, except the initial directors, shall be elected,
appointed or designated as provided in the articles or bylaws.
If no method of designation or appointment is set forth in the
articles or bylaws, the directors, other than the initial
directors, shall be elected by the board.
17-19-805. Terms of directors generally.
(a) The articles or bylaws shall specify the terms of
directors. Except for designated or appointed directors, the
terms of directors shall not exceed five (5) years. In the
absence of any term specified in the articles or bylaws, the
term of each director shall be one (1) year. Directors may be
elected for successive terms.
(b) A decrease in the number of directors or term of
office does not shorten an incumbent director's term.
(c) Except as provided in the articles or bylaws:
(i) The term of a director filling a vacancy in the
office of a director elected by members expires at the next
election of directors by members; and
(ii) The term of a director filling any other vacancy
expires at the end of the unexpired term that the director is
filling.
(d) Despite the expiration of a director's term, the
director continues to serve until the director's successor is
elected, designated or appointed and qualifies, or until there
is a decrease in the number of directors.
17-19-806. Staggered terms for directors.
The articles or bylaws may provide for staggering the terms of
directors by dividing the total number of directors into groups.
The terms of office of the several groups need not be uniform.
17-19-807. Resignation of directors.
(a) A director may resign at any time by delivering
written notice, signed either manually or in facsimile, to the
board of directors, its presiding officer or to the president or
secretary.
(b) A resignation is effective when the notice is
effective unless the notice specifies a later effective date.
If a resignation is made effective at a later date, the board
may fill the pending vacancy before the effective date if the
board provides that the successor does not take office until the
effective date.
17-19-808. Removal of directors elected by members or
directors.
(a) The members may remove one (1) or more directors
elected by them without cause.
(b) If a director is elected by a class, chapter or other
organizational unit or by region or other geographic grouping,
the director may be removed only by the members of that class,
chapter, unit or grouping.
(c) Except as provided in subsection (j) of this section,
a director may be removed under subsection (a) or (b) of this
section only if the number of votes cast to remove the director
would be sufficient to elect the director at a meeting to elect
directors.
(d) If cumulative voting is authorized, a director may not
be removed if the number of votes, or if the director was
elected by a class, chapter, unit or grouping of members, the
number of votes of that class, chapter, unit or grouping,
sufficient to elect the director under cumulative voting is
voted against the director's removal.
(e) A director elected by members may be removed by the
members only at a meeting called for the purpose of removing the
director and the meeting notice shall state that the purpose, or
one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is removal of the
director.
(f) In computing whether a director is protected from
removal under subsections (b) through (d) of this section, it
should be assumed that the votes against removal are cast in an
election for the number of directors of the class to which the
director to be removed belonged on the date of that director's
election.
(g) An entire board of directors may be removed under
subsections (a) through (e) of this section.
(h) A director elected by the board may be removed without
cause by the vote of two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then in
office or any greater number as is set forth in the articles or
bylaws; provided, however, that a director elected by the board
to fill the vacancy of a director elected by the members may be
removed without cause by the members, but not by the board.
(j) If, at the beginning of a director's term on the
board, the articles or bylaws provide that the director may be
removed for missing a specified number of board meetings, the
board may remove the director for failing to attend the
specified number of meetings. The director may be removed only
if a majority of the directors then in office vote for the
removal.
(k) The articles or bylaws of a religious corporation may:
(i) Limit the application of this section; and
(ii) Set forth the vote and procedures by which the
board or any person may remove with or without cause a director
elected by the members or the board.
17-19-809. Removal of designated or appointed directors.
(a) A designated director may be removed by an amendment
to the articles or bylaws deleting or changing the designation.
(b) Appointed directors:
(i) Except as otherwise provided in the articles or
bylaws, an appointed director may be removed without cause by
the person appointing the director;
(ii) The person removing the director shall do so by
giving written notice of the removal to the director and either
the presiding officer of the board or the corporation's
president or secretary; and
(iii) A removal is effective when the notice is
effective unless the notice specifies a future effective date.
17-19-810. Removal of directors by judicial proceeding.
(a) The district court of the county where a corporation's
principal office is located, or if none in the county where
registered office is located, may remove any director of the
corporation from office in a proceeding commenced either by the
corporation, its members holding at least ten percent (10%) of
the voting power of any class, or the attorney general in the
case of a public benefit corporation, if the court finds that:
(i) The director engaged in fraudulent or dishonest
conduct, or gross abuse of authority or discretion, with respect
to the corporation, or a final judgment has been entered finding
that the director has violated a duty set forth in W.S.
17-19-830 through 17-19-832; and
(ii) Removal is in the best interest of the
corporation.
(b) The court that removes a director may bar the director
from serving on the board for a period prescribed by the court.
(c) If members or the attorney general commence a
proceeding under subsection (a) of this section, the corporation
shall be made a party defendant.
(d) If a public benefit corporation or its members
commence a proceeding under subsection (a) of this section, they
shall give the secretary of state written notice of the
proceeding.
(e) The articles or bylaws of a religious corporation may
limit or prohibit the application of this section.
17-19-811. Vacancy on board.
(a) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, and
except as provided in subsections (b) and (c) of this section,
if a vacancy occurs on a board of directors, including a vacancy
resulting from an increase in the number of directors:
(i) The members, if any, may fill the vacancy. If the
vacant office was held by a director elected by a class, chapter
or other organizational unit or by region or other geographic
grouping, only members of the class, chapter, unit or grouping
are entitled to vote to fill the vacancy if it is filled by the
members;
(ii) The board of directors may fill the vacancy; or
(iii) If the directors remaining in office constitute
fewer than a quorum of the board, they may fill the vacancy by
the affirmative vote of a majority of all the directors
remaining in office.
(b) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, if a
vacant office was held by an appointed director, only the person
who appointed the director may fill the vacancy.
(c) If a vacant office was held by a designated director,
the vacancy shall be filled as provided in the articles or
bylaws. In the absence of an applicable article or bylaw
provision, the vacancy shall not be filled by the board.
(d) A vacancy that will occur at a specific later date (by
reason of a resignation effective at a later date under W.S.
17-19-807(b) or otherwise) may be filled before the vacancy
occurs but the new director cannot take office until the vacancy
occurs.
17-19-812. Compensation of directors.
Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, a board of
directors may fix the compensation of directors.
B. Meetings and Action of the Board
17-19-820. Regular and special meetings.
(a) If the time and place of a directors' meeting is fixed
by the bylaws or the board, the meeting is a regular meeting.
All other meetings are special meetings.
(b) A board of directors may hold regular or special
meetings in or out of this state.
(c) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, a
board may permit any or all directors to participate in a
regular or special meeting by, or conduct the meeting through
the use of, any means of communication by which all directors
participating may simultaneously communicate with each other
during the meeting. A director participating in a meeting by
this means is deemed to be present in person at the meeting.
17-19-821. Action without meeting.
(a) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise,
action required or permitted by this act to be taken at a board
of directors' meeting may be taken without a meeting if the
action is taken by all members of the board. The action shall
be evidenced by one (1) or more written consents describing the
action taken, signed by each director, and included in the
minutes filed with the corporate records reflecting the action
taken.
(b) Action taken under this section is effective when the
last director signs the consent, unless the consent specifies a
different effective date.
(c) A consent signed under this section has the effect of
a meeting vote and may be described as such in any document.
17-19-822. Call and notice of meetings.
(a) Unless the articles, bylaws or subsection (c) of this
section provide otherwise, regular meetings of the board may be
held without notice.
(b) Unless the articles, bylaws or subsection (c) of this
section provide otherwise, special meetings of the board shall
be preceded by at least two (2) days notice to each director of
the date, time, and place, but not the purpose, of the meeting.
(c) In corporations without members any board action to
remove a director or to approve a matter that would require
approval by the members if the corporation had members, shall
not be valid unless each director is given at least seven (7)
days written notice that the matter will be voted upon at a
directors' meeting or unless notice is waived pursuant to W.S.
17-19-823.
(d) Unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise, the
presiding officer of the board, the president or twenty percent
(20%) of the directors then in office may call and give notice
of a meeting of the board.
17-19-823. Waiver of notice.
(a) A director may at any time waive any notice required
by this act, the articles or bylaws. Except as provided in
subsection (b) of this section, the waiver shall be in writing,
signed by the director entitled to the notice, and filed with
the minutes or the corporate records.
(b) A director's attendance at or participation in a
meeting waives any required notice of the meeting unless the
director upon arriving at the meeting or prior to the vote on a
matter not noticed in conformity with this act the articles or
bylaws objects to lack of notice and does not thereafter vote
for or assent to the objected to action.
17-19-824. Quorum and voting.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this act, the articles
or bylaws, a quorum of a board of directors consists of a
majority of the directors in office immediately before a meeting
begins. In no event may the articles or bylaws authorize a
quorum of fewer than the greater of one-third (1/3) of the
number of directors in office or two (2) directors.
(b) If a quorum is present when a vote is taken, the
affirmative vote of a majority of directors present is the act
of the board unless this act, the articles or bylaws require the
vote of a greater number of directors.
17-19-825. Committees of the board; other informal
committees.
(a) Unless prohibited or limited by the articles or
bylaws, a board of directors may create one (1) or more
committees of the board and shall only appoint members of the
board to serve on them. Each committee shall have two (2) or
more directors, who serve at the pleasure of the board.
(b) The creation of a committee and appointment of members
to it shall be approved by the greater of:
(i) A majority of all the directors in office when
the action is taken; or
(ii) The number of directors required by the articles
or bylaws to take action under W.S. 17-19-824.
(c) W.S. 17-19-820 through 17-19-824, which govern
meetings, action without meetings, notice and waiver of notice,
and quorum and voting requirements of the board, apply to
committees of the board and their members as well.
(d) To the extent specified by the board of directors or
in the articles or bylaws, each committee of the board may
exercise the board's authority under W.S. 17-19-801.
(e) A committee of the board shall not, however:
(i) Authorize distributions;
(ii) Approve or recommend to members dissolution,
merger, consolidation or the sale, pledge or transfer of all or
substantially all of the corporation's assets;
(iii) Elect, appoint or remove directors or fill
vacancies on the board or on any of its committees; or
(iv) Adopt, amend or repeal the articles or bylaws.
(f) The creation of, delegation of authority to, or action
by a committee does not alone constitute compliance by a
director with the standards of conduct described in W.S.
17-19-830.
(g) Nothing in this section prohibits a board from
appointing informal or advisory committees comprised of persons
who may or may not be members of the board to undertake tasks
assigned to them by the board.
C. Standards of Conduct
17-19-830. Directors' standards and liabilities.
(a) A director shall not be deemed to be a trustee with
respect to the corporation or with respect to any property held
or administered by the corporation, including without limit,
property that may be subject to restrictions imposed by the
donor or transferor of such property.
(b) Members of a board of any nonprofit corporation
organized under this act are not individually liable for any
actions, inactions or omissions by the nonprofit corporation.
This subsection does not affect individual liability for
intentional torts or illegal acts. This subsection also does not
prevent removal of a board member by court order pursuant to
W.S. 17-19-810.
17-19-831. Director conflict of interest.
(a) A conflict of interest transaction is a transaction
with the corporation in which a director of the corporation has
a direct or indirect interest. A conflict of interest
transaction is not voidable if the transaction was fair at the
time it was entered into or is approved as provided in
subsection (b) or (c) of this section.
(b) A transaction in which a director of a public benefit
or religious corporation has a conflict of interest may be
approved:
(i) In advance by the vote of the board of directors
or a committee of the board if:
(A) The material facts of the transaction and
the director's interest are disclosed or known to the board or
committee of the board; and
(B) The directors approving the transaction in
good faith reasonably believe that the transaction is fair to
the corporation; or
(ii) Before or after it is consummated by obtaining
approval of the:
(A) Attorney general; or
(B) District court in an action in which the
attorney general is joined as a party.
(c) A transaction in which a director of a mutual benefit
corporation has a conflict of interest may be approved if:
(i) The material facts of the transaction and the
director's interest were disclosed or known to the board of
directors or a committee of the board and the board or committee
of the board authorized, approved or ratified the transaction;
or
(ii) The material facts of the transaction and the
director's interest were disclosed or known to the members and
they authorized, approved or ratified the transaction.
(d) For purposes of this section, a director of the
corporation has an indirect interest in a transaction if:
(i) Another entity in which the director has a
material interest or in which the director is a general partner
is a party to the transaction; or
(ii) Another entity of which the director is a
director, officer or trustee is a party to the transaction.
(e) For purposes of subsections (b) and (c) of this
section a conflict of interest transaction is authorized,
approved or ratified, if it receives the affirmative vote of a
majority of the directors on the board or on the committee, who
have no direct or indirect interest in the transaction, but a
transaction shall not be authorized, approved or ratified under
this section by a single director. If a majority of the
directors on the board who have no direct or indirect interest
in the transaction vote to authorize, approve or ratify the
transaction, a quorum is present for the purpose of taking
action under this section. The presence of, or a vote cast by,
a director with a direct or indirect interest in the transaction
does not affect the validity of any action taken under paragraph
(b)(i) or (c)(i) of this section if the transaction is otherwise
approved as provided in subsection (b) or (c) of this section.
(f) For purposes of paragraph (c)(ii) of this section, a
conflict of interest transaction is authorized, approved or
ratified by the members if it receives a majority of the votes
entitled to be counted under this subsection. Votes cast by or
voted under the control of a director who has a direct or
indirect interest in the transaction, and votes cast by or voted
under the control of an entity described in paragraph (d)(i) of
this section, shall not be counted in a vote of members to
determine whether to authorize, approve or ratify a conflict of
interest transaction under paragraph (c)(ii) of this section.
The vote of these members, however, is counted in determining
whether the transaction is approved under other sections of this
act. A majority of the voting power, whether or not present,
that are entitled to be counted in a vote on the transaction
under this subsection constitutes a quorum for the purpose of
taking action under this section.
(g) The articles, bylaws or a resolution of the board may
impose additional requirements on conflict of interest
transactions.
17-19-832. Loans to or guaranties for directors and
officers.
(a) A corporation shall not lend money to nor guarantee
the obligation of a director or officer of the corporation
except as provided in W.S. 17-19-853.
(b) The fact that a loan or guarantee is made in violation
of this section does not affect the borrower's liability on the
loan.
D. Officers
17-19-840. Required officers.
(a) Unless otherwise provided in the articles or bylaws, a
corporation shall have a president, a secretary, a treasurer and
any other officers as are appointed by the board.
(b) The bylaws or the board shall delegate to one (1) of
the officers responsibility for preparing minutes of the
directors' and members' meetings and for authenticating records
of the corporation.
(c) The same individual may simultaneously hold more than
one (1) office in a corporation.
17-19-841. Duties and authority of officers.
Each officer has the authority and shall perform the duties set
forth in the bylaws or, to the extent consistent with the
bylaws, the duties and authority prescribed in a resolution of
the board or by direction of an officer authorized by the board
to prescribe the duties and authority of other officers.
17-19-842. Standards of conduct for officers.
(a) An officer who is an employee of the corporation with
discretionary authority shall discharge his duties under that
authority:
(i) In good faith;
(ii) With the care an ordinarily prudent person in a
like position would exercise under similar circumstances; and
(iii) In a manner the officer reasonably believes to
be in the best interests of the corporation and its members, if
any.
(b) In discharging his duties an officer who is an
employee of the corporation is entitled to rely on information,
opinions, reports or statements, including financial statements
and other financial data, if prepared or presented by:
(i) One (1) or more officers or employees of the
corporation whom the officer reasonably believes to be reliable
and competent in the matters presented;
(ii) Legal counsel, public accountants or other
persons as to matters the officer reasonably believes are within
the person's professional or expert competence; or
(iii) In the case of religious corporations,
religious authorities and ministers, priests, rabbis or other
persons whose position or duties in the religious organization
the officer believes justify reliance and confidence and whom
the officer believes to be reliable and competent in the matters
presented.
(c) An officer who is an employee of the corporation is
not acting in good faith if the officer has knowledge concerning
the matter in question that makes reliance otherwise permitted
by subsection (b) of this section unwarranted.
(d) An officer who is an employee of the corporation is
not liable to the corporation, any member or other person for
any action taken or not taken as an officer, if the officer
acted in compliance with this section.
(e) An officer of a corporation organized under this act,
who is not an employee of the corporation is not individually
liable for any actions, inactions or omissions by the
corporation. This subsection does not affect individual
liability for intentional torts or illegal acts.
(f) Whether or not he is an employee of the corporation,
an officer shall not be deemed to be a trustee with respect to
the corporation or with respect to any property held or
administered by the corporation, including without limit,
property that may be subject to restrictions imposed by the
donor or transferor of the property.
17-19-843. Resignation and removal of officers.
(a) An officer may resign at any time by delivering notice
to the corporation. A resignation is effective when the notice
is effective unless the notice specifies a future effective
date. If a resignation is made effective at a future date and
the corporation accepts the future effective date, its board of
directors may fill the pending vacancy before the effective date
if the board provides that the successor cannot take office
until the effective date.
(b) A board may remove any officer at any time with or
without cause.
17-19-844. Contract rights of officers.
(a) The appointment of an officer does not itself create
contract rights.
(b) An officer's removal does not affect the officer's
contract rights, if any, with the corporation. An officer's
resignation does not affect the corporation's contract rights,
if any, with the officer.
17-19-845. Officers' authority to execute documents.
(a) Any contract or other instrument in writing executed
or entered into between a corporation and any other person is
not invalidated as to the corporation by any lack of authority
of the signing officers in the absence of actual knowledge on
the part of the other person that the signing officers had no
authority to execute the contract or other instrument if it is
signed by any two (2) officers in Category 1 below or by one (1)
officer in Category 1 below and one (1) individual in Category 2
below:
(i) Category 1-The presiding officer of the board and
the president;
(ii) Category 2-A vice president, the secretary,
treasurer and executive director.
E. Indemnification
17-19-850. Subarticle definitions.
(a) As used in this subarticle:
(i) "Corporation" includes any domestic or foreign
predecessor entity of a corporation in a merger, consolidation
or other transaction in which the predecessor's existence ceased
upon consummation of the transaction;
(ii) "Director" means an individual who is or was a
director of a corporation or an individual who, while a director
of a corporation, is or was serving at the corporation's request
as a director, officer, partner, trustee, employee or agent of
another foreign or domestic business or nonprofit corporation,
partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or
other enterprise. A director is considered to be serving an
employee benefit plan at the corporation's request if the
director's duties to the corporation also impose duties on, or
otherwise involve services by, the director to the plan or to
participants in or beneficiaries of the plan. "Director"
includes, unless the context requires otherwise, the estate or
personal representative of a director;
(iii) "Expenses" include counsel fees;
(iv) "Liability" means the obligation to pay a
judgment, settlement, penalty, fine (including an excise tax
assessed with respect to an employee benefit plan), or
reasonable expenses actually incurred with respect to a
proceeding;
(v) "Official capacity" means: (1) when used with
respect to a director, the office of director in a corporation;
and (2) when used with respect to an individual other than a
director, as contemplated in W.S. 17-19-856, the office in a
corporation held by the officer or the employment or agency
relationship undertaken by the employee or agent on behalf of
the corporation. "Official capacity" does not include service
for any other foreign or domestic business or nonprofit
corporation or any partnership, joint venture, trust, employee
benefit plan or other enterprise;
(vi) "Party" includes an individual who was, is or is
threatened to be made a named defendant or respondent in a
proceeding;
(vii) "Proceeding" means any threatened, pending or
completed action, suit or proceeding whether civil, criminal,
administrative or investigative and whether formal or informal.
17-19-851. Reserved.
17-19-852. Mandatory indemnification.
Unless limited by its articles of incorporation, a corporation
shall indemnify a director who was wholly successful, on the
merits or otherwise, in the defense of any proceeding to which
the director was a party because he is or was a director of the
corporation against reasonable expenses actually incurred by the
director in connection with the proceeding.
17-19-853. Advance for expenses.
(a) A corporation may pay for or reimburse the reasonable
expenses incurred by a director who is a party to a proceeding
in advance of final disposition of the proceeding if:
(i) The director furnishes the corporation a written
undertaking, executed personally or on the director's behalf, to
repay the advance if the director is not wholly successful; and
(ii) A determination is made that the facts then
known to those making the determination would not preclude
indemnification under this subarticle.
(b) The undertaking required by paragraph (a)(i) of this
section shall be an unlimited general obligation of the director
but need not be secured and may be accepted without reference to
financial ability to make repayment.
17-19-854. Court-ordered indemnification.
Unless limited by a corporation's articles of incorporation, a
director of the corporation who is a party to a proceeding may
apply for indemnification to the court conducting the proceeding
or to another court of competent jurisdiction. On receipt of an
application, the court after giving any notice the court
considers necessary may order indemnification in the amount it
considers proper if it determines the director is entitled to
mandatory indemnification under W.S. 17-19-852, in which case
the court shall also order the corporation to pay the director's
reasonable expenses incurred to obtain court-ordered
indemnification.
17-19-855. Reserved.
17-19-856. Indemnification of officers, employees and
agents.
(a) Unless limited by a corporation's articles of
incorporation:
(i) An officer, employee or agent of the corporation
who is not a director is entitled to mandatory indemnification
under W.S. 17-19-852, and is entitled to apply for court-ordered
indemnification under W.S. 17-19-854 in each case, to the same
extent as a director;
(ii) The corporation may indemnify and advance
expenses under this subarticle to an officer, employee or agent
of the corporation who is not a director to the same extent as
to a director; and
(iii) A corporation may also indemnify and advance
expenses to an officer, employee or agent who is not a director
to the extent, consistent with public policy, that may be
provided by its articles of incorporation, bylaws, general or
specific action of its board of directors, or contract.
17-19-857. Insurance.
A corporation may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of
an individual who is or was a director, officer, employee or
agent of the corporation, or who, while a director, officer,
employee or agent of the corporation, is or was serving at the
request of the corporation as a director, officer, partner,
trustee, employee or agent of another foreign or domestic
business or nonprofit corporation, partnership, joint venture,
trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise, against
liability asserted against or incurred by him in that capacity
or arising from his status as a director, officer, employee or
agent, whether or not the corporation would have power to
indemnify the person against the same liability under W.S.
17-19-852 or 17-19-856.
17-19-858. Application of subarticle.
(a) The indemnification and advancement of expenses
authorized by this subarticle shall not be exclusive of any
other rights to which any director, officer, employee or agent
may be entitled under any bylaw, agreement, vote of members or
disinterested directors or otherwise, both as to any action in
his official capacity and as to action in another capacity while
holding the office, and continues as to a person who has ceased
to be a director, officer, employee or agent and shall inure to
the benefit of the heirs, executors and administrators of that
person.
(b) If articles of incorporation limit indemnification or
advance for expenses, indemnification and advance for expenses
are valid only to the extent consistent with the articles.
(c) This subarticle does not limit a corporation's power
to pay or reimburse expenses incurred by a director in
connection with appearing as a witness in a proceeding at a time
when the director has not been made a named defendant or
respondent to the proceeding.
ARTICLE 9 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 10 - AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF
INCORPORATION AND BYLAWS
A. Articles of Incorporation
17-19-1001. Authority to amend.
A corporation may amend its articles of incorporation at any
time to add or change a provision that is required or permitted
in the articles or to delete a provision not required in the
articles. Whether a provision is required or permitted in the
articles is determined as of the effective date of the
amendment.
17-19-1002. Amendment by directors.
(a) Unless the articles provide otherwise, a corporation's
board of directors may adopt one (1) or more amendments to the
corporation's articles without member approval:
(i) To extend the duration of the corporation if it
was incorporated at a time when limited duration was required by
law;
(ii) To delete the names and addresses of the initial
directors;
(iii) To delete the name and address of the initial
registered agent or registered office, if a statement of change
is on file with the secretary of state;
(iv) To change the corporate name by substituting the
word "corporation," "incorporated," "company," "limited," or the
abbreviation "corp.," "inc.," "co.," or "ltd.," for a similar
word or abbreviation in the name, or by adding, deleting or
changing a geographical attribution to the name; or
(v) To make any other change expressly permitted by
this act to be made by director action.
(b) If a corporation has no members, its incorporators,
until directors have been chosen, and thereafter its board of
directors, may adopt one (1) or more amendments to the
corporation's articles subject to any approval required pursuant
to W.S. 17-19-1030. The corporation shall provide notice of any
meeting at which an amendment is to be voted upon. The notice
shall be in accordance with W.S. 17-19-822(c). The notice shall
also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider a proposed amendment to the articles and
contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment
or state the general nature of the amendment. The amendment
shall be approved by a majority of the directors in office at
the time the amendment is adopted.
17-19-1003. Amendment by directors and members.
(a) For corporations with directors and members, unless
this act, the articles, bylaws, the members, (acting pursuant to
subsection (b) of this section), or the board of directors,
(acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section) require a
greater vote or voting by class, an amendment to a corporation's
articles to be adopted shall be approved:
(i) By the board if the corporation is a public
benefit or religious corporation and the amendment does not
relate to the number of directors, the composition of the board,
the term of office of directors, or the method or way in which
directors are elected or selected;
(ii) Except as provided in W.S. 17-19-1002(a), by the
members by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast or a majority of
the voting power, whichever is less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030.
(b) The members may condition the amendment's adoption on
receipt of a higher percentage of affirmative votes or on any
other basis.
(c) If the board initiates an amendment to the articles or
board approval is required by subsection (a) of this section to
adopt an amendment to the articles, the board may condition the
amendment's adoption on receipt of a higher percentage of
affirmative votes or any other basis.
(d) If the board or the members seek to have the amendment
approved by the members at a membership meeting, the corporation
shall give notice to its members of the proposed membership
meeting in writing in accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice
shall state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the proposed amendment and contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment.
(e) If the board or the members seek to have the amendment
approved by the members by written consent or written ballot,
the material soliciting the approval shall contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment.
17-19-1004. Class voting by members on amendments.
(a) The members of a class in a public benefit corporation
are entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
articles if the amendment would change the rights of that class
as to voting in a manner different than the amendment affects
another class or members of another class.
(b) The members of a class in a mutual benefit corporation
are entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
articles if the amendment would:
(i) Affect the rights, privileges, preferences,
restrictions or conditions of that class as to voting,
dissolution, redemption or transfer of memberships in a manner
different than the amendment would affect another class;
(ii) Change the rights, privileges, preferences,
restrictions or conditions of that class as to voting,
dissolution, redemption or transfer by changing the rights,
privileges, preferences, restrictions or conditions of another
class;
(iii) Increase or decrease the number of memberships
authorized for that class;
(iv) Increase the number of memberships authorized
for another class;
(v) Effect an exchange, reclassification or
termination of the memberships of that class; or
(vi) Authorize a new class of memberships.
(c) The members of a class of a religious corporation are
entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
articles only if a class vote is provided for in the articles or
bylaws.
(d) If a class is to be divided into two (2) or more
classes as a result of an amendment to the articles of a public
benefit or mutual benefit corporation, the amendment shall be
approved by the members of each class that would be created by
the amendment.
(e) Except as provided in the articles or bylaws of a
religious corporation, if a class vote is required to approve an
amendment to the articles of a corporation, the amendment shall
be approved by the members of the class by two-thirds (2/3) of
the votes cast by the class or a majority of the voting power of
the class, whichever is less.
(f) A class of members of a public benefit or mutual
benefit corporation is entitled to the voting rights granted by
this section although the articles and bylaws provide that the
class cannot vote on the proposed amendment.
17-19-1005. Articles of amendment.
(a) A corporation amending its articles shall deliver to
the secretary of state articles of amendment setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The text of each amendment adopted;
(iii) The date of each amendment's adoption;
(iv) If approval of members was not required, a
statement to that effect and a statement that the amendment was
approved by a sufficient vote of the board of directors or
incorporators;
(v) If approval by members was required:
(A) The designation, number of memberships
outstanding, number of votes entitled to be cast by each class
entitled to vote separately on the amendment, and number of
votes of each class indisputably voting on the amendment; and
(B) Either the total number of votes cast for
and against the amendment by each class entitled to vote
separately on the amendment or the total number of undisputed
votes cast for the amendment by each class and a statement that
the number cast for the amendment by each class was sufficient
for approval by that class.
(vi) If approval of the amendment by some person or
persons other than the members, the board or the incorporators
is required pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1030, a statement that the
approval was obtained.
17-19-1006. Restated articles of incorporation.
(a) A corporation's board of directors may restate its
articles of incorporation at any time with or without approval
by members or any other person.
(b) The restatement may include one (1) or more amendments
to the articles. If the restatement includes an amendment
requiring approval by the members or any other person, it shall
be adopted as provided in W.S. 17-19-1003.
(c) If the restatement includes an amendment requiring
approval by members, the board shall submit the restatement to
the members for their approval.
(d) If the board seeks to have the restatement approved by
the members at a membership meeting, the corporation shall
notify each of its members of the proposed membership meeting in
writing in accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice shall
also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the proposed restatement and contain or
be accompanied by a copy or summary of the restatement that
identifies any amendments or other change it would make in the
articles.
(e) If the board seeks to have the restatement approved by
the members by written ballot or written consent, the material
soliciting the approval shall contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of the restatement that identifies any
amendments or other change it would make in the articles.
(f) A restatement requiring approval by the members shall
be approved by the same vote as an amendment to articles under
W.S. 17-19-1003.
(g) If the restatement includes an amendment requiring
approval pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1030, the board shall submit the
restatement for approval.
(h) A corporation restating its articles shall deliver to
the secretary of state articles of restatement setting forth the
name of the corporation and the text of the restated articles of
incorporation together with a certificate setting forth:
(i) Whether the restatement contains an amendment to
the articles requiring approval by the members or any other
person other than the board of directors and, if it does not,
that the board of directors adopted the restatement; or
(ii) If the restatement contains an amendment to the
articles requiring approval by the members, the information
required by W.S. 17-19-1005; and
(iii) If the restatement contains an amendment to the
articles requiring approval by a person whose approval is
required pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1030, a statement that the
approval was obtained.
(j) Duly adopted restated articles of incorporation
supersede the original articles of incorporation and all
amendments to them.
(k) The secretary of state may certify restated articles
of incorporation, as the articles of incorporation currently in
effect, without including the certificate information required
by subsection (h) of this section.
17-19-1007. Amendment pursuant to judicial reorganization.
(a) A corporation's articles may be amended without board
approval or approval by the members or approval required
pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1030 to carry out a plan of
reorganization ordered or decreed by a court of competent
jurisdiction under federal statute if the articles after
amendment contain only provisions required or permitted by W.S.
17-19-202.
(b) The individual or individuals designated by the court
shall deliver to the secretary of state articles of amendment
setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The text of each amendment approved by the
court;
(iii) The date of the court's order or decree
approving the articles of amendment;
(iv) The title of the reorganization proceeding in
which the order or decree was entered; and
(v) A statement that the court had jurisdiction of
the proceeding under federal statute.
(c) This section does not apply after entry of a final
decree in the reorganization proceeding even though the court
retains jurisdiction of the proceeding for limited purposes
unrelated to consummation of the reorganization plan.
17-19-1008. Effect of amendment.
An amendment to articles of incorporation does not affect a
cause of action existing against or in favor of the corporation,
a proceeding to which the corporation is a party, any
requirement or limitation imposed upon the corporation or any
property held by it by virtue of any trust upon which the
property is held by the corporation or the existing rights of
persons other than members of the corporation. An amendment
changing a corporation's name does not abate a proceeding
brought by or against the corporation in its former name.
B. Bylaws
17-19-1020. Amendment by directors.
If a corporation has no members, its incorporators, until
directors have been chosen, and thereafter its board of
directors, may adopt one (1) or more amendments to the
corporation's bylaws subject to any approval required pursuant
to W.S. 17-19-1030. The corporation shall provide notice of any
meeting of directors at which an amendment is to be approved.
The notice shall be in accordance with W.S. 17-19-822(c). The
notice shall also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the
purposes, of the meeting is to consider a proposed amendment to
the bylaws and contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of
the amendment or state the general nature of the amendment. The
amendment shall be approved by a majority of the directors in
office at the time the amendment is adopted.
17-19-1021. Amendment by directors and members.
(a) For corporations with directors and members, unless
this act, the articles, bylaws, the members, (acting pursuant to
subsection (b) of this section), or the board of directors
(acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section) require a
greater vote or voting by class, an amendment to a corporation's
bylaws to be adopted shall be approved:
(i) By the board if the corporation is a public
benefit or religious corporation and the amendment does not
relate to the number of directors, the composition of the board,
the term of office of directors, or the method or way in which
directors are elected or selected;
(ii) By the members by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes
cast or a majority of the voting power, whichever is less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030.
(b) The members may condition the amendment's adoption on
its receipt of a higher percentage of affirmative votes or on
any other basis.
(c) If the board initiates an amendment to the bylaws or
board approval is required by subsection (a) of this section to
adopt an amendment to the bylaws, the board may condition the
amendment's adoption on receipt of a higher percentage of
affirmative votes or on any other basis.
(d) If the board or the members seek to have the amendment
approved by the members at a membership meeting, the corporation
shall give notice to its members of the proposed membership
meeting in writing in accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice
shall also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes,
of the meeting is to consider the proposed amendment and contain
or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment.
(e) If the board or the members seek to have the amendment
approved by the members by written consent or written ballot,
the material soliciting the approval shall contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment.
17-19-1022. Class voting by members on amendments.
(a) The members of a class in a public benefit corporation
are entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
bylaws if the amendment would change the rights of that class as
to voting in a manner different than the amendment affects
another class or members of another class.
(b) The members of a class in a mutual benefit corporation
are entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
bylaws if the amendment would:
(i) Affect the rights, privileges, preferences,
restrictions or conditions of that class as to voting,
dissolution, redemption or transfer of memberships in a manner
different than the amendment would affect another class;
(ii) Change the rights, privileges, preferences,
restrictions or conditions of that class as to voting,
dissolution, redemption or transfer by changing the rights,
privileges, preferences, restrictions or conditions of another
class;
(iii) Increase or decrease the number of memberships
authorized for that class;
(iv) Increase the number of memberships authorized
for another class;
(v) Effect an exchange, reclassification or
termination of all or part of the memberships of that class; or
(vi) Authorize a new class of memberships.
(c) The members of a class of a religious corporation are
entitled to vote as a class on a proposed amendment to the
bylaws only if a class vote is provided for in the articles or
bylaws.
(d) If a class is to be divided into two (2) or more
classes as a result of an amendment to the bylaws, the amendment
shall be approved by the members of each class that would be
created by the amendment.
(e) If a class vote is required to approve an amendment to
the bylaws, the amendment shall be approved by the members of
the class by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast by the class or
a majority of the voting power of the class, whichever is less.
(f) A class of members is entitled to the voting rights
granted by this section although the articles and bylaws provide
that the class may not vote on the proposed amendment.
C. Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws
17-19-1030. Approval by third persons.
The articles may require an amendment to the articles or bylaws
to be approved in writing by a specified person or persons other
than the board. Such an article provision may only be amended
with the approval in writing of the specified person or persons.
17-19-1031. Amendment terminating members or redeeming or
canceling memberships.
(a) Any amendment to the articles or bylaws of a public
benefit or mutual benefit corporation that would terminate all
members or any class of members or redeem or cancel all
memberships or any class of memberships shall meet the
requirements of the act and this section.
(b) Before adopting a resolution proposing such an
amendment, the board of a mutual benefit corporation shall give
notice of the general nature of the amendment to the members.
(c) After adopting a resolution proposing such an
amendment, the notice to members proposing the amendment shall
include one (1) statement of up to five hundred (500) words
opposing the proposed amendment if such statement is submitted
by any five (5) members or members having three percent (3%) or
more of the voting power, whichever is less, not later than
twenty (20) days after the board has voted to submit the
amendment to the members for their approval. In public benefit
corporations the production and mailing costs shall be paid by
the requesting members. In mutual benefit corporations the
production and mailing costs shall be paid by the corporation.
(d) Any such amendment shall be approved by the members by
two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast by each class.
(e) The provisions of W.S. 17-19-621 shall not apply to
any amendment meeting the requirements of the act and this
section.
ARTICLE 11 - MERGER AND CONSOLIDATION
A. Merger
17-19-1101. Approval of plan of merger.
(a) Subject to the limitations set forth in W.S.
17-19-1102, one (1) or more nonprofit corporations may merge
into a business or nonprofit corporation, if the plan of merger
is approved as provided in W.S. 17-19-1103.
(b) The plan of merger shall set forth:
(i) The name of each corporation planning to merge
and the name of the surviving corporation into which each plans
to merge;
(ii) The terms and conditions of the planned merger;
(iii) The manner and basis, if any, of converting the
memberships of each public benefit or religious corporation into
memberships of the surviving corporation; and
(iv) If the merger involves a mutual benefit
corporation, the manner and basis, if any, of converting
memberships of each merging corporation into memberships,
obligations or securities of the surviving or any other
corporation or into cash or other property in whole or part.
(c) The plan of merger may set forth:
(i) Any amendments to the articles of incorporation
or bylaws of the surviving corporation to be effected by the
planned merger; and
(ii) Other provisions relating to the planned merger.
17-19-1102. Limitations on mergers by public benefit or
religious corporations.
(a) Without the prior approval of a district court in a
proceeding which the secretary of state has been given written
notice, a public benefit or religious corporation may merge only
with:
(i) A public benefit or religious corporation;
(ii) A foreign corporation that would qualify under
this act as a public benefit or religious corporation;
(iii) A wholly-owned foreign or domestic business or
mutual benefit corporation, provided the public benefit or
religious corporation is the surviving corporation and continues
to be a public benefit or religious corporation after the
merger;
(iv) A governmental subdivision; or
(v) A business or mutual benefit corporation,
provided that:
(A) On or prior to the effective date of the
merger, assets with a value equal to the greater of the fair
market value of the net tangible and intangible assets,
including goodwill, of the public benefit corporation or the
fair market value of the public benefit corporation if it were
to be operated as a business concern are transferred or conveyed
to one (1) or more persons who would have received its assets
under W.S. 17-19-1406(a)(v) and (vi) had it dissolved;
(B) It shall return, transfer or convey any
assets held by it upon condition requiring return, transfer or
conveyance, which condition occurs by reason of the merger, in
accordance with the condition; and
(C) The merger is approved by a majority of
directors of the public benefit or religious corporation who are
not and will not become members or shareholders in or officers,
employees, agents or consultants of the surviving corporation.
(b) At least twenty (20) days before consummation of any
merger of a public benefit corporation or a religious
corporation pursuant to paragraph (a)(v) of this section, notice
including a copy of the proposed plan of merger, shall be
delivered to the secretary of state. The secretary of state
shall notify the attorney general of the proposed plan.
(c) Without the prior written consent of the attorney
general or of the district court in a proceeding in which the
attorney general has been given notice, no member of a public
benefit or religious corporation may receive or keep anything as
a result of a merger other than a membership or membership in
the surviving public benefit or religious corporation. The
court shall approve the transaction if it is in the public
interest.
17-19-1103. Action on plan by board, members and third
persons.
(a) Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of
directors or members, acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this
section, require a greater vote or voting by class, a plan of
merger to be adopted shall be approved:
(i) By the board;
(ii) By the members, if any, by two-thirds (2/3) of
the votes cast or a majority of the voting power, whichever is
less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030 for an amendment to the articles or bylaws.
(b) If the corporation does not have members, the merger
shall be approved by a majority of the directors in office at
the time the merger is approved. In addition the corporation
shall provide notice of any directors' meeting at which such
approval is to be obtained in accordance with W.S. 17-19-822(c).
The notice shall also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the
purposes, of the meeting is to consider the proposed merger.
(c) The board may condition its submission of the proposed
merger, and the members may condition their approval of the
merger, on receipt of a higher percentage of affirmative votes
or on any other basis.
(d) If the board seeks to have the plan approved by the
members at a membership meeting, the corporation shall give
notice to its members of the proposed membership meeting in
accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice shall also state
that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is
to consider the plan of merger and contain or be accompanied by
a copy or summary of the plan. The copy or summary of the plan
for members of the surviving corporation shall include any
provision that, if contained in a proposed amendment to the
articles of incorporation or bylaws, would entitle members to
vote on the provision. The copy or summary of the plan for
members of the disappearing corporation shall include a copy or
summary of the articles and bylaws that will be in effect
immediately after the merger takes effect.
(e) If the board seeks to have the plan approved by the
members by written consent or written ballot, the material
soliciting the approval shall contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of the plan. The copy or summary of the plan
for members of the surviving corporation shall include any
provision that, if contained in a proposed amendment to the
articles of incorporation or bylaws, would entitle members to
vote on the provision. The copy or summary of the plan for
members of the disappearing corporation shall include a copy or
summary of the articles and bylaws that will be in effect
immediately after the merger takes effect.
(f) Voting by a class of members is required on a plan of
merger if the plan contains a provision that, if contained in a
proposed amendment to articles of incorporation or bylaws, would
entitle the class of members to vote as a class on the proposed
amendment under W.S. 17-19-1004 or 17-19-1022. The plan is
approved by a class of members by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes
cast by the class or a majority of the voting power of the
class, whichever is less.
(g) After a merger is adopted, and at any time before
articles of merger are filed, the planned merger may be
abandoned, subject to any contractual rights, without further
action by members or other persons who approved the plan in
accordance with the procedure set forth in the plan of merger
or, if none is set forth, in the manner determined by the board
of directors.
17-19-1104. Articles of merger.
(a) After a plan of merger is approved by the board of
directors, and if required by W.S. 17-19-1103, by the members
and any other persons, the surviving or acquiring corporation
shall deliver to the secretary of state articles of merger
setting forth:
(i) The plan of merger;
(ii) If approval of members was not required, a
statement to that effect and a statement that the plan was
approved by a sufficient vote of the board of directors;
(iii) If approval by members was required:
(A) The designation, number of memberships
outstanding, number of votes entitled to be cast by each class
entitled to vote separately on the plan, and number of votes of
each class indisputably voting on the plan; and
(B) Either the total number of votes cast for
and against the plan by each class entitled to vote separately
on the plan or the total number of undisputed votes cast for the
plan by each class and a statement that the number cast for the
plan by each class was sufficient for approval by that class.
(iv) If approval of the plan by some person or
persons other than the members or the board is required pursuant
to W.S. 17-19-1103(a)(iii), a statement that the approval was
obtained.
17-19-1105. Effect of merger.
(a) When a merger takes effect:
(i) Every other corporation party to the merger
merges into the surviving corporation and the separate existence
of every corporation except the surviving corporation ceases;
(ii) The title to all real estate and other property
owned by each corporation party to the merger is vested in the
surviving corporation without reversion or impairment subject to
any and all conditions to which the property was subject prior
to the merger;
(iii) The surviving corporation has all liabilities
and obligations of each corporation party to the merger;
(iv) A proceeding pending against any corporation
party to the merger may be continued as if the merger did not
occur or the surviving corporation may be substituted in the
proceeding for the corporation whose existence ceased; and
(v) The articles of incorporation and bylaws of the
surviving corporation are amended to the extent provided in the
plan of merger.
17-19-1106. Merger with foreign corporation.
(a) Except as provided in W.S. 17-19-1102, one (1) or more
foreign business or nonprofit corporations may merge with one
(1) or more domestic nonprofit corporations if:
(i) The merger is permitted by the law of the state
or country under whose law each foreign corporation is
incorporated and each foreign corporation complies with that law
in effecting the merger;
(ii) The foreign corporation complies with W.S.
17-19-1104 if it is the surviving corporation of the merger; and
(iii) Each domestic nonprofit corporation complies
with the applicable provisions of W.S. 17-19-1101 through
17-19-1103 and, if it is the surviving corporation of the
merger, with W.S. 17-19-1104.
(b) Upon the merger taking effect, the surviving foreign
business or nonprofit corporation is deemed to have irrevocably
appointed the secretary of state as its agent for service of
process in any proceeding brought against it.
17-19-1107. Bequests, devises and gifts.
Any bequest, devise, gift, grant or promise contained in a will
or other instrument of donation, subscription or conveyance,
that is made to a constituent corporation and that takes effect
or remains payable after the merger, inures to the surviving
corporation unless the will or other instrument otherwise
specifically provides.
17-19-1108. Merger with a governmental subdivision.
Except for W.S. 17-19-1102, this article does not apply if a
public benefit, mutual benefit or religious corporation merges
with a governmental subdivision. The corporation shall file with
the secretary of state notice of the consummated merger.
B. Consolidation
17-19-1110. Approval of plan of consolidation.
(a) Subject to the limitations set forth in W.S.
17-19-1111, one (1) or more nonprofit corporations may
consolidate into a new business or nonprofit corporation, if the
plan of consolidation is approved as provided in W.S.
17-19-1112.
(b) The plan of consolidation shall set forth:
(i) The name of each corporation planning to
consolidate and the name of the new corporation into which each
plans to consolidate which is hereinafter designated as the new
corporation;
(ii) The terms and conditions of the planned
consolidation;
(iii) The manner and basis, if any, of converting the
memberships of each public benefit or religious corporation into
memberships of the new corporation;
(iv) If the consolidation involves a mutual benefit
corporation, the manner and basis, if any, of converting
memberships of each consolidating corporation into memberships,
obligations or securities of the new corporation or into cash or
other property in whole or part; and
(v) With respect to the new corporation, all of the
statements required to be set forth in articles of incorporation
for corporations organized under this act.
(c) The plan of consolidation may set forth other
provisions relating to the planned consolidation.
17-19-1111. Limitations on consolidations by public
benefit or religious corporations.
(a) Without the prior approval of the district court in a
proceeding which the secretary of state has been given written
notice, a public benefit or religious corporation may
consolidate only with:
(i) A public benefit or religious corporation;
(ii) A foreign corporation that would qualify under
this act as a public benefit or religious corporation;
(iii) A wholly-owned foreign or domestic business or
mutual benefit corporation, provided the new corporation is and
will continue to be a public benefit or religious corporation;
(iv) A governmental subdivision; or
(v) A business or mutual benefit corporation,
provided that:
(A) On or prior to the effective date of the
consolidation, assets with a value equal to the greater of the
fair market value of the net tangible and intangible assets,
including goodwill, of the public benefit corporation or the
fair market value of the public benefit corporation if it were
to be operated as a business concern are transferred or conveyed
to one (1) or more persons who would have received its assets
under W.S. 17-19-1406(a)(v) and (vi) had it dissolved;
(B) It shall return, transfer or convey any
assets held by it upon condition requiring return, transfer or
conveyance, which condition occurs by reason of the
consolidation, in accordance with the condition; and
(C) The consolidation is approved by a majority
of directors of each public benefit or religious corporation who
are not and will not become members or shareholders in or
officers, employees, agents or consultants of the new
corporation.
(b) At least twenty (20) days before consummation of any
consolidation of a public benefit corporation or a religious
corporation pursuant to paragraph (a)(v) of this section, notice
including a copy of the proposed plan of consolidation, shall be
delivered to the secretary of state. The secretary of state
shall give notice of the proposed plan to the attorney general.
(c) Without the prior written consent of the attorney
general or of the district court in a proceeding in which the
attorney general has been given notice, no member of a public
benefit or religious corporation may receive or keep anything as
a result of a consolidation other than a membership or
membership in the new public benefit or religious corporation.
The court shall approve the transaction if it is in the public
interest.
17-19-1112. Action on plan by board, members and third
persons.
(a) Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of
directors or members, acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this
section, require a greater vote or voting by class, a plan of
consolidation to be adopted shall be approved:
(i) By the board;
(ii) By the members, if any, by two-thirds (2/3) of
the votes cast or a majority of the voting power, whichever is
less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030 for an amendment to the articles or bylaws.
(b) If a corporation party to a consolidation does not
have members, the consolidation shall be approved by a majority
of the directors in office at the time the consolidation is
approved. In addition the corporation shall provide notice of
any directors' meeting at which such approval is to be obtained
in accordance with W.S. 17-19-822(c). The notice shall also
state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the proposed consolidation.
(c) Each board may condition its submission of the
proposed consolidation, and the members may condition their
approval of the consolidation, on receipt of a higher percentage
of affirmative votes or on any other basis.
(d) If each board seeks to have the plan approved by the
members at a membership meeting, each corporation shall give
notice to its members of the proposed membership meeting in
accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice shall also state
that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is
to consider the plan of consolidation and contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan. The copy or
summary of the plan for members of the corporations involved
shall include any provision that, if contained in a proposed
amendment to the articles of incorporation or bylaws, would
entitle members to vote on the provision. The copy or summary
of the plan for members of the disappearing corporation or
corporations shall include a copy or summary of the articles and
bylaws that will be in effect immediately after the
consolidation takes effect.
(e) If each board seeks to have the plan approved by the
members by written consent or written ballot, the material
soliciting the approval shall contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of the plan. The copy or summary of the plan
for members of the new corporation shall include any provision
that, if contained in a proposed amendment to the articles of
incorporation or bylaws, would entitle members to vote on the
provision. The copy or summary of the plan for members of the
disappearing corporation or corporations shall include a copy or
summary of the articles and bylaws that will be in effect
immediately after the consolidation takes effect.
(f) Voting by a class of members is required on a plan of
consolidation if the plan contains a provision that, if
contained in a proposed amendment to articles of incorporation
or bylaws, would entitle the class of members to vote as a class
on the proposed amendment under W.S. 17-19-1004 or 17-19-1022.
The plan is approved by a class of members by two-thirds (2/3)
of the votes cast by the class or a majority of the voting power
of the class, whichever is less.
(g) After a consolidation is adopted, and at any time
before articles of consolidation are filed, the planned
consolidation may be abandoned, subject to any contractual
rights, without further action by members or other persons who
approved the plan in accordance with the procedure set forth in
the plan of consolidation or, if none is set forth, in the
manner determined by the board of directors.
17-19-1113. Articles of consolidation.
(a) After a plan of consolidation is approved by the board
of directors, and if required by W.S. 17-19-1112, by the members
and any other persons, the new corporation shall deliver to the
secretary of state articles of consolidation setting forth:
(i) The plan of consolidation;
(ii) If approval of members was not required, a
statement to that effect and a statement that the plan was
approved by a sufficient vote of the board of directors;
(iii) If approval by members was required:
(A) The designation, number of memberships
outstanding, number of votes entitled to be cast by each class
entitled to vote separately on the plan, and number of votes of
each class indisputably voting on the plan; and
(B) Either the total number of votes cast for
and against the plan by each class entitled to vote separately
on the plan or the total number of undisputed votes cast for the
plan by each class and a statement that the number cast for the
plan by each class was sufficient for approval by that class.
(iv) If approval of the plan by some person or
persons other than the members or the board is required pursuant
to W.S. 17-19-1112(a)(iii), a statement that the approval was
obtained.
17-19-1114. Effect of consolidation.
(a) When a consolidation takes effect:
(i) Every other corporation party to the
consolidation consolidates into the new corporation and the
separate existence of every corporation except the new
corporation ceases;
(ii) The title to all real estate and other property
owned by each corporation party to the consolidation is vested
in the new corporation without reversion or impairment subject
to any and all conditions to which the property was subject
prior to the consolidation;
(iii) The new corporation has all liabilities and
obligations of each corporation party to the consolidation;
(iv) A proceeding pending against any corporation
party to the consolidation may be continued as if the
consolidation did not occur or the new corporation may be
substituted in the proceeding for the corporation whose
existence ceased; and
(v) The articles of incorporation and bylaws of the
new corporation are amended to the extent provided in the plan
of consolidation.
17-19-1115. Consolidation with foreign corporation.
(a) Except as provided in W.S. 17-19-1111, one (1) or more
foreign business or nonprofit corporations may consolidate with
one (1) or more domestic nonprofit corporations if:
(i) The consolidation is permitted by the law of the
state or country under whose law each foreign corporation is
incorporated and each foreign corporation complies with that law
in effecting the consolidation;
(ii) The foreign corporation complies with W.S.
17-19-1113 if it is the new corporation of the consolidation;
and
(iii) Each domestic nonprofit corporation complies
with the applicable provisions of W.S. 17-19-1110 through
17-19-1112 and, if it is the new corporation of the
consolidation, with W.S. 17-19-1113.
(b) Upon the consolidation taking effect, the new foreign
business or nonprofit corporation is deemed to have irrevocably
appointed the secretary of state as its agent for service of
process in any proceeding brought against it.
17-19-1116. Bequests, devises and gifts.
Any bequest, devise, gift, grant or promise contained in a will
or other instrument of donation, subscription or conveyance,
that is made to a constituent corporation and that takes effect
or remains payable after the consolidation, inures to the new
corporation unless the will or other instrument otherwise
specifically provides.
17-19-1117. Consolidation with a governmental subdivision.
Except for W.S. 17-19-1111, this article does not apply if a
public benefit, mutual benefit or religious corporation
consolidates with a governmental subdivision. The corporation
shall file notice with the secretary of state of the consummated
consolidation.
ARTICLE 12 - SALE OF ASSETS
17-19-1201. Sale of assets in regular course of activities
and mortgage of assets.
(a) A corporation may on the terms and conditions and for
the consideration determined by the board of directors:
(i) Sell, lease, exchange or otherwise dispose of
all, or substantially all, of its property in the usual and
regular course of its activities; or
(ii) Mortgage, pledge, dedicate to the repayment of
indebtedness, whether with or without recourse, or otherwise
encumber any or all of its property whether or not in the usual
and regular course of its activities.
(b) Unless the articles require it, approval of the
members or any other person of a transaction described in
subsection (a) of this section is not required.
17-19-1202. Sale of assets other than in regular course of
activities.
(a) A corporation may sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise
dispose of all, or substantially all, of its property, with or
without the goodwill, other than in the usual and regular course
of its activities on the terms and conditions and for the
consideration determined by the corporation's board if the
proposed transaction is authorized by subsection (b) of this
section.
(b) Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of
directors or members, acting pursuant to subsection (d) of this
section, require a greater vote or voting by class, the proposed
transaction to be authorized shall be approved:
(i) By the board;
(ii) By the members by two-thirds (2/3) of the votes
cast or a majority of the voting power, whichever is less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030 for an amendment to the articles or bylaws.
(c) If the corporation does not have members the
transaction shall be approved by a vote of a majority of the
directors in office at the time the transaction is approved. In
addition the corporation shall provide notice of any directors'
meeting at which the approval is to be obtained in accordance
with W.S. 17-19-822(c). The notice shall also state that the
purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is to
consider the sale, lease, exchange or other disposition of all,
or substantially all, of the property or assets of the
corporation and contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary
of a description of the transaction.
(d) The board may condition its submission of the proposed
transaction, and the members may condition their approval of the
transaction, on receipt of a higher percentage of affirmative
votes or on any other basis.
(e) If the corporation seeks to have the transaction
approved by the members at a membership meeting, the corporation
shall give notice to its members of the proposed membership
meeting in accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice shall
also state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the sale, lease, exchange or other
disposition of all, or substantially all, of the property or
assets of the corporation and contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of a description of the transaction.
(f) If the board needs to have the transaction approved by
the members by written consent or written ballot, the material
soliciting the approval shall contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of a description of the transaction.
(g) A public benefit or religious corporation shall give
written notice to the secretary of state (who shall then give
notice to the attorney general) twenty (20) days before it
sells, leases, exchanges or otherwise disposes of all, or
substantially all, of its property if the transaction is not in
the usual and regular course of its activities unless the
attorney general has given the corporation a written waiver of
this subsection.
(h) After a sale, lease, exchange or other disposition of
property is authorized, the transaction may be abandoned,
subject to any contractual rights, without further action by the
members or any other person who approved the transaction in
accordance with the procedure set forth in the resolution
proposing the transaction or, if none is set forth, in the
manner determined by the board of directors.
ARTICLE 13 - DISTRIBUTIONS
17-19-1301. Prohibited distributions.
Except as authorized by W.S. 17-19-1302, a corporation shall not
make any distributions.
17-19-1302. Purchase of memberships; authorized
distributions.
(a) A mutual benefit corporation may purchase its
memberships if after the purchase is completed:
(i) The corporation would be able to pay its debts as
they become due in the usual course of its activities; and
(ii) The corporation's total assets would at least
equal the sum of its total liabilities.
(b) Corporations may make distributions upon dissolution
in conformity with article 14 of this act.
ARTICLE 14 - DISSOLUTION
A. Voluntary Dissolution
17-19-1401. Dissolution by incorporators or directors.
(a) A majority of the incorporators or directors of a
corporation that has no members may, subject to any approval
required by the articles or bylaws, dissolve the corporation by
delivering to the secretary of state articles of dissolution.
(b) The corporation shall give notice of any meeting at
which dissolution will be approved. The notice shall be in
accordance with W.S. 17-19-822(c). The notice shall also state
that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is
to consider dissolution of the corporation.
(c) The incorporators or directors in approving
dissolution shall adopt a plan of dissolution indicating to whom
the assets owned or held by the corporation will be distributed
after all creditors have been paid.
17-19-1402. Dissolution by directors, members and third
persons.
(a) Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of
directors or members (acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this
section) require a greater vote or voting by class, dissolution
is authorized if it is approved:
(i) By the board;
(ii) By the members, if any, by two-thirds (2/3) of
the votes cast or a majority of the voting power, whichever is
less; and
(iii) In writing by any person or persons whose
approval is required by a provision of the articles authorized
by W.S. 17-19-1030 for an amendment to the articles or bylaws.
(b) If the corporation does not have members, dissolution
shall be approved by a vote of a majority of the directors in
office at the time the transaction is approved. In addition,
the corporation shall provide notice of any directors' meeting
at which such approval is to be obtained in accordance with W.S.
17-19-822(c). The notice shall also state that the purpose, or
one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider
dissolution of the corporation and contain or be accompanied by
a copy or summary of the plan of dissolution.
(c) The board may condition its submission of the proposed
dissolution, and the members may condition their approval of the
dissolution on receipt of a higher percentage of affirmative
votes or on any other basis.
(d) If the board seeks to have dissolution approved by the
members at a membership meeting, the corporation shall give
notice to its members of the proposed membership meeting in
accordance with W.S. 17-19-705. The notice shall also state
that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is
to consider dissolving the corporation and contain or be
accompanied by a copy or summary of the plan of dissolution.
(e) If the board seeks to have dissolution approved by the
members by written consent or written ballot, the material
soliciting the approval shall contain or be accompanied by a
copy or summary of the plan of dissolution.
(f) The plan of dissolution shall indicate to whom the
assets owned or held by the corporation will be distributed
after all creditors have been paid.
17-19-1403. Notices to the secretary of state.
(a) A public benefit or religious corporation shall give
the secretary of state written notice that it intends to
dissolve at or before the time it delivers articles of
dissolution to him. The notice shall include a copy or summary
of the plan of dissolution. The secretary of state shall then
give notice of the plan to the attorney general.
(b) No assets shall be transferred or conveyed by a public
benefit or religious corporation as part of the dissolution
process until twenty (20) days after it has given the written
notice required by subsection (a) of this section to the
secretary of state or until the attorney general has consented
in writing to the dissolution, or indicated in writing that he
will take no action in respect to, the transfer or conveyance,
whichever is earlier.
(c) When all or substantially all of the assets of a
public benefit corporation have been transferred or conveyed
following approval of dissolution, the board shall deliver to
the secretary of state (who shall then provide notice to the
attorney general) a list showing those, other than creditors, to
whom the assets were transferred or conveyed. The list shall
indicate the addresses of each person, other than creditors, who
received assets and indicate what assets each received.
17-19-1404. Articles of dissolution.
(a) At any time after dissolution is authorized, the
corporation may dissolve by delivering to the secretary of state
articles of dissolution setting forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The date dissolution was authorized;
(iii) A statement that dissolution was approved by a
sufficient vote of the board;
(iv) If approval of members was not required, a
statement to that effect and a statement that dissolution was
approved by a sufficient vote of the board of directors or
incorporators;
(v) If approval by members was required:
(A) The designation, number of memberships
outstanding, number of votes entitled to be cast by each class
entitled to vote separately on dissolution, and number of votes
of each class indisputably voting on dissolution; and
(B) Either the total number of votes cast for
and against dissolution by each class entitled to vote
separately on dissolution or the total number of undisputed
votes cast for dissolution by each class and a statement that
the number cast for dissolution by each class was sufficient for
approval by that class.
(vi) If approval of dissolution by some person or
persons other than the members, the board or the incorporators
is required pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1402(a)(iii), a statement
that the approval was obtained; and
(vii) If the corporation is a public benefit or
religious corporation, that the notice to the secretary of state
required by W.S. 17-19-1403(a) has been given.
(b) A corporation is dissolved upon the effective date of
its articles of dissolution.
17-19-1405. Revocation of dissolution.
(a) A corporation may revoke its dissolution within one
hundred twenty (120) days of its effective date.
(b) Revocation of dissolution shall be authorized in the
same manner as the dissolution was authorized unless that
authorization permitted revocation by action of the board of
directors alone, in which event the board of directors may
revoke the dissolution without action by the members or any
other person.
(c) After the revocation of dissolution is authorized, the
corporation may revoke the dissolution by delivering to the
secretary of state for filing articles of revocation of
dissolution, together with a copy of its articles of
dissolution, that set forth:
(i) The name of the corporation;
(ii) The effective date of the dissolution that was
revoked;
(iii) The date that the revocation of dissolution was
authorized;
(iv) If the corporation's board of directors, or
incorporators, revoked the dissolution, a statement to that
effect;
(v) If the corporation's board of directors revoked a
dissolution authorized by the members alone or in conjunction
with another person or persons, a statement that revocation was
permitted by action by the board of directors alone pursuant to
that authorization; and
(vi) If member or third person action was required to
revoke the dissolution, the information required by W.S.
17-19-1404(a)(v) and (vi).
(d) Revocation of dissolution is effective upon the
effective date of the articles of revocation of dissolution.
(e) When the revocation of dissolution is effective, it
relates back to and takes effect as of the effective date of the
dissolution and the corporation resumes carrying on its
activities as if dissolution had never occurred.
17-19-1406. Effect of dissolution.
(a) A dissolved corporation continues its corporate
existence but shall not carry on any activities except those
appropriate to wind up and liquidate its affairs, including:
(i) Preserving and protecting its assets and
minimizing its liabilities;
(ii) Discharging or making provision for discharging
its liabilities and obligations;
(iii) Disposing of its properties that will not be
distributed in kind;
(iv) Returning, transferring or conveying assets held
by the corporation upon a condition requiring return, transfer
or conveyance, which condition occurs by reason of the
dissolution, in accordance with such condition;
(v) Transferring, subject to any contractual or legal
requirements, its assets as provided in or authorized by its
articles of incorporation or bylaws;
(vi) If the corporation is a public benefit or
religious corporation, and no provision has been made in its
articles or bylaws for distribution of assets on dissolution,
transferring, subject to any contractual or legal requirement,
its assets:
(A) To one (1) or more persons described in
section 501(c)(iii) of the Internal Revenue Code; or
(B) If the dissolved corporation is not
described in section 501(c)(iii) of the Internal Revenue Code,
to one (1) or more public benefit or religious corporations.
(vii) If the corporation is a mutual benefit
corporation and no provision has been made in its articles or
bylaws for distribution of assets on dissolution, transferring
its assets to its members or, if it has no members, to those
persons whom the corporation holds itself out as benefitting or
serving; and
(viii) Doing every other act necessary to wind up and
liquidate its assets and affairs.
(b) Dissolution of a corporation does not:
(i) Transfer title to the corporation's property;
(ii) Subject its directors or officers to standards
of conduct different from those prescribed in article 8 of this
act;
(iii) Change quorum or voting requirements for its
board or members; change provisions for selection, resignation
or removal of its directors or officers or both; or change
provisions for amending its bylaws;
(iv) Prevent commencement of a proceeding by or
against the corporation in its corporate name;
(v) Abate or suspend a proceeding pending by or
against the corporation on the effective date of dissolution; or
(vi) Terminate the authority of the registered agent.
17-19-1407. Known claims against dissolved corporation.
(a) A dissolved corporation may dispose of the known
claims against it by following the procedure described in this
section.
(b) The dissolved corporation shall notify its known
claimants in writing by mail or private carrier or by personal
delivery of the dissolution at any time after its effective
date. The written notice shall:
(i) Describe information that shall be included in a
claim;
(ii) Provide a mailing address where a claim may be
sent;
(iii) State the deadline, which may not be fewer than
one hundred twenty (120) days from the effective date of the
written notice, by which the dissolved corporation shall receive
the claim; and
(iv) State that the claim will be barred if not
received by the deadline.
(c) A claim against the dissolved corporation is barred:
(i) If a claimant who was given written notice under
subsection (b) of this section does not deliver the claim to the
dissolved corporation by the deadline; or
(ii) If a claimant whose claim was rejected by the
dissolved corporation does not commence a proceeding to enforce
the claim within ninety (90) days from the effective date of the
rejection notice.
(d) For purposes of this section "claim" does not include
a contingent liability or a claim based on an event occurring
after the effective date of dissolution.
17-19-1408. Unknown claims against dissolved corporation.
(a) A dissolved corporation may also publish notice of its
dissolution and request that persons with claims against the
corporation present them in accordance with the notice.
(b) The notice shall:
(i) Be published one (1) time in a newspaper of
general circulation in the county where the dissolved
corporation's principal office, or, if none in this state, its
registered office, is or was last located;
(ii) Describe the information that shall be included
in a claim and provide a mailing address where the claim may be
sent; and
(iii) State that a claim against the corporation will
be barred unless a proceeding to enforce the claim is commenced
within five (5) years or the number of years set forth in the
applicable statute of limitation, whichever is less, after
publication of the notice.
(c) If the dissolved corporation publishes a newspaper
notice in accordance with subsection (b) of this section, the
claim of each of the following claimants is barred unless the
claimant commences a proceeding to enforce the claim against the
dissolved corporation within five (5) years or the number of
years set forth in the applicable statute of limitations,
whichever is less, after the publication date of the newspaper
notice:
(i) A claimant who did not receive written notice
under W.S. 17-19-1407;
(ii) A claimant whose claim was timely sent to the
dissolved corporation but not acted on; and
(iii) A claimant whose claim is contingent or based
on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution.
(d) A claim may be enforced under this section:
(i) Against the dissolved corporation, to the extent
of its undistributed assets; or
(ii) If the assets have been distributed in
liquidation, against any person, other than a creditor of the
corporation, to whom the corporation distributed its property to
the extent of the distributee's pro rata share of the claim or
the corporate assets distributed to such person in liquidation,
whichever is less, but the distributee's total liability for all
claims under this section may not exceed the total amount of
assets distributed to the distributee.
B. Administrative Dissolution
17-19-1420. Grounds for administrative dissolution.
(a) The secretary of state may commence a proceeding under
W.S. 17-19-1421 to administratively dissolve a corporation if
any of the following has occurred:
(i) The corporation is without a registered agent or
registered office in this state for thirty (30) days or more;
(ii) The corporation does not notify the secretary of
state within thirty (30) days that its registered agent or
registered office has been changed, that its registered agent
has resigned or that its registered office has been
discontinued;
(iii) The corporation's period of duration, if any,
stated in its articles of incorporation expires;
(iv) The corporation does not deliver its annual
reports or pay the annual license taxes to the secretary of
state when due pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1630;
(v) It is in the public interest and the corporation:
(A) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing under this act with the
secretary of state; or
(B) Cannot be served by either the secretary of
state or the registered agent at its address provided pursuant
to W.S. 17-28-107.
(vi) An incorporator, director, officer or agent of
the corporation signed a document he knew was false in any
material respect with intent that the document be delivered to
the secretary of state for filing;
(vii) The corporation has failed to respond to a
valid and enforceable subpoena;
(viii) The corporation has failed to pay any
penalties imposed under W.S. 17-28-109.
(b) Prior to commencing a proceeding under W.S. 17-19-1421
the secretary of state may classify a corporation as delinquent
awaiting administrative dissolution if the corporation meets any
of the criteria in subsection (a) of this section.
17-19-1421. Procedure for and effect of administrative
dissolution.
(a) Upon determining that one (1) or more grounds exist
under W.S. 17-19-1420 for dissolving a corporation, the
secretary of state shall serve the corporation with written
notice of that determination under W.S. 17-28-104. In the case
of a public benefit corporation the secretary of state shall
also notify the attorney general in writing.
(b) If the corporation does not correct each ground for
dissolution or demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the
secretary of state that each ground determined by the secretary
of state does not exist within at least sixty (60) days after
service of the notice is perfected under W.S. 17-28-104, the
secretary of state may administratively dissolve the corporation
by signing a certificate of dissolution that recites the ground
or grounds for dissolution and its effective date. The
secretary of state shall file the original of the certificate
and serve a copy on the corporation under W.S. 17-28-104, and in
the case of a public benefit corporation shall notify the
attorney general in writing.
(c) A corporation administratively dissolved continues its
corporate existence but may not carry on any activities except
those necessary to wind up and liquidate its affairs under W.S.
17-19-1406 and notify its claimants under W.S. 17-19-1407 and
17-19-1408.
(d) The administrative dissolution of a corporation does
not terminate the authority of its registered agent.
(e) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 91, § 3.
17-19-1422. Reinstatement following administrative
dissolution.
(a) A corporation administratively dissolved under W.S.
17-19-1421 may apply to the secretary of state for reinstatement
within two (2) years after the effective date of dissolution.
Reinstatement may be denied by the secretary of state if the
corporation has been the subject of secretary of state and law
enforcement investigation pertaining to fraud or any other
violation of state or federal law, or if there is other reason
to believe the corporation was engaged in illegal operations.
The application shall:
(i) Recite the name of the corporation and the
effective date of its administrative dissolution;
(ii) State that the ground or grounds for dissolution
either did not exist or have been eliminated;
(iii) Repealed By Laws 1999, ch. 196, § 2.
(iv) If the corporation was administratively
dissolved for failing to deliver its annual report or pay the
annual license taxes to the secretary of state when due pursuant
to W.S. 17-19-1630, include payment of fees and taxes then
delinquent and the reinstatement certificate fee prescribed by
W.S. 17-19-122; and
(v) If the corporation was administratively dissolved
for failure to maintain a registered agent, include payment of a
one hundred fifty dollar ($150.00) reinstatement fee and payment
of any fees and taxes then delinquent.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section and that the information is correct, the
secretary of state shall cancel the certificate of dissolution
and prepare a certificate of reinstatement reciting that
determination and the effective date of reinstatement, file the
original of the certificate, and serve a copy on the corporation
under W.S. 17-28-104.
(c) When reinstatement is effective, it relates back to
and takes effect as of the effective date of the administrative
dissolution and the corporation shall resume carrying on its
activities as if the administrative dissolution had never
occurred.
(d) The corporation shall retain its registered corporate
name during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
17-19-1423. Appeal from denial of reinstatement.
(a) The secretary of state, upon denying a corporation's
application for reinstatement following administrative
dissolution, shall serve the corporation under W.S. 17-28-104
with a written notice that explains the reason or reasons for
denial.
(b) The corporation may appeal the denial of reinstatement
to the district court within thirty (30) days after service of
the notice of denial is perfected. The corporation appeals by
petitioning the court to set aside the dissolution and attaching
to the petition copies of the secretary of state's certificate
of dissolution, the corporation's application for reinstatement,
and the secretary of state's notice of denial.
(c) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to reinstate the dissolved corporation or may take other action
the court considers appropriate.
(d) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
C. Judicial Dissolution
17-19-1430. Grounds for judicial dissolution.
(a) The district court may dissolve a corporation:
(i) In a proceeding by the attorney general if it is
established that:
(A) The corporation obtained its articles of
incorporation through fraud;
(B) The corporation has continued to exceed or
abuse the authority conferred upon it by law;
(C) The corporation is a public benefit
corporation and the corporate assets are being misapplied or
wasted; or
(D) The corporation is a public benefit
corporation and is no longer able to carry out its purposes.
(ii) Except as provided in the articles or bylaws of
a religious corporation, in a proceeding by fifty (50) members
or members holding five percent (5%) of the voting power,
whichever is less, or by a director or any person specified in
the articles, if it is established that:
(A) The directors are deadlocked in the
management of the corporate affairs, and the members, if any,
are unable to break the deadlock;
(B) The directors or those in control of the
corporation have acted, are acting or will act in a manner that
is illegal, oppressive or fraudulent;
(C) The members are deadlocked in voting power
and have failed, for a period that includes at least two (2)
consecutive annual meeting dates, to elect successors to
directors whose terms have, or would otherwise have, expired;
(D) The corporate assets are being misapplied or
wasted; or
(E) The corporation is a public benefit or
religious corporation and is no longer able to carry out its
purposes.
(iii) In a proceeding by a creditor if it is
established that:
(A) The creditor's claim has been reduced to
judgment, the execution on the judgment returned unsatisfied and
the corporation is insolvent; or
(B) The corporation has admitted in writing that
the creditor's claim is due and owing and the corporation is
insolvent.
(iv) In a proceeding by the corporation to have its
voluntary dissolution continued under court supervision.
(b) Prior to dissolving a corporation, the court shall
consider whether:
(i) There are reasonable alternatives to dissolution;
(ii) Dissolution is in the public interest, if the
corporation is a public benefit corporation; and
(iii) Dissolution is the best way of protecting the
interests of members, if the corporation is a mutual benefit
corporation.
17-19-1431. Procedure for judicial dissolution.
(a) Venue for a proceeding by the attorney general to
dissolve a corporation lies in Laramie county district court.
Venue for a proceeding brought by any other party named in W.S.
17-19-1430 lies in the county where a corporation's principal
office or, if none in this state, its registered office, is or
was last located.
(b) It is not necessary to make directors or members
parties to a proceeding to dissolve a corporation unless relief
is sought against them individually.
(c) A court in a proceeding brought to dissolve a
corporation may issue injunctions, appoint a receiver or
custodian pendente lite with all powers and duties the court
directs, take other action required to preserve the corporate
assets wherever located, and carry on the activities of the
corporation until a full hearing can be held.
(d) A person other than the attorney general who brings an
involuntary dissolution proceeding for a public benefit or
religious corporation shall forthwith give written notice of the
proceeding to the secretary of state who shall then notify the
attorney general. The attorney general may intervene.
17-19-1432. Receivership or custodianship.
(a) A court in a judicial proceeding brought to dissolve a
public benefit or mutual benefit corporation may appoint one (1)
or more receivers to wind up and liquidate, or one (1) or more
custodians to manage, the affairs of the corporation. The court
shall hold a hearing, after notifying all parties to the
proceeding and any interested persons designated by the court,
before appointing a receiver or custodian. The court appointing
a receiver or custodian has exclusive jurisdiction over the
corporation and all of its property wherever located.
(b) The court may appoint an individual, or a domestic or
foreign business or nonprofit corporation, authorized to
transact business in this state, as a receiver or custodian.
The court may require the receiver or custodian to post bond,
with or without sureties, in an amount the court directs.
(c) The court shall describe the powers and duties of the
receiver or custodian in its appointing order, which may be
amended from time to time. Among other powers:
(i) The receiver:
(A) May dispose of all or any part of the assets
of the corporation wherever located, at a public or private
sale, if authorized by the court; provided, however, that the
receiver's power to dispose of the assets of the corporation is
subject to any trust and other restrictions that would be
applicable to the corporation; and
(B) May sue and defend in the receiver's or
custodian's name as receiver or custodian of the corporation in
all Wyoming district courts.
(ii) The custodian may exercise all of the powers of
the corporation, through or in place of its board of directors
or officers, to the extent necessary to manage the affairs of
the corporation in the best interests of its members and
creditors.
(d) The court during a receivership may redesignate the
receiver a custodian, and during a custodianship may redesignate
the custodian a receiver, if doing so is in the best interests
of the corporation, its members, and creditors.
(e) The court from time to time during the receivership or
custodianship may order compensation paid and expense
disbursements or reimbursements made to the receiver or
custodian and the receiver or custodian's counsel from the
assets of the corporation or proceeds from the sale of the
assets.
17-19-1433. Decree of dissolution.
(a) If after a hearing the court determines that one (1)
or more grounds for judicial dissolution described in W.S.
17-19-1430 exist, it may enter a decree dissolving the
corporation and specifying the effective date of the
dissolution, and the clerk of the court shall deliver a
certified copy of the decree to the secretary of state, who
shall file it.
(b) After entering the decree of dissolution, the court
shall direct the winding up and liquidation of the corporation's
affairs in accordance with W.S. 17-19-1406 and the notification
of its claimants in accordance with W.S. 17-19-1407 and
17-19-1408.
D. Miscellaneous
17-19-1440. Deposit with state treasurer.
Assets of a dissolved corporation that should be transferred to
a creditor, claimant or member of the corporation who cannot be
found or who is not competent to receive them, shall be reduced
to cash subject to known trust restrictions and deposited with
the state treasurer for safekeeping; provided, however, that in
the state treasurer's discretion property may be received and
held in kind. When the creditor, claimant or member furnishes
satisfactory proof of entitlement to the amount deposited or
property held in kind, the state treasurer shall deliver to the
creditor, member or other person or his representative that
amount or property.
ARTICLE 15 - FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
A. Certificate of Authority
17-19-1501. Authority to transact business required.
(a) A foreign corporation may not transact business in
this state until it obtains a certificate of authority from the
secretary of state.
(b) The following activities, among others, do not
constitute transacting business within the meaning of subsection
(a) of this section:
(i) Maintaining, defending or settling any
proceeding;
(ii) Holding meetings of the board of directors or
members or carrying on other activities concerning internal
corporate affairs;
(iii) Maintaining bank accounts;
(iv) Maintaining offices or agencies for the
transfer, exchange and registration of memberships or securities
or maintaining trustees or depositaries with respect to those
securities;
(v) Selling through independent contractors;
(vi) Soliciting or obtaining orders, whether by mail
or through employees or agents or otherwise, if the orders
require acceptance outside this state before they become
contracts;
(vii) Creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages,
and security interests in real or personal property;
(viii) Securing or collecting debts or enforcing
mortgages and security interests in property securing the debts;
(ix) Owning, without more, real or personal property;
(x) Conducting an isolated transaction that is
completed within thirty (30) days and that is not one in the
course of repeated transactions of a like nature;
(xi) Transacting business in interstate commerce.
(c) The list of activities in subsection (b) of this
section is not exhaustive.
17-19-1502. Consequences of transacting business without
authority.
(a) A foreign corporation transacting business in this
state without a certificate of authority shall not maintain a
proceeding in any court in this state until it obtains a
certificate of authority.
(b) The successor to a foreign corporation that transacted
business in this state without a certificate of authority and
the assignee of a cause of action arising out of that business
shall not maintain a proceeding on that cause of action in any
court in this state until the foreign corporation or its
successor obtains a certificate of authority.
(c) A court may stay a proceeding commenced by a foreign
corporation, its successor or assignee until it determines
whether the foreign corporation or its successor requires a
certificate of authority. If it so determines, the court may
further stay the proceeding until the foreign corporation or its
successor obtains the certificate.
(d) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
the failure of a foreign corporation to obtain a certificate of
authority does not impair the validity of its corporate acts or
prevent it from defending any proceeding in this state.
17-19-1503. Application for certificate of authority.
(a) A foreign corporation may apply for a certificate of
authority to transact business in this state by delivering an
application to the secretary of state. The application shall
set forth:
(i) The name of the foreign corporation or, if its
name is unavailable for use in this state, a corporate name that
satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-19-1506;
(ii) The name of the state or country under whose law
it is incorporated;
(iii) The date of incorporation and period of
duration;
(iv) The street address of its principal office and
an email address for the foreign corporation;
(v) The address of its registered office in this
state and the name of its registered agent at that office;
(vi) The names and usual business or home addresses
of its current directors and officers;
(vii) Whether the foreign corporation has members;
(viii) Whether the corporation, if it had been
incorporated in this state, would be a public benefit, mutual
benefit or religious corporation;
(ix) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of the state of Wyoming in compliance with the
requirement of article 10 section 5 of the Wyoming constitution;
and
(x) Any additional information as may be necessary or
appropriate in order to enable the secretary of state to
determine whether the corporation is entitled to a certificate
of authority to transact business in this state and to determine
and assess the fees and license taxes under the laws of this
state.
(b) The foreign corporation shall deliver with the
completed application a certificate of existence dated not more
than sixty (60) days prior to filing in Wyoming, or a document
of similar import, duly authenticated by the secretary of state
or other official having custody of corporate records in the
state or country under whose law it is incorporated.
(c) The application for certificate of authority shall be
accompanied by a written consent to appointment by the
registered agent.
17-19-1504. Amended certificate of authority.
(a) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state shall obtain an amended certificate of authority
from the secretary of state if it changes:
(i) Its corporate name;
(ii) The period of its duration; or
(iii) The state or country of its incorporation.
(b) The requirements of W.S. 17-19-1503 for obtaining an
original certificate of authority apply to obtaining an amended
certificate under this section.
17-19-1505. Effect of certificate of authority.
(a) A certificate of authority authorizes the foreign
corporation to which it is issued to transact business in this
state subject, however, to the right of the state to revoke the
certificate as provided in this act.
(b) A foreign corporation with a valid certificate of
authority has the same rights and enjoys the same privileges as
and, except as otherwise provided by this act, is subject to the
same duties, restrictions, penalties and liabilities now or
later imposed on, a domestic corporation of like character.
(c) This act does not authorize this state to regulate the
organization or internal affairs of a foreign corporation
authorized to transact business in this state.
17-19-1506. Corporate name of foreign corporation.
(a) If the corporate name of a foreign corporation does
not satisfy the requirements of W.S. 17-19-401, the foreign
corporation, to obtain or maintain a certificate of authority to
transact business in this state, may use a fictitious name to
transact business in this state if its real name is unavailable
and it delivers to the secretary of state for filing a copy of
the resolution of its board of directors, certified by its
secretary, adopting the fictitious name.
(b) Except as authorized by subsections (c) and (d) of
this section, the corporate name, including a fictitious name,
of a foreign corporation shall not be the same as, nor
deceptively similar to any trademark or service mark registered
in this state and shall be distinguishable upon the records of
the secretary of state from other business names as required by
W.S. 17-16-401.
(c) A foreign corporation may apply to the secretary of
state for authorization to use a name that is not
distinguishable in accordance with the provisions of W.S.
17-16-401(c).
(i) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(ii) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(d) A foreign corporation may use in this state the name,
including the fictitious name, of another domestic or foreign
corporation that is used in this state if the other corporation
is incorporated or authorized to transact business in this state
and the foreign corporation has:
(i) Merged with the other corporation; or
(ii) Been formed by reorganization of the other
corporation; or
(iii) Has acquired all or substantially all of the
assets, including the corporate name, of the other corporation.
(iv) Repealed By Laws 1996, ch. 80, § 3.
(e) If a foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state changes its corporate name to one that
does not satisfy the requirements of W.S. 17-19-401, it may not
transact business in this state under the changed name until it
adopts a name satisfying the requirements of W.S. 17-19-401 and
obtains an amended certificate of authority under W.S.
17-19-1504.
17-19-1507. Registered office and registered agent of
foreign corporation.
(a) Each foreign corporation authorized to transact
business in this state shall continuously maintain in this
state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111; and
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(A) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(B) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(C) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all foreign corporations.
17-19-1508. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-19-1509. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-19-1510. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
B. Withdrawal
17-19-1520. Withdrawal of foreign corporation.
(a) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state shall not withdraw from this state until it
obtains a certificate of withdrawal from the secretary of state.
(b) A foreign corporation authorized to transact business
in this state may apply for a certificate of withdrawal by
delivering an application to the secretary of state for filing.
The application shall set forth:
(i) The name of the foreign corporation and the name
of the state or country under whose law it is incorporated;
(ii) That it is not transacting business in this
state and that it surrenders its authority to transact business
in this state;
(iii) That it revokes the authority of its registered
agent to accept service on its behalf and appoints the secretary
of state as its agent for service of process in any proceeding
based on a cause of action arising during the time it was
authorized to do business in this state;
(iv) A mailing address and an email address to which
the secretary of state may provide a copy of any process served
on him under paragraph (iii) of this subsection; and
(v) A commitment to notify the secretary of state in
the future of any change in the mailing address or email
address.
(c) After the withdrawal of the corporation is effective,
service of process on the secretary of state under this section
is service on the foreign corporation. Upon receipt of process,
the secretary of state shall provide a copy of the process to
the foreign corporation at the post office address or email
address set forth in its application for withdrawal.
C. Revocation of Certificate of Authority
17-19-1530. Grounds for revocation.
(a) The secretary of state may commence a proceeding under
W.S. 17-19-1531 to revoke the certificate of authority of a
foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state if any of the following has occurred:
(i) The foreign corporation is without a registered
agent or registered office in this state for thirty (30) days or
more;
(ii) The foreign corporation does not inform the
secretary of state under W.S. 17-28-102 or 17-28-103 that its
registered agent or registered office has changed, that its
registered agent has resigned, or that its registered office has
been discontinued within thirty (30) days of the change,
resignation or discontinuance;
(iii) An incorporator, director, officer or agent of
the foreign corporation signed a document the person knew was
false in any material respect with intent that the document be
delivered to the secretary of state for filing;
(iv) The secretary of state receives a duly
authenticated certificate from the secretary of state or other
official having custody of corporate records in the state or
country under whose law the foreign corporation is incorporated
stating that it has been dissolved or disappeared as the result
of a merger;
(v) The corporation does not deliver its annual
reports or pay the annual license taxes to the secretary of
state when due pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1630;
(vi) The corporation has failed to respond to a valid
and enforceable subpoena;
(vii) It is in the public interest and the
corporation:
(A) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing with the secretary of state
under this act; or
(B) Cannot be served either by the registered
agent or by mail or electronically by the secretary of state
acting as the agent for process.
(viii) The foreign corporation has failed to pay any
penalties imposed under W.S. 17-28-109.
(b) The attorney general may commence a proceeding under
W.S. 17-19-1531 to revoke the certificate of authority of a
foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state if:
(i) The corporation has continued to exceed or abuse
the authority conferred upon it by law;
(ii) The corporation would have been a public benefit
corporation had it been incorporated in this state and that its
corporate assets in this state are being misapplied or wasted;
or
(iii) The corporation would have been a public
benefit corporation had it been incorporated in this state and
it is no longer able to carry out its purposes.
(c) Prior to commencing a proceeding under W.S. 17-19-1531
the secretary of state may classify a foreign corporation as
delinquent awaiting administrative revocation if the foreign
corporation meets any of the criteria in subsection (a) of this
section.
17-19-1531. Procedure and effect of revocation.
(a) The secretary of state upon determining that one (1)
or more grounds exist under W.S. 17-19-1530 for revocation of a
certificate of authority shall serve the foreign corporation
with written notice of that determination under W.S. 17-28-104.
(b) The attorney general upon determining that one (1) or
more grounds exist under W.S. 17-19-1530(b) for revocation of a
certificate of authority shall request the secretary of state to
serve, and the secretary of state shall serve the foreign
corporation with written notice of that determination under W.S.
17-28-104.
(c) If the foreign corporation does not correct each
ground for revocation or demonstrate to the reasonable
satisfaction of the secretary of state or attorney general that
each ground for revocation determined by the secretary of state
or attorney general does not exist within sixty (60) days after
service of the notice is perfected under W.S. 17-28-104, the
secretary of state may revoke the foreign corporation's
certificate of authority by signing a certificate of revocation
that recites the ground or grounds for revocation and its
effective date. The secretary of state shall file the original
of the certificate and serve a copy on the foreign corporation
under W.S. 17-28-104.
(d) The authority of a foreign corporation to transact
business in this state ceases on the date shown on the
certificate revoking its certificate of authority.
(e) The secretary of state's revocation of a foreign
corporation's certificate of authority appoints the secretary of
state the foreign corporation's agent for service of process in
any proceeding based on a cause of action that arose during the
time the foreign corporation was authorized to transact business
in this state. Service of process on the secretary of state
under this subsection is service on the foreign corporation.
Upon receipt of process, the secretary of state shall either:
(i) Mail a copy of the process to the secretary of
the foreign corporation at its principal office shown in its
most recent annual report or in any subsequent communications
received from the corporation stating the current mailing
address of its principal office, or, if none are on file, in its
application for a certificate of authority; or
(ii) Electronically submit a copy of the process to
the foreign corporation's email address.
(f) Revocation of a foreign corporation's certificate of
authority does not terminate the authority of the registered
agent of the corporation.
(g) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 91, § 3.
17-19-1532. Appeal from revocation.
(a) A foreign corporation may appeal the secretary of
state's revocation of its certificate of authority pursuant to
W.S. 16-3-114 within thirty (30) days after the service of the
certificate of revocation is perfected under W.S. 17-28-104. The
foreign corporation appeals by petitioning the court to set
aside the revocation and attaching to the petition copies of its
certificate of authority and the secretary of state's
certificate of revocation.
(b) The court may summarily order the secretary of state
to reinstate the certificate of authority or may take any other
action the court considers appropriate.
(c) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other
civil proceedings.
17-19-1533. Reinstatement following revocation.
(a) A foreign corporation whose certificate of authority
has been revoked under W.S. 17-19-1531 may apply to the
secretary of state for reinstatement within two (2) years after
the effective date of the revocation. Reinstatement may be
denied by the secretary of state if the corporation has been the
subject of a secretary of state and law enforcement
investigation pertaining to fraud or any other violation of
state or federal law, or if there is other reason to believe the
foreign corporation has engaged in illegal operations. The
application shall:
(i) Recite the name of the foreign corporation and
the effective date of the revocation of its certificate of
authority;
(ii) State that the grounds for revocation either did
not exist or have been eliminated;
(iii) If the foreign corporation's certificate of
authority was revoked for failure to deliver its annual report
or pay annual license taxes to the secretary of state when due
pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1630, include payment of a twenty-five
dollar ($25.00) reinstatement fee and payment of any fees and
taxes then delinquent; and
(iv) If the foreign corporation's certificate of
authority was revoked for failure to maintain a registered
agent, include payment of a one hundred fifty dollar ($150.00)
reinstatement fee and payment of any fees and taxes then
delinquent.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section and that the information is correct, the
secretary of state shall cancel the revocation, prepare a
certificate of reinstatement reciting that determination and the
effective date of reinstatement, file the original of the
certificate and serve a copy on the corporation pursuant to W.S.
17-28-104.
(c) When reinstatement is effective, it relates back to
and takes effect as of the effective date of the revocation and
the foreign corporation may resume carrying on its activities as
if the revocation had not occurred.
(d) A foreign corporation may retain its registered
corporate name during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
ARTICLE 16 - RECORDS AND REPORTS
A. RECORDS
17-19-1601. Corporate records.
(a) A corporation shall keep as permanent records minutes
of all meetings of its members and board of directors, a record
of all actions taken by the members or directors without a
meeting, and a record of all actions taken by committees of the
board of directors as authorized by W.S. 17-19-825(d).
(b) A corporation shall maintain appropriate accounting
records.
(c) A corporation or its agent shall maintain a record of
its members in a form that permits preparation of a list of the
name and address of all members, in alphabetical order by class,
showing the number of votes each member is entitled to cast.
(d) A corporation shall maintain its records in written
form or in another form capable of conversion into written form
within a reasonable time.
(e) A corporation shall keep a copy of the following
records at its principal office:
(i) Its articles or restated articles of
incorporation and all amendments to them currently in effect;
(ii) Its bylaws or restated bylaws and all amendments
to them currently in effect;
(iii) Resolutions adopted by its board of directors
relating to the characteristics, qualifications, rights,
limitations and obligations of members or any class or category
of members;
(iv) The minutes of all meetings of members and
records of all actions approved by the members for the past
three (3) years;
(v) All written communications to members generally
within the past three (3) years, including the financial
statements furnished for the past three (3) years under W.S.
17-19-1620;
(vi) A list of the names and addresses of its current
directors and officers; and
(vii) Its most recent annual report delivered to the
secretary of state under W.S. 17-19-1630.
17-19-1602. Inspection of records by members.
(a) Subject to subsection (e) of this section and W.S.
17-19-1603(c), a member is entitled to inspect and copy, at a
reasonable time and location specified by the corporation, any
of the records of the corporation described in W.S.
17-19-1601(e) if the member gives the corporation written notice
or a written demand at least five (5) business days before the
date on which the member wishes to inspect and copy.
(b) Subject to subsection (e) of this section, a member is
entitled to inspect and copy, at a reasonable time and
reasonable location specified by the corporation, any of the
following records of the corporation if the member meets the
requirements of subsection (c) of this section and gives the
corporation written notice at least five (5) business days
before the date on which the member wishes to inspect and copy:
(i) Excerpts from any records required to be
maintained under W.S. 17-19-1601(a), to the extent not subject
to inspection under W.S. 17-19-1602(a);
(ii) Accounting records of the corporation; and
(iii) Subject to W.S. 17-19-1605, the membership
list.
(c) A member may inspect and copy the records identified
in subsection (b) of this section only if:
(i) The member's demand is made in good faith and for
a proper purpose;
(ii) The member describes with reasonable
particularity the purpose and the records the member desires to
inspect; and
(iii) The records are directly connected with this
purpose.
(d) This section does not affect:
(i) The right of a member to inspect records under
W.S. 17-19-720 or, if the member is in litigation with the
corporation, to the same extent as any other litigant; or
(ii) The power of a court, independently of this act,
to compel the production of corporate records for examination.
(e) The articles or bylaws of a religious corporation may
limit or abolish the right of a member under this section to
inspect and copy any corporate record.
(f) Nothing in this act pertaining to access to corporate
records shall operate to violate the confidentiality of records,
including patient files, personnel matters, disciplinary files,
individual member files, client files, medical files or other
files which are generally considered by law to be confidential
or privileged.
17-19-1603. Scope of inspection rights.
(a) A member's agent or attorney has the same inspection
and copying rights as the member the agent or attorney
represents.
(b) The right to copy records under W.S. 17-19-1602
includes, if reasonable, the right to receive copies made by
photographic, xerographic or other means.
(c) The corporation may impose a reasonable charge,
covering the costs of labor and material, for copies of any
documents provided to the member. The charge may not exceed the
estimated cost of production or reproduction of the records.
(d) The corporation may comply with a member's demand to
inspect the record of members under W.S. 17-19-1602(b)(iii) by
providing the member with a list of its members that was
compiled no earlier than the date of the member's demand.
17-19-1604. Court-ordered inspection.
(a) If a corporation does not allow a member who complies
with W.S. 17-19-1602(a) to inspect and copy any records required
by that subsection to be available for inspection, the district
court in the county where the corporations' principal office,
or, if none in this state, its registered office, is located may
summarily order inspection and copying of the records demanded
at the corporation's expense upon application of the member.
(b) If a corporation does not within a reasonable time
allow a member to inspect and copy any other record, the member
who complies with W.S. 17-19-1602(b) and (c) may apply to the
district court in the county where the corporation's principal
office, or, if none in this state, its registered office, is
located for an order to permit inspection and copying of the
records demanded. The court shall dispose of an application
under this subsection on an expedited basis.
(c) If the court orders inspection and copying of the
records demanded, it shall also order the corporation to pay the
member's costs, including reasonable counsel fees, incurred to
obtain the order unless the corporation proves that it refused
inspection in good faith because it had a reasonable basis for
doubt about the right of the member to inspect the records
demanded.
(d) If the court orders inspection and copying of the
records demanded, it may impose reasonable restrictions on the
use or distribution of the records by the demanding member.
17-19-1605. Limitations on use of membership list.
(a) Without consent of the board, a membership list or any
part thereof may not be obtained or used by any person for any
purpose unrelated to a member's interest as a member. Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, without the consent of
the board a membership list or any part thereof may not be:
(i) Used to solicit money or property unless the
money or property will be used solely to solicit the votes of
the members in an election to be held by the corporation;
(ii) Used for any commercial purpose; or
(iii) Sold to or purchased by any person.
B. Reports
17-19-1620. Financial statements for members.
(a) Except as provided in the articles or bylaws of a
religious corporation, a corporation upon written demand from a
member shall furnish that member its latest annual financial
statements, which may be consolidated or combined statements of
the corporation and one (1) or more of its subsidiaries or
affiliates, as appropriate, that include a balance sheet as of
the end of the fiscal year and statement of operations for that
year. If financial statements are prepared for the corporation
on the basis of generally accepted accounting principles, the
annual financial statements shall also be prepared on that
basis.
(b) If annual financial statements are reported upon by a
public accountant, the accountant's report shall accompany them.
If not, the statements shall be accompanied by the statement of
the president or the person responsible for the corporation's
financial accounting records:
(i) Stating the president's or other person's
reasonable belief as to whether the statements were prepared on
the basis of generally accepted accounting principles and, if
not, describing the basis of preparation; and
(ii) Describing any respects in which the statements
were not prepared on a basis of accounting consistent with the
statements prepared for the preceding year.
17-19-1621. Report of indemnification to members.
If a corporation indemnifies or advances expenses to a director
under W.S. 17-19-852, 17-19-853 or 17-19-854 in connection with
a proceeding by or in the right of the corporation, the
corporation shall report the indemnification or advance in
writing to the members with or before the notice of the next
meeting of members.
C. Annual Report and License Tax
17-19-1630. Filing of reports.
(a) Every Wyoming nonprofit corporation organized under
the laws of this state and every foreign nonprofit corporation
which obtains the right to transact and carry on its affairs
within this state shall file an annual report setting forth the
names and addresses of its officers and directors, the address
of its principal office, and any compensation, profit or
pecuniary advantage paid directly or indirectly to any officer
or director.
(b) The annual report required in subsection (a) of this
section shall be filed with the secretary of state on or before
the first day of the month of registration of every year.
(c) A director or officer of the corporation shall execute
the annual report under penalty of perjury.
(d) A fee of fifty dollars ($50.00) shall be collected by
the secretary of state upon initial incorporation or
qualification and an annual franchise fee of twenty-five dollars
($25.00) shall accompany the annual report.
(e) If an annual report does not contain the information
required by this section, the secretary of state shall promptly
notify the reporting domestic or foreign corporation in writing
and return the report to it for correction.
(f) The information in the annual report shall be current
on the date the annual report is executed on behalf of the
corporation.
(g) Any foreign nonprofit corporation transacting business
in Wyoming without qualifying is subject to the penalties
provided by W.S. 17-16-1502(d).
17-19-1631. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
17-19-1632. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
17-19-1633. Repealed By Laws 1997, ch. 192, § 3.
ARTICLE 17 - DOMESTICATION AND CONTINUANCE OF
FOREIGN CORPORATION
A. Domestication
17-19-1701. Domestication of foreign corporations.
Any nonprofit corporation incorporated under the laws of any of
the several states of the United States for any purpose, and so
long as the corporation complies with W.S. 17-19-301(b), may
become a domestic corporation of this state by delivering or
causing to be delivered to the secretary of state articles of
domestication. Upon filing the articles of domestication, the
secretary of state shall issue to the foreign corporation a
certificate of domestication which shall continue the
corporation as if it had been incorporated under this act. The
articles of domestication, upon being filed by the secretary of
state, constitute the articles of the domesticated foreign
corporation and it shall thereafter have all the powers and
privileges and be subjected to all the duties and limitations
granted and imposed upon domestic nonprofit corporations under
the provisions of this act. A corporation does not become a
resident for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through 16-6-118
solely because it becomes a domestic nonprofit corporation under
this section.
17-19-1702. Application for certificate of domestication;
articles of domestication.
(a) A foreign corporation, in order to procure a
certificate of domestication shall file articles of
domestication with the secretary of state, which articles shall
include and set forth:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
incorporation and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization, and a certificate of
good standing not more than thirty (30) days old;
(ii) The name of the corporation and the jurisdiction
under the laws of which it is incorporated;
(iii) The date of incorporation and the period of
duration of the corporation;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
corporation and the jurisdiction under the laws of which it is
incorporated;
(v) The address of the proposed registered office of
the corporation in this state, and the name of its proposed
registered agent in this state at that address;
(vi) The purpose or purposes of the corporation which
it proposes to pursue in the transaction of affairs in this
state;
(vii) The names and addresses of the directors and
officers of the corporation;
(viii) A statement of whether it is a public benefit
corporation, a mutual benefit corporation or a religious
corporation;
(ix) A statement whether the corporation has members;
(x) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of this state in compliance with the requirement of
article 10, section 5 of the Wyoming constitution; and
(xi) Any additional information as may be necessary
or appropriate to enable the secretary of state to determine
whether the corporation is entitled to a certificate of
domestication evidencing its authority to transact its affairs
and business in this state.
B. Continuance
17-19-1710. Continuance of foreign corporations.
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, any
nonprofit corporation incorporated for any purpose under the
laws of any jurisdiction other than this state, and so long as
the corporation complies with W.S. 17-19-301(b), may, if the
jurisdiction will acknowledge the corporation's termination of
domicile in the foreign jurisdiction, apply to the secretary of
state for registration under this act, thus continuing the
foreign corporation in Wyoming as if it had been incorporated in
this state. The secretary of state may issue a certificate of
registration upon receipt of an application supported by
articles of continuance as provided by this act together with
the statements, information and documents set out in subsection
(c) of this section. The certificate of registration may then be
issued subject to any limitations and conditions and may contain
any provisions as may appear proper to the secretary of state.
(b) The secretary of state shall cause notice of issuance
of a certificate of registration to be given forthwith to the
proper officer of the jurisdiction in which the corporation was
previously incorporated.
(c) The articles of continuance filed by a foreign
corporation with the secretary of state shall contain:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
incorporation and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization;
(ii) The name of the corporation and the jurisdiction
under the laws of which it is incorporated;
(iii) The date of incorporation and the period of
duration of the corporation;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
corporation;
(v) The address of the proposed registered office of
the corporation in this state and the name of its proposed
registered agent in this state at the address;
(vi) The purpose or purposes of the corporation which
it proposes to pursue in the transaction of business in this
state;
(vii) The names and respective addresses of the
directors and officers of the corporation;
(viii) A statement of whether it is a public benefit
corporation, a mutual benefit corporation or a religious
corporation;
(ix) A statement whether the corporation has members;
(x) A statement that the corporation accepts the
constitution of this state in compliance with the requirements
of article 10, section 5 of the Wyoming constitution;
(xi) Any additional information necessary or
appropriate to enable the secretary of state to determine
whether the corporation is entitled to a certificate of
registration evidencing its authority to transact its affairs
and business in the state; and
(xii) Any additional information permitted in
articles of incorporation under W.S. 17-19-202.
(d) The application shall be executed by the corporation
by its president or other officer, director, trustee, manager or
person performing functions equivalent to those of a president
and who is authorized to execute the application on behalf of
the corporation and shall be verified by the officer signing the
application.
(e) The provisions of the articles of continuance may,
without expressly so stating, vary from the provisions of the
corporation's articles of incorporation or equivalent basic
corporate charter or other authorization, if the variation is
one which a corporation incorporated under this act could effect
by way of amendment to its articles of incorporation. Upon
issuance of a certificate of continuance by the secretary of
state, the articles of continuance shall be deemed to be the
articles of incorporation of the continued corporation. The
corporation may elect to incorporate by reference in the
articles of continuance its basic corporate charter or other
authorization which had been adopted by the corporation in the
foreign jurisdiction, in order to permit the same to continue to
act as the articles of incorporation of the corporation,
provided, however, that such basic corporate charter or other
authorization shall be deemed amended to the extent necessary to
make the same conform to the laws of Wyoming and to the
provisions of the articles of continuance.
(f) Except for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through
16-6-118, the existence of any corporation heretofore or
hereafter issued a certificate of continuance under this act
shall be deemed to have commenced on the date the corporation
commenced its existence in the jurisdiction in which the
corporation was first formed, incorporated or otherwise came
into being. The laws of Wyoming shall apply to a corporation
continuing under this act to the same extent as if the
corporation had been incorporated under the laws of Wyoming from
and after the issuance of a certificate of continuance under
this act by the secretary of state to the corporation. When a
foreign corporation is continued as a corporation under this
act, such continuance shall not affect the corporation's
ownership of its property or liability for any existing
obligations, causes of action, claims, pending or threatened
prosecutions or civil or administrative actions, convictions,
rulings, orders, judgments or any other characteristics or
aspects of the corporation and its existence.
(g) A membership issued before the corporation's
continuance in Wyoming is deemed to have been issued in
compliance with this act and the provisions of the articles of
continuance. Continuance under this act does not deprive a
member of any right or privilege that he claims under, or
relieve the member of any liability in respect of, an issued
membership.
(h) As used in this section, the term "corporation" shall
include any incorporated organization, foundation, trust,
association or similar entity which appears to the secretary of
state to possess characteristics sufficiently similar to those
of a corporation organized under this act.
ARTICLE 18 - TRANSITION PROVISIONS
17-19-1801. Application to existing domestic corporations.
This act applies to all domestic corporations in existence on
its effective date that were incorporated under the following
statutes of this state: W.S. 17-6-101 through 17-6-117, 17-7-101
through 17-7-116 and 17-9-101 through 17-9-106.
17-19-1802. Application to qualified foreign corporations.
A foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this
state on the effective date of this act is subject to this act
but is not required to obtain a new certificate of authority to
transact business under this act.
17-19-1803. Saving provisions.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the repeal of a statute by this act does not affect:
(i) The operation of the statute or any action taken
under it before its repeal;
(ii) Any ratification, right, remedy, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under the
statute before its repeal;
(iii) Any violation of the statute or any penalty,
forfeiture or punishment incurred because of the violation,
before its repeal;
(iv) Any proceeding, reorganization or dissolution
commenced under the statute before its repeal, and the
proceeding, reorganization or dissolution may be completed in
accordance with the statute as if it had not been repealed; or
(v) Any meeting of members or directors or action by
written consent noticed or any action taken before its repeal as
a result of a meeting of members or directors or action by
written consent.
(b) If a penalty or punishment imposed for violation of a
statute repealed by this act is reduced by this act, the penalty
or punishment if not already imposed shall be imposed in
accordance with this act.
17-19-1804. Public benefit, mutual benefit and religious
corporations.
(a) On January 1, 1993 each domestic corporation existing
on the effective date of this act that is or becomes subject to
this act shall be designated as a public benefit, mutual benefit
or religious corporation as follows:
(i) Any corporation designated by statute as a public
benefit corporation, a mutual benefit corporation or a religious
corporation is the type of corporation designated by statute;
(ii) Any corporation that does not come within
paragraph (i) of this subsection but is organized primarily or
exclusively for religious purposes is a religious corporation;
(iii) Any corporation that does not come within
paragraph (i) or (ii) of this subsection but that is recognized
as exempt under section 501(c)(iii) of the Internal Revenue
Code, or any successor section, is a public benefit corporation;
(iv) Any corporation that does not come within
paragraph (i), (ii) or (iii) of this subsection, but that is
organized for a public or charitable purpose and that upon
dissolution shall distribute its assets to a public benefit
corporation, the United States, a state or a person that is
recognized as exempt under section 501(c)(iii) of the Internal
Revenue Code, or any successor section, is a public benefit
corporation; and
(v) Any corporation that does not come within
paragraph (i), (ii), (iii) or (iv) of this subsection is a
mutual benefit corporation.
17-19-1805. Issuance of additional capital stock
prohibited.
As of January 1, 1993, no additional capital stock may be issued
by any nonprofit corporation organized prior to January 1, 1993.
As of January 1, 1993, persons who were issued capital stock of
a nonprofit corporation pursuant to W.S. 17-6-102(a)(viii) shall
be considered members, and not stockholders, and shall have the
rights, privileges and obligations of members, including rights
upon dissolution, as set forth in this act or the corporation's
articles of incorporation or bylaws.
17-19-1806. Transition of for profit corporations to
nonprofit status.
(a) Any corporation as defined by W.S. 17-16-140 and
incorporated under the Wyoming Business Corporation Act may
become a corporation pursuant to this act by filing amended
articles of incorporation complying with this act if:
(i) The corporation is or determines to become upon
filing the amended articles of incorporation, a public benefit,
mutual benefit or religious corporation;
(ii) All shareholders are entitled to the same notice
and rights of dissent provided under W.S. 17-16-1320 through
17-16-1331 and notice of any known tax consequences under the
Internal Revenue Code;
(iii) All shareholders in a business corporation
which is or becomes a mutual benefit corporation shall become
members entitled to a number of votes, rights to benefits and
unequal obligations for assessments and rights upon dissolution
in proportion to their number of shares at the time of filing
the amended articles of incorporation, unless the amended
articles of incorporation provide otherwise;
(iv) The transition to nonprofit status shall not
impair any obligations or liabilities to others existing at the
time of the transition.
17-19-1807. Transition of mutual benefit corporations to
for profit status.
(a) Any corporation organized under this chapter which is
a mutual benefit corporation may become a corporation organized
under the Wyoming Business Corporation Act by filing amended
articles of incorporation complying with the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act, providing that the corporation shall become a
for profit corporation upon filing the amended articles or on a
specific date set in the articles if:
(i) The members are entitled to reasonable notice of
the impending change;
(ii) Any members dissenting from the change are
entitled to the benefits dissenting shareholders would be
entitled to under W.S. 17-16-1320 through 17-16-1331 in
proportion to the members' rights to assets in the event of
dissolution of the corporation;
(iii) The transition to for profit status shall not
impair the obligation or liability of the corporation to others
existing at the time of the transition of the corporation; and
(iv) The corporation is not a cooperative utility
pursuant to the Wyoming Cooperative Utilities Act.
CHAPTER 20 - WYOMING COOPERATIVE UTILITIES ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
A. In General
17-20-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Cooperative Utilities Act".
17-20-102. Applicability.
This act shall apply to cooperative utilities.
17-20-103. Application of the Wyoming Nonprofit
Corporation Act.
Each cooperative utility shall be governed by the provisions of
the Wyoming Nonprofit Corporation Act, W.S. 17-19-101 through
17-19-1807, except insofar as they may be inconsistent with the
provisions of this act.
17-20-104. Securities Act exemption.
The provisions of chapter 4 of title 17 of the Wyoming statutes
shall not apply to any note, bond or other evidence of
indebtedness issued by any cooperative utility to the United
States or any agency or any instrumentality thereof, to any
mortgage or deed of trust executed to secure the same, or to the
issuance of membership certificates or proxies by a cooperative
utility.
B and C. [Reserved]
D. Definitions
17-20-140. General definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Cooperative utility" means a corporation
organized under any law of this state or under the law of any
other jurisdiction, for a purpose other than the conduct of
business for profit and includes, but is not limited to,
corporations organized to own, operate and maintain electric,
telephone and television distribution systems primarily to its
members;
(ii) "Patronage capital contributions" means all
funds received and receivable from members from the furnishing
of cooperative utility services in excess of operating costs and
expenses properly chargeable against the furnishing of
cooperative utility services;
(iii) "This act" means W.S. 17-20-101 through
17-20-1801.
ARTICLE 2 - ORGANIZATION
17-20-201. Reserved.
17-20-202. Articles of incorporation.
(a) In addition to the requirements set forth in W.S.
17-19-202, each corporation organized under this act shall
state, in its articles, that it is a cooperative utility.
(b) Each corporation incorporating under this act shall be
considered a mutual benefit corporation and shall be subject to
provisions governing mutual benefit corporations found in the
Wyoming Nonprofit Corporation Act, except as provided in this
act.
ARTICLES 3 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 4 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 5 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 6 - MEMBERS AND MEMBERSHIPS
A. Admission of Members
17-20-601. Admission.
(a) No person who is not an incorporator shall become a
member of a cooperative utility unless the person agrees to use
the services furnished by the cooperative utility on a
continuing basis when such services shall be available through
its facilities. The bylaws may provide that any person,
including an incorporator, shall cease to be [a] member of the
cooperative utility if the member fails or refuses to use the
services made available by the cooperative utility, or if
services are not made available to the member by the cooperative
utility within the specified time after the person has become a
member.
(b) The bylaws may prescribe additional qualifications and
limitations in respect to membership.
17-20-602. Reserved.
17-20-603. Requirement of members.
A cooperative utility is required to have members.
ARTICLE 7 - MEMBERS' MEETINGS AND VOTING
A. [Reserved]
B. Voting
17-20-720. Reserved.
17-20-721. Reserved.
17-20-722. Quorum requirements.
Except for member votes on mergers, consolidations, sale or
disposition of assets, and dissolutions, ten percent (10%) of
all members of the cooperative utility present in person or by
proxy or one hundred (100) members present in person, whichever
is fewer, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of
business at all meetings of the members. If less than a quorum
is present at any meeting, a majority of those present in person
shall adjourn the meeting, but may reschedule the meeting with
further notice.
17-20-723. Reserved.
17-20-724. Reserved.
17-20-725. Reserved.
17-20-726. Reserved.
17-20-727. Reserved.
17-20-728. Election of directors.
The bylaws may provide that the territory in which a cooperative
utility supplies service to its members shall be divided into
two (2) or more director districts, and in respect to each such
director district shall describe the boundaries thereof and
designate the number of directors that shall be elected by the
members residing therein.
17-20-729. Amendment of bylaws.
(a) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-19-1021(a)(i) and (ii), a
cooperative utility may amend its bylaws not inconsistent with
its articles of incorporation by a two-thirds (2/3) vote of the
board of directors after notice as required by this section.
(b) A cooperative utility shall provide notice of any
meeting of the board of directors at which an amendment proposed
under subsection (a) of this section is to be voted upon at
least thirty (30) days before the meeting. The notice shall:
(i) State that a purpose of the meeting is to
consider a proposed amendment to the bylaws;
(ii) Contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary
of the amendment;
(iii) Be fair and reasonable. Fair and reasonable
notice includes, but is not limited to, advertisement in a
newspaper of general circulation within the cooperative
utility's service area and direct mailings to members such as in
a bill or other communication.
ARTICLES 8 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 9 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 10 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 11 - MERGER AND CONSOLIDATION
A. Merger
17-20-1101. Reserved.
17-20-1102. Reserved.
17-20-1103. Merger of 2 or more cooperative utilities.
Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of directors
or members, acting pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1103(c) require a
greater vote, a plan of merger involving two (2) or more
cooperative utilities to be adopted shall be approved as
provided by W.S. 17-19-1103(a)(i) and (iii) and by the
affirmative vote of not less than a majority of all of the
members of each of the merging cooperative utilities.
17-20-1104. Reserved.
17-20-1105. Reserved.
17-20-1106. Merger with entity other than a cooperative
utility.
(a) A cooperative utility may merge with any entity if:
(i) The merger is permitted by the law of the state
or country under whose law the entity is organized and existing
and each entity complies with that law in effecting the merger;
(ii) The entity complies with W.S. 17-19-1104 if it
is the surviving corporation or entity;
(iii) The merger is approved by the affirmative vote
of not less than two-thirds (2/3) of all of the members of the
cooperative utility; and
(iv) The provisions in W.S. 17-20-1201 are met.
B. Consolidation
17-20-1110. Reserved.
17-20-1111. Reserved.
17-20-1112. Consolidation of 2 or more cooperative
utilities.
Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of directors
or members, acting pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1112(c) require a
greater vote, a plan of consolidation involving two (2) or more
cooperative utilities to be adopted shall be approved as
provided by W.S. 17-19-1112(a)(i) and (iii) and by the
affirmative vote of not less than a majority of all of the
members of each of the consolidating cooperative utilities.
17-20-1113. Reserved.
17-20-1114. Reserved.
17-20-1115. Consolidation with entity other than a
cooperative utility.
(a) A cooperative utility may consolidate with any entity
if:
(i) The consolidation is permitted by the law of the
state or country under whose law the entity is organized and
existing and each entity complies with that law in effecting the
consolidation;
(ii) The entity complies with 17-19-1113 if it is the
new corporation or entity;
(iii) The consolidation is approved by the
affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds (2/3) of all of the
members of the cooperative utilities; and
(iv) The provisions in W.S. 17-20-1201 are met.
ARTICLE 12 - SALE OR ENCUMBRANCE OF ASSETS
17-20-1201. Sale or disposition of assets of a cooperative
utility.
(a) A cooperative utility shall not sell, lease or
otherwise dispose of all or any substantial portion of its
property, when the action is not in the regular course of
activities, except as provided in this section.
(b) Before a meeting is held to vote on approval of
disposition of all or a substantial portion of cooperative
utility property, the board of directors shall:
(i) Have the proposed disposition analyzed with
respect to the effect on rates for utility services and the
equity position of members. The analyses shall be performed by
at least two (2) independent analysts with experience in utility
rate setting and valuation of utility property;
(ii) Notify all cooperative utility members, at least
ninety (90) days in advance, of a meeting to vote on disposition
of cooperative utility property, enclosing a summary of the
proposals for disposition of the property with the notice, and
make available to any member the full proposal for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the cooperative utility;
and
(iii) The cooperative utility shall mail to all
members of the cooperative utility a summary of any alternate
purchase proposals that have been submitted within thirty (30)
days of the meeting date, and make available to any member the
full proposal for inspection and copying at the principal office
of the cooperative utility.
(c) A two-thirds (2/3) affirmative vote of all the members
of the cooperative utility is required for any sale or
disposition under this article.
(d) This section is subject to the contractual obligations
of the cooperative utility with power suppliers and other third
parties.
17-20-1202. Mortgage or encumbrance of assets of a
cooperative utility.
(a) The board of directors, without authorization by the
members, shall have full power and authority:
(i) To borrow monies from any source and in such
amounts as the board may from time to time determine; and
(ii) To mortgage or otherwise pledge or encumber any
or all of the cooperative utility's properties or assets as
security therefor.
ARTICLE 13 - DISTRIBUTIONS TO MEMBERS
17-20-1301. Patronage capital contributions, allocations
and refunds; deposits and advance payments.
(a) Cooperative utilities organized under this act may
make distributions to members in the form of patronage capital
contributions, allocations and refunds. The bylaws shall
provide for patronage capital contributions, allocations and
refunds. Refunds may be made only at the discretion of the
board of directors.
(b) Any patronage capital that has been retired, returned,
refunded or tendered to a member of a cooperative that has
remained unclaimed by the person appearing on the records of the
cooperative entitled thereto for more than two (2) years, shall
be determined to be unclaimed. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, including provisions pertaining to unclaimed
property, unclaimed patronage capital shall be used by the
cooperative for the benefit of the general membership of the
cooperative.
(c) Notwithstanding W.S. 34-24-109 and any other provision
of law, any deposit or advance payment that has been refunded,
including any interest thereon, that has not been claimed by the
member appearing on the records of the cooperative for more than
five (5) years and for which the cooperative has made good faith
efforts to deliver to the member shall be determined to be
unclaimed. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including
provisions pertaining to unclaimed property, unclaimed refunds
for deposits or advance payments shall be used by the
cooperative utility for the benefit of the general membership of
the cooperative. The right of an owner to unclaimed refunds for
deposits or advance payments held by a cooperative utility is
extinguished when the unclaimed refunds are used by the
cooperative utility for the benefit of its general membership in
accordance with this subsection. Nothing in this subsection
precludes a cooperative utility from refunding subsequently
claimed funds at the cooperative utility's discretion.
ARTICLE 14 - DISSOLUTION
A. Voluntary Dissolution
17-20-1401. Reserved.
17-20-1402. Dissolution by directors, members and third
persons.
Unless this act, the articles, bylaws or the board of directors
or members, acting pursuant to W.S. 17-19-1402(c) require a
greater vote, dissolution is authorized if it is approved as
provided by W.S. 17-19-1402(a)(i) and (iii) and by the
affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds (2/3) of all of the
members of the cooperative utility.
ARTICLES 15 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 16 - RESERVED
ARTICLES 17 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 18 - TRANSITION PROVISIONS
17-20-1801. Application.
This act applies to all cooperative utilities, including rural
electric associations, whether formed before the effective date
of this act or not.
CHAPTER 21 - UNIFORM PARTNERSHIP ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-21-101. Definitions.
(a) In this chapter:
(i) "Business" includes every trade, occupation and
profession;
(ii) "Chief executive office" means the principal
operating headquarters and the primary offices of the chief
executive officer;
(iii) "Debtor in bankruptcy" means a person who is
the subject of:
(A) An order for relief under title 11 of the
United States Code or a comparable order under a successor
statute of general application; or
(B) A comparable order under federal or state
law governing insolvency.
(iv) "Distribution" means a transfer of cash or other
property from a partnership to a partner in the partner's
capacity as a partner, or to the partner's transferee;
(v) "Foreign registered limited liability
partnership" means a partnership or association formed under, or
pursuant to an agreement governed by, the laws of any state or
jurisdiction other than this state that is registered as a
limited liability partnership under the laws of the other
jurisdiction;
(vi) "Partnership" means an association of two (2) or
more persons to carry on as coowners a business for profit
formed under W.S. 17-21-202, predecessor law, or comparable law
of another jurisdiction, and includes for all purposes of the
laws of this state, a registered limited liability partnership;
(vii) "Partnership agreement" means an agreement,
written or oral, among the partners concerning the partnership;
(viii) "Partnership at will" means a partnership in
which the partners have not agreed to remain partners until the
expiration of a definite term or the completion of a particular
undertaking;
(ix) "Person" means an individual, corporation,
business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, joint
venture, government, governmental subdivision, agency or
instrumentality or any other legal or commercial entity;
(x) "Property" means all property, real, personal or
mixed, tangible or intangible, or any interest therein;
(xi) "Registered limited liability partnership" means
a partnership formed pursuant to an agreement governed by the
laws of this state, registered under W.S. 17-21-1101 and
complying with W.S. 17-21-1103;
(xii) "State" means a state of the United States, the
District of Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States;
(xiii) "Statement" means a statement of partnership
authority under W.S. 17-21-303, a statement of denial under W.S.
17-21-304, a statement of dissociation under W.S. 17-21-704, a
statement of dissolution under W.S. 17-21-806, a statement of
merger under W.S. 17-21-906, a statement of registration as a
registered limited liability partnership, or a renewal thereof,
under W.S. 17-21-1101, a statement of continuance under W.S.
17-21-1106, a statement of registration as a foreign registered
limited liability partnership, or a renewal thereof, under W.S.
17-21-1104 or an amendment, cancellation or withdrawal of any of
the foregoing;
(xiv) "Transfer" includes an assignment, conveyance,
lease, mortgage, deed and encumbrance;
(xv) "Registered agent" means as provided in W.S.
17-28-101 through 17-28-111.
17-21-102. Knowledge and notice.
(a) A person knows a fact if the person has knowledge of
it.
(b) A person has notice of a fact if the person:
(i) Knows of it;
(ii) Has received a notice of it; or
(iii) Has reason to know it exists from all of the
facts known to that person at the time in question.
(c) A person notifies or gives a notice to another by
taking steps reasonably required to inform the other person in
the ordinary course of business, whether or not the other person
learns of it.
(d) A person is notified or receives a notice of a fact
when:
(i) The existence of the fact comes to the person's
attention; or
(ii) The notice is duly delivered at the person's
place of business or at any other place held out by the person
as a place for receiving communications.
(e) Except as provided in subsection (f) of this section,
notice received by a person who is not an individual, including
a partnership, is effective for a particular transaction when
the notice is brought to the attention of the individual
conducting the transaction, or in any event when the notice
would have been brought to that individual's attention if the
person had exercised due diligence. Such a person exercises due
diligence if he maintains reasonable routines for communicating
significant information to the individual conducting the
transaction and there is reasonable compliance with the
routines. Due diligence does not require an individual acting
for the person to communicate information unless the
communication is part of the individual's regular duties or the
individual has reason to know of the transaction and that the
transaction would be materially affected by the information.
(f) Receipt of notice by a partner of a matter relating to
the partnership is effective immediately as notice to the
partnership, but is not effective in the case of fraud on the
partnership committed by or with the consent of the partner who
received the notice.
17-21-103. Effect of partnership agreement; nonwaivable
provisions.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
a partnership agreement governs relations among the partners and
between the partners and the partnership. To the extent the
partnership agreement does not otherwise provide, this chapter
governs relations among the partners and between the partners
and the partnership.
(b) A partnership agreement may not:
(i) Vary the rights and duties under W.S. 17-21-105
except to eliminate the duty to provide copies of statements to
all the partners;
(ii) Unreasonably restrict a partner's right of
access to books and records under W.S. 17-21-403(b);
(iii) Eliminate the duty of loyalty under W.S.
17-21-404(b);
(iv) Unreasonably reduce the duty of care under W.S.
17-21-404(d);
(v) Eliminate the obligation of good faith and fair
dealing under W.S. 17-21-404(e);
(vi) Vary the power to withdraw as a partner under
W.S. 17-21-601(a)(i), except to require the notice to be in
writing;
(vii) Vary the right to expulsion of a partner by a
court in the events specified in W.S. 17-21-601(a)(v);
(viii) Vary the requirement to wind up the
partnership business in cases specified in W.S.
17-21-801(a)(iv), (v) or (vi); or
(ix) Restrict rights of third parties under this
chapter.
17-21-104. Supplemental principles of law.
(a) Unless displaced by particular provisions of this
chapter, the principles of law and equity supplement this
chapter.
(b) If an obligation to pay interest arises under this
chapter and the rate is not specified, the rate is that
specified in W.S. 1-16-102.
17-21-105. Execution, filing, and recording of statements.
(a) A statement may be filed in the office of the
secretary of state. A certified copy of a statement that is
filed in an office in another state may be filed in the office
of the secretary of state. Either filing has the effect provided
in this chapter with respect to partnership property located in
or transactions that occur in this state. If a statement of
partnership authority is filed with the secretary of state under
W.S. 17-21-303, all statements provided for under this chapter
subsequent to the filing of this statement shall be filed with
the secretary of state in accordance with this chapter. If the
secretary of state refuses to file a statement, the secretary of
state shall return it to a partner or representative within
fifteen (15) days after the document was delivered, together
with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
(b) A certified copy of a statement that has been filed in
the office of the secretary of state that is recorded in the
office for recording transfers of real property shall have the
effect provided for recorded statements in this chapter. A
recorded statement that is not a certified copy of a statement
filed in the office of the secretary of state shall not have the
effect provided for recorded statements in this chapter.
(c) A statement filed by a partnership must be executed by
at least two (2) partners. Other statements must be executed by
a partner or other person authorized by this chapter. An
individual who executes a statement as, or on behalf of, a
partner or other person named as a partner in a statement must
personally declare under penalty of perjury that the contents of
the statement are accurate.
(d) A person authorized by this chapter to file a
statement may amend or cancel the statement by filing an
amendment or cancellation that names the partnership, identifies
the statement and states the substance of the amendment or
cancellation.
(e) A person who files a statement pursuant to this
section shall promptly send a copy of the statement to every
partner and to any other person named as a partner in the
statement. Failure to send a copy of a statement to a partner
or other person does not limit the effectiveness of the
statement as to a person not a partner.
(f) The secretary of state shall collect a fee of ten
dollars ($10.00) for filing or providing a certified copy of a
statement. The appropriate county clerk shall collect a fee of
ten dollars ($10.00) for recording a statement.
17-21-106. Law governing internal affairs.
Except as provided in W.S. 17-21-1104, the laws of the state or
other jurisdiction in which a partnership has its chief
executive office govern the partnership's internal affairs.
17-21-107. Partnership subject to amendment or repeal of
chapter.
A partnership governed by this chapter is subject to any
amendment or repeal of this chapter.
17-21-108. Powers.
The secretary of state has the power reasonably necessary to
perform the duties required of him by this chapter. The
secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable forms, rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
ARTICLE 2 - NATURE OF PARTNERSHIP
17-21-201. Partnership as entity.
A partnership is an entity.
17-21-202. Creation of partnership.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the association of two (2) or more persons to carry on as
co-owners of a business for profit creates a partnership,
whether or not the persons intend to create a partnership.
(b) An association created under a statute other than this
chapter, any predecessor law or comparable law of another
jurisdiction is not a partnership.
(c) In determining whether a partnership is created, the
following rules apply:
(i) Joint tenancy, tenancy in common, tenancy by the
entireties, joint property, common property or part ownership
does not by itself establish a partnership, even if the
co-owners share profits made by the use of the property;
(ii) The sharing of gross returns does not by itself
establish a partnership, even if the persons sharing them have a
joint or common right or interest in property from which the
returns are derived;
(iii) The receipt by a person of a share of the
profits of a business is prima facie evidence that the person is
a partner in the business, but that inference may not be drawn
if the profits were received in payment:
(A) Of a debt by installments or otherwise;
(B) For services as an independent contractor or
of wages or other compensation to an employee;
(C) Of rent;
(D) Of an annuity or other retirement or health
benefit to a beneficiary, representative or designee of a
deceased or retired partner;
(E) Of interest or other charge on a loan, even
if the amount of payment varies with the profits of the
business, including a direct or indirect present or future
ownership of the collateral or rights to income, proceeds or
increase in value derived from the collateral; or
(F) Of consideration for the sale of the
goodwill of a business or other property by installments or
otherwise.
(d) Except as provided by W.S. 17-21-308, persons who are
not partners as to each other are not partners as to other
persons.
(e) A partnership created under this chapter is a general
partnership and the partners are general partners of the
partnership.
17-21-203. Partnership property.
Property transferred to or otherwise acquired by a partnership
is property of the partnership and not of the partners
individually.
17-21-204. When property is partnership property.
(a) Property is partnership property if acquired:
(i) In the name of the partnership; or
(ii) In the name of one (1) or more partners with an
indication in the instrument transferring title to the property
of the person's capacity as a partner or of the existence of a
partnership, but without an indication of the name of the
partnership.
(b) Property is acquired in the name of the partnership by
a transfer to:
(i) The partnership in its name; or
(ii) One (1) or more partners in their capacity as
partners in the partnership, if the name of the partnership is
indicated in the instrument transferring title to the property.
(c) Property is presumed to be partnership property if
purchased with partnership assets, even if not acquired in the
name of the partnership or of one (1) or more partners with an
indication in the instrument transferring title to the property
of the person's capacity as a partner or of the existence of a
partnership.
(d) Property acquired in the name of one (1) or more of
the partners, without an indication in the instrument
transferring title to the property of the person's capacity as a
partner or of the existence of a partnership and without use of
partnership assets, is presumed to be separate property even if
used for partnership purposes.
ARTICLE 3 - RELATIONS OF PARTNERS TO PERSONS
DEALING WITH PARTNERSHIP
17-21-301. Partner agent of partnership.
(a) Subject to the effect of a statement of partnership
authority pursuant to W.S. 17-21-303:
(i) Each partner is an agent of the partnership for
the purpose of its business. Any act of a partner, including
the execution of an instrument in the partnership name, for
apparently carrying on in the usual way the partnership business
or business of the kind carried on by the partnership binds the
partnership, unless the partner has no authority to act for the
partnership in the particular matter and the person with whom
the partner is dealing knows or has received a notice that the
partner lacks authority;
(ii) An act of a partner which is not apparently for
carrying on in the usual way the partnership business or
business of the kind carried on by the partnership does not bind
the partnership unless authorized by the other partners.
17-21-302. Transfer of partnership property.
(a) Subject to the effect of a statement of partnership
authority pursuant to W.S. 17-21-303:
(i) Partnership property held in the name of the
partnership may be transferred by an instrument of transfer
executed by any partner in the partnership name;
(ii) Partnership property held in the name of one (1)
or more partners with an indication in the instrument
transferring the property to them of their capacity as partners
or of the existence of a partnership, but without an indication
of the name of the partnership, may be transferred by an
instrument of transfer executed by the persons in whose name the
property is held;
(iii) A partnership may recover property transferred
under this subsection if it proves that execution of the
instrument of transfer did not bind the partnership under W.S.
17-21-301, unless the property was transferred by the initial
transferee or a person claiming through the initial transferee
to a subsequent transferee who gave value without having notice
that the person who executed the instrument of initial transfer
lacked authority to bind the partnership.
(b) Partnership property held in the name of one (1) or
more persons other than the partnership, without an indication
in the instrument transferring the property to them of their
capacity as partners or of the existence of a partnership, may
be transferred free of any claims of the partnership or the
partners by the persons in whose name the property is held to a
transferee who gives value without having notice that it is
partnership property.
(c) If a person holds all of the partners' interests in
the partnership, all of the partnership property vests in that
person. That person may execute documents in the name of the
partnership to evidence vesting of the property in that person
and may file or record those documents.
17-21-303. Statement of partnership authority.
(a) A partnership may file a statement of partnership
authority, which:
(i) Shall include:
(A) The name of the partnership;
(B) The street address of its chief executive
office and of an office in this state, if any;
(C) The names and mailing addresses of all the
partners or of an agent appointed and maintained by the
partnership for the purpose of subsection (b) of this section;
and
(D) A statement specifying the names of the
partners authorized to execute an instrument transferring real
property held in the name of the partnership.
(ii) May include a statement of the authority, or of
limitations on the authority, of some or all of the partners to
enter into other transactions on behalf of the partnership and
any other matter.
(b) If a statement of partnership authority names an
agent, the agent shall maintain a list of the names and mailing
addresses of all of the partners and make it available to any
person on request for good cause shown.
(c) If a filed statement of partnership authority is
executed pursuant to W.S. 17-21-105(c) and states the name of
the partnership but does not contain all of the other
information required by subsection (a) of this section, the
statement nevertheless operates with respect to a person not a
partner as provided in subsections (d) and (e) of this section.
(d) Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section,
a filed statement of partnership authority supplements the
authority of a partner to enter into transactions on behalf of
the partnership as follows:
(i) Except for transfers of real property, a grant of
authority contained in a filed statement of partnership
authority is conclusive, in favor of a person who gives value
without knowledge to the contrary, so long as and to the extent
that a limitation on that authority is not then contained in
another filed statement. A filed cancellation of a limitation
on authority revives the previous grant of authority;
(ii) A grant of authority to transfer real property
held in the name of the partnership contained in a certified
copy of a filed statement of partnership authority recorded in
the office for recording transfers of that real property is
conclusive, in favor of a person who gives value without
knowledge to the contrary, so long as and to the extent that a
certified copy of a filed statement containing a limitation on
that authority is not then recorded in the office for recording
transfers of that real property. The recording in the office
for recording transfers of that real property of a certified
copy of a filed cancellation of a limitation on authority
revives the previous grant of authority.
(e) A person not a partner is deemed to know of a
limitation on the authority of a partner to transfer real
property held in the name of the partnership if a certified copy
of the filed statement containing the limitation on authority is
recorded in the office for recording transfers of that real
property.
(f) Except as provided in subsections (d) and (e) of this
section and W.S. 17-21-704 and 17-21-806, a person not a partner
is not deemed to know of a limitation on the authority of a
partner merely because the limitation is contained in a filed
statement.
(g) Unless earlier canceled, a filed statement of
partnership authority is canceled by operation of law five (5)
years after the date on which the statement or the most recent
amendment was filed with the secretary of state.
17-21-304. Statement of denial.
A partner or other person named as a partner in a filed
statement of partnership authority or in a list maintained by an
agent pursuant to W.S. 17-21-303(b) may file a statement of
denial stating the name of the partnership and the fact that is
being denied, which may include denial of a person's authority
or status as a partner. A statement of denial is a limitation
on authority to the extent provided in W.S. 17-21-303(d) and
(e).
17-21-305. Partnership liable for partner's actionable
conduct.
(a) A partnership is liable for loss or injury caused to a
person or for a penalty incurred as a result of a wrongful act
or omission or other actionable conduct of a partner acting in
the ordinary course of business of the partnership or with the
authority of the partnership.
(b) If in the course of its business, a partnership
receives money or property of a person not a partner which is
misapplied by a partner while it is in the custody of the
partnership, the partnership is liable for the loss.
17-21-306. Partner's liability.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
all partners are liable jointly and severally for all
obligations of the partnership unless otherwise agreed by the
claimant or provided by law.
(b) Except as provided by subsections (c) and (d) of this
section, a partner of a registered limited liability partnership
is not liable, directly or indirectly (including by way of
indemnification, contribution, assessment or otherwise), for any
debts, obligations or liabilities of, or chargeable to, the
registered limited liability partnership or another partner or
partners, whether arising in tort, contract or otherwise, solely
by reason of being such a partner or acting (or omitting to act)
in such capacity or otherwise participating (as an employee,
consultant, contractor or otherwise) in the conduct of the other
business or activities of the registered limited liability
partnership, while the partnership is a registered limited
liability partnership.
(c) Subsection (b) of this section shall not affect the
liability of a partner in a registered limited liability
partnership for the partner's own negligent or wrongful act or
misconduct, or that of any person under the partner's direct
supervision and control.
(d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) of
this section, all or specified partners of a registered limited
liability partnership may be liable in their capacity as
partners for all or specified debts, obligations or liabilities
of a registered limited liability partnership to the extent at
least a majority of the partners shall have agreed unless
otherwise provided in any agreement between the partners. Any
such agreement may be modified or revoked to the extent at least
a majority of the partners shall have agreed, unless otherwise
provided in any agreement between the partners, provided,
however, that:
(i) Any such modification or revocation shall not
affect the liability of a partner for any debts, obligations or
liabilities of a registered limited liability partnership
incurred, created or assumed by the registered limited liability
partnership prior to the modification or revocation; and
(ii) A partner shall be liable for debts, obligations
and liabilities of the registered limited liability partnership
incurred, created or assumed after such modification or
revocation only in accordance with this article and, if the
agreement is further modified, the agreement as so further
modified but only to the extent not inconsistent with subsection
(c) of this section.
(e) Nothing in this section shall in any way affect or
impair the ability of a partner to act as a guarantor or surety
for, provide collateral for, or otherwise be liable for, the
debts, obligations or liabilities of a registered limited
liability partnership.
(f) Subsection (b) of this section shall not affect the
liability of a registered limited liability partnership out of
partnership assets for partnership debts, obligations and
liabilities.
(g) A partner in a registered limited liability
partnership is not a proper party to a proceeding by or against
a registered limited liability partnership, the object of which
is to recover any debts, obligations, or liabilities of, or
chargeable to, the partnership, unless the partner is personally
liable under subsection (c) or (d) of this section.
17-21-307. Actions by and against partnership and
partners.
(a) A partnership may sue and be sued in the name of the
partnership.
(b) An action may be brought against the partnership and
any or all of the partners who are personally liable for
obligations of the partnership under W.S. 17-21-306 in the same
action or in separate actions.
(c) A judgment against a partnership is not by itself a
judgment against a partner. A judgment against a partnership
may not be satisfied from a partner's assets unless there is a
judgment against the partner.
(d) A judgment creditor of a partner may not levy
execution against the assets of a partner to satisfy a judgment
based on a claim against the partnership unless:
(i) The partner is personally liable for the
liability of the partnership under W.S. 17-21-306; and
(ii) One (1) of the following conditions is
satisfied:
(A) A judgment based on the same claim has been
obtained against the partnership and a writ of execution on the
judgment has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part;
(B) An involuntary case under title 11 of the
United States Code has been commenced against the partnership
and has not been dismissed within sixty (60) days after
commencement or the partnership has commenced a voluntary case
under title 11 of the United States Code and the case has not
been dismissed;
(C) The partner has agreed that the creditor
need not exhaust partnership assets;
(D) A court grants permission to the judgment
creditor to levy execution against the assets of a partner based
on a finding that partnership assets subject to execution are
clearly insufficient to satisfy the judgment, that exhaustion of
partnership assets is excessively burdensome or that the grant
of permission is an appropriate exercise of the court's
equitable powers; or
(E) Liability is imposed on the partner by law
or contract independent of the existence of the partnership.
(e) This section applies to any partnership liability or
obligation resulting from a representation by a partner or
purported partner under W.S. 17-21-308(a) or (b).
17-21-308. Purported partner.
(a) If a person, by words or conduct, purports to be a
partner or consents to being represented by another as a
partner, in a partnership or with one (1) or more persons not
partners, the purported partner is liable to a person to whom
the representation is made:
(i) If that person, relying on the representation,
enters into a transaction with the actual or purported
partnership; and
(ii) If the purported partner would have been
personally liable for obligations of the partnership under W.S.
17-21-306 if he actually had been a partner.
(b) Subject to subsection (a) of this section if the
representation, either by the purported partner or by a person
with the purported partner's consent, is made in a public
manner, the purported partner is liable to a person who relies
upon the purported partnership even if the purported partner is
not aware of being held out as a partner to the claimant. If
partnership liability results, the purported partner is liable
as if the purported partner were a partner. If no partnership
liability results, the purported partner is liable jointly and
severally with any other person consenting to the
representation.
(c) If a person is thus represented to be a partner in an
existing partnership or with one (1) or more persons not
partners, the purported partner is an agent of persons
consenting to the representation to bind them to the same extent
and in the same manner as if the purported partner were a
partner, with respect to persons who enter into transactions in
reliance upon the representation. If all the partners of the
existing partnership consent to the representation, a
partnership act or obligation results. If fewer than all the
partners of the existing partnership consent to the
representation, the person acting and the partners consenting to
the representation are jointly and severally liable as provided
in W.S. 17-21-306 as if the person actually had been a partner.
(d) A person is not a partner in a partnership solely
because the person is named by another in a statement of
partnership authority.
(e) A person does not continue to be a partner solely
because of a failure to file a statement of dissociation or to
amend a statement of partnership authority to indicate the
partner's dissociation from the partnership.
17-21-309. Liability of incoming partner.
A person admitted as a partner into a partnership is liable for
all obligations of the partnership arising before the person's
admission as if the person had been a partner when the
obligations were incurred, but this liability may be satisfied
only out of partnership property.
ARTICLE 4 - RELATIONS OF PARTNERS TO EACH OTHER
AND TO PARTNERSHIP
17-21-401. Partner's rights and duties.
(a) A partnership shall establish an account for each
partner which shall be credited with an amount equal to the cash
plus the value of any other property, net of the amount of any
liabilities, the partner contributes to the partnership and the
partner's share of the partnership profits. Each partner's
account shall be charged with an amount equal to the cash plus
the value of any other property, net of the amount of any
liabilities, distributed by the partnership to the partner and
the partner's share of the partnership losses provided that the
partner shall be personally liable on account of such charges
only as provided in W.S. 17-21-807 and 17-21-808.
(b) A partnership shall credit each partner's account with
an equal share of the partnership profits and shall charge each
partner with a share of the partnership losses, whether capital
or operating, as provided in W.S. 17-21-808, in proportion to
the partner's share of the profits.
(c) A partnership shall indemnify each partner for
payments reasonably made and liabilities reasonably incurred by
the partner in the ordinary and proper conduct of the business
of the partnership or for the preservation of its business or
property, provided, however, that no other partner shall be
required to make any payment to the partnership or any other
partner, except as provided to the partnership or any other
partner, except as provided in W.S. 17-21-807 and 17-21-808,
including any payments attributable all or in part to
partnership liabilities for indemnification.
(d) A partnership shall repay a partner who, in aid of the
partnership, makes a payment or advance beyond the amount of
capital the partner agreed to contribute.
(e) A payment made by a partner which gives rise to a
partnership obligation under subsection (c) or (d) of this
section constitutes a loan to the partnership. Interest accrues
from the date of the payment or advance.
(f) Each partner has equal rights in the management and
conduct of the partnership business.
(g) A partner may use or possess partnership property only
on behalf of the partnership.
(h) A partner is not entitled to remuneration for services
performed for the partnership, except for reasonable
compensation for services rendered in winding up the business of
the partnership.
(j) A person may become a partner only with the consent of
all the partners.
(k) A difference arising as to a matter in the ordinary
course of business of a partnership may be decided by a majority
of the partners. An act outside the ordinary course of business
of a partnership and an amendment to the partnership agreement
may be undertaken only with the consent of all the partners.
(m) This section does not affect the obligations of a
partnership to other persons under W.S. 17-21-301.
17-21-402. Distributions in kind.
A partner has no right to receive and may not be required to
accept a distribution in kind.
17-21-403. Partner's right to information.
(a) A partnership shall keep its books and records, if
any, at its chief executive office.
(b) A partnership shall provide partners and their agents
and attorneys access to its books and records. It shall provide
former partners and their agents and attorneys access to books
and records pertaining to the period during which they were
partners. The right of access provides the opportunity to
inspect and copy books and records during ordinary business
hours. A partnership may impose a reasonable charge, covering
the costs of labor and material, for copies of documents
furnished.
(c) Each partner and the partnership, on demand, shall
furnish to a partner and the legal representative of a deceased
partner or partner under legal disability, to the extent just
and reasonable, complete and accurate information concerning the
partnership.
17-21-404. General standards of partner's conduct.
(a) The only fiduciary duties a partner owes to the
partnership and the other partners are the duty of loyalty and
the duty of care set forth in this section.
(b) A partner's duty of loyalty to the partnership and the
other partners is limited to the following:
(i) To account to the partnership and hold as trustee
for it any property, profit or benefit derived by the partner,
without the consent of the other partners, in the conduct and
winding up of the partnership business or from a use or
appropriation by the partner of partnership property or
opportunity;
(ii) To refrain from dealing with the partnership in
the conduct or winding up of the partnership business, as or on
behalf of a party having an interest adverse to the partnership
without the consent of the other partners; and
(iii) To refrain from competing with the partnership
in the conduct of the partnership business without the consent
of the other partners before the dissolution of the partnership.
(c) A partner's duty of loyalty may not be eliminated by
agreement, but the partners may by agreement identify specific
types or categories of activities that do not violate the duty
of loyalty, if not manifestly unreasonable.
(d) A partner's duty of care to the partnership and the
other partners in the conduct and winding up of the partnership
business is limited to refraining from engaging in grossly
negligent or reckless conduct, intentional misconduct or a
knowing violation of law.
(e) A partner shall discharge the duties to the
partnership and the other partners under this chapter or under
the partnership agreement, and exercise any rights, consistent
with the obligation of good faith and fair dealing. The
obligation of good faith and fair dealing may not be eliminated
by agreement but the partners may by agreement determine the
standards by which the performance of the obligation is to be
measured, if the standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
(f) A partner does not violate a duty or obligation under
this chapter or under the partnership agreement merely because
the partner's conduct furthers the partner's own interest. A
partner may lend money to and transact other business with the
partnership. The rights and obligations of a partner who lends
money to or transacts business with the partnership are the same
as those of a person who is not a partner, subject to other
applicable law.
(g) This section applies to a person winding up the
partnership business as the personal or legal representative of
the last surviving partner as if the person were a partner.
17-21-405. Partner's liability to partnership.
A partner is liable to the partnership for a breach of the
partnership agreement or for the violation of any duty to the
partnership causing harm to the partnership.
17-21-406. Remedies of partnership and partners.
(a) A partnership may maintain an action against a partner
for a breach of the partnership agreement or for the violation
of any duty to the partnership causing harm to the partnership.
(b) A partner may maintain an action against the
partnership or another partner for legal or equitable relief,
including an accounting as to partnership business, to:
(i) Enforce a right under the partnership agreement;
(ii) Enforce a right under this chapter, including:
(A) The partner's rights under W.S. 17-21-401,
17-21-403 and 17-21-404;
(B) The partner's right on dissociation to have
the partner's interest in the partnership purchased pursuant to
W.S. 17-21-701 or enforce any other right under article 6 or 7
of this chapter; or
(C) The partner's right to compel a dissolution
and winding up of the partnership business under W.S. 17-21-801
or enforce any other right under article 8 of this chapter.
(iii) Enforce the rights and otherwise protect the
interests of the partner, including rights and interests arising
independently of the partnership relationship.
(c) The accrual of and any time limitation on a right of
action for a remedy under this section is governed by other law.
A right to an accounting upon a dissolution and winding up does
not revive a claim barred by law.
17-21-407. Continuation of partnership beyond definite
term or particular undertaking.
(a) If a partnership for a definite term or particular
undertaking is continued, without an express agreement, after
the expiration of the term or completion of the undertaking, the
rights and duties of the partners remain the same as they were
at the expiration or completion, so far as is consistent with a
partnership at will.
(b) A continuation of the business by the partners or
those of them who habitually acted in the business during the
term or undertaking, without any settlement or liquidation of
the partnership business, is prima facie evidence of an
agreement that the business will not be wound up.
ARTICLE 5 - TRANSFEREES AND CREDITORS OF PARTNER
17-21-501. Partner's interest in partnership property not
transferable.
A partner is not a co-owner of partnership property and has no
interest that can be transferred, either voluntarily or
involuntarily, in partnership property.
17-21-502. Partner's transferable interest in partnership.
(a) The only transferable interest of a partner in the
partnership is the partner's interest in distributions. The
interest is personal property.
(b) A transferee of a partner's transferable interest in
the partnership has the right to cause a winding up of the
partnership business as provided in W.S. 17-21-801(a)(vi).
17-21-503. Transfer of partner's transferable interest.
(a) A transfer, in whole or in part, of a partner's
transferable interest in the partnership:
(i) Is permissible;
(ii) Does not by itself cause a winding up of the
partnership business; and
(iii) Does not, as against the other partners or the
partnership, entitle the transferee, during the continuance of
the partnership, to participate in the management or conduct of
the partnership business, to require access to information
concerning or an account of partnership transactions or to
inspect or copy the partnership books or records.
(b) A transferee of a partner's transferable interest in
the partnership is entitled to receive, in accordance with the
transfer, distributions to which the transferor would otherwise
be entitled. Upon transfer, the transferor retains the rights
and duties of a partner other than the interest in distributions
transferred.
(c) If an event causes a dissolution and winding up of the
partnership business under W.S. 17-21-801, a transferee is
entitled to receive, in accordance with the transfer, the net
amount otherwise distributable to the transferor. In a
dissolution and winding up, a transferee may require an
accounting only from the date of the last account agreed to by
all of the partners.
(d) Until receipt of notice of a transfer, a partnership
has no duty to give effect to the transferee's rights under this
section.
17-21-504. Partner's transferable interest subject to
charging order.
(a) On application by a judgment creditor of a partner or
partner's transferee, a court having jurisdiction may charge the
transferable interest of the debtor partner or transferee to
satisfy the judgment. The court may appoint a receiver of the
debtor's share of the distributions due or to become due to the
debtor in respect of the partnership and make all other orders,
directions, accounts and inquiries the debtor might have made or
which the circumstances of the case may require.
(b) A charging order constitutes a lien on the judgment
debtor's transferable interest in the partnership. The court
may order a foreclosure of the interest subject to the charging
order at any time and upon conditions it considers appropriate.
The purchaser at the foreclosure sale has the rights of a
transferee.
(c) At any time before foreclosure, an interest charged
may be redeemed:
(i) By the judgment debtor;
(ii) With property other than partnership property by
one (1) or more of the other partners; or
(iii) With partnership property by one (1) or more of
the other partners with the consent of all the partners whose
interests are not so charged.
(d) This chapter does not deprive a partner of a right
under exemption laws with respect to the partner's interest in
the partnership.
(e) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which a
judgment creditor of a partner or partner's transferee may
satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor's transferable
interest in the partnership.
ARTICLE 6 - PARTNER'S DISSOCIATION
17-21-601. Events causing partner's dissociation.
(a) A partner is dissociated from a partnership upon:
(i) Receipt by the partnership of notice of the
partner's express will to withdraw as a partner or upon any
later date specified in the notice;
(ii) An event agreed to in the partnership agreement
as causing the partner's dissociation;
(iii) The partner's expulsion pursuant to the
partnership agreement;
(iv) The partner's expulsion by the unanimous vote of
the other partners if:
(A) It is unlawful to carry on the partnership
business with that partner;
(B) There has been a transfer of all or
substantially all of that partner's transferable interest in the
partnership, other than a transfer for security purposes or a
court order charging the partner's interest which has not been
foreclosed;
(C) Within ninety (90) days after the
partnership notifies a corporate partner that it will be
expelled because it has filed a certificate of dissolution or
the equivalent, its charter has been revoked or its right to
conduct business has been suspended by the jurisdiction of its
incorporation, there is no revocation of the certificate of
dissolution or no reinstatement of its charter or its right to
conduct business; or
(D) A partnership that is a partner has been
dissolved and its business is being wound up.
(v) On application by the partnership or another
partner, the partner's expulsion by judicial decree because:
(A) The partner engaged in wrongful conduct that
adversely and materially affected the partnership business;
(B) The partner willfully or persistently
committed a material breach of the partnership agreement or of a
duty owed to the partnership or the other partners under W.S.
17-21-404; or
(C) The partner engaged in conduct relating to
the partnership business which makes it not reasonably
practicable to carry on the business in partnership with that
partner.
(vi) The partner's:
(A) Becoming a debtor in bankruptcy;
(B) Executing an assignment for the benefit of
creditors;
(C) Seeking, consenting to or acquiescing in the
appointment of a trustee, receiver or liquidator of that partner
or of all or substantially all of that partner's property; or
(D) Failing within ninety (90) days after the
appointment, to have vacated or stayed the appointment of a
trustee, receiver or liquidator of the partner or of all or
substantially all of the partner's property obtained without the
partner's consent or acquiescence, or failing within ninety (90)
days after the expiration of a stay to have the appointment
vacated.
(vii) In the case of a partner who is an individual:
(A) The partner's death;
(B) The appointment of a guardian or general
conservator for the partner; or
(C) A judicial determination that the partner
has otherwise become incapable of performing the partner's
duties under the partnership agreement.
(viii) In the case of a partner that is a trust or is
acting as a partner by virtue of being a trustee of a trust,
distribution of the trust's entire transferable interest in the
partnership, but not merely the substitution of a successor
trustee;
(ix) In the case of a partner that is an estate or is
acting as a partner by virtue of being a personal representative
of an estate, distribution of the estate's entire transferable
interest in the partnership, but not merely the substitution of
a successor personal representative; or
(x) Termination of a partner who is not an
individual, partnership, corporation, trust or estate.
17-21-602. Partner's wrongful dissociation.
(a) A partner's dissociation is wrongful only if:
(i) It is in breach of an express provision of the
partnership agreement; or
(ii) In the case of a partnership for a definite term
or particular undertaking, before the expiration of the term or
the completion of the undertaking:
(A) The partner withdraws by express will,
unless the withdrawal follows the dissociation of another
partner and results in a right to dissolve the partnership under
W.S. 17-21-801(a)(ii)(A);
(B) The partner is expelled by judicial decree
under W.S. 17-21-601; or
(C) In case of a partner who is not an
individual, trust other than a business trust or estate, the
partner is expelled or otherwise dissociated because it
willfully dissolved or terminated.
(b) A partner who wrongfully dissociates is liable to the
partnership and to the other partners for damages caused by the
dissociation. That liability is in addition to any other
liability of the partner to the partnership or to the other
partners.
17-21-603. Effect of partner's dissociation.
(a) A dissociated partner's interest in the partnership
shall be purchased pursuant to article 7 of this chapter unless
the partner's dissociation results in a dissolution and winding
up of the partnership business under article 8 of this chapter.
(b) Upon a partner's dissociation, that partner's right to
participate in the management and conduct of the partnership
business is terminated, except as provided in W.S. 17-21-804,
and that partner's duties under:
(i) W.S. 17-21-404(b)(i) and (ii) and (d) continue
only with regard to matters or events that occurred before the
dissociation; and
(ii) W.S. 17-21-404(b)(iii) terminate.
ARTICLE 7 - PARTNER'S DISSOCIATION WHEN BUSINESS NOT WOUND UP
17-21-701. Purchase of dissociated partner's interest.
(a) If a partner is dissociated from a partnership without
resulting in a dissolution and winding up of the partnership
business under W.S. 17-21-801, the partnership shall cause the
dissociated partner's interest in the partnership to be
purchased for a buyout price determined pursuant to subsection
(b) of this section.
(b) The buyout price of a dissociated partner's interest
is the amount that would have been distributable to the
dissociating partner under W.S. 17-21-808(b) if, on the date of
dissociation, the assets of the partnership were sold at a price
equal to the greater of the liquidation value or the value based
on a sale of the entire business as a going concern without the
dissociated partner and the partnership were wound up as of that
date. In either case, the sale price of the partnership assets
shall be determined on the basis of the amount that would be
paid by a willing buyer to a willing seller, neither being under
any compulsion to buy or sell, and with knowledge of all
relevant facts. Interest shall be paid from the date of
dissociation to the date of payment.
(c) Damages for wrongful dissociation under W.S.
17-21-602(b) and all other amounts owing, whether or not
presently due, from the dissociated partner to the partnership,
shall be offset against the buyout price. Interest shall be
paid from the date the amount owed becomes due to the date of
payment.
(d) A partnership shall indemnify a dissociated partner
against all partnership liabilities incurred before the
dissociation, except liabilities then unknown to the
partnership, and against all partnership liabilities incurred
after the dissociation, except liabilities incurred by an act of
the dissociated partner under W.S. 17-21-702. For purposes of
this subsection, a liability not known to a partner other than
the dissociated partner is not known to the partnership.
(e) If no agreement for the purchase of a dissociated
partner's interest is reached within one hundred twenty (120)
days after a written demand for payment, the partnership shall
pay or cause to be paid in cash to the dissociated partner the
amount the partnership estimates to be the buyout price and
accrued interest, reduced by any offsets and accrued interest
under subsection (c) of this section.
(f) If a deferred payment is authorized under subsection
(h) of this section, the partnership may tender a written offer
to pay the amount it estimates to be the buyout price and
accrued interest, reduced by any offsets under subsection (c) of
this section, stating the time of payment, the amount and type
of security for payment and the other terms and conditions of
the obligation.
(g) The payment or tender required by subsection (e) or
(f) of this section shall be accompanied by the following:
(i) A statement of partnership assets and liabilities
as of the date of dissociation;
(ii) The latest available partnership balance sheet
and income statement, if any;
(iii) An explanation of how the estimated amount of
the payment was calculated; and
(iv) Written notice that the payment is in full
satisfaction of the obligation to purchase unless, within one
hundred twenty (120) days after the written notice, the
dissociated partner commences an action to determine the buyout
price, any offsets under subsection (c) of this section or other
terms of the purchase obligation.
(h) A partner who wrongfully dissociates before the
expiration of a definite term or the completion of a particular
undertaking is not entitled to payment of any portion of the
buyout price until the expiration of the term or completion of
the undertaking, unless the partner establishes to the
satisfaction of the court that earlier payment will not cause
undue hardship to the business of the partnership. A deferred
payment shall be adequately secured and bear interest.
(j) A dissociated partner may maintain an action against
the partnership pursuant to W.S. 17-21-406(b)(ii)(B), to
determine the buyout price of that partner's interest, any
offsets under subsection (c) of this section or other terms of
the purchase obligation. The action shall be commenced within
one hundred twenty (120) days after the partnership has tendered
payment or an offer to pay or within one (1) year after written
demand for payment if no payment or offer to pay is tendered.
The court shall determine the buyout price of the dissociated
partner's interest, any offset due under subsection (c) of this
section and accrued interest, and enter judgment for any
additional payment or refund. If deferred payment is authorized
under subsection (h) of this section, the court shall also
determine the security for payment and other terms of the
obligation to purchase. The court may assess reasonable
attorney's fees and the fees and expenses of appraisers or other
experts for a party to the action, in amounts the court finds
equitable, against any other party, if the court finds that the
other party acted arbitrarily, vexatiously or not in good faith,
including the partnership's failure to tender payment or an
offer to pay or to comply with the requirements of subsection
(g) of this section.
17-21-702. Dissociated partner's power to bind and
liability to partnership.
(a) For two (2) years after a partner dissociates without
resulting in a dissolution and winding up of the partnership
business, the partnership, including a surviving partnership
under article 9 of this chapter, is bound by an act of the
dissociated partner that would have bound the partnership under
W.S. 17-21-301 before dissociation only if the other party to
the transaction:
(i) Reasonably believes when entering the transaction
that the dissociated partner is a partner at that time;
(ii) Does not have notice of the partner's
dissociation; and
(iii) Is not deemed to have notice under W.S.
17-21-303(e) or 17-21-704.
(b) A dissociated partner is liable to the partnership for
any loss caused to the partnership arising from an obligation
incurred by the dissociated partner after dissociation, for
which the partnership is liable under subsection (a) of this
section.
17-21-703. Dissociated partner's liability to other
persons.
(a) A partner's dissociation does not of itself discharge
the partner's liability for a partnership obligation incurred
before dissociation. A dissociated partner is not liable for a
partnership obligation incurred after dissociation except as
provided in subsection (b) of this section.
(b) A partner who dissociates without resulting in a
dissolution and winding up of the partnership business is
personally liable as a partner to the other party on account of
a partnership obligation incurred in connection with a
transaction entered into by the partnership or a surviving
partnership under article 9 of this chapter, within two (2)
years after the partner's dissociation, only if:
(i) The other party to the transaction:
(A) Reasonably believes when entering the
transaction that the dissociated partner is a partner at that
time;
(B) Does not have notice of the partner's
dissociation; and
(C) Is not deemed to have notice under W.S.
17-21-303(e) or 17-21-704; and
(ii) The obligation is one on account of which the
partner would be personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306 if the
partner had not dissociated.
(c) By agreement with the partnership creditor and the
partners continuing the business, a dissociated partner may be
released from liability for a partnership obligation.
(d) A dissociated partner is released from liability for a
partnership obligation if a partnership creditor, with notice of
the partner's dissociation but without the partner's consent,
agrees to a material alteration in the nature or time of payment
of a partnership obligation.
17-21-704. Statement of dissociation.
(a) A dissociated partner or the partnership may file a
statement of dissociation stating the name of the partnership
and that the partner is dissociated from the partnership. A
statement of dissociation is a limitation on the authority of a
dissociated partner for the purposes of W.S. 17-21-303(d) and
(e).
(b) For purposes of W.S. 17-21-702 and 17-21-703(b), a
person not a partner is deemed to have notice of the
dissociation ninety (90) days after the statement of
dissociation is filed.
17-21-705. Continued use of partnership name.
Continued use of a partnership name, or a dissociated partner's
name as part thereof, by the partners continuing the business
does not of itself make the dissociated partner liable for an
obligation of the partners or the partnership continuing the
business.
ARTICLE 8 - WINDING UP PARTNERSHIP BUSINESS
17-21-801. Events causing dissolution and winding up of
partnership business.
(a) A partnership is dissolved and its business shall be
wound up only upon:
(i) Except as provided in W.S. 17-21-802, receipt by
a partnership at will of notice from a partner, other than a
partner who is dissociated under W.S. 17-21-601(a)(ii) through
(x), of that partner's express will to withdraw as a partner or
upon any later date specified in the notice;
(ii) In a partnership for a definite term or
particular undertaking:
(A) Except as provided in W.S. 17-21-802, within
ninety (90) days after a partner's wrongful dissociation under
W.S. 17-21-602 or a partner's dissociation by death or otherwise
under W.S. 17-21-601(a)(vi) through (x), receipt by the
partnership of notice from another partner of that partner's
express will to withdraw as a partner;
(B) The express will of all the partners; or
(C) The expiration of the term or the completion
of the undertaking unless all the partners agree to continue the
business, in which case the partnership agreement is deemed
amended retroactively to provide that the expiration or
completion does not result in the dissolution and winding up of
the partnership business.
(iii) An event agreed to in the partnership agreement
resulting in the winding up of the partnership business, unless
all the partners agree to continue the business, in which case
the partnership agreement is deemed amended retroactively to
provide that the event does not result in the dissolution and
winding up of the partnership business;
(iv) An event that makes it unlawful for all or
substantially all of the business of the partnership to be
continued, but any cure of illegality within ninety (90) days
after notice to the partnership of the event is effective
retroactively to the date of the event for purposes of this
section;
(v) On application by a partner, a judicial decree
that:
(A) The economic purpose of the partnership is
likely to be unreasonably frustrated;
(B) Another partner has engaged in conduct
relating to the partnership business that makes it not
reasonably practicable to carry on the business in partnership
with that partner; or
(C) It is not otherwise reasonably practicable
to carry on the partnership business in conformity with the
partnership agreement.
(vi) On application by a transferee of a partner's
transferable interest, a judicial decree that it is equitable to
wind up the partnership business:
(A) If the partnership was for a definite term
or particular undertaking at the time of the transfer or entry
of the charging order that gave rise to the transfer, after the
expiration of the term or completion of the undertaking; or
(B) If the partnership was a partnership at will
at the time of the transfer or entry of the charging order that
gave rise to the transfer, at any time.
17-21-802. Dissolution deferred ninety days.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
a partnership of more than two (2) persons is not dissolved
until ninety (90) days after receipt by the partnership of
notice from a partner under W.S. 17-21-801(a)(i) or (ii)(A) and
its business may be continued until that date as if no notice
were received. Before that date, the partner who gave the
notice may waive the right to have the partnership business
wound up. If there is no waiver before that date, the
partnership is dissolved and its business must be wound up.
(b) A partnership may be dissolved at any time during the
ninety (90) day period and its business wound up by the express
will of at least one-half (1/2) of the other partners.
(c) After receipt by the partnership of notice from a
partner under W.S. 17-21-801(a)(i) or (ii)(A), the partner who
gave the notice:
(i) Has no rights in the management and conduct of
the partnership business if it is continued under subsection (a)
of this section, but may participate in winding up the business
under W.S. 17-21-804 if the partnership is dissolved on or
before the expiration of the ninety (90) day period pursuant to
subsection (a) or (b) of this section;
(ii) Is liable for obligations incurred during the
period only to the extent a dissociated partner would be liable
under W.S. 17-21-702(b) or 17-21-703(b), but is not liable for
contributions for and shall be indemnified by the other partners
against any partnership liability incurred by another partner to
the extent the liability is not appropriate for winding up the
partnership business; and
(iii) With respect to profits or losses incurred
during the period, shall be credited with a share of any profits
but shall be charged with a share of any losses only to the
extent of profits credited for the period.
17-21-803. Partnership continues after dissolution.
A partnership continues after dissolution until the winding up
of its business is completed, at which time the partnership is
terminated.
17-21-804. Right to wind up partnership business.
(a) After dissolution, a partner who has not wrongfully
dissociated has a right to participate in winding up the
partnership's business, but on application of any partner,
partner's legal representative or transferee, the court, for
good cause, may order judicial supervision of the winding up.
(b) The legal representative of the last surviving partner
may wind up a partnership's business.
(c) A person winding up a partnership's business may
preserve the partnership business or property as a going concern
for a reasonable time, prosecute and defend actions and
proceedings, whether civil, criminal or administrative, settle
and close the partnership's business, dispose of and transfer
the partnership's property, discharge the partnership's
liabilities, distribute the assets of the partnership pursuant
to W.S. 17-21-808 and perform other necessary acts, including
settlement of disputes by mediation or arbitration.
17-21-805. Partner's power to bind partnership after
dissolution.
(a) Subject to W.S. 17-21-806, a partnership is bound by a
partner's act after dissolution that:
(i) Is appropriate for winding up the partnership
business; or
(ii) Would have bound the partnership under W.S.
17-21-301 before dissolution, if the other party to the
transaction does not have notice of the dissolution.
17-21-806. Statement of dissolution.
(a) After dissolution, a partner who has not wrongfully
dissociated may file a statement of dissolution stating the name
of the partnership and that the partnership has dissolved and is
winding up its business.
(b) A statement of dissolution cancels a filed statement
of partnership authority for the purposes of W.S. 17-21-303(d)
and is a limitation on authority for the purposes of W.S.
17-21-303(e).
(c) For purposes of W.S. 17-21-301 and 17-21-805, a person
not a partner is deemed to have notice of the dissolution and
the limitation on the partners' authority as a result of the
statement of dissolution ninety (90) days after it is filed.
(d) After filing and where appropriate, recording a
statement of dissolution, the dissolved partnership may file and
where appropriate, record a statement of partnership authority
which shall operate with respect to a person not a partner as
provided in W.S. 17-21-303(d) and (e) in any transaction,
whether or not the transaction is appropriate for winding up the
partnership business.
17-21-807. Partner's liability to other partners after
dissolution.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section
and W.S. 17-21-802(c)(ii), after dissolution a partner is liable
to the other partners for the partner's share of any partnership
liability incurred under W.S. 17-21-805 for which the partner is
personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306.
(b) A partner who, with knowledge of the winding up,
incurs a partnership liability under W.S. 17-21-805(a)(ii) by an
act that is not appropriate for winding up the partnership
business is liable to the partnership for any loss caused to the
partnership arising from that liability.
17-21-808. Settlement of accounts among partners.
(a) In winding up the partnership business, the assets of
the partnership shall be applied to discharge its obligations to
creditors, including partners who are creditors. Any surplus
shall be applied to pay in cash the net amount distributable to
partners in accordance with their right to distributions
pursuant to subsection (b) of this section.
(b) Each partner is entitled to a settlement of all
partnership accounts upon winding up the partnership business.
In settling accounts among the partners, the profits and losses
that result from the liquidation of the partnership assets shall
be credited and charged to the partners' accounts. The
partnership shall make a distribution to a partner in an amount
equal to that partner's positive balance. A partner shall
contribute to the partnership an amount equal to that partner's
negative balance only to the extent that negative balance is
attributable to an obligation for which that partner is
personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306.
(c) To the extent not taken into account in settling the
accounts among partners pursuant to subsection (b) of this
section, each partner shall contribute in the proportion in
which the partner shares partnership losses, the amount
necessary to satisfy those partnership obligations for which the
partner is personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306. If a partner
fails or is not obligated to contribute, the other partners
shall contribute in the proportions in which the partners share
partnership losses, the additional amount necessary to satisfy
those partnership obligations for which the partners are
personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306. A partner or partner's
legal representative may recover from the other partners any
contributions the partner makes to the extent the amount
contributed exceeds that partner's share of the partnership
obligations but only to the extent such contributions are made
on account of obligations for which the other partners are
liable under W.S. 17-21-306.
(d) The estate of a deceased partner is liable for the
partner's obligation to contribute to the partnership under
subsection (b) of this section.
(e) An assignee for the benefit of creditors of a
partnership or a partner or a person appointed by the court to
represent creditors of a partnership or a partner, may enforce a
partner's obligation to contribute to the partnership under
subsection (b) of this section.
ARTICLE 9 - CONVERSIONS AND MERGERS
17-21-901. Conversion of partnership to limited
partnership.
(a) A partnership may be converted to a limited
partnership pursuant to this section.
(b) The terms and conditions of a conversion of a
partnership to a limited partnership shall be approved by all
the partners or by a number or percentage specified for
conversion in the partnership agreement.
(c) After the conversion is approved by the partners, the
partnership shall file a certificate of limited partnership
which satisfies the requirements of W.S. 17-14-301 and includes:
(i) A statement that the partnership was converted to
a limited partnership from a partnership;
(ii) Its former name; and
(iii) A statement of the number of votes cast by the
partners for and against the conversion and if the vote is less
than unanimous, the number or percentage required to approve the
conversion under the partnership agreement.
(d) The conversion takes effect when the certificate of
limited partnership is filed or at any later date specified in
the certificate.
(e) A partner who becomes a limited partner as a result of
the conversion remains liable as a partner for an obligation
incurred by the partnership before the conversion takes effect
for which the partner is personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306,
17-21-807 and 17-21-808. If the other party to a transaction
with the limited partnership reasonably believes when entering
the transaction that the limited partner is a general partner,
the partner is liable for an obligation incurred by the limited
partnership within ninety (90) days after the conversion takes
effect for which a general partner would be personally liable
under W.S. 17-21-306, 17-21-807 and 17-21-808. The partner's
liability for all other obligations of the limited partnership
incurred after the conversion takes effect is that of a limited
partner as provided in the Uniform Limited Partnership Act.
17-21-902. Conversion of limited partnership to
partnership.
(a) A limited partnership may be converted to a
partnership pursuant to this section.
(b) Notwithstanding a provision to the contrary in a
limited partnership agreement, the terms and conditions of a
conversion of a limited partnership to a partnership shall be
approved by all the partners.
(c) After the conversion is approved by the partners, the
limited partnership shall cancel its certificate of limited
partnership pursuant to W.S. 17-14-303.
(d) The conversion takes effect when the certificate of
limited partnership is canceled.
(e) A limited partner who becomes a partner as a result of
the conversion remains liable only as a limited partner for an
obligation incurred by the limited partnership before the
conversion takes effect. The limited partner is liable as a
partner for an obligation of the partnership for which the
partner is personally liable under W.S. 17-21-306, 17-21-807 and
17-21-808 incurred after the conversion takes effect.
17-21-903. Effect of conversion; entity unchanged.
(a) A partnership or limited partnership that has been
converted pursuant to this article is for all purposes the same
entity that existed before the conversion.
(b) When a conversion takes effect:
(i) All property owned by the converting partnership
or limited partnership remains vested in the converted entity;
(ii) All obligations of the converting partnership or
limited partnership continue as obligations of the converted
entity; and
(iii) An action or proceeding pending against the
converting partnership or limited partnership may be continued
as if the conversion had not occurred.
17-21-904. Merger of partnerships.
(a) Pursuant to a plan of merger approved as provided in
subsection (c) of this section, a partnership may be merged with
one (1) or more partnerships or limited partnerships.
(b) The plan of merger shall set forth:
(i) The name of each partnership or limited
partnership that is a party to the merger;
(ii) The name of the surviving entity into which the
other partnerships or limited partnerships will merge;
(iii) Whether the surviving entity is a partnership
or a limited partnership and the status of each partner;
(iv) The terms and conditions of the merger;
(v) The manner and basis of converting the interests
of each party to the merger into interests or obligations of the
surviving entity or into cash or other property in whole or
part; and
(vi) The street address of the surviving entity's
chief executive office.
(c) The plan of merger shall be approved:
(i) In the case of a partnership that is a party to
the merger, by all the partners or a number or percentage
specified for merger in the partnership agreement; and
(ii) In the case of a limited partnership that is a
party to the merger, by the vote required for approval of a
merger by the law of the state or foreign jurisdiction in which
the limited partnership is organized and in the absence of such
specifically applicable law, by all the partners notwithstanding
a provision to the contrary in the partnership agreement.
(d) After a plan of merger is approved and before the
merger takes effect, the plan may be amended or abandoned as
provided in the plan.
(e) The merger takes effect on the later of:
(i) The approval of the plan of merger by all parties
to the merger, as provided in subsection (c) of this section;
(ii) The filing of all documents required by law to
be filed as a condition to the effectiveness of the merger; or
(iii) Any effective date specified in the plan of
merger.
17-21-905. Effect of merger.
(a) When a merger takes effect:
(i) Every partnership or limited partnership that is
a party to the merger other than the surviving entity ceases to
exist;
(ii) All property owned by each of the merged
partnerships or limited partnerships vests in the surviving
entity;
(iii) All obligations of every partnership or limited
partnership that is a party to the merger become the obligations
of the surviving entity; and
(iv) An action or proceeding pending against a
partnership or limited partnership that is a party to the merger
may be continued as if the merger had not occurred or the
surviving entity may be substituted as a party to the action or
proceeding.
(b) The secretary of state is the agent for service of
process in an action or proceeding against a surviving foreign
partnership or limited partnership to enforce an obligation of a
domestic partnership or limited partnership that is a party to a
merger. The surviving entity shall promptly notify the
secretary of state of the mailing address of its chief executive
office, of any change of address and the email address of its
chief executive officer. Upon receipt of process, the secretary
of state shall mail or electronically submit a copy of the
process to the surviving foreign partnership or limited
partnership.
(c) A partner of the surviving partnership or limited
partnership is liable for:
(i) All obligations of a party to the merger for
which the partner was personally liable before the merger;
(ii) All other obligations of the surviving entity
incurred before the merger by a party to the merger, but those
obligations may be satisfied only out of property of that
entity; and
(iii) All obligations of the surviving entity
incurred after the merger takes effect.
(d) If the obligations incurred before the merger by a
party to the merger are not satisfied out of the property of the
surviving partnership or limited partnership, the partners of
that party immediately before the effective date of the merger
shall contribute the amount necessary to satisfy that party's
obligations to the surviving entity, in the manner provided in
W.S. 17-21-808(c) as if the merged party were dissolved.
(e) A partner of a party to a merger who does not become a
partner of the surviving partnership or limited partnership is
dissociated from the entity, of which that partner was a
partner, as of the date the merger takes effect. The surviving
entity shall cause the partner's interest in the entity to be
purchased under W.S. 17-21-701. The surviving entity is bound
under W.S. 17-21-702 by an act of a partner dissociated under
this subsection and the partner is liable under W.S. 17-21-703
for transactions entered into by the surviving entity after the
merger takes effect.
17-21-906. Statement of merger.
(a) After a merger, the surviving partnership or limited
partnership may file a statement that one (1) or more
partnerships or limited partnerships have merged into the
surviving entity.
(b) A statement of merger shall contain:
(i) The name of each partnership or limited
partnership that is a party to the merger;
(ii) The name of the surviving entity into which the
other partnerships or limited partnership were merged;
(iii) The street address of the surviving entity's
chief executive office and of an office in this state, if any;
and
(iv) Whether the surviving entity is a partnership or
limited partnership.
(c) Except as provided in subsection (d) of this section
and for purposes of W.S. 17-21-302, property of the surviving
partnership or limited partnership which before the merger was
held in the name of another party to the merger is property held
in the name of the surviving entity upon filing a statement of
merger.
(d) For purposes of W.S. 17-21-302, real property of the
surviving partnership or limited partnership which before the
merger was held in the name of another party to the merger is
property held in the name of the surviving entity upon recording
a certified copy of the statement of merger with the appropriate
county clerk.
(e) A filed and where appropriate, recorded statement of
merger, executed and declared to be accurate pursuant to W.S.
17-21-105(c), stating the name of a partnership or limited
partnership that is a party to the merger in whose name property
was held before the merger and the name of the surviving entity,
but not containing all of the other information required by
subsection (b) of this section, operates with respect to the
partnerships or limited partnerships named to the extent
provided in subsections (c) and (d) of this section.
17-21-907. Nonexclusive.
This article is not exclusive. Partnerships or limited
partnerships may be converted or merged in any other manner
provided by law.
ARTICLE 10 - MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
17-21-1001. Uniformity of application and construction.
This chapter shall be applied and construed to effectuate its
general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the
subject of this chapter among states enacting it.
17-21-1002. Short title.
This chapter may be cited as the "Uniform Partnership Act."
17-21-1003. Application to existing relationships.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, this
chapter applies to all partnerships in existence on January 1,
1994 that were formed under the Wyoming Partnership Act or any
predecessor law providing for the formation, operation and
liquidation of partnerships.
(b) W.S. 17-21-802 does not apply to a partnership in
existence on January 1, 1994 unless the partners agree
otherwise.
(c) This chapter does not impair the obligations of a
contract existing on January 1, 1994 or affect an action or
proceeding begun or right accrued before January 1, 1994.
(d) A judgment against a partnership or a partner in an
action commenced before January 1, 1994 may be enforced in the
same manner as a judgment rendered before January 1, 1994.
ARTICLE 11 - REGISTERED LIMITED LIABILITY PARTNERSHIPS
17-21-1101. Registered limited liability partnerships.
(a) To become a registered limited liability partnership,
a partnership shall file with the office of the secretary of
state a statement of registration as a registered limited
liability partnership. The statement of registration shall
state:
(i) The name of the partnership;
(ii) The address of its principal office and the name
of the registered agent for service of process in this state at
such address which, if in this state, shall be its registered
office for service of process;
(iii) If the partnership's principal office is not
located in this state, the address of a registered office and
the name and address of a registered agent for service of
process in this state, which the partnership will be required to
maintain;
(iv) A brief statement of the business in which the
partnership engages;
(v) Any other matters that the partnership determines
to include; and
(vi) That the partnership thereby registers as a
registered limited liability partnership.
(b) The statement of registration shall be executed by one
(1) or more partners authorized to execute a statement of
registration. The statement of registration shall be accompanied
by a written consent to appointment manually signed by the
registered agent.
(c) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(d) The secretary of state shall register as a registered
limited liability partnership any partnership that submits a
statement of registration that substantially complies with this
section and the required fee.
(e) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(f) Registration is effective immediately upon the filing
of a statement of registration or at any later date or time
specified in the statement of registration, and remains
effective until:
(i) It is voluntarily withdrawn by filing with the
office of the secretary of state a written statement of
withdrawal executed by one (1) or more partners authorized to
execute a statement of withdrawal; or
(ii) Sixty (60) days after notice by the secretary of
state that the partnership has failed to make timely payment of
the annual fee specified in subsection (n) of this section or
has failed to pay any penalties imposed under W.S. 17-28-109,
unless the fee and any penalties are paid within the sixty (60)
day period, or that the partnership is without a registered
agent or registered office in this state, unless the partnership
regains a registered agent or registered office in this state
during the sixty (60) day period. The secretary of state shall
provide such notice by first class mail to the last known
mailing address of the partnership or by electronic means.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this paragraph, any
domestic registered limited liability partnership whose
statement of registration has lapsed under this paragraph may be
reinstated as provided in W.S. 17-21-1107.
(g) A registered limited liability partnership registered
under this chapter ceases to be a registered limited liability
partnership upon filing with the office of the secretary of
state a statement of withdrawal as a registered limited
liability partnership, which shall set forth:
(i) The name of the registered limited liability
partnership;
(ii) The date of filing of the initial statement of
registration;
(iii) The reason for filing the statement of
withdrawal;
(iv) The effective date (which shall be a date
certain) of withdrawal if it is not to be effective on the
filing of the statement of withdrawal, provided that any
effective date other than the date of filing of the statement of
withdrawal shall be a date subsequent to the filing; and
(v) Any other information the partners determine to
include therein.
(h) The filing of a statement of withdrawal by or on
behalf of a partnership pursuant to this section shall be
effective only to cancel the partnership's registration as a
limited liability partnership, and shall not, unless it
specifically so provides, indicate the dissolution of the
partnership.
(j) A partnership becomes a registered limited liability
partnership at the time of the filing of the initial statement
of registration with the office of the secretary of state or at
any later date or time specified in the statement of
registration if, in either case, there has been substantial
compliance with the requirements of this chapter. A partnership
continues as a registered limited liability partnership if there
has been substantial compliance with the requirements of this
chapter. The status of a partnership as a registered limited
liability partnership and the liability of a partner of such
registered limited liability partnership shall not be affected
by errors or subsequent changes in the information stated in a
statement of registration under subsection (a) of this section
or a statement of renewal under subsection (e) of this section.
The filing of a statement of withdrawal shall not affect the
liability of the partners for debts, obligations or liabilities
of the partnership incurred, assumed or arising prior to the
date of the statement of withdrawal.
(k) The fact that a statement of registration or a
statement of renewal is on file with the office of the secretary
of state is notice that the partnership is a registered limited
liability partnership and is notice of all other facts set forth
in the statement of registration or statement of renewal.
(m) The secretary of state shall provide forms for a
statement of registration under subsection (a) of this section
or a statement of renewal.
(n) An initial registration fee of one hundred dollars
($100.00) shall be paid to the secretary of state except for
foreign limited liability partnerships which shall pay an
initial registration fee of one hundred fifty dollars ($150.00).
In addition each registered limited liability partnership and
foreign limited liability partnership shall annually comply with
and pay the fees provided by W.S. 17-16-1630(a) through (e) and
17-16-120(j) as if it were a corporation. Any registered foreign
limited liability partnership transacting business in this state
without registering or annually maintaining its registration is
subject to the penalties provided by W.S. 17-16-1502(d).
(o) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all registered limited liability partnerships.
(p) If the secretary of state refuses to file a statement
of registration, the secretary of state shall return it to the
registered limited liability partnership or its representative
within fifteen (15) days after the statement was delivered,
together with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the
refusal.
17-21-1102. Effect of registration; entity unchanged.
(a) A partnership that has registered pursuant to this
article is for all purposes of the laws of this state the same
entity that existed before the registration.
(b) When registration takes effect:
(i) All property owned by the registering partnership
remains vested in the registered partnership;
(ii) All obligations of the registering partnership
continue as obligations of the registered partnership; and
(iii) An action or proceeding pending against the
registering partnership may be continued as if the registration
had not occurred.
(c) If a registered limited liability partnership or
foreign registered limited liability partnership dissolves and
its business continues without winding up the partnership
affairs and without liquidating or terminating the partnership,
the registration of the registered limited liability partnership
or the foreign registered limited liability partnership shall
continue to be applicable to the partnership continuing the
business, and the partnership shall not be required to file a
new statement of registration or statement of renewal. The
partnership continuing the business shall be deemed to have
filed any documents required or permitted under this section
which were filed by the dissolved partnership. The partnership
continuing the business shall file a statement of renewal at
such time as the dissolved partnership would have been required
to file a statement of renewal.
(d) If a registered limited liability partnership or
foreign registered limited liability partnership dissolves and
winds up its affairs, liquidates or terminates, the statement of
registration or statement of renewal remains in effect as to the
partnership and the partners during the period of winding up,
and as to the partners subsequent to liquidation or termination
as to liabilities of the partnership incurred, assumed or
arising prior to liquidation or termination.
17-21-1103. Name of registered limited liability
partnership; limited rights.
(a) The name of a registered limited liability partnership
shall not be the same as or deceptively similar to any trademark
or service mark registered in this state, shall be
distinguishable upon the records of the secretary of state from
other business names filed with that office and must end with
"Registered Limited Liability Partnership", "Limited Liability
Partnership", "R.L.L.P.", "L.L.P.", "RLLP", or "LLP".
(b) The authorization granted by the secretary of state to
file a statement of registration under a registered limited
liability partnership name does not:
(i) Abrogate or limit the law governing unfair
competition or unfair trade practices;
(ii) Derogate from the common law the principles of
equity or the statutes of this state or of the United States
with respect to the right to acquire and protect names and
trademarks; or
(iii) Create an exclusive right in geographic or
generic terms contained within a name.
17-21-1104. Applicability of act to foreign and interstate
commerce.
(a) A partnership, including a registered limited
liability partnership, formed pursuant to an agreement governed
by this chapter, may conduct its business, carry on its
operations and have and exercise the powers granted by this
chapter in any state, territory, district or possession of the
United States or in any foreign country.
(b) It is the intent of the legislature that the legal
existence of registered limited liability partnerships formed
pursuant to an agreement governed by this chapter be recognized
outside the boundaries of this state and that the laws of this
state governing such registered limited liability partnerships
transacting business outside this state be granted the
protection of full faith and credit under the constitution of
the United States.
(c) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-21-106, the internal affairs
of registered limited liability partnerships, including the
liability of partners for debts, obligations and liabilities of
or chargeable to the partnership or another partner or partners
and the liability of partners to the partnership and other
partners, shall be subject to and governed by the laws of this
state.
(d) Before transacting business in this state, a foreign
registered limited liability partnership shall:
(i) Comply with any statutory or administrative
registration or filing requirements governing the specific type
of business in which the partnership is engaged; and
(ii) File a statement of registration as a foreign
registered limited liability partnership with the office of the
secretary of state, on such forms as the secretary shall
provide, stating:
(A) The name of the partnership;
(B) The jurisdiction under the laws of which
govern its partnership agreement and under which it is
registered as a limited liability partnership;
(C) An email address and the address of its
principal office which, if in this state, shall be its
registered office for service of process;
(D) If the partnership's principal office is not
located in this state, the address of a registered office and
the name and address of a registered agent for service of
process in this state, which the partnership will be required to
maintain;
(E) A brief statement of the business in which
the partnership engages;
(F) Any other information that the partnership
determines to include; and
(G) A statement that the partnership is a
registered limited liability partnership.
(e) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 35, § 2.
(f) A foreign registered limited liability partnership
registered to transact business in this state may withdraw its
registration as a foreign registered limited liability
partnership by filing with the office of the secretary of state
a statement of withdrawal as a foreign registered limited
liability partnership, which shall set forth:
(i) The name of the foreign registered limited
liability partnership and the state or other jurisdiction under
whose jurisdiction it is or was registered as a registered
limited liability partnership;
(ii) That the foreign registered limited liability
partnership is not transacting business in this state and that
it surrenders its registration to transact business in this
state;
(iii) That the foreign registered limited liability
partnership revokes the authority of its registered agent in
this state to accept service of process and appoints the
secretary of state as its agent for service of process in any
action, suit or proceeding based upon any cause of action
arising during the time the foreign registered limited liability
partnership was registered to transact business in this state;
and
(iv) A mailing address and an email address to which
the secretary of state may provide a copy of any process served
on him in his capacity as agent for such registered limited
liability partnership.
(g) The failure of a foreign registered limited liability
partnership to file a statement of registration or a statement
of renewal pursuant to W.S. 17-21-1101 or to appoint and
maintain a registered agent in this state shall not affect the
liability of the partners or impair the validity of any contract
or act of the foreign registered limited liability partnership
and shall not prevent the foreign registered limited liability
partnership from defending any action or proceeding in any court
of this state, but the foreign registered limited liability
partnership shall not maintain any action or proceeding in any
court of this state until it has filed a statement of
registration. A foreign registered limited liability
partnership, by transacting business in this state without
registration, appoints the secretary of state as its agent for
service of process with respect to causes of action arising out
of the transaction of business in this state.
(h) The name of a foreign registered limited liability
partnership doing business in this state shall not be the same
as or deceptively similar to any trademark or service mark
registered in this state and shall be distinguishable upon the
records of the secretary of state from other business names
filed with that office. A foreign limited liability partnership
must use a name which satisfies the requirements of the state or
other jurisdiction under whose law it is formed and ends with
"Registered Limited Liability Partnership", "Limited Liability
Partnership", "R.L.L.P.", "L.L.P.", "RLLP", or "LLP".
(j) The laws under which a foreign limited liability
partnership is formed govern relations among the partners and
between the partners and the partnership and the liability of
partners for obligations of the partnership.
(k) The authorization granted by the secretary of state to
file a statement of registration under a foreign registered
limited liability partnership name does not:
(i) Abrogate or limit the law governing unfair
competition or unfair trade practices;
(ii) Derogate from the common law the principles of
equity or the statutes of this state or of the United States
with respect to the right to acquire and protect names and
trademarks; or
(iii) Create an exclusive right in geographic or
generic terms contained within a name.
(m) Failure of a foreign registered limited liability
partnership to make timely payment of the annual fee specified
in W.S. 17-21-1101(n) or to pay any penalties imposed under W.S.
17-28-109 shall result in the statement of registration being
revoked by the secretary of state pursuant to W.S.
17-21-1101(f).
(n) A foreign registered limited liability partnership
whose registration has lapsed for failure to pay fees or failure
to maintain a registered agent in this state as provided in this
article may apply to the secretary of state for reinstatement
within two (2) years after the effective date of lapse as
provided in W.S. 17-21-1107.
17-21-1105. Registered limited liability partnership by
licensed persons.
Nothing in this act shall be interpreted as precluding an
individual whose occupation requires licensure under Wyoming law
or the law of another jurisdiction from forming a registered
limited liability partnership if the applicable licensing
statutes do not prohibit it and the licensing body does not
prohibit it by rule or regulation adopted consistent with the
appropriate licensing statute. Each licensed professional
offering professional services through a registered limited
liability partnership shall retain their professional license in
good standing and shall be subject to all rules, regulations,
standards and requirements pertaining thereto.
17-21-1106. Statement of continuance.
(a) Any foreign registered limited liability partnership,
except partnerships acting as an insurer as defined in W.S.
26-1-102(a)(xvi) or acting as a financial institution as defined
in W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix), may register with the secretary of
state to continue as a registered limited liability partnership
in this state.
(b) To become a registered limited liability partnership,
the foreign registered limited liability partnership shall file
with the office of the secretary of state a statement of
continuance that meets the following requirements:
(i) Complies with the provisions of W.S. 17-21-1101,
including payment of the registration fee;
(ii) Contains written confirmation from the state in
which the partnership was formed that the partnership's
registered domicile in that state is terminated or will be
terminated upon continuance in this state;
(iii) Includes a certified copy of the partnership's
original statement of registration as a registered limited
liability partnership;
(iv) Contains a statement of duration of the
partnership from the date of formation to present;
(v) Contains a statement that the partnership will
abide by the constitution and laws of this state;
(vi) Contains any additional information necessary to
enable the secretary of state to determine whether the foreign
registered limited liability partnership is entitled to continue
in this state as a registered limited liability partnership.
(c) The secretary of state shall register as a registered
limited liability partnership any partnership that submits the
required fee and a statement of continuance that substantially
complies with this section.
(d) Registration is effective immediately upon the filing
of the statement of continuance or at any later date or time
specified in the statement. Upon the effective date, the laws of
Wyoming shall apply to the partnership as a registered limited
liability partnership.
(e) Except for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through
16-6-121, the existence of any registered limited liability
partnership registered upon a statement of continuance shall be
deemed to have commenced on the date the partnership was
originally registered under the laws of another state.
(f) The continuance shall not affect the ownership of
partnership property, liability for any existing obligation,
cause of action, claim, pending or threatened prosecution, civil
or administrative action, conviction, ruling, order or judgment.
The continuance does not deprive a partner of any right or
privilege, nor relieve a partner of any liability.
17-21-1107. Reinstatement following lapse of registration.
(a) A domestic registered limited liability partnership
whose registration has lapsed for failure to pay fees as
provided in W.S. 17-21-1101(f)(ii) may apply to the secretary of
state for reinstatement within two (2) years after the effective
date of lapse. The application shall recite the name of the
domestic registered limited liability partnership and the
effective date of its lapse of registration.
(b) A domestic registered limited liability partnership
applying for reinstatement pursuant to subsection (a) of this
section shall include payment of fees and taxes then delinquent
and a reinstatement certificate fee prescribed by the secretary
of state by rule.
(c) If the secretary of state determines that the
application contains the information required by subsection (a)
of this section, that the information is correct and the
application contains the fees and taxes required by subsection
(b) of this section, he shall prepare a certificate of
reinstatement that recites his determination and the effective
date of reinstatement, file the original of the certificate and
return a copy to the domestic registered limited liability
partnership.
(d) When the reinstatement is effective, it relates back
and takes effect as of the effective date of the lapse of
registration pursuant to W.S. 17-21-1101(f)(ii) and the domestic
registered limited liability partnership resumes carrying on its
business as if the lapse of registration had never occurred.
(e) The domestic registered limited liability partnership
shall retain its registered name during the two (2) year
reinstatement period.
CHAPTER 22 - UNIFORM UNINCORPORATED NONPROFIT ASSOCIATION ACT
17-22-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Unincorporated Nonprofit Association Act."
17-22-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Member" means a person who, under the rules or
practices of a nonprofit association, may participate in the
selection of persons authorized to manage the affairs of the
nonprofit association or in the development of policy of the
nonprofit association;
(ii) "Nonprofit association" means an unincorporated
organization consisting of two (2) or more members joined by
mutual consent for a common, nonprofit purpose. However, a
joint tenancy, tenancy in common, or tenancy by the entireties
does not by itself establish a nonprofit association, even if
the co-owners share the use of the property for a nonprofit
purpose;
(iii) "Person" means an individual, corporation,
business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, agency,
joint venture, government, governmental subdivision or
instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity;
(iv) "State" means a state of the United States, the
District of Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States;
(v) "This act" means W.S. 17-22-101 through
17-22-115.
17-22-103. Territorial application.
Real and personal property in Wyoming may be acquired, held,
encumbered and transferred by a nonprofit association, whether
or not the nonprofit association or a member has any other
relationship to the state.
17-22-104. Real and personal property; nonprofit
association as legatee, devisee or beneficiary.
(a) A nonprofit association in its name may acquire, hold,
encumber or transfer an estate or interest in real and personal
property.
(b) A nonprofit association may be a legatee, devisee or
beneficiary of a trust or contract.
17-22-105. Statement of authority as to real property.
(a) A nonprofit association shall execute and record a
statement of authority to transfer an estate or interest in real
property in the name of the nonprofit association.
(b) An estate or interest in real property in the name of
a nonprofit association may be transferred by a person so
authorized in a statement of authority recorded in the office of
the county clerk in which a transfer of the property would be
recorded.
(c) A statement of authority shall set forth:
(i) The name of the nonprofit association;
(ii) The address in this state, including the street
address, if any, of the nonprofit association. If the nonprofit
association does not have an address in this state, its address
out of state;
(iii) The name or title of the person authorized to
transfer an estate or interest in real property held in the name
of the nonprofit association; and
(iv) The action, procedure or vote of the nonprofit
association which authorizes the person to transfer the real
property of the nonprofit association and which authorizes the
person to execute the statement of authority.
(d) A statement of authority shall be executed in the same
manner as a deed. The person who executes the statement of
authority shall not be the named person in the statement of
authority authorized to transfer the estate or interest.
(e) The filing officer may collect a fee for recording the
statement of authority in the amount authorized for recording a
transfer of real property.
(f) An amendment, including a cancellation, of a statement
of authority shall meet the requirements for execution and
recording of an original statement. Unless canceled earlier, a
recorded statement of authority or its most recent amendment is
canceled by operation of law five (5) years after the date of
the most recent recording.
(g) If the record title to the real property is in the
name of a nonprofit association and the statement of authority
is recorded in the office of the county clerk in which a
transfer of real property would be recorded, the authority of
the person named in a statement of authority is conclusive in
favor of a transferee who gives value without notice that the
person named in the statement of authority lacks authority.
17-22-106. Liability in tort and contract.
(a) A nonprofit association is a legal entity separate
from its members for the purposes of determining and enforcing
rights, duties and liabilities in contract and tort.
(b) A person is not liable for a breach of a nonprofit
association's contract merely because the person is a member, is
authorized to participate in the management of the affairs of
the nonprofit association or is a person considered as a member
by the nonprofit association.
(c) A person is not liable for a tortious act or omission
for which a nonprofit association is liable merely because the
person is a member, is authorized to participate in the
management of the affairs of the nonprofit association or is a
person considered as a member by the nonprofit association.
(d) A tortious act or omission of a member or other person
for which a nonprofit association is liable is not imputed to a
person merely because the person is a member of the nonprofit
association, is authorized to participate in the management of
the affairs of the nonprofit association or is a person
considered as a member by the nonprofit association.
(e) A member of, or a person considered as a member by, a
nonprofit association may assert a claim against the nonprofit
association. A nonprofit association may assert a claim against
a member or a person considered as a member by the nonprofit
association.
17-22-107. Capacity to assert and defend; standing.
(a) A nonprofit association, in its name, may institute,
defend, intervene or participate in a judicial, administrative
or other governmental proceeding or in an arbitration, mediation
or any other form of alternative dispute resolution.
(b) A nonprofit association may assert a claim in its name
on behalf of its members if one (1) or more members of the
nonprofit association have standing to assert a claim in their
own right, the interests the nonprofit association seeks to
protect are germane to its purposes, and neither the claim
asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of
a member.
17-22-108. Effect of judgment or order.
A judgment or order against a nonprofit association is not by
itself a judgment or order against a member.
17-22-109. Disposition of personal property of inactive
nonprofit association.
(a) If a nonprofit association has been inactive for three
(3) years or longer, a person in possession or control of
personal property of the nonprofit association may transfer the
property:
(i) If a nonprofit association document specifies a
person to whom transfer is to be made under these circumstances,
to that person; or
(ii) If no person is so specified, to a nonprofit
association or nonprofit corporation pursuing broadly similar
purposes, or governmental agency.
17-22-110. Appointment of agent to receive service of
process.
(a) A nonprofit association may file in the office of the
secretary of state a statement appointing an agent authorized to
receive service of process.
(b) A statement appointing an agent shall set forth:
(i) The name of the nonprofit association;
(ii) The address in this state, including the street
address, if any, of the nonprofit association. If the nonprofit
association does not have an address in this state, its address
out of state; and
(iii) The name of the person in this state authorized
to receive service of process and the person's address,
including the state address, in this state.
(c) A statement appointing an agent shall be signed and
acknowledged by a person authorized to manage the affairs of the
nonprofit association. The statement shall also be signed and
acknowledged by the person appointed agent, who thereby accepts
the appointment. An appointed agent may resign by filing a
resignation in the office of the secretary of state and giving
notice to the nonprofit association.
(d) A filing officer may collect a fee of five dollars
($5.00) for filing a statement appointing an agent to receive
service of process, an amendment, or a resignation.
(e) An amendment to a statement appointing an agent to
receive service of process shall meet the requirements for
execution of an original statement.
(f) If the secretary of state refuses to file a statement
appointing an agent, the secretary of state shall return it to
the nonprofit association or its representative within fifteen
(15) days after the statement was delivered, together with a
brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
17-22-111. Claim not abated by change of members of
officers.
A claim for relief against a nonprofit association does not
abate solely by reason of a change in its members or persons
authorized to manage the affairs of the nonprofit association.
17-22-112. Venue.
For purposes of venue, a nonprofit association is a resident of
a county in which it has an office.
17-22-113. Summons and complaint; service on whom.
In an action or proceeding against a nonprofit association a
summons and complaint shall be served on an agent authorized by
appointment to receive service of process, an officer, managing
or general agent, or a person authorized to participate in the
management of its affairs. If none of them can be served,
service may be made on a member.
17-22-114. Transition concerning real and personal
property.
(a) If, before July 1, 1993, an estate or interest in real
or personal property was purportedly transferred to a nonprofit
association, on July 1, 1993 the estate or interest vests in the
nonprofit association unless the parties have treated the
transfer as ineffective.
(b) If, before July 1, 1993, the transfer vested the
estate or interest in another person to hold the estate or
interest as a fiduciary for the benefit of the nonprofit
association, its members, or both, on or after July 1, 1993 the
fiduciary may transfer the estate or interest to the nonprofit
association in its name or the nonprofit association, by
appropriate proceedings, may require that the estate or interest
be transferred to it in its name.
17-22-115. Savings clause.
This act does not affect an action or proceeding begun or right
accrued before July 1, 1993.
CHAPTER 23 - WYOMING STATUTORY TRUST ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-23-101. Short title.
This chapter shall be known as the "Wyoming Statutory Trust
Act."
17-23-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this chapter:
(i) "Beneficial owner" means any owner of a
beneficial interest in a statutory trust. The fact of ownership
shall be determined and evidenced, whether by means of
registration, the issuance of certificates or otherwise, in
conformity to the applicable provisions of the governing
instrument of the statutory trust;
(ii) "Governing instrument" means a trust instrument
which creates a statutory trust and provides for the governance
of the affairs of the statutory trust and the conduct of its
business. A governing instrument may:
(A) Provide that a person shall become a
beneficial owner and shall become bound by the governing
instrument if the person, or a representative authorized by the
person orally, in writing or by other action such as payment for
a beneficial interest, complies with the conditions for becoming
a beneficial owner set forth in the governing instrument or any
other writing and acquires a beneficial interest; and
(B) Consist of one (1) or more agreements,
instruments or other writings and may include or incorporate
bylaws containing provisions relating to the business of the
statutory trust, the conduct of its affairs and its rights or
powers or the rights or powers of its trustees, beneficial
owners, agents or employees.
(iii) "Other business entity" means a corporation, a
partnership, a limited partnership, a limited liability company,
a common-law trust or any other unincorporated business,
excluding a statutory trust;
(iv) "Person" means a natural person, partnership,
limited partnership, limited liability company, trust, estate,
association, corporation, custodian, nominee or any other
individual or entity in its own or any representative capacity;
(v) "Statutory trust" means an unincorporated
association which:
(A) Is created by a trust instrument under which
property is or will be held, managed, administered, controlled,
invested, reinvested or operated, or business or professional
activities for profit are carried on or will be carried on, by a
trustee or trustees for the benefit of a person who is or may
become entitled to a beneficial interest in the trust property,
including but not limited to a trust of the type known at common
law as a "business trust," "Massachusetts trust," a trust
qualifying as a real estate investment trust under sections 856
through 859 of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, or under any successor provision, or a trust
qualifying as a real estate mortgage investment conduit under
section 860D of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, or under any successor provision; and
(B) Files a certificate of trust pursuant to
W.S. 17-23-114. Any association meeting the definition of this
paragraph whether organized before or after the effective date
of this chapter shall be a statutory trust and a separate legal
entity.
(vi) "Trustee" means the person or persons appointed
as a trustee in accordance with the governing instrument of a
statutory trust, and may include the beneficial owners or any of
them.
17-23-103. Purpose.
Statutory trusts may be organized under this chapter for any
lawful purpose, except acting as an insurer as defined in W.S.
26-1-102(a)(xvi), or acting as a financial institution as
defined by W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix) or its successor statute,
whether or not conducted for profit, or for any of the purposes
referred to in W.S. 17-23-102(a)(v)(A) including, without
limitation, for the purpose of holding or otherwise taking title
to property, whether in an active or custodial capacity.
17-23-104. Contributions by beneficial owners.
(a) A contribution of a beneficial owner to the statutory
trust may be in cash, property or services rendered, or a
promissory note or other obligation to contribute cash or
property or to perform services. A person may become a
beneficial owner of a statutory trust and may receive a
beneficial interest in a statutory trust without making a
contribution or being obligated to make a contribution to the
statutory trust.
(b) Except as provided in the governing instrument, a
beneficial owner is obligated to the statutory trust to perform
any promise to contribute cash, property or to perform services,
even if the beneficial owner is unable to perform because of
death, disability or any other reason. If a beneficial owner
does not make the required contribution of property or services,
the beneficial owner is obligated at the option of the statutory
trust to contribute cash equal to that portion of the agreed
value, as stated in the records of the statutory trust, of the
contribution that has not been made. The cash contribution
shall be in addition to any other rights, including the right to
specific performance, that the statutory trust may have against
the beneficial owner under the governing instrument or
applicable law.
(c) A governing instrument may provide that the interest
of any beneficial owner who fails to make any contribution that
he is obligated to make shall be subject to specific penalties
or consequences for the failure. The penalty or consequence may
take the form of:
(i) Reducing or eliminating the defaulting beneficial
owner's proportionate interest in the statutory trust;
(ii) Subordinating his beneficial interest to that of
nondefaulting beneficial owners;
(iii) A forced sale of his beneficial interest;
(iv) Forfeiture of his beneficial interest;
(v) The lending by other beneficial owners of the
amount necessary to meet his commitment;
(vi) Fixing of the value of his beneficial interest
by appraisal or by formula and redemption or sale of his
beneficial interest at that value; or
(vii) Any other penalty or consequence.
17-23-105. Liability of beneficial owners and trustees.
(a) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, the beneficial owner shall be entitled to
any limitations of personal liability extended to shareholders
of private corporations for profit organized under the Wyoming
Business Corporation Act or extended to members of limited
liability companies organized under the Wyoming Limited
Liability Company Act.
(b) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, a trustee, when acting in that capacity,
shall not be personally liable to any persons other than the
statutory trust or a beneficial owner for any act, omission or
obligation of the statutory trust or any trustee.
Notwithstanding the provisions of W.S. 17-23-113, trustees of a
statutory trust shall not be held to a more rigorous standard of
care than that imposed upon directors of a business corporation
under the Wyoming Business Corporation Act.
17-23-106. Legal proceedings.
(a) A statutory trust may sue and be sued in its own name,
and service of process upon any one (1) of the trustees or upon
the registered agent shall be sufficient. A statutory trust may
be sued for debts and other obligations or liabilities
contracted or incurred by the trustees, or by the duly
authorized agents of the trustees, in the performance of their
respective duties under the governing instrument of the
statutory trust, and for any damages to persons or property
resulting from the negligence of the trustees or agents acting
in the performance of their respective duties. The property of a
statutory trust shall be subject to attachment and execution
pursuant to the Wyoming Code of Civil Procedure, as if it were a
corporation.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of
this section, in the event that the governing instrument of a
statutory trust which is a registered investment company under
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, creates one (1)
or more series as provided in W.S. 17-23-108(b)(ii), the debts,
liabilities, obligations and expenses incurred, contracted for
or otherwise existing with respect to a particular series shall
be enforceable against the assets of that series only, and not
against the assets of the statutory trust generally if:
(i) Separate and distinct records are maintained for
the series;
(ii) The assets associated with the series are held
and accounted for separately from the other assets of the
statutory trust, or any other series of that trust; and
(iii) The governing instrument so provides, and
notice of the limitation on liabilities of a series as
referenced in this subsection is set forth in the certificate of
trust of the statutory trust.
(c) A trustee of a statutory trust may be served with
process in the manner prescribed in subsection (d) of this
section in all civil actions or proceedings brought in this
state involving or relating to the activities of the statutory
trust or a violation by a trustee of a duty to the statutory
trust, or any beneficial owner, whether or not the trustee is a
trustee at the time suit is commenced. Every resident or
nonresident of the state who accepts election or appointment or
serves as a trustee of a statutory trust shall, by the
acceptance or service, have consented to the appointment of the
registered agent of the statutory trust required by W.S.
17-23-109 as that person's agent upon whom service of process
may be made as provided in this section. Any process served in
accordance with this section shall be of the same legal force
and validity as if served upon the trustee within the state and
the appointment of the registered agent shall be irrevocable.
(d) Service of process shall be effected by serving a
Wyoming trustee or registered agent of the statutory trust
required by W.S. 17-23-109, with one (1) copy of the process in
the manner provided by law for service of process.
(e) In the governing instrument or other writing, a
trustee may consent to be subject to the nonexclusive
jurisdiction of the courts of, or arbitration in, a specified
jurisdiction, or the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of, or
the exclusivity of arbitration in, this state, and to be served
with legal process in the manner prescribed in the governing
instrument or other writing.
(f) Nothing in this section limits or affects the right to
serve process in any other manner provided by law. This section
is an extension of and not a limitation upon the right otherwise
existing of service of legal process upon nonresidents.
(g) A partnership, limited partnership, corporation,
limited liability company or other nonnatural person formed or
organized under the laws of any foreign country or other foreign
jurisdiction or the laws of any state other than the state of
Wyoming shall not be deemed to be doing business in the state
solely by reason of its being a trustee of a statutory trust.
17-23-107. Rights of beneficial owners in trust property.
(a) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, a beneficial owner shall have an undivided
beneficial interest in the property of the statutory trust and
shall share in the profits or losses of the statutory trust in
the proportion of the entire undivided beneficial interest in
the statutory trust he owns. The governing instrument of a
statutory trust may provide that the statutory trust or the
trustees, acting for and on behalf of the statutory trust, shall
be deemed to hold beneficial ownership of any income earned on
securities of the statutory trust issued by any business
entities formed, organized or existing under the laws of any
jurisdiction, including the laws of any foreign country.
(b) No creditor of the beneficial owner shall have any
right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or
equitable remedies with respect to, the property of the
statutory trust.
(c) A beneficial owner's beneficial interest in the
statutory trust is personal property notwithstanding the nature
of the property of the trust. Except to the extent otherwise
provided in the governing instrument, a beneficial owner has no
interest in specific statutory trust property.
(d) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, the transferee of a beneficial owner's
beneficial interest in the statutory trust shall only be
entitled to receive the share of profits and the return of
contributions to which the beneficial owner otherwise would be
entitled. In the absence of the unanimous written consent of
the owners of all other beneficial interests and of all trustees
of the statutory trust, and except to the extent otherwise
provided in the governing instrument, a transferee of a
beneficial owner's beneficial interest shall have no right to
participate in, be kept apprised of the affairs of the statutory
trust or to become a beneficial owner of a beneficial interest
in the statutory trust.
(e) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, at the time a beneficial owner becomes
entitled to receive a distribution, he has the status of, and is
entitled to all remedies available to, a creditor of the
statutory trust with respect to the distribution. A governing
instrument may provide for the establishment of record dates
with respect to allocations and distributions by a statutory
trust.
17-23-108. Management of statutory trust.
(a) The business and affairs of a statutory trust shall be
managed by or under the direction of its trustees. To the
extent provided in the governing instrument, any person,
including a beneficial owner, shall be entitled to direct the
trustees in the management of a statutory trust. Except to the
extent otherwise provided in the governing instrument, neither
the power to give direction to a trustee nor the exercise
thereof by any person, including a beneficial owner, shall cause
the person to be a trustee.
(b) A governing instrument may contain any provision
relating to the management of the business and affairs of the
statutory trust, and the rights, duties and obligations of the
trustees, beneficial owners and other persons, which is not
contrary to any provision or requirement of this chapter and,
without limitation may:
(i) Provide for classes, groups or series of trustees
or beneficial owners, or classes, groups or series of beneficial
interests, having the relative rights, powers and duties as the
governing instrument may provide, and may make provision for the
future creation in the manner provided in the governing
instrument of additional classes, groups or series of trustees,
beneficial owners or beneficial interests, having such relative
rights, powers and duties as may be established, including
rights, powers and duties senior or subordinate to existing
classes, groups or series of trustees, beneficial owners or
beneficial interests;
(ii) Establish or provide for the establishment of
designated series of trustees, beneficial owners or beneficial
interests having separate rights, powers or duties with respect
to specified property or obligations of the statutory trust or
profits and losses associated with specified property or
obligations, and, to the extent provided in the governing
instrument, any designated series may have a separate business
purpose or investment objective;
(iii) Provide for the taking of any action, including
the amendment of the governing instrument, the accomplishment of
a merger or consolidation, the appointment of one (1) or more
trustees, the sale, lease, exchange, transfer, pledge or other
disposition of all or any part of the assets of the statutory
trust or the assets of any series, or the dissolution of the
statutory trust, or may provide for the taking of any action to
create under the provisions of the governing instrument a class,
group or series of beneficial interests that was not previously
outstanding, in any such case without the vote of or approval of
any particular trustee or beneficial owner, or class, group or
series of trustees or beneficial owners;
(iv) Grant to, or withhold from, all or certain
trustees or beneficial owners, or a specified class, group or
series of trustees or beneficial owners, the right to vote,
separately or with any other classes, groups or series of the
trustees or beneficial owners, on any matter, with voting being
on a per capita, number, financial interest, class, group series
or any other basis;
(v) To the extent that voting rights are granted
under the governing instrument, set forth provisions relating to
notice of the time, place or purpose of any meeting at which any
matter is to be voted on, waiver of any notice, action by
consent without a meeting, the establishment of record dates,
quorum requirements, voting in person, by proxy or in any other
manner, or any other matter with respect to the exercise of any
right to vote;
(vi) Provide for the present or future creation of
more than one (1) statutory trust, including the creation of a
future statutory trust to which all or any part of the assets,
liabilities, profits or losses of any existing statutory trust
will be transferred, and for the conversion of beneficial
interests in an existing statutory trust, or series thereof,
into beneficial interests in the separate statutory trust, or
series thereof.
(c) To the extent that, at law or in equity, a trustee has
duties, including fiduciary duties, and liabilities relating to
a statutory trust or to a beneficial owner:
(i) Any trustee acting under a governing instrument
shall not be liable to the statutory trust or to any beneficial
owner for the trustee's good faith reliance on the provisions of
the governing instrument; and
(ii) The trustee's duties and liabilities may be
expanded or restricted by provisions in a governing instrument.
17-23-109. Registered office and registered agent to be
maintained.
(a) Each statutory trust shall have and continuously
maintain in this state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111; and
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all statutory trusts.
17-23-110. Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 90, § 3.
17-23-111. Failure to maintain registered agent or
registered office or pay annual fee.
If any statutory trust has failed to comply with the provisions
of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111 or has failed to pay the fee
required by W.S. 17-23-117, it is transacting business within
this state without authority and shall forfeit any franchises,
rights or privileges acquired under the laws of this state. The
forfeiture shall be made effective in the following manner. The
secretary of state shall provide by first class mail or by
electronic means a notice of its failure to comply. Unless
compliance is made within sixty (60) days of mailing or
electronic submission of the notice, the statutory trust shall
be deemed defunct and to have forfeited its certificate of
organization acquired under the laws of this state. Any defunct
statutory trust may at any time within two (2) years after the
forfeiture of its certificate, be revived and reinstated, by
filing the necessary statement under this chapter and paying the
prescribed fee, together with a penalty of one hundred dollars
($100.00). The statutory trust shall retain its registered name
during the two (2) year reinstatement period.
17-23-112. Existence of statutory trust.
(a) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, the statutory trust shall have perpetual
existence.
(b) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
governing instrument, the death, incapacity, dissolution,
termination or bankruptcy of a beneficial owner shall not result
in the termination or dissolution of a statutory trust.
17-23-113. Applicability of trust law.
Except to the extent otherwise provided in the governing
instrument or in this chapter, the laws of this state pertaining
to trusts are hereby made applicable to statutory trusts. A
statutory trust complying with the provisions of this chapter
shall not be considered a financial institution as defined in
W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix).
17-23-114. Certificate of trust; amendment; cancellation.
(a) Every statutory trust shall file a certificate of
trust in the office of the secretary of state. The certificate
of trust shall set forth:
(i) The name of the statutory trust, which shall not
be the same as, or deceptively similar to any trademark or
service mark registered in this state and shall be
distinguishable upon the records of the secretary of state from
other business names as required by W.S. 17-16-401;
(ii) The name and the business address of at least
one (1) of the trustees authorized to manage the statutory
trust;
(iii) The future effective date or time of the
certificate if it is not to be effective upon the filing of the
certificate; and
(iv) Any other information the trustee determines to
include.
(b) A certificate of trust may be amended by filing a
certificate of amendment in the office of the secretary of
state. The certificate of amendment shall set forth:
(i) The name of the statutory trust;
(ii) The amendment to the certificate; and
(iii) The future effective date or time of the
certificate if it is not to be effective upon the filing of the
certificate.
(c) A certificate of trust may be amended at any time for
any purpose as the trustees may determine. A trustee who
becomes aware that any statement in a certificate of trust was
false when made or that any matter described has changed making
the certificate false in any material respect, shall promptly
file a certificate of amendment.
(d) A certificate of trust shall be canceled upon the
completion of winding up of the statutory trust and its
termination. A certificate of cancellation shall be filed in
the office of the secretary of state and set forth:
(i) The name of the statutory trust;
(ii) The date of filing of its certificate of trust;
(iii) The future effective date or time of
cancellation if it is not to be effective upon the filing of the
certificate; and
(iv) Any other information the trustee determines to
include.
17-23-115. Execution of certificate.
(a) Each certificate required by this chapter to be filed
with the secretary of state shall be executed in the following
manner:
(i) A certificate of trust shall be signed by at
least one (1) of the trustees;
(ii) A certificate of amendment shall be signed by at
least one (1) of the trustees;
(iii) A certificate of cancellation shall be signed
by all of the trustees or as otherwise provided in the governing
instrument;
(iv) If a statutory trust is filing a certificate of
merger or consolidation, the certificate of merger or
consolidation shall be signed by all of the trustees or as
otherwise provided in the governing instrument. If the
certificate of merger or consolidation is being filed by another
business entity, the certificate of merger or consolidation
shall be signed by a person authorized to execute the instrument
on behalf of the other business entity; and
(v) The certificate of trust shall be accompanied by
a written consent to appointment manually signed by the
registered agent.
(b) The execution of a certificate by a trustee
constitutes an oath or affirmation, under the penalties of false
swearing of W.S. 6-5-303, that, to the best of the trustee's
knowledge and belief, the facts stated are true.
17-23-116. Filing of certificate; effective date; fee;
organization.
(a) The original signed copy together with a duplicate
copy, which may be either a signed or conformed copy, of the
certificate of trust and any certificates of amendment or
cancellation or any certificate of merger or consolidation shall
be delivered to the secretary of state. Unless the secretary of
state finds that any certificate does not conform to law, upon
receipt of all filing fees required he shall:
(i) Certify that the certificate of trust, the
certificate of amendment, the certificate of cancellation or the
certificate of merger or consolidation has been filed in his
office by endorsing upon the original and duplicate copy of the
certificate the word "Filed," and the date and hour of the
filing. This endorsement is conclusive of the date and time of
its filing in the absence of actual fraud;
(ii) File and index the original endorsed
certificate; and
(iii) Issue a certificate of organization to which he
shall affix the duplicate copy of the certificate of trust. In
the case of the filing of any certificate other than a
certificate of trust, the secretary of state shall return the
duplicate copy, similarly endorsed, to the person who filed it
or his representative.
(b) A certificate of trust, certificate of amendment,
certificate of cancellation or certificate of merger or
consolidation which acts as a certificate of cancellation shall
be effective as provided in W.S. 17-23-118.
(c) A fee as set forth in W.S. 17-23-117 shall be paid at
the time of the filing of a certificate of trust, a certificate
of amendment, a certificate of cancellation or a certificate of
merger or consolidation.
(d) Upon the issuance of the certificate of organization,
the statutory trust shall be considered organized. The
certificate of organization shall be conclusive evidence that
all conditions precedent required to be performed by the trustee
and beneficial owners have been complied with and that the
statutory trust has been legally organized under this chapter,
except as against this state in a proceeding to cancel or revoke
the certificate of organization or for involuntary dissolution
of the statutory trust.
(e) A statutory trust shall not transact business or incur
indebtedness, except that which is incidental to its
organization or until the secretary of state has issued a
certificate of organization.
(f) If the secretary of state refuses to file a
certificate of trust, certificate of amendment, certificate of
cancellation or certificate of merger or consolidation under
subsection (a) of this section, the secretary of state shall
return it to the filing party or its representative within
fifteen (15) days after the certificate was delivered, together
with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
17-23-117. Administration; filing, service and copying
fees; annual fee.
(a) The secretary of state has the power reasonably
necessary to perform the duties required by this chapter. The
secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
(b) The secretary of state shall set and collect filing,
service and copying fees to recover costs to administer this
chapter. Fees shall not exceed the costs of providing these
services.
(c) The secretary of state shall collect an annual tax of
one hundred dollars ($100.00), due and payable January 2 of each
year. This tax is delinquent if not paid by February 1 and an
addition to the tax shall then be due of one hundred dollars
($100.00).
17-23-118. Effective time and date of document.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
a document accepted for filing is effective:
(i) At the time of filing on the date it is filed, as
evidenced by the secretary of state's date and time endorsement
on the original document; or
(ii) At the time specified in the document as its
effective time on the date it is filed.
(b) A document may specify a delayed effective time and
date, which shall be a date and time certain, and if it does so
the document becomes effective at the time and date specified.
If a delayed effective date but no time is specified, the
document is effective at the close of business on that date. A
delayed effective date for a document may not be later than
ninety (90) days after the date it is filed.
17-23-119. Reserved name.
(a) A person may apply to reserve the exclusive use of a
statutory trust name by delivering an application to the
secretary of state for filing. The application shall set forth
the name and address of the applicant and the name proposed to
be reserved. If the secretary of state finds that the statutory
trust name applied for is available, the secretary shall file
the application and reserve the name for the applicant's
exclusive use for a nonrenewable one hundred twenty (120) day
period.
(b) The owner of a reserved statutory trust name may
transfer the reservation to another person by delivering to the
secretary of state a manually signed notice of the transfer that
states the name and address of the transferee.
17-23-120. Derivative actions.
(a) A beneficial owner may bring an action in the district
court in the right of a statutory trust to recover a judgment in
its favor if trustees with authority to do so have refused to
bring the action or if an effort to cause those trustees to
bring the action is not likely to succeed.
(b) In a derivative action, the plaintiff must be a
beneficial owner at the time of bringing the action and:
(i) At the time of the transaction of which he
complains; or
(ii) His status as a beneficial owner had devolved
upon him by operation of law or pursuant to the terms of the
governing instrument of the statutory trust from a person who
was a beneficial owner at the time of the transaction.
(c) In a derivative action, the complaint shall set forth
with particularity the effort, if any, of the plaintiff to
secure initiation of the action by the trustees, or the reasons
for not making the effort.
(d) If a derivative action is successful, in whole or in
part, or if anything is received by a statutory trust as a
result of a judgment, compromise or settlement of any derivative
action, the court may award the plaintiff reasonable expenses,
including reasonable attorney's fees. If anything is so
received by the plaintiff, the court shall make the award of the
plaintiff's expenses payable out of those proceeds and direct
the plaintiff to remit to the statutory trust the remainder of
the proceeds. If those proceeds are insufficient to reimburse
the plaintiff's reasonable expenses, the court may direct that
any award of plaintiff's expenses or portion thereof be paid by
the statutory trust.
(e) A beneficial owner's right to bring a derivative
action may be subject to additional standards and restrictions,
if any, as are set forth in the governing instrument, including,
without limitation, the requirement that beneficial owners
owning a specified beneficial interest in the statutory trust
join in the bringing of the derivative action.
17-23-121. Indemnification.
(a) Subject to standards and restrictions, if any, as are
set forth in the governing instrument, a statutory trust shall
have the power to indemnify and hold harmless any trustee or
beneficial owner or other person from and against any and all
claims and demands whatsoever.
(b) The absence of a provision for indemnity in the
governing instrument shall not be construed to deprive any
trustee or beneficial owner or other person of any right to
indemnity which is otherwise available to the person under the
laws of this state.
ARTICLE 2 - MERGER, CONSOLIDATION AND CONTINUANCE
17-23-201. Merger and consolidation.
(a) Pursuant to an agreement of merger or consolidation, a
statutory trust may merge or consolidate with or into one (1) or
more statutory trusts or other business entities formed or
organized or existing under the laws of this state or any other
state of the United States or any foreign country or other
foreign jurisdiction, with the statutory trust or other business
entity as the agreement provides being the surviving or
resulting statutory trust or other business entity. Unless
otherwise provided in the governing instrument of a statutory
trust, a merger or consolidation shall be approved by all of the
trustees and the beneficial owners of each statutory trust which
is to merge or consolidate. In connection with a merger or
consolidation, rights or securities of, or interests in, a
statutory trust or other business entity which is a constituent
party to the merger or consolidation may be exchanged for or
converted into cash, property, rights or securities of, or
interests in, the surviving or resulting statutory trust or
other business entity or, in addition to or in lieu thereof, may
be exchanged for or converted into cash, property, rights or
securities of, or interests in, a statutory trust or other
business entity which is not the surviving or resulting
statutory trust or other business entity in the merger or
consolidation. Notwithstanding prior approval, an agreement of
merger or consolidation may be terminated or amended pursuant to
a provision for termination or amendment contained in the
agreement of merger or consolidation.
(b) If a statutory trust is merging or consolidating under
this section, the statutory trust or other business entity
surviving or resulting from the merger or consolidation shall
file a certificate of merger or consolidation in the office of
the secretary of state. The certificate of merger or
consolidation shall state:
(i) The name and jurisdiction of formation or
organization of each statutory trust or other business entity
which is to merge or consolidate;
(ii) That an agreement of merger or consolidation has
been approved and executed by each statutory trust or other
business entity which is to merge or consolidate;
(iii) The name of the surviving or resulting
statutory trust or other business entity;
(iv) The future effective date or time of the merger
or consolidation if it is not to be effective upon the filing of
the certificate of merger or consolidation;
(v) That the executed agreement of merger or
consolidation is on file at the principal place of business of
the surviving or resulting statutory trust or other business
entity, and the address thereof;
(vi) That a copy of the agreement of merger or
consolidation will be furnished by the surviving or resulting
statutory trust or other business entity, on request and without
cost, to any beneficial owner of any statutory trust or any
person holding an interest in any other business entity which is
to merge or consolidate; and
(vii) If the surviving or resulting entity is not a
statutory trust or other business entity formed or organized or
existing under the laws of this state, a statement that the
surviving or resulting other business entity agrees that it may
be served with process in this state in any action, suit or
proceeding for the enforcement of any obligation of any
statutory trust which is to merge or consolidate. The statement
shall irrevocably appoint the secretary of state as the agent to
accept service of process in any such action, suit or proceeding
and specify the address to which a copy of the process shall be
mailed by the secretary of state. In the event of service under
this paragraph upon the secretary of state, the plaintiff shall
furnish the secretary of state with the address specified in the
certificate of merger or consolidation provided for in this
paragraph and any other address which the plaintiff may elect to
furnish, together with copies of the process required by the
secretary of state. The secretary of state shall notify the
surviving or resulting other business entity at all addresses
furnished by the plaintiff by letter, certified mail, return
receipt requested. The letter shall enclose a copy of the
process and any other papers served upon the secretary of state.
It shall be the duty of the plaintiff in the event of such
service to serve process and any other papers in duplicate, to
notify the secretary of state that service is being made
pursuant to this paragraph, and to pay the secretary of state
the sum of fifty dollars ($50.00) for use of the state, which
shall be taxed as part of the costs in the proceeding, if the
plaintiff shall prevail. The secretary of state shall maintain
an alphabetical record of any process under this paragraph
setting forth the name of the plaintiff and defendant, the
title, docket number and nature of the proceedings in which
process has been served upon him, the return date thereof, and
the day and hour when the service was made. The secretary of
state shall not be required to retain the information for a
period longer than five (5) years from his receipt of the
service of process.
(c) Unless a future effective date or time is provided in
a certificate of merger or consolidation, in which event a
merger or consolidation shall be effective at the future
effective date or time, a merger or consolidation shall be
effective upon the filing in the office of the secretary of
state of a certificate of merger or consolidation.
(d) A certificate of merger or consolidation shall act as
a certificate of cancellation for a statutory trust which is not
the surviving or resulting entity in the merger or
consolidation.
(e) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
the governing instrument, a governing instrument containing a
specific reference to this subsection may provide that an
agreement of merger or consolidation approved in accordance with
subsection (a) of this section may:
(i) Effect any amendment to the governing instrument
of the statutory trust; or
(ii) Effect the adoption of a new governing
instrument of the statutory trust if it is the surviving or
resulting statutory trust in the merger or consolidation.
(f) Any amendment to the governing instrument of a
statutory trust or adoption of a new governing instrument of the
statutory trust made pursuant to subsection (e) of this section
shall be effective at the effective time or date of the merger
or consolidation. The provisions of subsection (e) of this
section and this subsection shall not be construed to limit the
accomplishment of a merger or consolidation or of any of the
matters referred to in this article by any other means provided
for in the governing instrument of a statutory trust or other
agreement or as otherwise permitted by law, including that the
governing instrument of any constituent statutory trust to the
merger or consolidation, including a statutory trust formed for
the purpose of consummating a merger or consolidation, shall be
the governing instrument of the surviving or resulting statutory
trust.
(g) When any merger or consolidation shall have become
effective under this section, for all purposes of the laws of
the state, all of the rights, privileges and powers of each of
the statutory trusts and other business entities that have
merged or consolidated, and all property, real, personal and
mixed, and all debts due to any of those statutory trusts and
other business entities, as well as all other things and causes
of action belonging to each of such statutory trusts and other
business entities, shall be vested in the surviving or resulting
statutory trust or other business entity as they were of each of
the statutory trusts and other business entities that have
merged or consolidated. The title to any real property vested
by deed or otherwise, under the laws of the state, in any of
merging or consolidating statutory trusts and other business
entities, shall not revert or be in any way impaired by reason
of this chapter. All rights of creditors and all liens upon any
property of any merging or consolidating statutory trusts and
other business entities shall be preserved unimpaired, and all
debts, liabilities and duties of each of the statutory trusts
and other business entities that have merged or consolidated
shall attach to the surviving or resulting statutory trust or
other business entity, and may be enforced against it to the
same extent as if the debts, liabilities and duties had been
incurred or contracted by it.
17-23-202. Continuance of foreign statutory trusts.
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, any
statutory trust created for any purpose except acting as an
insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi), or acting as a
financial institution as defined by W.S. 13-1-101(a)(ix) or its
successor statute, under the laws of any jurisdiction other than
this state may, if the jurisdiction will acknowledge the
statutory trust's termination of domicile in the foreign
jurisdiction, apply to the secretary of state for registration
under this chapter, thus continuing the statutory trust in
Wyoming as if it had been organized under the laws of this
state. The secretary of state may issue a certificate of
continuance upon receipt of an application for continuance as
provided in subsection (c) of this section. The certificate of
continuance may then be issued subject to any limitations and
conditions and may contain any provisions as appear proper to
the secretary of state.
(b) The secretary of state shall cause notice of issuance
of a certificate of continuance to be given forthwith to the
proper officer of the jurisdiction in which the statutory trust
was previously organized.
(c) The application for continuance filed by a foreign
statutory trust with the secretary of state shall include:
(i) A certified copy of its original certificate of
trust and all amendments thereto or its equivalent;
(ii) The name of the statutory trust and the
jurisdiction under the laws of which it is organized;
(iii) The date of organization and the period of
duration of the statutory trust;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
statutory trust;
(v) The street address of the proposed registered
office of the statutory trust in this state and the name of its
proposed registered agent in this state at the address;
(vi) The purpose or purposes of the statutory trust
which it proposes to pursue in the transaction of business in
this state;
(vii) Any information concerning capital structure or
financial status the secretary of state deems necessary to
establish fees and taxes under the laws of this state;
(viii) Any additional information necessary or
appropriate to enable the secretary of state to determine
whether the statutory trust is entitled to a certificate of
organization evidencing its existence and authority to transact
business in this state.
(d) The application shall be executed by the statutory
trust by its trustees or a trustee who is authorized to execute
the application on behalf of the statutory trust and shall be
verified by the trustee signing the application.
(e) The provisions of the application for continuance may
without expressly so stating, vary from the provisions of the
statutory trust's certificate of trust or governing instrument
or equivalent, if the variation is one which a statutory trust
organized under the Wyoming Statutory Trust Act could effect by
way of amendment to its certificate of trust or governing
instrument. Upon issuance of a certificate of continuance by
the secretary of state, the certificate of continuance shall be
the certificate of trust of the continued statutory trust. The
statutory trust may elect to incorporate by reference in and
attachment to the application for continuance its original
certificate of trust or other authorization which had been
adopted by the statutory trust in the foreign jurisdiction, in
order to permit the original to continue to act as the
certificate of trust of the statutory trust provided, however,
that the original certificate of trust or other authorization
shall be deemed amended to the extent necessary to make it
conform to the laws of this state.
(f) The existence of any statutory trust issued a
certificate of continuance under this chapter shall be deemed to
have commenced on the date the statutory trust commenced its
existence in the jurisdiction in which the statutory trust was
first formed, organized or otherwise came into being. The laws
of this state shall apply to a statutory trust continuing under
this chapter to the same extent as if the statutory trust had
been organized under the laws of this state from and after the
issuance of a certificate of continuance under this chapter by
the secretary of state to the statutory trust. When a foreign
statutory trust is continued as a statutory trust under this
chapter, the continuance shall not affect the statutory trust's
ownership of its property or liability for any existing
obligations, causes of action, claims, pending or threatened
prosecutions or civil or administrative actions, convictions,
rulings, orders, judgments or any other characteristics or
aspects of the statutory trust and its existence.
(g) As used in this section, the term "statutory trust"
shall include any business trust, association or similar entity
which appears to the secretary of state to possess
characteristics sufficiently similar to those of a statutory
trust organized under the Wyoming Statutory Trust Act.
ARTICLE 3 - EFFECTIVENESS
17-23-301. Reserved power of state to amend or repeal
chapter.
All provisions of this chapter may be altered from time to time
or repealed and all rights of statutory trusts, trustees,
beneficial owners and other persons are subject to this
reservation.
17-23-302. Construction and application of chapter and
governing instrument.
(a) The rule that statutes in derogation of the common law
are to be strictly construed shall have no application to this
chapter.
(b) It is the policy of this chapter to give maximum
effect to the principle of freedom of contract and to the
enforceability of governing instruments.
CHAPTER 24 - BUSINESS NAMES
17-24-101. Business entity name; limited rights.
(a) The authorization granted under this title by the
secretary of state to file articles of incorporation, a
certificate of limited partnership, articles of organization,
articles of formation, a certificate of trust or other similar
document authorizing the transaction of business in this state
under a corporate, limited partnership, limited liability
company, statutory trust, statutory foundation or other business
entity name or to reserve a name does not:
(i) Abrogate or limit the law governing unfair
competition or unfair trade practices;
(ii) Derogate from the common law the principles of
equity or the statutes of this state or of the United States
with respect to the right to acquire and protect names and
trademarks; or
(iii) Create an exclusive right in geographic or
generic terms contained within a name.
CHAPTER 25 - CLOSE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY SUPPLEMENT
17-25-101. Short title.
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Close Limited Liability Company Supplement."
17-25-102. Application of Wyoming Limited Liability
Company Act.
(a) The Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act applies to
close limited liability companies to the extent not inconsistent
with the provisions of this chapter and the powers provided the
secretary of state by W.S. 17-29-1102 shall apply to this
supplement.
(b) This chapter does not repeal or modify any statute or
rule of law that is or would apply to a limited liability
company that is organized under the Wyoming Limited Liability
Company Act that does not elect to become a close limited
liability company.
17-25-103. Definition and election of close limited
liability company status.
(a) A close limited liability company is a limited
liability company whose articles of organization contain a
statement that the company is a close limited liability company.
(b) A limited liability company formed under W.S.
17-29-101 through 17-29-1102 may convert to a close limited
liability company by amending its articles of organization to
include the statement required by subsection (a) of this
section.
(c) A statement in substantially the following form shall
appear conspicuously in the operating agreement and on any
certificates of ownership in a close limited liability company:
NOTICE OF RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFERS AND WITHDRAWALS
The rights of members in a close limited liability company may
differ materially from the rights of members in other limited
liability companies. The Close Limited Liability Company
Supplement, articles of organization, and operating agreement of
a close limited liability company may restrict transfer of
ownership interests, withdrawal or resignation from the company,
return of capital contributions and dissolution of the company.
17-25-104. Formation.
Any person may form a close limited liability company which
shall have one (1) or more members by signing and delivering one
(1) original and one (1) exact or conformed copy of the articles
of organization to the secretary of state for filing. The person
forming the close limited liability company need not be a member
of the company.
17-25-105. Articles of organization.
The articles of organization of a close limited liability
company shall include a statement that the company is a close
limited liability company and shall set forth the matters
required by W.S. 17-29-201.
17-25-106. Management.
Management of a close limited liability company shall be vested
in its members which, unless otherwise provided in the operating
agreement, shall be in proportion to the division of profits and
losses among members. If provision is made for it in the
articles of organization, management of the company may be
vested in a manager or managers who shall be appointed in the
articles of organization or operating agreement or elected by
the members in the manner prescribed by the operating agreement
of the company. The manager or managers, or persons appointed
by the manager or managers, shall also hold the offices and have
the responsibilities accorded to them by the members and set out
in the operating agreement of the company.
17-25-107. Withdrawal of members and return of members'
contributions to capital.
(a) A member may only withdraw from a close limited
liability company upon the terms and conditions set forth in the
operating agreement. If no terms and conditions for withdrawal
of a member are set forth in the company’s operating agreement,
a member may withdraw only with the consent of all other members
of the company.
(b) A member shall not receive out of close limited
liability company property any part of his or its contribution
to capital unless:
(i) All liabilities of the company, except
liabilities to members on account of their contributions to
capital, have been paid or there remains property of the company
sufficient to pay them; and
(ii) All members consent to such return of
contributions to capital; and either:
(A) The company is dissolved; or
(B) The articles of organization or operating
agreement of the company otherwise provide for the return of
contributions to capital.
(iii) Repealed By Laws 2008, Ch. 116, § 2.
(iv) Repealed By Laws 2008, Ch. 116, § 2.
(c) In the absence of a statement in the articles of
organization to the contrary or the consent of all members of
the close limited liability company, a member, irrespective of
the nature of his or its contribution, has only the right to
demand and receive cash in return for his or its contribution to
capital.
(d) A member of a close limited liability company may not
have the company dissolved for a failure to return his or its
contribution to capital.
17-25-108. Dissolution.
(a) A close limited liability company organized under this
chapter shall be dissolved upon the occurrence of any of the
following events:
(i) When the period fixed for the duration of the
company expires;
(ii) By the unanimous written agreement of all
members; or
(iii) At the time or upon the occurrence of events
specified in the operating agreement.
(b) As soon as possible following the occurrence of any of
the events specified in subsection (a) of this section causing
the dissolution of a close limited liability company, the
company shall execute a statement of intent to dissolve in the
form prescribed by the secretary of state.
17-25-109. Repealed By Laws 2010, Ch. 94, § 3.
17-25-110. Sharing of profits and losses; distributions.
(a) A close limited liability company may divide and
allocate the profits and losses of its business among the
members and transferees of the company upon the basis provided
in the operating agreement. If the operating agreement does not
so provide, profits and losses shall be allocated on the basis
of the value of contributions to the company by each member and
transferee to the extent they have been received by the company
and have not been returned.
(b) Distributions by a close limited liability company
before its dissolution and winding up may be made among the
members and transferees of the company upon the basis provided
in the operating agreement. If the operating agreement does not
so provide, distributions shall be made on the basis of the
value of contributions to the company by each member and
transferee to the extent they have been received by the company
and have not been returned.
17-25-111. Transferability of interest.
All interests in a close limited liability company, including
transferable interests, shall only be transferred as provided in
the operating agreement. If the operating agreement does not so
provide, no transfer of a close limited liability company
interest, including a transferable interest, shall be made
without the consent of all members of the company.
CHAPTER 26 - CONVERSION
17-26-101. Conversion of entities.
(a) Any entity, domestic or foreign, may convert to any
other entity, domestic or foreign, pursuant to this section. As
used in this section, "entity" means any entity authorized to be
formed under this title and organized under the laws of this
state or the laws of another state that are the functional
equivalent.
(b) A domestic entity may be converted into any form of
foreign entity recognized in that foreign jurisdiction pursuant
to this section.
(c) A foreign entity may be converted into a domestic
entity if the conversion is authorized pursuant to the articles
of incorporation, articles of organization, certificate of
limited partnership, articles of association, registration
statement or other document of similar import filed or recorded
by or for an entity in the jurisdiction in which the entity is
formed.
(d) The converting domestic or foreign entity shall
approve the terms and conditions of the conversion in accord
with the documents enumerated in subsection (c) of this section.
(e) After the conversion is approved, the newly converted
domestic entity shall file the appropriate document of
organization as enumerated in subsection (c) of this section and
include:
(i) Information that clearly names and identifies the
converting entity and the newly converted entity;
(ii) The state of original formation and the date of
original organization; and
(iii) Proof that conversion is approved by the owners
or members of the converting entity in accordance with the
authority given the converting entity.
(f) The conversion takes effect when the appropriate
document of organization enumerated in subsection (c) of this
section is filed or at any later date specified in the document.
(g) Upon conversion, all property owned by the converting
entity remains in the newly converted entity. All obligations
of the converting entity continue as obligations of the newly
converted entity. Any action or proceeding pending against the
converting entity may be continued as if the conversion had not
occurred.
(h) The secretary of state shall charge a fee to convert
an entity. Unless otherwise specified by law, the fee for
conversion shall be equal to the fee for the origination of the
newly converted entity type.
CHAPTER 27 - ELECTRONIC ANNUAL REPORTS
17-27-101. Electronic filing of annual reports authorized;
rules; penalty.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any entity
required to file an annual report and pay an annual license fee
under title 17 of the Wyoming statutes, may be authorized by
rules of the secretary of state to file the annual report
electronically and pay the annual license fee through credit
card, electronic funds transfer or by other means. For each
electronically transmitted annual report filed in the office of
the secretary of state, the office shall assign a unique number
to the filed report, create a record that bears the number
assigned and the date and time of filing, and maintain the filed
annual report for public inspection.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2008, Ch. 91, § 3.
CHAPTER 28 - REGISTERED OFFICES AND AGENTS
17-28-101. Registered office and registered agent.
(a) Each business entity shall continuously maintain in
this state:
(i) A registered office that may be the same as any
of its places of business but shall be located at a street
address in Wyoming which shall be a physical location where the
business entity's registered agent, or a natural person who has
an agency relationship with the registered agent, can accept
service of process as provided in W.S. 17-28-104 and is
physically present at that location; and
(ii) A registered agent, who shall be:
(A) An individual who is at least eighteen (18)
years of age, resides in this state and whose business office is
identical with the registered office;
(B) A domestic business entity whose business
office is identical with the registered office and which has a
written agreement creating an agency relationship with an
individual providing for acceptance of service of process as
provided in W.S. 17-28-104;
(C) A foreign business entity authorized to
transact business in this state whose business office is
identical with the registered office and which has a written
agreement creating an agency relationship with an individual
providing for acceptance of service of process as provided in
W.S. 17-28-104; or
(D) A business entity or an individual, at least
eighteen (18) years of age, who is:
(I) In the business of serving as a
registered agent for more than ten (10) entities, including a
registered agent which serves as a registered agent for the
entities served by another commercial registered agent; and
(II) Registered as a commercial registered
agent under W.S. 17-28-105 and whose business office is
identical with the registered office. A business entity
registered as a commercial registered agent shall have a written
agreement creating an agency relationship with a natural person
providing for acceptance of service of process as provided in
W.S. 17-28-104.
(b) For purposes of this chapter, "business entity" means
a corporation, nonprofit corporation, limited liability company,
limited partnership, cooperative marketing association,
statutory trust, statutory foundation or registered limited
liability partnership, whether foreign or domestic.
(c) Every registered agent shall certify compliance with
the requirements of this chapter on a form prescribed by the
secretary of state on the date of registration.
(d) For purposes of this chapter, "written agreement" or
"contract creating an agency relationship" means any written
document granting a natural person representing a registered
agent the authority to accept service of process on behalf of
any entity served by the registered agent. A single document
may serve as authorization for each natural person representing
the registered agent without listing each natural person
individually.
(e) In addition to the requirements imposed by this
section on business entities and registered agents, each
business entity and registered agent shall maintain an email
address that the secretary of state's office may use to serve
documents on the business entity or registered agent as provided
in W.S. 17-28-104.
17-28-102. Change of registered office or registered
agent.
(a) A business entity may change its registered office or
registered agent by signing and delivering to the secretary of
state for filing a statement of change that sets forth all of
the following:
(i) The name of the business entity;
(ii) The street address of its current registered
office;
(iii) If the current registered office is to be
changed, the street address of the new registered office;
(iv) The name of its current registered agent;
(v) If the current registered agent is to be changed,
the name of the new registered agent and the new agent's written
consent to the appointment executed by the registered agent,
either on the statement or attached to it;
(vi) That the new registered office and registered
agent comply with the requirements of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-
28-111;
(vii) That after the change or changes are made, the
street addresses of its registered office and the business
office of its registered agent will be identical, if applicable;
(viii) The email address of its registered agent as
required by W.S. 17-28-101(e).
(b) If a registered agent changes the street address of
his business office, he shall change the street address of the
registered office of any business entity for which he is the
registered agent by notifying the business entity in writing of
the change and signing and delivering to the secretary of state
for filing a statement that complies with the requirements of
subsection (a) of this section and recites that every entity
which the registered agent serves has been notified of the
change.
(c) If a registered agent changes its name, it shall
change the name of the registered agent of any business entity
for which it is the registered agent by notifying the business
entity in writing of the change and signing and delivering to
the secretary of state for filing a statement that complies with
the requirements of subsection (a) of this section and recites
that every entity which the registered agent serves has been
notified of the change.
(d) If a business entity changes its email address
required by W.S. 17-28-101(e), the business entity shall notify
the secretary of state of the new email address.
17-28-103. Resignation of registered agent.
(a) A registered agent may resign his agency appointment
by signing and delivering to the secretary of state for filing
the signed original and one (1) exact or conformed copy of a
statement of resignation for each entity from which the
registered agent resigns. The statement may include a statement
that the registered office is also discontinued. The statement
of resignation shall state that the registered agent has sent
notice to each affected entity at least thirty (30) days prior
to the filing of the statement of resignation to the address of
the entity last known to the registered agent. The statement
shall be addressed to any officer or other authorized person of
the entity other than the registered agent.
(b) Upon receiving the resignation of a registered agent
where no successor is appointed, the entity shall provide the
secretary of state with a statement of change in compliance with
W.S. 17-28-102(a) within thirty (30) days following receipt by
the business entity of the statement of resignation by a
registered agent.
(c) A registered agent may resign his agency appointment
and appoint a new registered agent that complies with W.S.
17-28-101(a) by signing and delivering to the secretary of state
on a statement of change of registered agent form designated by
the secretary of state:
(i) A signed original and one (1) exact or conformed
copy of a statement of resignation for each entity from which
the registered agent resigns;
(ii) A statement from each affected entity ratifying
and approving the appointment of the new registered agent;
(iii) A statement designating a new registered office
for each entity affected; and
(iv) A statement from the new registered agent
certifying his compliance with all requirements of this chapter
and acknowledging his appointment to serve as registered agent
for each entity affected.
(d) The agency appointment is terminated, and the
registered office discontinued if so provided, on the date on
which the statement of resignation was filed under subsections
(a) and (b) of this section. The agency appointment is
terminated, the registered office discontinued if so provided,
and the new registered agent and registered office are effective
on the date on which the statement of change of registered agent
was filed under subsection (c) of this section.
(e) If an agency appointment is terminated under the
provisions of this section and no successor is appointed,
service of process on the business entity shall be upon the
secretary of state until a new appointment is made or until the
entity is administratively dissolved or revoked.
(f) Upon receipt of resignation by a registered agent
where no successor is appointed, the secretary of state shall
classify the entity as delinquent awaiting administrative
dissolution, revocation or forfeiture of its articles of
organization as appropriate.
(g) Failure of a commercial registered agent to renew
registration pursuant to W.S. 17-28-106 shall constitute a
resignation of the registered agent pursuant to this section for
purposes of administrative dissolution, revocation or forfeiture
of the entities represented, but the registered agent shall
remain responsible for all the requirements of this chapter with
respect to each entity represented until a new registered agent
is appointed, the registered agent has resigned in accordance
with subsection (a) of this section or until the entity is
administratively dissolved, revoked or its authority to transact
business is forfeited.
17-28-104. Service on business entity.
(a) A business entity's registered agent, or the natural
person having an agency relationship with the registered agent
as provided in W.S. 17-28-101(a), shall accept service of
process, notice, or demand required or permitted by law that is
served on the entity. The secretary of state may provide service
of process, notice or demand by electronic means.
(b) If a business entity has no registered agent, or the
agent cannot with reasonable diligence be served, the entity may
be served by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, addressed to the entity at its principal office.
Service is perfected under this subsection at the earliest of:
(i) The date the entity receives the mail;
(ii) The date shown on the return receipt, if signed,
either manually or in facsimile, on behalf of the entity; or
(iii) Five (5) days after its deposit in the United
States mail, as evidenced by the postmark, if mailed postpaid
and correctly addressed.
(c) A business entity may be served as provided in this
section or as provided in the Wyoming Rules of Civil Procedure.
(d) Every entity shall provide to its registered agent, or
to the secretary of state as provided in W.S. 17-28-107(b), and
keep current the name, mailing address and physical address, if
different, and business telephone number of a natural person who
is an officer, director, limited liability company member or
manager, managing partner or trustee of the entity who is
authorized to receive communications from the registered agent
and is deemed the designated communications contact for the
entity. The designated communications contact for the entity
shall not be the entity's registered agent or an employee of the
entity's registered agent unless the registered agent is the
entity's officer, director, limited liability company member or
manager, managing partner or trustee.
(e) Upon formation of a business entity, the business
entity shall execute a consent to service by electronic means
for use in the limited circumstances where the business entity
has no registered agent or where the agent cannot with
reasonable diligence be served. Upon acceptance of a summons in
accordance with the limited circumstances specified in this
subsection, the secretary of state may elect to serve the
business entity by electronic means in lieu of the process
specified in subsection (b) of this section. Service is
perfected under this subsection on the date the electronic
communication is sent to the business entity.
17-28-105. Commercial registered agent registration
required.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
no person shall transact business in this state as a registered
agent unless the person is registered with the secretary of
state in accordance with the provisions of this section and W.S.
17-28-106. Violation of this section is punishable under W.S.
17-28-109.
(b) The registration requirements of this section and W.S.
17-28-106 shall not apply to a person who serves as registered
agent for ten (10) or fewer business entities, unless the
registered agent is serving as registered agent for an entity or
entities that is serving as registered agent for more than ten
(10) business entities.
(c) Any person claiming to be exempt from registration
requirements based upon the provisions of subsection (b) of this
section shall have the burden of proving the exemption in any
administrative or other civil action.
(d) For purposes of W.S. 17-28-106, "commercial registered
agent" means a registered agent required to register under this
section.
(e) A commercial registered agent shall not:
(i) Have been convicted of any felony;
(ii) Have any officer, director, partner, manager or
other authorized person who has been convicted of any felony;
(iii) Engage in conduct in connection with acting as
a registered agent that is intended or likely to deceive or
defraud the public; nor
(iv) Have any officer, director, partner, manager or
other authorized person whose ability to act as a registered
agent has been revoked by the secretary of state or a comparable
official in another state for engaging in conduct in connection
with acting as a registered agent that is intended or likely to
deceive or defraud the public, or who was an officer, director,
partner, manager or other authorized person of an entity whose
ability to act as a registered agent has been so revoked.
17-28-106. Registration requirements.
(a) A commercial registered agent shall obtain a
registration by filing an application with the secretary of
state. The application shall be executed and sworn under
penalty of perjury and contain information the secretary of
state requires by rule including:
(i) The legal name of the applicant;
(ii) The applicant's physical street address of its
registered office in this state where service may be made. A
separate mailing address may be included in addition to the
physical street address;
(iii) Whether the applicant, or in the case of a
corporation or other business entity its officers or directors,
members, partners or persons serving in a similar capacity, has
ever been convicted of a felony;
(iv) The name, address and phone number of the person
who has authority to act on behalf of the commercial registered
agent;
(v) A statement that the applicant is eighteen (18)
years or older if the applicant is a natural person;
(vi) The name, physical street address, phone number
and normal business hours of the registered office where the
natural person with whom the agent has an agency agreement for
purposes of receiving service of process, if applicable may be
served;
(vii) The applicant's email address where service may
be made by the secretary of state;
(viii) Other information the secretary of state deems
appropriate in the registration and identification of registered
agents.
(b) Every applicant for registration shall pay a filing
fee as set by rule adopted pursuant to this chapter. The fee,
other than the late filing fee provided in subsection (c) of
this section, shall be designed to recover the cost of
administering the provisions of this chapter relating to
registered agents. If an application is withdrawn or denied,
the secretary of state shall retain the entire fee.
(c) Registration of a commercial registered agent shall be
valid for the calendar year of registration and shall expire
December 31 of each year subject to the following:
(i) Renewal of registration shall be made by paying
the annual registration fee by November 30 of each calendar
year;
(ii) Any person acting as a commercial registered
agent who renews the registration between December 1 and
December 31 shall pay an additional late registration fee equal
to the annual filing fee;
(iii) Any person who acts as a commercial registered
agent after the expiration of his registration on December 31 of
each year and willfully or by neglect fails to renew such
registration as provided in this subsection shall be acting in
violation of this act. Renewal of a commercial agent
registration after December 31 shall be accompanied by a late
renewal fee of five hundred dollars ($500.00) plus an
administrative fee which reflects the reasonable costs incurred
by the secretary of state for notification of the entities,
represented by the commercial registered agent, classified as
delinquent awaiting administrative dissolution, revocation or
forfeiture of its authority to transact business as provided in
W.S. 17-28-103(f);
(iv) All fees shall be paid in full prior to any
reregistration as a commercial registered agent.
(d) The secretary of state may publish or cause a listing
of registrants to be disseminated to interested persons under
such rules as the secretary of state prescribes.
17-28-107. Duties of the registered agent; duties of the
entity.
(a) The registered agent shall:
(i) Maintain a physical address in accordance with
W.S. 17-28-102(a)(ii) and as defined by the secretary of state
by rule and maintain an email address as required by W.S. 17-28-
101(e);
(ii) Accept service of process in accordance with
W.S. 17-28-104(a);
(iii) Maintain the address of record to which all
service of process is to be delivered for each entity
represented;
(iv) Register as a commercial registered agent
pursuant to W.S. 17-28-105 if applicable; and
(v) Maintain at the registered office, the following
information for each domestic entity represented which shall be
current within sixty (60) days of any change until the entity's
first annual report is accepted for filing with the secretary of
state and thereafter when the annual report is due for filing
and shall be maintained in a format that can be reasonably
produced on demand:
(A) Names and addresses of each entity's
directors, officers, limited liability company managers,
managing partners, trustees or persons serving in a similar
capacity;
(B) The name, physical address and business
telephone number of a natural person who is authorized to
receive communications from the registered agent as specified in
W.S. 17-28-104(d);
(C) A copy of the written contract or agreement
creating an agency relationship between the registered agent and
a natural person with respect to accepting service of process on
behalf of each business entity represented by the registered
agent.
(b) If the registered agent and the entity agree, the
entity shall file with the secretary of state the information
specified in paragraph (a)(iii) and subdivisions (a)(v)(A) and
(B) of this section and the information specified in W.S.
17-28-104(d). As verification of the agreement, the entity
shall file with the secretary of state a consent form, as
provided by that office, which acknowledges the entity's
election under this subsection. If the information or form
acknowledging the entity's election is filed with the secretary
of state, then the registered agent has complied with the
requirement to maintain such information under this section.
17-28-108. Production of records.
(a) All records maintained pursuant to W.S. 17-28-107 are
subject to periodic, special or other examination by the
secretary of state or his representatives as deemed necessary or
appropriate in investigations.
(b) The secretary of state may compel production of
records required to be maintained pursuant to W.S. 17-28-107 in
accordance with the provisions of the Wyoming Administrative
Procedure Act.
(c) The secretary of state shall hold any records obtained
pursuant to this section confidential except for information
already on file with the secretary of state as part of a public
document and information required to be in the annual report
required by W.S. 17-16-1630(a). The secretary of state may
release any such confidential information only pursuant to court
ordered subpoena or to a bona fide law enforcement agency for
use in a criminal investigation.
(d) Failure to produce or denial of access to records
maintained pursuant to W.S. 17-28-107 to the secretary of state
on demand or failure to answer a validly issued and enforceable
subpoena shall be punishable as provided in W.S. 17-28-109.
(e) Any business entity which provides false records
required to be maintained pursuant to W.S. 17-28-107 to the
entity's registered agent shall be punished by a fine not
exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), or by imprisonment
not exceeding six (6) months, or both.
17-28-109. Actions against registered agents.
(a) The secretary of state may impose a civil penalty not
to exceed five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each violation,
with respect to each entity represented, of this chapter for
which no other specific penalty is provided, and may deny or
revoke any registration, require enhanced recordkeeping and
refuse to accept filings for business entities served by a
registered agent if the registered agent, or in the case of
registered agent that is a corporation or other business entity,
its officers, directors, members, partners or persons serving in
a similar capacity:
(i) Has failed to make application for registration
as a commercial registered agent under W.S. 17-28-105 if
applicable;
(ii) Has failed to maintain records as required by
W.S. 17-28-107;
(iii) Cannot be served at the address of the
registered office or the registered agent's email address;
(iv) Has willfully violated or willfully failed to
comply with any provision of this chapter; or
(v) Cannot be located at the address on the
application provided to the secretary of state.
(b) A registered agent has complied with W.S. 17-28-107 if
he has timely requested from the entity, either by certified
letter or through an engagement letter or other similar
document, that the required information be provided and be kept
current within sixty (60) days of any change until the entity's
first annual report is accepted for filing with the secretary of
state. It shall be a defense to an action under paragraph
(a)(ii) of this section if the registered agent notifies the
secretary of state of the entity's failure to provide the
required information or of the registered agent's belief that
the information is inaccurate, and the registered agent resigns
within sixty (60) days after the date the certified letter
requesting information has been sent. No fee shall be assessed a
registered agent resigning pursuant to this subsection.
(c) The secretary of state may deny or revoke the
registration of a registered agent who has been convicted of any
felony or has had an application for commercial registered agent
denied or revoked, or in the case of a registered agent that is
a corporation or other business entity, its officers, directors,
members, partners or persons serving in a similar capacity have
been convicted of any felony or have had an application for
commercial registered agent denied or revoked.
(d) In any action pursuant to this section the prevailing
party may recover costs of investigation, court costs and
attorney's fees.
(e) It shall be a defense to any violation under this
section if the agent, in the exercise of reasonable diligence
could not have known that:
(i) The information maintained by the agent is
inaccurate;
(ii) The information provided by the entity
represented is inaccurate; or
(iii) An entity used the registered agent's identity
or address without the registered agent's knowledge or consent.
(f) The secretary of state may deny registration, require
enhanced recordkeeping and refuse to accept filings from any
registered agent pursuant to this section without a contested
case hearing. If a contested case hearing is requested, this
authority shall only apply until the hearing is resolved.
(g) Any penalty imposed against a registered agent
pursuant to this act shall be paid pursuant to the final order
as issued by the secretary of state. If the penalty is not paid
within sixty (60) days of the order, or according to an
alternate schedule indicated in the order, the secretary of
state may refuse all filings by a registered agent until the
penalty is paid. In addition, in the case of a registered agent
that is a corporation or other business entity, the secretary of
state may administratively dissolve the entity or revoke its
certificate of authority if the penalty is not paid as provided
in this subsection.
17-28-110. Reinstatement after administrative dissolution
or revocation of authority.
(a) Except as otherwise provided by law for specific
business entities, a business entity administratively dissolved
or whose certificate of authority is revoked for violation of
any provision of this chapter may apply to the secretary of
state for reinstatement within two (2) years after the effective
date of dissolution or revocation. Reinstatement may be denied
by the secretary of state if the business entity has been the
subject of secretary of state and law enforcement investigation
pertaining to fraud or any other violation of state or federal
law, or if there is other reason to believe the business entity
was engaged in illegal operations.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that the business
entity is in compliance with this chapter, he shall cancel the
certificate of dissolution or revocation and prepare a
certificate of reinstatement that recites his determination and
the effective date of reinstatement, file the original of the
certificate, and serve a copy on the business entity as provided
in this chapter.
(c) When the reinstatement is effective, it relates back
to and takes effect as of the effective date of the
administrative dissolution or revocation and the business entity
resumes carrying on its business as if the administrative
dissolution or revocation had never occurred.
(d) Appeals of decisions of the secretary of state under
this section may be made as provided in W.S. 17-16-1423.
17-28-111. Rules and regulations; applicability.
(a) The secretary of state shall have the power reasonably
necessary to perform the duties required of him by this chapter.
The secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
(b) The Financial Technology Sandbox Act shall apply to
this chapter.
CHAPTER 29 - WYOMING LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-29-101. Short title.
This chapter may be cited as the "Wyoming Limited Liability
Company Act".
17-29-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this chapter:
(i) "Articles of organization" means the articles
required by W.S. 17-29-201(b). The term includes the articles
as amended or restated;
(ii) "Contribution" means any benefit provided by a
person to a limited liability company:
(A) In order to become a member upon formation
of the company and in accordance with an agreement between or
among the persons that have agreed to become the initial members
of the company;
(B) In order to become a member after formation
of the company and in accordance with an agreement between the
person and the company; or
(C) In the person's capacity as a member and in
accordance with the operating agreement or an agreement between
the member and the company.
(iii) "Debtor in bankruptcy" means a person that is
the subject of:
(A) An order for relief under Title 11 of the
United States Code or a successor statute of general
application; or
(B) A comparable order under federal, state or
foreign law governing insolvency.
(iv) "Designated office" means:
(A) The office of a registered agent that a
limited liability company is required to designate and maintain
under W.S. 17-28-101; or
(B) The principal office of a foreign limited
liability company.
(v) "Distribution", except as otherwise provided in
W.S. 17-29-405(g), means a transfer of money or other property
from a limited liability company to another person on account of
a transferable interest;
(vi) "Effective" with respect to a record required or
permitted to be delivered to the secretary of state for filing
under this article, means effective under W.S. 17-29-205(c);
(vii) "Foreign limited liability company" means an
unincorporated entity formed under the law of a jurisdiction
other than this state and denominated by that law as a limited
liability company or which appears to the secretary of state to
possess characteristics sufficiently similar to those of a
limited liability company organized under this chapter;
(viii) "Limited liability company", except in the
phrase "foreign limited liability company", means an entity
formed under this chapter;
(ix) "Low profit limited liability company" means a
limited liability company that has set forth in its articles of
organization a business purpose that satisfies, and which
limited liability company is at all times operated to satisfy,
each of the following requirements:
(A) The entity significantly furthers the
accomplishment of one (1) or more charitable or educational
purposes within the meaning of section 170(c)(2)(B) of the
Internal Revenue Code and would not have been formed but for the
entity's relationship to the accomplishment of charitable or
educational purposes;
(B) No significant purpose of the entity is the
production of income or the appreciation of property provided,
however, that the fact that an entity produces significant
income or capital appreciation shall not, in the absence of
other factors, be conclusive evidence of a significant purpose
involving the production of income or the appreciation of
property; and
(C) No purpose of the entity is to accomplish
one (1) or more political or legislative purposes within the
meaning of section 170(c)(2)(D) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(x) "Manager" means a person that under the operating
agreement of a manager-managed limited liability company is
responsible, alone or in concert with others, for performing the
management functions stated in W.S. 17-29-407(c);
(xi) "Manager-managed limited liability company"
means a limited liability company that qualifies under W.S.
17-29-407(a);
(xii) "Member" means a person that has become a
member of a limited liability company under W.S. 17-29-401 and
has not dissociated under W.S. 17-29-602;
(xiii) "Member-managed limited liability company"
means a limited liability company that is not a manager-managed
limited liability company;
(xiv) "Operating agreement" means the agreement,
whether or not referred to as an operating agreement and whether
oral, in a record, implied or in any combination thereof, of all
the members of a limited liability company, including a sole
member, concerning the matters described in W.S. 17-29-110(a).
The term includes the agreement as amended or restated;
(xv) "Organizer" means a person that acts under W.S.
17-29-201 to form a limited liability company;
(xvi) "Person" means as defined by W.S.
8-1-102(a)(vi);
(xvii) "Principal office" means the principal
executive office of a limited liability company or foreign
limited liability company, whether or not the office is located
in this state;
(xviii) "Record" means information that is inscribed
on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other
medium and is retrievable in perceivable form;
(xix) "Sign" or "signature" includes any manual,
facsimile, conformed or electronic signature;
(xx) "State" means a state of the United States, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands or any territory or insular possession subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States;
(xxi) "Transfer" includes an assignment, conveyance,
deed, bill of sale, lease, mortgage, security interest,
encumbrance, gift or transfer by operation of law;
(xxii) "Transferable interest" means the right, as
originally associated with a person's capacity as a member, to
receive distributions from a limited liability company in
accordance with the operating agreement, whether or not the
person remains a member or continues to own any part of the
right;
(xxiii) "Transferee" means a person to which all or
part of a transferable interest has been transferred, whether or
not the transferor is a member;
(xxiv) "Financial institution" means a bank, savings
and loan association or state chartered credit union;
(xxv) "Majority of the members," unless the operating
agreement provides otherwise, means:
(A) For a limited liability company formed
before July 1, 2010, more than fifty percent (50%) of its
membership interests based on each member’s proportionate
contribution to the capital of the limited liability company, as
adjusted from time to time to properly reflect any additional
contributions or withdrawals by the members, unless the limited
liability company amends its articles of organization to provide
otherwise;
(B) For a limited liability company formed on or
after July 1, 2010, a per capita majority of the members.
17-29-103. Knowledge; notice.
(a) A person knows a fact when the person:
(i) Has actual knowledge of it; or
(ii) Is deemed to know it under paragraph (d)(i) of
this section or law other than this chapter.
(b) A person has notice of a fact when the person:
(i) Has reason to know the fact from all of the facts
known to the person at the time in question; or
(ii) Is deemed to have notice of the fact under
paragraph (d)(ii) of this section.
(c) A person notifies another of a fact by taking steps
reasonably required to inform the other person in ordinary
course, whether or not the other person knows the fact.
(d) A person that is not a member is deemed:
(i) To know of a limitation on authority to transfer
real property as provided in W.S. 17-29-302(g); and
(ii) To have notice of a limited liability company's:
(A) Dissolution, ninety (90) days after articles
of dissolution under W.S. 17-29-702(b)(ii)(A) and the limitation
on the member's or manager's authority as a result of the
statement of dissolution becomes effective;
(B) Reserved; and
(C) Merger, conversion, continuance, transfer or
domestication, ninety (90) days after articles of merger,
conversion, continuance, transfer or domestication under article
10 of this chapter become effective.
17-29-104. Nature, purpose and duration of limited
liability company.
(a) A limited liability company is an entity distinct from
its members.
(b) A limited liability company may have any lawful
purpose, regardless of whether for profit.
(c) A limited liability company has perpetual duration.
(d) Limited liability companies may be organized under
this chapter for any lawful purpose, except for the purpose of
acting as a financial institution or acting as an insurer as
defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi).
(e) Nothing in this chapter shall be interpreted as
precluding an individual whose occupation requires licensure
under Wyoming law from forming a limited liability company if
the applicable licensing statutes do not prohibit it and the
licensing body does not prohibit it by rule or regulation
adopted consistent with the appropriate licensing statute. No
limited liability company may offer professional services or
practice a profession except by and through its licensed members
or licensed employees, each of whom shall retain his
professional license in good standing and shall remain as fully
liable and responsible for his professional activities, and
subject to all rules, regulations, standards and requirements
pertaining thereto, as though practicing individually rather
than in a limited liability company.
17-29-105. Powers.
A limited liability company has the capacity to sue and be sued
in its own name and the power to do all things necessary or
convenient to carry on its activities.
17-29-106. Governing law.
(a) The law of this state governs:
(i) The internal affairs of a limited liability
company; and
(ii) The liability of a member as member and a
manager as manager for the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of a limited liability company.
17-29-107. Supplemental principles of law; applicability.
(a) Unless displaced by particular provisions of this
chapter, the principles of law and equity supplement this
chapter.
(b) The Financial Technology Sandbox Act shall apply to
this chapter.
17-29-108. Name.
(a) The words "limited liability company," or its
abbreviations "LLC" or "L.L.C.," "limited company," or its
abbreviations "LC" or "L.C.," "Ltd. liability company," "Ltd.
liability co." or "limited liability co." shall be included in
the name of every limited liability company formed under the
provisions of this act except the name of a low profit limited
liability company, as defined in W.S. 17-29-102(a)(ix) shall
contain the abbreviations "L3C," "l3c," "low profit ltd.
liability company," "low profit ltd. liability co." or "low
profit limited liability co.". In addition, the limited
liability company name may not:
(i) Contain a word or phrase which indicates or
implies that it is organized for a purpose other than one (1) or
more of the purposes contained in its articles of organization;
(ii) Be the same as, or deceptively similar to, any
trademark or service mark registered in this state and shall be
distinguishable upon the records of the secretary of state from
other business names as provided in W.S. 17-16-401;
(iii) Contain a word or phrase which indicates or
implies that it is organized under the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act, the Wyoming Statutory Close Corporation
Supplement or the Nonprofit Corporation Act.
(b) Nothing in this article shall prohibit the use of a
tradename in accordance with applicable law.
17-29-109. Reservation of name.
(a) A person may reserve the exclusive use of the name of
a limited liability company, including a fictitious or assumed
name for a foreign limited liability company whose name is not
available, by delivering an application to the secretary of
state for filing. The application must state the name and
address of the applicant and the name proposed to be reserved.
If the secretary of state finds that the name for which
application has been made is available, it shall be reserved for
the applicant's exclusive use for a one hundred twenty (120) day
period.
(b) The owner of a name reserved for a limited liability
company may transfer the reservation to another person by
delivering to the secretary of state for filing a signed notice
of the transfer which states the name and address of the
transferee.
17-29-110. Operating agreement; scope, function and
limitations.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and
(c) of this section, the operating agreement governs all of the
following:
(i) Relations among the members as members and
between the members and the limited liability company;
(ii) The rights and duties under this chapter of a
person in the capacity of manager;
(iii) The activities of the company and the conduct
of those activities;
(iv) The means and conditions for amending the
operating agreement;
(v) Management rights and voting rights of members;
(vi) Transferability of membership interests;
(vii) Distributions to members prior to dissolution;
(viii) All other aspects of the management of the
limited liability company.
(b) To the extent the operating agreement does not
otherwise provide for a matter described in subsection (a) of
this section, this chapter governs the matter.
(c) An operating agreement shall not:
(i) Vary a limited liability company's capacity under
W.S. 17-29-105 to sue and be sued in its own name;
(ii) Vary the law applicable under W.S 17-29-106;
(iii) Vary the power of the court under W.S.
17-29-204;
(iv) Reserved;
(v) Eliminate the contractual obligation of good
faith and fair dealing under W.S. 17-29-409(d);
(vi) Unreasonably restrict the duties and rights
stated in W.S. 17-29-410;
(vii) Vary the power of a court to decree dissolution
in the circumstances specified in W.S. 17-29-701(a)(iv) and (v);
(viii) Vary the requirement to wind up a limited
liability company's business as specified in W.S. 17-29-702(a)
and (b)(i);
(ix) Unreasonably restrict the right of a member to
maintain an action under article 9 of this chapter;
(x) Reserved; or
(xi) Reserved.
17-29-111. Operating agreement; effect on limited
liability company and persons becoming members; preformation
agreement.
(a) A limited liability company is bound by and may
enforce the operating agreement, whether or not the company has
itself manifested assent to the operating agreement.
(b) A person that becomes a member of a limited liability
company is deemed to assent to the operating agreement.
(c) Two (2) or more persons intending to become the
initial members of a limited liability company may make an
agreement providing that upon the formation of the company the
agreement will become the operating agreement. One (1) person
intending to become the initial member of a limited liability
company may assent to terms providing that upon the formation of
the company the terms will become the operating agreement.
17-29-112. Operating agreement; effect on third parties
and relationship to records effective on behalf of limited
liability company.
(a) An operating agreement may specify that its amendment
requires the approval of a person that is not a party to the
operating agreement or the satisfaction of a condition. An
amendment is ineffective if its adoption does not include the
required approval or satisfy the specified condition.
(b) The obligations of a limited liability company and its
members to a person in the person's capacity as a transferee or
dissociated member are governed by the operating agreement. An
amendment to the operating agreement made after a person becomes
a transferee or dissociated member is effective with regard to
any debt, obligation or other liability of the limited liability
company or its members to the person in the person's capacity as
a transferee or dissociated member.
(c) If a record that has been delivered by a limited
liability company to the secretary of state for filing and has
become effective under this chapter contains a provision that
would be ineffective under W.S. 17-29-110(c) if contained in the
operating agreement, the provision is likewise ineffective in
the record.
(d) Subject to subsection (c) of this section, if a record
that has been delivered by a limited liability company to the
secretary of state for filing and has become effective under
this chapter conflicts with a provision of the operating
agreement:
(i) The operating agreement prevails as to members,
dissociated members, transferees and managers; and
(ii) The record prevails as to other persons to the
extent they reasonably rely on the record.
17-29-113. Registered office and registered agent to be
maintained.
(a) Each limited liability company shall have and
continuously maintain in this state:
(i) A registered office as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111;
(ii) A registered agent as provided in W.S. 17-28-101
through 17-28-111.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all limited liability companies.
17-29-114. Foreign limited liability companies; operation;
revocation and reinstatement of certificates of authority.
To the extent not inconsistent with this act or the provisions
of the Wyoming Business Corporations Act, a foreign limited
liability company shall do business in Wyoming by complying with
the provisions of W.S. 17-16-1501 through 17-16-1536 in the same
manner as a foreign corporation. A foreign limited liability
company's certificate of authority shall be revoked or
reinstated in the manner provided for foreign corporations in
W.S. 17-16-1530 through 17-16-1532.
ARTICLE 2 - FORMATION, ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION AND OTHER
FILINGS
17-29-201. Formation of limited liability company;
articles of organization.
(a) One (1) or more persons may act as organizers to form
a limited liability company by signing and delivering to the
secretary of state for filing articles of organization.
(b) Articles of organization shall state:
(i) The name of the limited liability company, which
must comply with W.S. 17-29-108;
(ii) The street address of the limited liability
company's initial registered office and the name of its initial
registered agent at that office; and
(iii) Reserved.
(c) The articles of organization shall be accompanied by a
written consent to appointment signed by the registered agent.
(d) Subject to W.S. 17-29-112(c), articles of organization
may also contain statements as to matters other than those
required by subsection (b) of this section. However, a
statement in articles of organization is not effective as a
statement of authority.
(e) The following rules apply:
(i) A limited liability company is formed when the
articles of organization become effective, unless the articles
state a delayed effective date pursuant to W.S. 17-29-205(c);
(ii) If the articles state a delayed effective date,
a limited liability company is not formed if, before the
articles take effect, a statement of cancellation is signed and
delivered to the secretary of state for filing and the secretary
of state files the articles;
(iii) Subject to any delayed effective date and
except in a proceeding by this state to dissolve a limited
liability company, the filing of the articles of organization by
the secretary of state is conclusive proof that the organizer
satisfied all conditions to the formation of a limited liability
company.
17-29-202. Amendment or restatement of articles of
organization.
(a) Articles of organization may be amended or restated at
any time. Articles of organization shall be amended when:
(i) There is a change in the name of the limited
liability company;
(ii) There is a false or erroneous statement in the
articles of organization.
(b) To amend its articles of organization, a limited
liability company must deliver to the secretary of state for
filing an amendment stating:
(i) The name of the company;
(ii) The date of filing of its articles of
organization; and
(iii) The changes the amendment makes to the articles
as most recently amended or restated.
(c) To restate its articles of organization, a limited
liability company shall deliver to the secretary of state for
filing a restatement, designated as such in its heading,
stating:
(i) In the heading or an introductory paragraph, the
company's present name and the date of the filing of the
company's initial articles of organization; and
(ii) The changes the restatement makes to the
articles as most recently amended or restated.
(d) Subject to W.S. 17-29-112(c) and 17-29-205(c), an
amendment to or restatement of articles of organization is
effective when delivered for filing with the secretary of state.
(e) If a member of a member-managed limited liability
company, or a manager of a manager-managed limited liability
company, knows that any information in filed articles of
organization was inaccurate when the articles were filed or has
become inaccurate owing to changed circumstances, the member or
manager shall promptly:
(i) Cause the articles to be amended; or
(ii) If appropriate, deliver to the secretary of
state for filing a statement of correction under W.S. 17-28-102
or a statement of correction under W.S. 17-29-206.
17-29-203. Signing of records to be delivered for filing
to secretary of state.
(a) A record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing pursuant to this chapter shall be signed as follows:
(i) Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (ii)
through (iv) of this subsection, a record signed on behalf of a
limited liability company shall be signed by a person authorized
by the company;
(ii) A limited liability company's initial articles
of organization shall be signed by at least one (1) person
acting as an organizer;
(iii) Reserved;
(iv) A record filed on behalf of a dissolved limited
liability company that has no members shall be signed by the
person winding up the company's activities under W.S.
17-29-702(c) or a person appointed under W.S. 17-29-702(d) to
wind up those activities;
(v) A statement of cancellation under W.S.
17-29-201(e)(ii) shall be signed by each organizer that signed
the initial articles of organization, but a personal
representative of a deceased or incompetent organizer may sign
in the place of the decedent or incompetent;
(vi) A statement of denial by a person under W.S.
17-29-303 shall be signed by that person; and
(vii) Any other record shall be signed by the person
on whose behalf the record is delivered to the secretary of
state.
(b) Any record filed under this chapter may be signed by
an agent.
17-29-204. Signing and filing pursuant to judicial order.
(a) If a person required by this chapter to sign a record
or deliver a record to the secretary of state for filing under
this chapter does not do so, any other person that is aggrieved
may petition the appropriate court to order:
(i) The person to sign the record;
(ii) The person to deliver the record to the
secretary of state for filing; or
(iii) The secretary of state to file the record
unsigned.
(b) If a petitioner under subsection (a) of this section
is not the limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company to which the record pertains, the petitioner
shall make the company a party to the action.
17-29-205. Delivery to and filing of records by secretary
of state; effective time and date.
(a) A record authorized or required to be delivered to the
secretary of state for filing under this chapter shall be
captioned to describe the record's purpose, be in a medium
permitted by the secretary of state, and be delivered to the
secretary of state. If the filing fees required by this act or
other law and any past due fees, taxes or penalties have been
paid, unless the secretary of state determines that a record
does not comply with the filing requirements of this chapter,
the secretary of state shall file the record and:
(i) For a statement of denial under W.S. 17-29-303,
send a copy of the filed statement and a receipt for the fees to
the person on whose behalf the statement was delivered for
filing and to the limited liability company; and
(ii) For all other records, send a copy of the filed
record and a receipt for the fees to the person on whose behalf
the record was filed.
(b) Upon request and payment of the requisite fee, the
secretary of state shall send to the requester a certified copy
of a requested record.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in W.S. 17-28-103 and
17-29-206, a record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing under this article shall be effective as provided in W.S.
17-16-123.
(d) If the secretary of state refuses to file a record
under subsection (a) of this section, the secretary of state
shall return it to the limited liability company or its
representative within fifteen (15) days after the record was
delivered, together with a brief, written explanation of the
reason for the refusal.
17-29-206. Correcting filed record.
(a) A limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company may deliver to the secretary of state for
filing a statement of correction to correct a record previously
delivered by the company to the secretary of state and filed by
the secretary of state, if at the time of filing the record
contained inaccurate information or was defectively signed.
(b) A statement of correction under subsection (a) of this
section may not state a delayed effective date and shall:
(i) Describe the record to be corrected, including
its filing date, or attach a copy of the record as filed;
(ii) Specify the inaccurate information and the
reason it is inaccurate or the manner in which the signing was
defective; and
(iii) Correct the defective signature or inaccurate
information.
(c) When filed by the secretary of state, a statement of
correction under subsection (a) of this section is effective
retroactively as of the effective date of the record the
statement corrects, but the statement is effective when filed:
(i) For the purposes of W.S. 17-29-103(d); and
(ii) As to persons that previously relied on the
uncorrected record and would be adversely affected by the
retroactive effect.
17-29-207. Liability for inaccurate information in filed
record.
(a) If a record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing under this chapter and filed by the secretary of state
contains inaccurate information, a person that suffers a loss by
reliance on the information may recover damages for the loss
from:
(i) A person that signed the record, or caused
another to sign it on the person's behalf, and knew the
information to be inaccurate at the time the record was signed;
and
(ii) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, a
member of a member-managed limited liability company or the
manager of a manager-managed limited liability company, if:
(A) The record was delivered for filing on
behalf of the company; and
(B) The member or manager had notice of the
inaccuracy for a reasonably sufficient time before the
information was relied upon so that, before the reliance, the
member or manager reasonably could have:
(I) Effected an amendment under W.S.
17-29-202;
(II) Filed a petition under W.S. 17-29-204;
or
(III) Delivered to the secretary of state
for filing a statement of correction under W.S. 17-28-102 or a
statement of correction under W.S. 17-29-206.
(b) To the extent that the operating agreement of a
member-managed limited liability company expressly relieves a
member of responsibility for maintaining the accuracy of
information contained in records delivered on behalf of the
company to the secretary of state for filing under this chapter
and imposes that responsibility on one (1) or more other
members, the liability stated in paragraph (a)(ii) of this
section applies to those other members and not to the member
that the operating agreement relieves of the responsibility.
(c) An individual who signs a record authorized or
required to be filed under this chapter affirms under penalty of
perjury that the information stated in the record is accurate.
17-29-208. Certificate of existence or authorization.
(a) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of
the requisite fee, shall furnish to any person a certificate of
existence for a limited liability company if the records filed
in the office of the secretary of state show that the company
has been formed under W.S. 17-29-201 and the secretary of state
has not filed articles of dissolution pertaining to the company.
A certificate of existence shall state:
(i) The company's name;
(ii) That the company was duly formed under the laws
of this state and the date of formation;
(iii) Whether all fees, taxes and penalties due under
this chapter or other law to the secretary of state have been
paid;
(iv) Whether the company's most recent annual report
required by W.S. 17-29-209 has been filed by the secretary of
state;
(v) Whether the secretary of state has
administratively dissolved the company;
(vi) Whether the company has delivered to the
secretary of state for filing articles of dissolution;
(vii) Reserved; and
(viii) Other facts of record in the office of the
secretary of state which are specified by the person requesting
the certificate.
(b) Subject to any qualification stated in the
certificate, a certificate of existence or certificate of
authorization issued by the secretary of state is conclusive
evidence that the limited liability company is in existence.
17-29-209. Annual report for secretary of state.
(a) Every limited liability company organized under the
laws of this state and every foreign limited liability company
which obtains a certificate of authority to transact and carry
on business within this state shall file with the secretary of
state on or before the first day of the month of organization of
every year a certification, under the penalty of perjury, by its
treasurer or other fiscal agent setting forth its capital,
property and assets located and employed in the state of
Wyoming. The statement shall give the address of its principal
office. On or before the first day of the month of organization
of every year the limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company shall pay to the secretary of state in
addition to all other statutory taxes and fees a license fee
based upon the sum of its capital, property and assets reported,
of sixty dollars ($60.00) or two-tenths of one mill on the
dollar ($.0002), whichever is greater.
(b) The provisions of subsection (a) of this section shall
be modified as follows:
(i) Any limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company engaged in the public calling of carrying
goods, passengers or information interstate is not required to
comply with the provisions of subsection (a) of this section
except to the extent of capital, property and assets used in
intrastate business in this state;
(ii) The value of all mines and mining claims from
which gold, silver and other precious metals, soda, saline,
coal, mineral oil or other valuable deposit, is or shall be
produced is deemed equivalent to the assessed value of the gross
product thereof, for the previous year;
(iii) The assessed value of any property shall be its
actual value.
(c) Financial information in the annual report shall be
current as of the end of the limited liability company's or
foreign limited liability company's fiscal year immediately
preceding the date the annual report is executed on behalf of
the company. All other information in the annual report shall
be current as of the date the annual report is executed on
behalf of the company.
(d) If an annual report does not contain the information
required by this section, the secretary of state shall promptly
notify the reporting domestic or foreign limited liability
company in writing and return the report to it for correction.
(e) Every limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company registered or authorized to do business in the
state of Wyoming shall preserve for three (3) years at its
principal place of business, suitable records and books as may
be necessary to determine the amount of fee for which it is
liable under this section. All records and books shall be
available for examination by the secretary of state or his
designee during regular business hours except as arranged by
mutual consent.
17-29-210. Fees; annual fee.
(a) The secretary of state shall charge and collect fees
from limited liability companies and foreign limited liability
companies for:
(i) Filing the original articles of organization, one
hundred dollars ($100.00);
(ii) For amending the articles of organization, a
filing fee of sixty dollars ($60.00);
(iii) An annual fee accompanying the report required
in W.S. 17-29-209, due and payable on or before the date of the
filing under W.S. 17-29-209;
(iv) Filing, service and copying fees for those
services provided by his office for which a fee is not otherwise
established. A fee shall not exceed the cost of providing the
service;
(v) Issuing a certificate of authority for a foreign
limited liability company, a filing fee of one hundred fifty
dollars ($150.00).
(b) Except for articles of organization, any document to
be filed with the secretary of state shall be signed by the
member, members, manager, managers or other authorized
individual as set forth in the operating agreement. A person
signing a document, including the articles of organization, he
knows is false in any material respect with intent that the
document be delivered to the secretary of state for filing under
this act is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not
more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), by imprisonment for
not more than six (6) months, or both.
(c) Any foreign limited liability company transacting
business in this state without obtaining a certificate of
authority as required by W.S. 17-16-1501 and 17-29-114 is
subject to the penalties provided by W.S. 17-16-1502(d).
17-29-211. Series of members, managers, transferable
interests or assets.
(a) An operating agreement may establish or provide for
the establishment of one (1) or more designated series of
members, managers, transferable interests or assets. This
section shall govern any matter with respect to a series to the
extent not otherwise provided in the operating agreement.
(b) Subject to subsection (c) of this section, if an
operating agreement establishes or provides for the
establishment of a particular series:
(i) The debts, obligations or other liabilities of
the particular series, whether arising in contract, tort or
otherwise, shall be enforceable against the assets of the series
only and not against:
(A) The assets of the limited liability company
generally or any other series thereof;
(B) Any member of the limited liability company.
(ii) The debts, obligations or other liabilities of
the limited liability company generally or any other series
thereof, whether arising in contract, tort or otherwise, shall
not be enforceable against the assets of the particular series.
(c) The limitations on liabilities in subsection (b) of
this section shall only apply if:
(i) The records for the particular series that
account for the assets of the series are separately maintained
from the records that account for the assets of the limited
liability company or any other series thereof. Records that
reasonably identify the assets of a particular series, including
by specific listing, category, type, quantity, computational or
allocational formula or procedure such as a percentage or share
of assets or by any other method where the identity of the
assets is objectively determinable, shall be deemed to account
for the assets of the particular series separately from the
assets of the limited liability company or any other series
thereof;
(ii) The operating agreement specifically provides
for the limitations on liabilities; and
(iii) Notice of the limitations on liabilities of the
particular series is included in the articles of organization.
Notice under this paragraph shall be sufficient whether or not
the limited liability company has established or referenced any
particular series in the notice.
(d) Nothing in this section, an operating agreement or
articles of organization shall restrict:
(i) A series or limited liability company on behalf
of a series from agreeing in the operating agreement or
otherwise that any or all of the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of the limited liability company generally or any
other series thereof shall be enforceable against the assets of
the series;
(ii) A limited liability company from agreeing in the
operating agreement or otherwise that any or all of the debts,
obligations or other liabilities of a series shall be
enforceable against the assets of the limited liability company
generally; or
(iii) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-29-304(a), a member or
manager from agreeing in the operating agreement or otherwise to
be personally liable for any or all of the debts, obligations or
other liabilities of a series.
(e) A series established under this section shall have the
power and capacity to, in its own name, contract, hold title to
assets including real, personal and intangible property, grant
liens and security interests and sue and be sued. A series may:
(i) Have separate rights, powers or duties with
respect to specified property or obligations of the limited
liability company or profits and losses associated with
specified property or obligations;
(ii) Carry on any lawful purpose regardless of
whether for profit, except for the purpose of acting as a
financial institution or acting as an insurer as defined in W.S.
26-1-102(a)(xvi);
(iii) Hold assets directly or indirectly, including
in the name of the series or the name of the limited liability
company.
(f) An operating agreement that establishes or provides
for the establishment of a series may:
(i) Provide for classes or groups of members or
managers of the series having the relative rights, powers and
duties specified in the operating agreement;
(ii) Provide for and specify the future creation of
additional classes or groups of members or managers of the
series having the relative rights, powers and duties as may be
established, including rights, powers and duties senior to
existing classes and groups of members or managers of the
series;
(iii) Provide for the taking of an action, including
the amendment of the operating agreement, without the vote or
approval of any member or manager or class or group of members
or managers of the series;
(iv) Provide that any member or class or group of
members of a series shall have no voting rights;
(v) Grant to all or certain identified members or
managers or class or group of members or managers of the series
the right to vote on any matter separately or with all or any
class or group of members or managers of the series. Voting by
members or managers may be on a per capita, number, financial
interest, class, group or other basis.
(g) The management of a series shall be vested as follows:
(i) In the members of the series pursuant to W.S.
17-29-407(b). A member shall cease to be a member of a series
upon the divestment of all of the member's transferable
interests of the series. The fact that a person ceases to be a
member of a particular series shall not by itself cause the
person to cease to be a member of the limited liability company
or any other series thereof or cause the termination of the
series, regardless of whether the person was the last remaining
member of the series; or
(ii) If the operating agreement provides for the
management of the series in whole or in part by a manager, the
management shall be vested in one (1) or more managers who shall
be chosen as provided in the operating agreement and who shall
hold the offices and have the responsibilities as specified in
the agreement. A manager shall cease to be a manager of a
series as provided in an operating agreement and subject to W.S.
17-29-407(c)(v). The fact that a person ceases to be a manager
of a particular series shall not by itself cause the person to
cease to be a manager of the limited liability company or any
other series thereof.
(h) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-29-404 and subject to
subsections (j) and (m) of this section, if a member of a series
becomes entitled to receive a distribution, the member has the
status of, and is entitled to all remedies available to, a
creditor of the series with respect to the distribution. An
operating agreement may provide for the establishment of a
record date for allocations and distributions associated with a
series.
(j) Notwithstanding W.S. 17-29-405(a), a limited liability
company may make a distribution with respect to a series that
has been established under this section unless the total assets
of the series after the distribution would be less than the sum
of its total liabilities plus the amount that would be needed,
if the series were to be dissolved, wound up and terminated at
the time of the distribution, to satisfy the preferential rights
upon winding up and termination of members whose preferential
rights are superior to those of the persons receiving the
distribution. A member that receives a distribution knowing
that the distribution was made in violation of this subsection
is personally liable to the series for the amount of the
distribution. This subsection shall not affect any obligation
or liability of a member under an agreement or other applicable
law for the amount of a distribution, except that any action
under this subsection shall be subject to W.S. 17-29-406(e).
For purposes of this subsection, "distribution" does not include
amounts constituting reasonable compensation for present or past
services or reasonable payments made in the ordinary course of
business under a bona fide retirement plan or other benefits
program.
(k) Subject to W.S. 17-29-702, a series established under
this section may be terminated and its affairs wound up without
causing the dissolution of the limited liability company. The
termination of the series shall not affect the limitations on
liabilities of the series as provided in subsection (b) of this
section. A series is terminated and its affairs shall be wound
up upon the occurrence of any of the following:
(i) The dissolution of the limited liability company
under W.S. 17-29-702;
(ii) The time or happening of events specified in the
operating agreement;
(iii) The vote or consent of members of the series
who own more than two-thirds (2/3) of the interests in the
profits of the series; or
(iv) On application by a member or manager of the
series, the entry of a court order terminating the series on the
grounds that it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the
purposes of the series in conformity with the operating
agreement.
(m) A person winding up the affairs of a series may, in
the name of the limited liability company and for and on behalf
of the limited liability company and the series, take all
actions with respect to the series as authorized by W.S.
17-29-702. The person shall provide for the claims and
obligations of the series and distribute the assets of the
series as provided in W.S. 17-29-708. Actions taken in
accordance with this subsection shall not affect the liability
of members and shall not impose liability on a liquidating
trustee appointed in accordance with this subsection.
Notwithstanding W.S. 17-29-702, the following persons may wind
up the affairs of a series:
(i) A manager of the series who has not wrongfully
terminated the series;
(ii) If the series has no manager who qualifies under
paragraph (i) of this subsection, the members of the series or a
person approved by the members;
(iii) The members who own more than fifty (50%)
percent of the interests in the profits of the series;
(iv) On application of a member or manager of the
series or any personal representative or assignee of the member
or manager, and upon cause shown, a court or a liquidating
trustee appointed by the court.
(n) A foreign limited liability company doing business in
this state and governed by an operating agreement that
establishes or provides for the establishment of one (1) or more
designated series of members, managers, transferable interests
or assets shall state the following on its certificate of
authority:
(i) That the operating agreement of the foreign
limited liability company establishes or provides for the
establishment of series having separate rights, powers or duties
with respect to specified property or obligations of the foreign
limited liability company or profits and losses associated with
specified property or obligations;
(ii) If any of the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of any particular series, whether arising in
contract, tort or otherwise, shall be enforceable against the
assets of the particular series only and not against the assets
of the foreign limited liability company generally or any other
series thereof;
(iii) If any of the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of the foreign limited liability company generally
or any other series thereof, whether arising in contract, tort
or otherwise, shall be enforceable against the assets of the
particular series.
(o) The secretary of state shall charge and collect fees
from limited liability companies and foreign limited liability
companies establishing one (1) or more series in the amount of
ten dollars ($10.00) per series designated or established under
this section.
ARTICLE 3 - RELATIONS OF MEMBERS AND MANAGERS
TO PERSONS DEALING WITH LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
17-29-301. No agency power of member as member.
(a) A member is not an agent of a limited liability
company solely by reason of being a member.
(b) A person's status as a member does not prevent or
restrict law other than this chapter from imposing liability on
a limited liability company because of the person's conduct.
17-29-302. Statement of authority.
(a) A limited liability company may deliver to the
secretary of state for filing a statement of authority. The
statement:
(i) Shall include the name of the company and the
street and mailing addresses of its designated office;
(ii) With respect to any position that exists in or
with respect to the company, may state the authority, or
limitations on the authority, of all persons holding the
position to:
(A) Execute an instrument transferring real
property held in the name of the company; or
(B) Enter into other transactions on behalf of,
or otherwise act for or bind, the company; and
(iii) May state the authority, or limitations on the
authority, of a specific person to:
(A) Execute an instrument transferring real
property held in the name of the company; or
(B) Enter into other transactions on behalf of,
or otherwise act for or bind, the company.
(b) To amend or cancel a statement of authority filed by
the secretary of state under W.S. 17-29-205(a), a limited
liability company shall deliver to the secretary of state for
filing an amendment or cancellation stating:
(i) The name of the company;
(ii) The street and mailing addresses of the
company's designated office;
(iii) The caption of the statement being amended or
cancelled and the date the statement being affected became
effective; and
(iv) The contents of the amendment or a declaration
that the statement being affected is cancelled.
(c) A statement of authority affects only the power of a
person to bind a limited liability company to persons that are
not members.
(d) Subject to subsection (c) of this section and W.S.
17-29-103(d) and except as otherwise provided in subsections
(f), (g) and (h) of this section, a limitation on the authority
of a person or a position contained in an effective statement of
authority is not by itself evidence of knowledge or notice of
the limitation by any person.
(e) Subject to subsection (c) of this section, a grant of
authority not pertaining to transfers of real property and
contained in an effective statement of authority is conclusive
in favor of a person that gives value in reliance on the grant,
except to the extent that when the person gives value:
(i) The person has knowledge to the contrary;
(ii) The statement has been cancelled or
restrictively amended under subsection (b) of this section; or
(iii) A limitation on the grant is contained in
another statement of authority that became effective after the
statement containing the grant became effective.
(f) Subject to subsection (c) of this section, an
effective statement of authority that grants authority to
transfer real property held in the name of the limited liability
company and that is recorded by certified copy in the office for
recording transfers of the real property is conclusive in favor
of a person that gives value in reliance on the grant without
knowledge to the contrary, except to the extent that when the
person gives value:
(i) The statement has been cancelled or restrictively
amended under subsection (b) of this section and a certified
copy of the cancellation or restrictive amendment has been
recorded in the office for recording transfers of the real
property; or
(ii) A limitation on the grant is contained in
another statement of authority that became effective after the
statement containing the grant became effective and a certified
copy of the later effective statement is recorded in the office
for recording transfers of the real property.
(g) Subject to subsection (c) of this section, if a
certified copy of an effective statement containing a limitation
on the authority to transfer real property held in the name of a
limited liability company is recorded in the office for
recording transfers of that real property, all persons are
deemed to know of the limitation.
(h) Subject to subsection (j) of this section, an
effective statement of dissolution or termination is a
cancellation of any filed statement of authority for the
purposes of subsection (f) of this section and is a limitation
on authority for the purposes of subsection (g) of this section.
(j) After a statement of dissolution becomes effective, a
limited liability company may deliver to the secretary of state
for filing and, if appropriate, may record a statement of
authority that is designated as a post dissolution statement of
authority. The statement operates as provided in subsections
(f) and (g) of this section.
(k) Unless earlier cancelled, an effective statement of
authority is cancelled by operation of law five (5) years after
the date on which the statement, or its most recent amendment,
becomes effective. This cancellation operates without need for
any recording under subsection (f) or (g) of this section.
(m) An effective statement of denial operates as a
restrictive amendment under this section and may be recorded by
certified copy for the purposes of paragraph (f)(i) of this
section.
17-29-303. Statement of denial.
(a) A person named in a filed statement of authority
granting that person authority may deliver to the secretary of
state for filing a statement of denial that:
(i) Provides the name of the limited liability
company and the caption of the statement of authority to which
the statement of denial pertains; and
(ii) Denies the grant of authority.
17-29-304. Liability of members and managers.
(a) The debts, obligations or other liabilities of a
limited liability company, whether arising in contract, tort or
otherwise:
(i) Are solely the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of the company; and
(ii) Do not become the debts, obligations or other
liabilities of a member or manager solely by reason of the
member acting as a member or manager acting as a manager.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2016, ch. 54, § 2.
(c) For purposes of imposing liability on any member or
manager of a limited liability company for the debts,
obligations or other liabilities of the company, a court shall
consider only the following factors no one (1) of which, except
fraud, is sufficient to impose liability:
(i) Fraud;
(ii) Inadequate capitalization;
(iii) Failure to observe company formalities as
required by law; and
(iv) Intermingling of assets, business operations and
finances of the company and the members to such an extent that
there is no distinction between them.
(d) In any analysis conducted under subsection (c) of this
section, a court shall not consider factors intrinsic to the
character and operation of a limited liability company, whether
a single or multiple member limited liability company. Factors
intrinsic to the character and operation of a limited liability
company include but are not limited to:
(i) The ability to elect treatment as a disregarded
or pass-through entity for tax purposes;
(ii) Flexible operation or organization including the
failure to observe any particular formality relating to the
exercise of the company's powers or management of its
activities;
(iii) The exercise of ownership, influence and
governance by a member or manager;
(iv) The protection of members' and managers'
personal assets from the obligations and acts of the limited
liability company.
ARTICLE 4 - RELATIONS OF MEMBERS TO EACH OTHER AND TO THE
LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
17-29-401. Becoming a member.
(a) If a limited liability company is to have only one (1)
member upon formation, the person becomes a member as determined
by that person and the organizer of the company. That person
and the organizer may be, but need not be, different persons.
If different, the organizer acts on behalf of the initial
member.
(b) If a limited liability company is to have more than
one (1) member upon formation, those persons become members as
agreed by them. The organizer acts on behalf of the persons in
forming the company and may be, but need not be, one of the
persons.
(c) Reserved.
(d) After formation of a limited liability company, a
person becomes a member:
(i) As provided in the operating agreement;
(ii) As the result of a transaction effective under
article 10 of this chapter;
(iii) With the consent of all the members; or
(vi) If, within ninety (90) consecutive days after
the company ceases to have any members:
(A) The last person to have been a member, or
the legal representative of that person, designates a person to
become a member; and
(B) The designated person consents to become a
member.
(e) A person may become a member without acquiring a
transferable interest and without making or being obligated to
make a contribution to the limited liability company.
17-29-402. Form of contribution.
A contribution may consist of tangible or intangible property or
other benefit to a limited liability company, including money,
services performed, promissory notes, other agreements to
contribute money or property and contracts for services to be
performed.
17-29-403. Liability for contributions.
A person's obligation to make a contribution to a limited
liability company is not excused by the person's death,
disability or other inability to perform personally. If a
person does not make a required contribution, the person or the
person's estate is obligated to contribute money equal to the
value of the part of the contribution which has not been made,
at the option of the company.
17-29-404. Sharing of and right to distributions before
dissolution.
(a) Any distributions made by a limited liability company
before its dissolution and winding up shall be in equal shares
among members and dissociated members, except:
(i) To the extent otherwise provided in a written or
verbal operating agreement as set forth in W.S. 17-29-110;
(ii) To the extent necessary to comply with any
transfer effective under W.S. 17-29-502 and any charging order
in effect under W.S. 17-29-503; or
(iii) To the extent otherwise represented by the
company through an authorized representative in tax filings with
the Internal Revenue Service in which the status elected by the
company is not timely disputed by any member.
(b) A person has a right to a distribution before the
dissolution and winding up of a limited liability company only
if the company decides to make an interim distribution. A
person's dissociation does not entitle the person to a
distribution.
(c) A person does not have a right to demand or receive a
distribution from a limited liability company in any form other
than money. Except as otherwise provided in W.S. 17-29-708(c),
a limited liability company may distribute an asset in kind if
each part of the asset is fungible with each other part and each
person receives a percentage of the asset equal in value to the
person's share of distributions.
(d) If a member or transferee becomes entitled to receive
a distribution, the member or transferee has the status of, and
is entitled to all remedies available to, a creditor of the
limited liability company with respect to the distribution.
17-29-405. Limitations on distribution.
(a) A limited liability company shall not make a
distribution if after the distribution:
(i) The company would not be able to pay its debts as
they become due in the ordinary course of the company's
activities; or
(ii) The company's total assets would be less than
the sum of its total liabilities plus the amount that would be
needed, if the company were to be dissolved, wound up and
terminated at the time of the distribution, to satisfy the
preferential rights upon dissolution, winding up and termination
of members whose preferential rights are superior to those of
persons receiving the distribution.
(b) A limited liability company may base a determination
that a distribution is not prohibited under subsection (a) of
this section on financial statements prepared on the basis of
accounting practices and principles that are reasonable in the
circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is
reasonable under the circumstances.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (f) of this
section, the effect of a distribution under subsection (a) of
this section is measured:
(i) In the case of a distribution by purchase,
redemption or other acquisition of a transferable interest in
the company, as of the date money or other property is
transferred or debt incurred by the company; and
(ii) In all other cases, as of the date:
(A) The distribution is authorized, if the
payment occurs within one hundred twenty (120) days after that
date; or
(B) The payment is made, if the payment occurs
more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the distribution
is authorized.
(d) Except as otherwise expressly agreed in writing, a
limited liability company's indebtedness to a member incurred by
reason of a distribution made in accordance with this section is
at parity with the company's indebtedness to its general,
unsecured creditors.
(e) A limited liability company's indebtedness, including
indebtedness issued in connection with or as part of a
distribution, is not a liability for purposes of subsection (a)
of this section if the terms of the indebtedness provide that
payment of principal and interest are made only to the extent
that a distribution could be made to members under this section.
(f) If indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each
payment of principal or interest on the indebtedness is treated
as a distribution, the effect of which is measured on the date
the payment is made.
(g) In subsection (a) of this section, "distribution" does
not include amounts constituting reasonable compensation for
present or past services or reasonable payments made in the
ordinary course of business under a bona fide retirement plan or
other benefits program.
17-29-406. Liability for improper distributions.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section, if a member of a member-managed limited liability
company or manager of a manager-managed limited liability
company consents to a distribution made in violation of W.S.
17-29-405 and in consenting to the distribution fails to comply
with W.S. 17-29-409, the member or manager is personally liable
to the company for the amount of the distribution that exceeds
the amount that could have been distributed without the
violation of W.S. 17-29-405.
(b) To the extent the operating agreement of a member-
managed limited liability company expressly relieves a member of
the authority and responsibility to consent to distributions and
imposes that authority and responsibility on one (1) or more
other members, the liability stated in subsection (a) of this
section applies to the other members and not the member that the
operating agreement relieves of authority and responsibility.
(c) A person that receives a distribution knowing that the
distribution to that person was made in violation of W.S.
17-29-405 is personally liable to the limited liability company
but only to the extent that the distribution received by the
person exceeded the amount that could have been properly paid
under W.S. 17-29-405.
(d) A person against which an action is commenced because
the person is liable under subsection (a) of this section may:
(i) Implead any other person that is subject to
liability under subsection (a) of this section and seek to
compel contribution from the person; and
(ii) Implead any person that received a distribution
in violation of subsection (c) of this section and seek to
compel contribution from the person in the amount the person
received in violation of subsection (c) of this section.
(e) An action under this section is barred if not
commenced within two (2) years after the distribution.
17-29-407. Management of limited liability company.
(a) A limited liability company is a member-managed
limited liability company unless the articles of organization or
the operating agreement:
(i) Expressly provides that:
(A) The company is or will be "manager-managed";
(B) The company is or will be "managed by
managers"; or
(C) Management of the company is or will be
"vested in managers"; or
(ii) Includes words of similar import.
(b) In a member-managed limited liability company, unless
the articles of organization or the operating agreement provide
otherwise, the following rules apply:
(i) The management and conduct of the company are
vested in the members;
(ii) Each member has equal rights in the management
and conduct of the company's activities except:
(A) When a member's interest is otherwise
defined in W.S. 17-29-102(a)(xxv);
(B) To the extent otherwise provided in any
other provision in this chapter; or
(C) To the extent otherwise represented by the
company through an authorized representative in tax filings with
the Internal Revenue Service in which the status elected by the
company is not timely disputed by any member.
(iii) A difference arising among members as to a
matter in the ordinary course of the activities of the company
may be decided by a majority of the members;
(iv) An act outside the ordinary course of the
activities of the company may be undertaken only with the
consent of all members;
(v) The operating agreement may be amended only with
the consent of all members.
(c) In a manager-managed limited liability company, unless
the articles of organization or the operating agreement provide
otherwise, the following rules apply:
(i) Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
chapter, any matter relating to the activities of the company is
decided exclusively by the managers;
(ii) Each manager has equal rights in the management
and conduct of the activities of the company;
(iii) A difference arising among managers as to a
matter in the ordinary course of the activities of the company
may be decided by a majority of the managers;
(iv) The consent of all members is required to:
(A) Sell, lease, exchange or otherwise dispose
of all, or substantially all, of the company's property, with or
without the good will, outside the ordinary course of the
company's activities;
(B) Approve a merger, conversion, continuance,
transfer or domestication under article 10 of this chapter;
(C) Undertake any other act outside the ordinary
course of the company's activities; and
(D) Amend the operating agreement.
(v) A manager may be chosen at any time by the
consent of a majority of the members and remains a manager until
a successor has been chosen, unless the manager at an earlier
time resigns, is removed or dies, or, in the case of a manager
that is not an individual, terminates. A manager may be removed
at any time by the consent of a majority of the members without
notice or cause;
(vi) A person need not be a member to be a manager,
but the dissociation of a member that is also a manager removes
the person as a manager. If a person that is both a manager and
a member ceases to be a manager, that cessation does not by
itself dissociate the person as a member;
(vii) A person's ceasing to be a manager does not
discharge any debt, obligation or other liability to the limited
liability company or members which the person incurred while a
manager.
(d) An action requiring the consent of members under this
article may be taken without a meeting, and a member may appoint
a proxy or other agent to consent or otherwise act for the
member by signing an appointing record, personally or by the
member's agent.
(e) The dissolution of a limited liability company does
not affect the applicability of this section. However, a person
that wrongfully causes dissolution of the company loses the
right to participate in management as a member and a manager.
(f) This article does not entitle a member to remuneration
for services performed for a member-managed limited liability
company, except for reasonable compensation for services
rendered in winding up the activities of the company.
17-29-408. Indemnification and insurance.
(a) A limited liability company shall reimburse for any
payment made and indemnify for any debt, obligation or other
liability incurred by a member of a member-managed company or
the manager of a manager-managed company in the course of the
member's or manager's activities on behalf of the company, if,
in making the payment or incurring the debt, obligation or other
liability, the member or manager complied with the duties stated
in W.S. 17-29-405 and 17-29-409.
(b) A limited liability company may purchase and maintain
insurance on behalf of a member or manager of the company
against liability asserted against or incurred by the member or
manager in that capacity or arising from that status.
17-29-409. Standards of conduct for members and managers.
(a) A member of a member-managed limited liability company
owes to the company and, subject to W.S. 17-29-901(b), the other
members the fiduciary duties of loyalty and care stated in
subsections (b) and (c).
(b) The duty of loyalty of a member in a member-managed
limited liability company includes the duties:
(i) To account to the company and to hold as trustee
for it any property, profit or benefit derived by the member:
(A) In the conduct or winding up of the
company's activities;
(B) From a use by the member of the company's
property; or
(C) From the appropriation of a limited
liability company opportunity;
(ii) To refrain from dealing with the company in the
conduct or winding up of the company's activities as or on
behalf of a person having an interest adverse to the company;
and
(iii) To refrain from competing with the company in
the conduct of the company's activities before the dissolution
of the company.
(c) Subject to the business judgment rule, the duty of
care of a member of a member-managed limited liability company
in the conduct and winding up of the company's activities is to
act with the care that a person in a like position would
reasonably exercise under similar circumstances and in a manner
the member reasonably believes to be in the best interests or at
least not opposed to the best interests of the company. In
discharging this duty, a member may rely in good faith upon
opinions, reports, statements or other information provided by
another person that the member reasonably believes is a
competent and reliable source for the information.
(d) A member in a member-managed limited liability company
or a manager-managed limited liability company shall discharge
the duties under this chapter or under the operating agreement
and exercise any rights consistently with the contractual
obligation of good faith and fair dealing.
(e) It is a defense to a claim under paragraph (b)(ii) of
this section and any comparable claim in equity or at common law
that the transaction was fair to or at least not opposed to the
limited liability company.
(f) All of the members of a member-managed limited
liability company or a manager-managed limited liability company
may authorize or ratify, after full disclosure of all material
facts, a specific act or transaction that otherwise would
violate the duty of loyalty.
(g) In a manager-managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(i) Subsections (a), (b), (c) and (e) of this section
apply to the manager or managers and not the members;
(ii) The duty stated under paragraph (b)(iii) of this
section continues until winding up is completed;
(iii) Subsection (d) of this section applies to the
members and managers;
(iv) Subsection (f) of this section applies only to
the members;
(v) A member does not have any fiduciary duty to the
company or to any other member solely by reason of being a
member.
17-29-410. Right of members, managers and dissociated
members to information.
(a) In a member-managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(i) On reasonable notice, a member may inspect and
copy during regular business hours, at a reasonable location
specified by the company, any record maintained by the company
regarding the company's activities, financial condition and
other circumstances, to the extent the information is material
to the member's rights and duties under the operating agreement
or this chapter;
(ii) The company shall furnish to each member:
(A) On demand, any information concerning the
company's activities, financial condition and other
circumstances which the company knows and is material to the
proper exercise of the member's rights and duties under the
operating agreement or this chapter, except to the extent the
company can establish that it reasonably believes the member
already knows the information; and
(B) On demand, any other information concerning
the company's activities, financial condition and other
circumstances, except to the extent the demand or information
demanded is unreasonable or otherwise improper under the
circumstances.
(iii) The duty to furnish information under paragraph
(ii) of this subsection also applies to each member to the
extent the member knows any of the information described in
paragraph (ii) of this subsection.
(b) In a manager-managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(i) The informational rights stated in subsection (a)
of this section and the duty stated in paragraph (a)(iii) of
this section apply to the managers and not the members;
(ii) During regular business hours and at a
reasonable location specified by the company, a member may
obtain from the company and inspect and copy full information
regarding the activities, financial condition and other
circumstances of the company as is just and reasonable if:
(A) The member seeks the information for a
purpose material to the member's interest as a member;
(B) The member makes a demand in a record
received by the company, describing with reasonable
particularity the information sought and the purpose for seeking
the information; and
(C) The information sought is directly connected
to the member's purpose.
(iii) Within ten (10) days after receiving a demand
pursuant to subparagraph (ii)(B) of this subsection, the company
shall in a record inform the member that made the demand:
(A) Of the information that the company will
provide in response to the demand and when and where the company
will provide the information; and
(B) If the company declines to provide any
demanded information, the company's reasons for declining.
(iv) Whenever this chapter or an operating agreement
provides for a member to give or withhold consent to a matter,
before the consent is given or withheld, the company shall, upon
demand, provide the member with all information that is known to
the company and is material to the member's decision.
(c) On ten (10) days' demand made in a record received by
a limited liability company, a dissociated member may have
access to information to which the person was entitled while a
member if the information pertains to the period during which
the person was a member, the person seeks the information in
good faith and the person satisfies the requirements imposed on
a member by paragraph (b)(ii) of this section. The company
shall respond to a demand made pursuant to this subsection in
the manner provided in paragraph (b)(iii) of this section.
(d) A limited liability company may charge a person that
makes a demand under this section the reasonable costs of
copying, limited to the costs of labor and material.
(e) A member or dissociated member may exercise rights
under this section through an agent or, in the case of an
individual under legal disability, a legal representative. Any
restriction or condition imposed by the operating agreement or
under subsection (g) of this section applies both to the agent
or legal representative and the member or dissociated member.
(f) The rights under this section do not extend to a
person as transferee.
(g) In addition to any restriction or condition stated in
its operating agreement, a limited liability company, as a
matter within the ordinary course of its activities, may impose
reasonable restrictions and conditions on access to and use of
information to be furnished under this section, including
designating information confidential and imposing nondisclosure
and safeguarding obligations on the recipient. In a dispute
concerning the reasonableness of a restriction under this
subsection, the company has the burden of proving
reasonableness.
ARTICLE 5 - TRANSFERABLE INTERESTS AND RIGHTS OF TRANSFEREES
AND CREDITORS
17-29-501. Nature of transferable interest.
A transferable interest is personal property.
17-29-502. Transfer of transferable interest.
(a) A transfer, in whole or in part, of a transferable
interest:
(i) Is permissible;
(ii) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter,
does not by itself cause a member's dissociation or a
dissolution and winding up of the limited liability company's
activities; and
(iii) Subject to W.S. 17-29-504, does not entitle the
transferee to:
(A) Participate in the management or conduct of
the company's activities; or
(B) Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(c) of this section, have access to records or other information
concerning the company's activities.
(b) A transferee has the right to receive, in accordance
with the transfer, distributions to which the transferor would
otherwise be entitled.
(c) In a dissolution and winding up of a limited liability
company, a transferee is entitled to an account of the company's
transactions only from the date of dissolution.
(d) A transferable interest may be evidenced by a
certificate of the interest issued by the limited liability
company in a record, and, subject to this section, the interest
represented by the certificate may be transferred by a transfer
of the certificate.
(e) A limited liability company need not give effect to a
transferee's rights under this section until the company has
notice of the transfer.
(f) A transfer of a transferable interest in violation of
a restriction on transfer contained in the operating agreement
is ineffective as to a person having notice of the restriction
at the time of transfer.
(g) Except as otherwise provided in W.S.
17-29-602(a)(iv)(B), when a member transfers a transferable
interest, the transferor retains the rights of a member other
than the interest in distributions transferred and retains all
duties and obligations of a member.
(h) When a member transfers a transferable interest to a
person that becomes a member with respect to the transferred
interest, the transferee is liable for the member's obligations
under W.S. 17-29-403 and 17-29-406(c) known to the transferee
when the transferee becomes a member.
17-29-503. Charging order.
(a) On application by a judgment creditor of a member or
transferee, a court may enter a charging order against the
transferable interest of the judgment debtor for the unsatisfied
amount of the judgment. A charging order requires the limited
liability company to pay over to the person to which the
charging order was issued any distribution that would otherwise
be paid to the judgment debtor.
(b) Reserved.
(c) Reserved.
(d) The member or transferee whose transferable interest
is subject to a charging order under subsection (a) of this
section may extinguish the charging order by satisfying the
judgment and filing a certified copy of the satisfaction with
the court that issued the charging order.
(e) A limited liability company or one (1) or more members
whose transferable interests are not subject to the charging
order may pay to the judgment creditor the full amount due under
the judgment and thereby succeed to the rights of the judgment
creditor, including the charging order.
(f) This article does not deprive any member or transferee
of the benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the member's
or transferee's transferable interest.
(g) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which a
person seeking to enforce a judgment against a judgment debtor,
including any judgment debtor who may be the sole member,
dissociated member or transferee, may, in the capacity of the
judgment creditor, satisfy the judgment from the judgment
debtor's transferable interest or from the assets of the limited
liability company. Other remedies, including foreclosure on the
judgment debtor's limited liability interest and a court order
for directions, accounts and inquiries that the judgment debtor
might have made are not available to the judgment creditor
attempting to satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor's
interest in the limited liability company and may not be ordered
by the court.
17-29-504. Power of personal representative of deceased
member.
If a member dies, the deceased member's personal representative
or other legal representative may exercise the rights of a
transferee provided in W.S. 17-29-502(c) and, for the purposes
of settling the estate, the rights of a current member under
W.S. 17-29-410.
ARTICLE 6 - MEMBER'S DISSOCIATION
17-29-601. Member's power to dissociate; wrongful
dissociation.
(a) A person has the power to dissociate as a member at
any time, rightfully or wrongfully, by withdrawing as a member
by express will under W.S. 17-29-602(a)(i).
(b) A person's dissociation from a limited liability
company is wrongful only if the dissociation:
(i) Is in breach of an express provision of the
operating agreement; or
(ii) Occurs before the termination of the company
and:
(A) The person is expelled as a member by
judicial order under W.S. 17-29-602(a)(v); or
(B) The person is dissociated under W.S.
17-29-602(a)(vii)(A) by becoming a debtor in bankruptcy.
(c) A person that wrongfully dissociates as a member is
liable to the limited liability company and, subject to W.S.
17-29-901, to the other members for damages caused by the
dissociation. The liability is in addition to any other debt,
obligation or other liability of the member to the company or
the other members.
17-29-602. Events causing dissociation.
(a) A person is dissociated as a member from a limited
liability company when:
(i) The company has notice of the person's express
will to withdraw as a member, but, if the person specified a
withdrawal date later than the date the company had notice, on
that later date;
(ii) An event stated in the operating agreement as
causing the person's dissociation occurs;
(iii) The person is expelled as a member pursuant to
the operating agreement;
(iv) The person is expelled as a member by the
unanimous consent of the other members if:
(A) It is unlawful to carry on the company's
activities with the person as a member;
(B) There has been a transfer of all of the
person's transferable interest in the company, other than:
(I) A transfer for security purposes; or
(II) A charging order in effect under W.S.
17-29-503.
(C) The person is an entity as defined in W.S.
17-16-140(a)(xiii) and, within ninety (90) days after the
company notifies the person that it will be expelled as a member
because the person has filed articles of dissolution or the
equivalent, its charter has been revoked, or its right to
conduct business has been suspended by the jurisdiction of its
incorporation, the articles of dissolution has not been revoked
or its charter or right to conduct business has not been
reinstated; or
(D) The person is some other entity not
described in subparagraph (C) of this paragraph that has been
dissolved and whose business is being wound up.
(v) On application by the company, the person is
expelled as a member by judicial order because the person:
(A) Has engaged, or is engaging, in wrongful
conduct that has adversely and materially affected, or will
adversely and materially affect, the company's activities;
(B) Has willfully or persistently committed, or
is willfully and persistently committing, a material breach of
the operating agreement or the person's duties or obligations
under W.S. 17-29-409; or
(C) Has engaged in, or is engaging in, conduct
relating to the company's activities which makes it not
reasonably practicable to carry on the activities with the
person as a member.
(vi) In the case of a person who is an individual:
(A) The person dies; or
(B) In a member-managed limited liability
company:
(I) A guardian or general conservator for
the person is appointed; or
(II) There is a judicial order that the
person has otherwise become incapable of performing the person's
duties as a member under this chapter or the operating
agreement.
(vii) In a member-managed limited liability company,
the person:
(A) Becomes a debtor in bankruptcy;
(B) Executes an assignment for the benefit of
creditors; or
(C) Seeks, consents to or acquiesces in the
appointment of a trustee, receiver or liquidator of the person
or of all or substantially all of the person's property.
(viii) In the case of a person that is a trust or is
acting as a member by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, the
trust's entire transferable interest in the company is
distributed;
(ix) In the case of a person that is an estate or is
acting as a member by virtue of being a personal representative
of an estate, the estate's entire transferable interest in the
company is distributed;
(x) In the case of a member that is not an
individual, partnership, limited liability company, corporation,
trust or estate, the termination of the member;
(xi) The company participates in a merger under
article 10 of this chapter, if:
(A) The company is not the surviving entity; or
(B) Otherwise as a result of the merger, the
person ceases to be a member.
(xii) The company participates in a conversion under
article 10 of this chapter;
(xiii) The company participates in a continuance,
transfer or domestication under article 10 of this chapter, if,
as a result of the continuance, transfer or domestication, the
person ceases to be a member; or
(xiv) The company terminates.
17-29-603. Effect of person's dissociation as member.
(a) When a person is dissociated as a member of a limited
liability company:
(i) The person's right to participate as a member in
the management and conduct of the company's activities
terminates;
(ii) If the company is member-managed, the person's
fiduciary duties as a member end with regard to matters arising
and events occurring after the person's dissociation; and
(iii) Subject to W.S. 17-29-504 and article 10 of
this chapter, any transferable interest owned by the person
immediately before dissociation in the person's capacity as a
member is owned by the person solely as a transferee.
(b) A person's dissociation as a member of a limited
liability company does not of itself discharge the person from
any debt, obligation or other liability to the company or the
other members which the person incurred while a member.
ARTICLE 7 - DISSOLUTION AND WINDING UP
17-29-701. Events causing dissolution.
(a) A limited liability company is dissolved, and its
activities must be wound up, upon the occurrence of any of the
following:
(i) An event or circumstance that the operating
agreement or articles of organization states causes dissolution;
(ii) The consent of all the members;
(iii) The passage of ninety (90) consecutive days
during which the company has no members;
(iv) On application by a member, the entry of a court
order dissolving the company on the grounds that:
(A) The conduct of all or substantially all of
the company's activities is unlawful; or
(B) It is not reasonably practicable to carry on
the company's activities in conformity with the articles of
organization and the operating agreement; or
(v) On application by a member or dissociated member,
the entry of a court order dissolving the company on the grounds
that the managers or those members in control of the company:
(A) Have acted, are acting, or will act in a
manner that is illegal or fraudulent; or
(B) Have acted or are acting in a manner that is
oppressive and was, is, or will be directly harmful to the
applicant.
(b) In a proceeding brought under paragraph (a)(v) of this
section, the court may order a remedy other than dissolution.
17-29-702. Winding up.
(a) A dissolved limited liability company shall wind up
its activities and the company continues after dissolution only
for the purpose of winding up.
(b) In winding up its activities, a limited liability
company:
(i) Shall discharge the company's debts, obligations,
or other liabilities, settle and close the company's activities
and marshal and distribute the assets of the company; and
(ii) May:
(A) Deliver to the secretary of state for filing
articles of dissolution stating the name of the company and that
the company is dissolved;
(B) Preserve the company activities and property
as a going concern for a reasonable time;
(C) Prosecute and defend actions and
proceedings, whether civil, criminal or administrative;
(D) Transfer the company's property;
(E) Settle disputes by mediation or arbitration;
(F) Reserved; and
(G) Perform other acts necessary or appropriate
to the winding up.
(c) If a dissolved limited liability company has no
members, the legal representative of the last person to have
been a member may wind up the activities of the company. If the
person does so, the person has the powers of a sole manager
under W.S. 17-29-407(c) and is deemed to be a manager for the
purposes of W.S. 17-29-304(a)(ii).
(d) If the legal representative under subsection (c) of
this section declines or fails to wind up the company's
activities, a person may be appointed to do so by the consent of
transferees owning a majority of the rights to receive
distributions as transferees at the time the consent is to be
effective. A person appointed under this subsection:
(i) Has the powers of a sole manager under W.S.
17-29-407(c) and is deemed to be a manager for the purposes of
W.S. 17-29-304(a)(ii); and
(ii) Shall promptly deliver to the secretary of state
for filing an amendment to the company's articles of
organization to:
(A) State that the company has no members;
(B) State that the person has been appointed
pursuant to this subsection to wind up the company; and
(C) Provide the street and mailing addresses of
the person.
(e) A court may order judicial supervision of the winding
up of a dissolved limited liability company, including the
appointment of a person to wind up the company's activities:
(i) On application of a member, if the applicant
establishes good cause;
(ii) On the application of a transferee, if:
(A) The company does not have any members;
(B) The legal representative of the last person
to have been a member declines or fails to wind up the company's
activities; and
(C) Within a reasonable time following the
dissolution a person has not been appointed pursuant to
subsection (c) of this section; or
(iii) In connection with a proceeding under W.S.
17-29-701(a)(iv) or (v).
17-29-703. Known claims against dissolved limited
liability company.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) of this
section, a dissolved limited liability company may give notice
of a known claim under subsection (b) of this section, which has
the effect as provided in subsection (c) of this section.
(b) A dissolved limited liability company may in a record
notify its known claimants of the dissolution. The notice
shall:
(i) Specify the information required to be included
in a claim;
(ii) Provide a mailing address to which the claim is
to be sent;
(iii) State the deadline for receipt of the claim,
which may not be less than one hundred twenty (120) days after
the date the notice is received by the claimant; and
(iv) State that the claim will be barred if not
received by the deadline.
(c) A claim against a dissolved limited liability company
is barred if the requirements of subsection (b) of this section
are met and:
(i) The claim is not received by the specified
deadline; or
(ii) If the claim is timely received but rejected by
the company:
(A) The company causes the claimant to receive a
notice in a record stating that the claim is rejected and will
be barred unless the claimant commences an action against the
company to enforce the claim within ninety (90) days after the
claimant receives the notice; and
(B) The claimant does not commence the required
action within the ninety (90) days.
(d) This section does not apply to a claim based on an
event occurring after the effective date of dissolution or a
liability that on that date is contingent.
17-29-704. Other claims against dissolved limited
liability company.
(a) A dissolved limited liability company may publish
notice of its dissolution and request persons having claims
against the company to present them in accordance with the
notice.
(b) The notice authorized by subsection (a) of this
section shall:
(i) Be published at least once in a newspaper of
general circulation in the county in this state in which the
dissolved limited liability company's principal office is
located or, if it has none in this state, in the county in which
the company's designated office is or was last located;
(ii) Describe the information required to be
contained in a claim and provide a mailing address to which the
claim is to be sent; and
(iii) State that a claim against the company is
barred unless an action to enforce the claim is commenced within
three (3) years after publication of the notice.
(c) If a dissolved limited liability company publishes a
notice in accordance with subsection (b) of this section, unless
the claimant commences an action to enforce the claim against
the company within three (3) years after the publication date of
the notice, the claim of each of the following claimants is
barred:
(i) A claimant that did not receive notice in a
record under W.S. 17-29-703;
(ii) A claimant whose claim was timely sent to the
company but not acted on; and
(iii) A claimant whose claim is contingent at, or
based on an event occurring after, the effective date of
dissolution.
(d) A claim not barred under this section or W.S.
17-29-703(c) may be enforced:
(i) Against a dissolved limited liability company, to
the extent of its undistributed assets; and
(ii) If assets of the company have been distributed
after dissolution, against a member or transferee to the extent
of that person's proportionate share of the claim or of the
assets distributed to the member or transferee after
dissolution, whichever is less, but a person's total liability
for all claims under this paragraph does not exceed the total
amount of assets distributed to the person after dissolution.
17-29-705. Administrative forfeiture of authority and
articles of organization.
(a) If any limited liability company's registered agent
has filed its resignation with the secretary of state and the
limited liability company has not replaced its registered agent
and registered office, or the limited liability company is
without a registered agent or registered office in this state
for any reason, it shall be deemed to be transacting business
within this state without authority and to have forfeited any
franchises, rights or privileges acquired under the laws thereof
and the forfeiture shall be made effective in the following
manner. The secretary of state shall provide by first class mail
or by electronic means a notice of its failure to comply with
aforesaid provisions. Unless compliance is made within sixty
(60) days of mailing or electronic submission of the notice, the
limited liability company shall be deemed defunct and to have
forfeited its articles of organization acquired under the laws
of this state. Provided, that any defunct limited liability
company may at any time within two (2) years after the
forfeiture of its articles of organization or certificate of
authority, in the manner herein provided, be revived and
reinstated, by filing the necessary statement under this act and
paying a reinstatement fee established by the secretary of state
by rule, together with a penalty of two hundred fifty dollars
($250.00). The reinstatement fee shall not exceed the costs of
providing the reinstatement service. The limited liability
company shall retain its registered name during the two (2) year
reinstatement period under this section.
(b) If any limited liability company has failed to pay the
fee required by W.S. 17-29-210 or any penalties imposed under
W.S. 17-28-109, it shall be deemed to be transacting business
within this state without authority and to have forfeited any
franchises, rights or privileges acquired under the laws
thereof. The forfeiture shall be made effective in the
following manner. The secretary of state shall provide notice
to the limited liability company at its last known mailing
address by first class mail or by electronic means. Unless
compliance is made within sixty (60) days of the date of notice
the limited liability company shall be deemed defunct and to
have forfeited its articles of organization or certificate of
authority acquired under the laws of this state. Provided, that
any defunct limited liability company may at any time within two
(2) years after the forfeiture of its articles of organization
of certificate of authority, be revived and reinstated by paying
the amount of the delinquent fees. When the reinstatement is
effective, it relates back to and takes effect as of the
effective date deemed defunct pursuant to this subsection and
the limited liability company resumes carrying on its business
as if it had never been deemed defunct.
(c) A limited liability company shall be deemed to be
transacting business within this state without authority, to
have forfeited any franchises, rights or privileges acquired
under the laws thereof and shall be deemed defunct and to have
forfeited its articles of organization or certificate of
authority acquired under the laws of this state, and the
forfeiture shall be made effective in the manner provided in
subsection (a) of this section, if:
(i) A member of the limited liability company signed
a document he knew was false in any material respect with intent
that the document be delivered to the secretary of state for
filing;
(ii) The limited liability company has failed to
respond to a valid and enforceable subpoena; or
(iii) It is in the public interest and the limited
liability company or any of its members:
(A) Failed to provide records to the registered
agent as required in this chapter;
(B) Has provided fraudulent information or has
failed to correct false information upon request of the
secretary of state on any filing with the secretary of state
under this chapter; or
(C) Cannot be served by either the registered
agent or by mail or electronically by the secretary of state
acting as the agent for process.
(d) The secretary of state may classify a limited
liability company as delinquent awaiting forfeiture of its
articles of organization or certificate of authority at the time
the secretary of state provides the notice required under
subsections (a) through (c) of this section to the limited
liability company.
(e) In addition to the other provisions of this section,
if any low profit limited liability company has ceased to meet
the definition of a low profit limited liability company as
provided in W.S. 17-29-102(a)(ix) and has failed for thirty (30)
days after ceasing to meet the definition to file an amendment
to its articles of organization with the secretary of state
amending its name to conform with the requirements of W.S.
17-29-108, it shall be deemed to be transacting business in this
state without authority and to have forfeited any franchises,
rights or privileges acquired under the laws thereof and the
forfeiture shall be made effective in the same manner as
provided in subsection (a) of this section. The reinstatement
provisions and fees provided in subsection (a) of this section
shall apply.
17-29-706. Reserved.
17-29-707. Appeal from rejection of reinstatement.
Appeals of decisions of the secretary of state under this
article may be made as provided in W.S. 17-16-1423.
17-29-708. Distribution of assets in winding up limited
liability company's activities.
(a) In winding up its activities, a limited liability
company shall apply its assets to discharge its obligations to
creditors, including members that are creditors.
(b) After a limited liability company complies with
subsection (a) of this section, any surplus shall be distributed
in the following order, subject to any charging order in effect
under W.S. 17-29-503:
(i) To each person owning a transferable interest
that reflects contributions made by a member and not previously
returned, an amount equal to the value of the unreturned
contributions; and
(ii) In equal shares among members and dissociated
members, except:
(A) To the extent otherwise provided in a
written or verbal operating agreement as set forth in W.S.
17-29-110;
(B) To the extent necessary to comply with any
transfer effective under W.S. 17-29-502; or
(C) To the extent otherwise represented by the
company through an authorized representative in tax filings with
the Internal Revenue Service in which the status elected by the
company is not timely disputed by any member.
(c) If a limited liability company does not have
sufficient surplus to comply with paragraph (b)(i) of this
section, any surplus shall be distributed among the owners of
transferable interests in proportion to the value of their
respective unreturned contributions.
(d) Repealed by Laws 2017, ch. 51, § 2.
ARTICLE 8 - RESERVED
ARTICLE 9 - ACTIONS BY MEMBERS
17-29-901. Direct action by member.
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, a member
may maintain a direct action against another member, a manager
or the limited liability company to enforce the member's rights
and otherwise protect the member's interests, including rights
and interests under the operating agreement or this chapter or
arising independently of the membership relationship.
(b) A member maintaining a direct action under this
section shall plead and prove an actual or threatened injury
that is not solely the result of an injury suffered or
threatened to be suffered by the limited liability company.
17-29-902. Derivative action.
(a) A member may maintain a derivative action to enforce a
right of a limited liability company if:
(i) The member first makes a demand on the other
members in a member-managed limited liability company, or the
managers of a manager-managed limited liability company,
requesting that they cause the company to bring an action to
enforce the right, and the managers or other members do not
bring the action within a reasonable time; or
(ii) A demand under paragraph (i) of this subsection
would be futile.
17-29-903. Proper plaintiff.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section, a derivative action under W.S. 17-29-902 may be
maintained only by a person that is a member at the time the
action is commenced and remains a member while the action
continues.
(b) If the sole plaintiff in a derivative action dies
while the action is pending, the court may permit another member
of the limited liability company to be substituted as plaintiff.
17-29-904. Pleading.
(a) In a derivative action under W.S. 17-29-902, the
complaint shall state with particularity:
(i) The date and content of plaintiff's demand and
the response to the demand by the managers or other members; or
(ii) If a demand has not been made, the reasons a
demand under W.S. 17-29-902(a)(i) would be futile.
17-29-905. Special litigation committee.
(a) If a limited liability company is named as or made a
party in a derivative proceeding, the company may appoint a
special litigation committee to investigate the claims asserted
in the proceeding and determine whether pursuing the action is
in the best interests of the company. If the company appoints a
special litigation committee, on motion by the committee made in
the name of the company, except for good cause shown, the court
shall stay discovery for the time reasonably necessary to permit
the committee to make its investigation. This subsection does
not prevent the court from enforcing a person's right to
information under W.S. 17-29-410 or, for good cause shown,
granting extraordinary relief in the form of a temporary
restraining order or preliminary injunction.
(b) A special litigation committee may be composed of one
(1) or more disinterested and independent individuals, who may
be members.
(c) A special litigation committee may be appointed:
(i) In a member-managed limited liability company:
(A) By the consent of a majority of the members
not named as defendants or plaintiffs in the proceeding; and
(B) If all members are named as defendants or
plaintiffs in the proceeding, by a majority of the members named
as defendants; or
(ii) In a manager-managed limited liability company:
(A) By a majority of the managers not named as
defendants or plaintiffs in the proceeding; and
(B) If all managers are named as defendants or
plaintiffs in the proceeding, by a majority of the managers
named as defendants.
(d) After appropriate investigation, a special litigation
committee may determine that it is in the best interests of the
limited liability company that the proceeding:
(i) Continue under the control of the plaintiff;
(ii) Continue under the control of the committee;
(iii) Be settled on terms approved by the committee;
or
(iv) Be dismissed.
(e) After making a determination under subsection (d) of
this section, a special litigation committee shall file with the
court a statement of its determination and its report supporting
its determination, giving notice to the plaintiff. The court
shall determine whether the members of the committee were
disinterested and independent and whether the committee
conducted its investigation and made its recommendation in good
faith, independently and with reasonable care, with the
committee having the burden of proof. If the court finds that
the members of the committee were disinterested and independent
and that the committee acted in good faith, independently and
with reasonable care, the court shall enforce the determination
of the committee. Otherwise, the court shall dissolve the stay
of discovery entered under subsection (a) of this section and
allow the action to proceed under the direction of the
plaintiff.
17-29-906. Proceeds and expenses.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section:
(i) Any proceeds or other benefits of a derivative
action under W.S. 17-29-902, whether by judgment, compromise or
settlement, belong to the limited liability company and not to
the plaintiff; and
(ii) If the plaintiff receives any proceeds, the
plaintiff shall remit them immediately to the company.
(b) If a derivative action under W.S. 17-29-902 is
successful in whole or in part, the court may award the
plaintiff reasonable expenses, including reasonable attorney's
fees and costs, from the recovery of the limited liability
company.
ARTICLE 10 - MERGER, CONVERSION, CONTINUANCE, TRANSFER AND
DOMESTICATION
17-29-1001. Definitions.
(a) As used in this chapter:
(i) "Constituent limited liability company" means a
constituent organization that is a limited liability company;
(ii) "Constituent organization" means an organization
that is party to a merger;
(iii) "Converted organization" means the organization
into which a converting organization converts pursuant to W.S.
17-29-1006;
(iv) "Converting limited liability company" means a
converting organization that is a limited liability company;
(v) "Converting organization" means an organization
that converts into another organization pursuant to W.S.
17-29-1006;
(vi) "Governing statute" means the statute that
governs an organization's internal affairs;
(vii) "Organization" means a general partnership,
including a limited liability partnership, limited partnership,
including a limited liability limited partnership, limited
liability company, business trust, statutory trust, corporation
or any other person having a governing statute. The term
includes a domestic or foreign organization regardless of
whether organized for profit;
(viii) "Organizational documents" means:
(A) For a domestic or foreign general
partnership, its partnership agreement;
(B) For a limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership, its certificate of limited partnership and
partnership agreement;
(C) For a domestic or foreign limited liability
company, its certificate or articles of organization and
operating agreement, or comparable records as provided in its
governing statute;
(D) For a business or statutory trust, its
agreement of trust, declaration of trust or certificate of
trust;
(E) For a domestic or foreign corporation for
profit, its articles of incorporation, bylaws and other
agreements among its shareholders which are authorized by its
governing statute or comparable records as provided in its
governing statute; and
(F) For any other organization, the basic
records that create the organization and determine its internal
governance and the relations among the persons that own it, have
an interest in it or are members of it.
(ix) "Personal liability" means liability for a debt,
obligation or other liability of an organization which is
imposed on a person that co-owns, has an interest in or is a
member of the organization:
(A) By the governing statute solely by reason of
the person co-owning, having an interest in or being a member of
the organization; or
(B) By the organization's organizational
documents under a provision of the governing statute authorizing
those documents to make one (1) or more specified persons liable
for all or specified debts, obligations or other liabilities of
the organization solely by reason of the person or persons co-
owning, having an interest in or being a member of the
organization.
(x) "Surviving organization" means an organization
into which one (1) or more other organizations are merged
whether the organization preexisted the merger or was created by
the merger.
17-29-1002. Merger.
(a) A limited liability company may merge with one (1) or
more other constituent organizations pursuant to this section,
W.S. 17-29-1003 through 17-29-1005 and a plan of merger, if:
(i) The governing statute of each of the other
organizations authorizes the merger;
(ii) The merger is not expressly prohibited by the
law of a jurisdiction that enacted any of the governing
statutes;
(iii) Each of the other organizations complies with
its governing statute in effecting the merger; and
(iv) No member of a domestic limited liability
company that is a party to the merger will, as a result of the
merger, become personally liable for the liabilities or
obligations of any other person or entity unless that member
approves the plan of merger and otherwise consents to becoming
personally liable.
(b) A plan of merger shall be in a record and shall
include:
(i) The name and form of each constituent
organization;
(ii) The name and form of the surviving organization
and, if the surviving organization is to be created by the
merger, a statement to that effect;
(iii) The terms and conditions of the merger,
including the manner and basis for converting the interests in
each constituent organization into any combination of money,
interests in the surviving organization or other consideration;
(iv) If the surviving organization is to be created
by the merger, the surviving organization's organizational
documents that are proposed to be in a record; and
(v) If the surviving organization is not to be
created by the merger, any amendments to be made by the merger
to the surviving organization's organizational documents that
are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
17-29-1003. Action on plan of merger by constituent
limited liability company.
(a) Subject to W.S. 17-29-1014, a plan of merger shall be
consented to by all the members of a constituent limited
liability company.
(b) Subject to W.S. 17-29-1014 and any contractual rights,
after a merger is approved, and at any time before articles of
merger are delivered to the secretary of state for filing under
W.S. 17-29-1004, a constituent limited liability company may
amend the plan or abandon the merger:
(i) As provided in the plan; or
(ii) Except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, with
the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
17-29-1004. Filings required for merger; effective date.
(a) After each constituent organization has approved a
merger, articles of merger shall be signed on behalf of:
(i) Each domestic constituent limited liability
company, as provided in W.S. 17-29-203(a); and
(ii) Each other constituent organization, as provided
in its governing statute.
(b) Articles of merger under this section shall include:
(i) The name and form of each constituent
organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(ii) The name and form of the surviving organization,
the jurisdiction of its governing statute and, if the surviving
organization is created by the merger, a statement to that
effect;
(iii) The date the merger is effective under the
governing statute of the surviving organization;
(iv) If the surviving organization is to be created
by the merger:
(A) If it will be a limited liability company,
the company's articles of organization; or
(B) If it will be an organization other than a
limited liability company, the organizational document that
creates the organization that is in a public record.
(v) If the surviving organization preexists the
merger, any amendments provided for in the plan of merger for
the organizational document that created the organization that
are in a public record;
(vi) A statement as to each constituent organization
that the merger was approved as required by the organization's
governing statute;
(vii) If the surviving organization is a foreign
organization not authorized to transact business in this state,
the street and mailing addresses of an office that the secretary
of state may use for the purposes of W.S. 17-29-1005(b); and
(viii) Any additional information required by the
governing statute of any constituent organization.
(c) Each constituent limited liability company shall
deliver the articles of merger for filing in the office of the
secretary of state.
(d) A merger becomes effective under this chapter:
(i) If the surviving organization is a limited
liability company, upon the later of:
(A) Compliance with subsection (c) of this
section; or
(B) Subject to W.S. 17-29-205(c), as specified
in the articles of merger; or
(ii) If the surviving organization is not a limited
liability company, as provided by the governing statute of the
surviving organization.
(e) If the secretary of state finds that the articles of
merger comply with the requirements of law, that all required
fees have been paid and a certificate has been requested, he
shall issue a certificate of merger.
17-29-1005. Effect of merger.
(a) When a merger becomes effective:
(i) The surviving organization continues or comes
into existence;
(ii) Each constituent organization that merges into
the surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate entity;
(iii) All property owned by each constituent
organization that ceases to exist vests in the surviving
organization;
(iv) All debts, obligations or other liabilities of
each constituent organization that ceases to exist continue as
debts, obligations or other liabilities of the surviving
organization;
(v) An action or proceeding pending by or against any
constituent organization that ceases to exist may be continued
as if the merger had not occurred;
(vi) Except as prohibited by other law, all of the
rights, privileges, immunities, powers and purposes of each
constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in the
surviving organization;
(vii) Except as otherwise provided in the plan of
merger, the terms and conditions of the plan of merger take
effect;
(viii) Except as otherwise agreed, if a constituent
limited liability company ceases to exist, the merger does not
dissolve the limited liability company for the purposes of
article 7 of this chapter;
(ix) If the surviving organization is created by the
merger:
(A) If it is a limited liability company, the
articles of organization becomes effective; or
(B) If it is an organization other than a
limited liability company, the organizational document that
creates the organization becomes effective; and
(x) If the surviving organization preexisted the
merger, any amendments provided for in the articles of merger
for the organizational document that created the organization
become effective.
(b) A surviving organization that is a foreign
organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this
state to enforce any debt, obligation or other liability owed by
a constituent organization. A surviving organization that is a
foreign organization and not authorized to transact business in
this state appoints the secretary of state as its agent for
service of process for the purposes of enforcing a debt,
obligation or other liability under this subsection.
17-29-1006. Conversion.
An organization other than a limited liability company may be
converted to a limited liability company pursuant to chapter 26
of this title and the organization's governing statutes.
17-29-1007. Reserved.
17-29-1008. Reserved.
17-29-1009. Effect of conversion.
(a) The effect of an organization other than a limited
liability company converting to a limited liability company
shall be as provided in chapter 26 of this title and the
organization's governing statutes.
(b) A converted organization that is a foreign
organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this
state to enforce any debt, obligation or other liability for
which the converting limited liability company is liable. A
converted organization that is a foreign organization and not
authorized to transact business in this state appoints the
secretary of state as its agent for service of process for
purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation or other liability
under this subsection.
17-29-1010. Continuance.
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, any
organization organized for any purpose except acting as an
insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi), or acting as a
financial institution under the laws of any foreign jurisdiction
may, if the foreign jurisdiction will acknowledge that the
organization's domicile has terminated in the foreign
jurisdiction, apply to the secretary of state for registration
under this act. The secretary of state may issue a certificate
of registration upon receipt of an application supported by
articles of continuance as provided by this act together with
the statements, information and documents set out in subsection
(c) of this section. The certificate of registration may then
be issued continuing the organization in Wyoming as if it had
been organized as a limited liability company in this state.
The certificate of registration may be subject to any
limitations and conditions as may appear proper to the secretary
of state.
(b) The secretary of state shall cause notice of issuance
of a certificate of registration to be given forthwith to the
proper officer of the foreign jurisdiction in which the
organization was previously organized.
(c) The articles of continuance filed by a foreign
organization with the secretary of state shall contain:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
organization and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
charter;
(ii) The names of the organization and the foreign
jurisdiction in which it has previously been lawfully organized;
(iii) The date of organization;
(iv) The address of its principal mailing address;
(v) The name and address of the proposed registered
agent in this state;
(vi) Reserved;
(vii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(viii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(ix) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(x) Any additional information permitted in articles
of organization under W.S. W.S. 17-29-201.
(d) The application shall be executed by the manager or
managers if any or by any member who is authorized to execute
the application on behalf of the organization.
(e) The provisions of the articles of continuance may,
without expressly so stating, vary from the provisions of the
organization's articles of organization or equivalent basic
charter or other authorization, if the variation is one which a
company organized under the Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act could effect by way of amendment to its articles of
organization. Upon issuance of a certificate of continuance by
the secretary of state, the articles of continuance shall be
deemed to be the articles of organization of the continued
organization. The organization may elect to incorporate by
reference in the articles of continuance its basic charter or
other authorization which has been adopted by it in the foreign
jurisdiction, in order to permit the same to continue to act as
the articles of organization, provided, however, that the basic
charter or other authorization shall be deemed amended to the
extent necessary to make the same conform to the laws of Wyoming
and to the provisions of the articles of continuance.
(f) Except for the purpose of W.S. 16-6-101 through
16-6-118, the existence of any organization heretofore or
hereafter issued a certificate of continuation under this act
shall be deemed to have commenced on the date the organization
commenced its existence in the jurisdiction in which it was
first formed, organized or otherwise came into being. The laws
of Wyoming shall apply to an organization continuing under this
act to the same extent as if it had been organized under the
laws of Wyoming from and after the issuance of a certificate of
continuation under this act by the secretary of state. When a
foreign organization is continued under this act, the
continuance shall not affect the ownership of its property, or
its liability for any existing obligations, causes of action,
claims, pending or threatened prosecution or civil or
administration actions, convictions, rulings, orders or
judgments.
(g) Continuance under this act does not deprive a member
of any right or privilege that he claims under, or relieve any
member of any liability in respect of, his membership.
17-29-1011. Transfer of a Wyoming limited liability
company to another jurisdiction.
(a) A limited liability company created, domesticated or
continued under this chapter may, if authorized by resolution
duly adopted as set forth in subsection (f) of this section, and
by the laws of any other jurisdiction, within or without the
United States, apply to the proper officer of the other
jurisdiction for a certificate of registration, and to the
secretary of state of this state for a certificate of transfer.
The application for certificate of transfer shall set forth the
following:
(i) The name of the limited liability company
immediately prior to the transfer, and if that name is
unavailable for use in the foreign jurisdiction or the limited
liability company desires to change its name in connection with
the transfer, the name by which the limited liability company
will be known in the foreign jurisdiction;
(ii) A statement of the jurisdiction to which the
limited liability company is to be transferred;
(iii) A statement that the limited liability company
shall surrender its articles of organization under this chapter
upon the effectiveness of the transfer;
(iv) A statement that the transfer was duly approved
by the members in the manner required under subsection (f) of
this section; and
(v) Any other terms and conditions of the transfer,
including any desired amendments to the articles of organization
of the limited liability company following its transfer.
(b) The secretary of state shall require that the limited
liability company maintain within the state an agent for service
of process for at least one (1) year after the transfer is
effected and shall impose any conditions he considers
appropriate for the protection of creditors, including the
provision of notice to the public of the application described
in subsection (a) of this section, the provision of a bond or a
deposit of funds in an appropriate depository located in Wyoming
and subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of Wyoming, and if
such conditions are not met, the secretary of state may refuse
to issue a certificate of transfer.
(c) The secretary of state, upon compliance by the
applicant and the secretary with subsections (a) and (b) of this
section and receipt of payment of the special toll charge
prescribed by subsection (e) of this section shall immediately
transmit a notice of issuance of a certificate of transfer to
the proper officer of the jurisdiction to which the limited
liability company is transferred.
(d) Upon issuance of a certificate of transfer, the
limited liability company shall be continued as if it had been
organized under the laws of the other jurisdiction and becomes a
limited liability company under the laws of the other
jurisdiction upon issuance by such jurisdiction of a certificate
of registration.
(e) Every limited liability company organized,
domesticated or continued under the laws of this state in order
to receive a certificate of transfer pursuant to subsection (c)
of this section shall pay to the secretary of state, in addition
to all other statutory taxes and fees, a special toll charge of
sixty dollars ($60.00).
(f) A resolution to transfer the limited liability company
to another jurisdiction shall be adopted by the members.
(g) The limited liability company may represent to the
proper officer of the jurisdiction to which the limited
liability company is transferred that the laws of the state of
Wyoming permit such transfer, and may describe the permission
extended by this section as authorizing the domestication,
continuance or other transfer of domicile as may be required by
the laws of the foreign jurisdiction in order for the limited
liability company to be accepted in that jurisdiction, provided
that the limited liability company may not misrepresent the
requirements or effects of the provisions of this section.
17-29-1012. Domestication of foreign limited liability
companies.
Any limited liability company created under the laws of any of
the several states of the United States for any purpose except
acting as an insurer as defined in W.S. 26-1-102(a)(xvi), or
acting as a financial institution may become a domestic limited
liability company of this state by delivering or causing to be
delivered to the secretary of state articles of domestication.
Upon filing the articles of domestication, the secretary of
state shall issue to the foreign limited liability company a
certificate of domestication which shall continue the company as
if it had been created under this chapter. The articles of
domestication, upon being filed by the secretary of state,
constitute the articles of the domesticated foreign limited
liability company and it shall thereafter have all the powers
and privileges and be subjected to all the duties and
limitations granted and imposed upon domestic limited liability
companies under the provisions of the Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act.
17-29-1013. Application for certificate of domestication;
articles of domestication.
(a) A foreign limited liability company, in order to
procure a certificate of domestication shall file articles of
domestication with the secretary of state, which articles shall
include and set forth:
(i) A certified copy of its original articles of
organization and all amendments thereto or its equivalent basic
charter or other authorization, and a certificate of good
standing not more than thirty (30) days old;
(ii) The name of the company and the jurisdiction
under the laws of which it is created;
(iii) The date of organization and the period of
duration of the company;
(iv) The address of the principal office of the
company and the jurisdiction under the laws of which it is
created;
(v) The address of the proposed registered office of
the company in this state, and the name of its proposed
registered agent in this state at that address;
(vi) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(vii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(viii) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(ix) Repealed By Laws 2014, Ch. 65, § 2.
(x) Any additional information permitted in articles
of organization under W.S. 17-29-201.
17-29-1014. Restrictions on approval of mergers,
conversions, continuances, transfers and domestications.
(a) If a member of a constituent, converting, continuing,
transferring or domesticating limited liability company will
have personal liability with respect to a surviving, converted,
continued, transferred or domesticated organization, approval or
amendment of a plan of merger, conversion, continuance, transfer
or domestication are ineffective without the consent of the
member, unless:
(i) The company's operating agreement provides for
approval of a merger, conversion, continuance, transfer or
domestication with the consent of fewer than all the members;
and
(ii) The member has consented to the provision of the
operating agreement.
(b) A member does not give the consent required by
subsection (a) of this section merely by consenting to a
provision of the operating agreement that permits the operating
agreement to be amended with the consent of fewer than all the
members.
17-29-1015. Article not exclusive.
This article does not preclude an entity from being merged,
converted, continued, transferred or domesticated under law
other than this chapter.
ARTICLE 11 - MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
17-29-1101. Uniformity of application and construction.
In applying and construing this uniform act, consideration shall
be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law with
respect to its subject matter among states that enact it.
17-29-1102. Secretary of state powers.
The secretary of state has the power reasonably necessary to
perform the duties required of him by this chapter. The
secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
17-29-1103. Application to existing domestic limited
liability companies.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
this chapter applies to domestic limited liability companies in
existence on July 1, 2010 that were organized under any general
statute of this state providing for organization of limited
liability companies.
(b) For limited liability companies organized in Wyoming
prior to the effective date of this chapter, the management
provisions contained in former W.S. 17-15-116, the division of
profits provisions contained in former W.S. 17-15-119, the
distribution of assets upon dissolution provisions contained in
former W.S. 17-15-126 and the stated term provisions contained
in former W.S. 17-15-107(a)(ii) are continued for a period of
four (4) years from the effective date of this chapter unless
the limited liability company amends its articles of
organization to provide otherwise.
17-29-1104. Applications to qualified foreign limited
liability companies.
A foreign limited liability company authorized to transact
business in this state on the effective date of this chapter is
subject to this chapter but is not required to obtain a new
certificate of authority to transact business under this
chapter.
17-29-1105. Saving provisions.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
the repeal of a statute by this act does not affect:
(i) The operation of the statute or any action taken
under it before its repeal;
(ii) Any ratification, right, remedy, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under the
statute before its repeal;
(iii) Any violation of the statute, or any penalty,
forfeiture or punishment incurred because of the violation,
before its repeal; or
(iv) Any proceeding or dissolution commenced under
the statute before its repeal, and the proceeding or dissolution
may be completed in accordance with the statute as if it had not
been repealed.
(b) If a penalty or punishment imposed for violation of a
statute repealed by this act is reduced by this act, the penalty
or punishment if not already imposed shall be imposed in
accordance with this act.
CHAPTER 30 - WYOMING STATUTORY FOUNDATION ACT
ARTICLE 1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
17-30-101. Short title.
This chapter may be cited as the "Wyoming Statutory Foundation
Act".
17-30-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Articles of formation" means the articles
required by W.S. 17-30-303, including any amendments thereto and
restatements thereof;
(ii) "Beneficiary" means a person who is or may be
designated as a beneficiary in the operating agreement or in
accordance with the operating agreement of a statutory
foundation. A "beneficiary" may be any one (1) or more of the
following:
(A) A person who has a present or future, vested
or contingent interest in the statutory foundation;
(B) If permitted under the terms in the
operating agreement, a person designated as a beneficiary of the
statutory foundation by the board of directors, at the
discretion of the board of directors;
(C) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(iii) "Certificate of existence" means the
certificate issued to a statutory foundation under W.S. 17-30-
308;
(iv) "Certificate of registration" means the
certificate of registration of a foreign foundation required
under W.S. 17-30-1101;
(v) "Charitable purpose" means the relief of poverty,
the advancement of education or religion, the promotion of a
health, governmental, municipal or other purpose, the
achievement of which is beneficial to the community;
(vi) "Contributor" means any person, excluding a
founder, who contributes property to a statutory foundation;
(vii) "Court" means the district court of the county
where a statutory foundation has its registered office or
another court of competent jurisdiction which is the most
appropriate forum in the circumstances;
(viii) "Financial institution" means a bank, savings
and loan association or state chartered credit union;
(ix) "Foreign foundation" means an entity formed
under the law of a foreign jurisdiction as a statutory
foundation, pursuant to the law of the foreign jurisdiction, or
which appears to the secretary of state to possess
characteristics sufficiently similar to those of a statutory
foundation organized under this act;
(x) "Founder" or "organizer" means one (1) or more
persons that acts under W.S. 17-30-303 to form a statutory
foundation. The organizer acts on behalf of the founder in
forming the statutory foundation and may but not need be one (1)
of the founders;
(xi) "Insolvency law" means title 11, United States
Code or successor federal statutes of general application;
(xii) "Operating agreement" means the written
agreement, whether or not designated as an operating agreement,
of a founder or board of directors of a statutory foundation
concerning the matters described in W.S. 17-30-309, including
any amendments thereto and restatements thereof;
(xiii) "Person" means as defined in W.S. 8-1-
102(a)(vi);
(xiv) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(xv) "Principal office" means the principal executive
office of a statutory foundation or a foreign foundation,
whether or not the office is located in this state;
(xvi) "Protector" means the person designated as a
protector of a statutory foundation under W.S. 17-30-503;
(xvii) "Record" means information that is inscribed
on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other
medium and is retrievable in perceivable form;
(xviii) "Registered agent" means a person appointed
as a registered agent under W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111;
(xix) "Sign" or "signature" shall include any manual,
facsimile, conformed or electronic signature;
(xx) "State" means a state of the United States, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands or any territory or insular possession subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States;
(xxi) "Statutory foundation" means an entity formed
or continued under this act;
(xxii) "This act" means W.S. 17-30-101 through 17-30-
1102.
17-30-103. Governing law.
(a) This act governs:
(i) The internal affairs of a statutory foundation;
and
(ii) The liability of a person as a founder or
contributor of a statutory foundation for the debts, obligations
or other liabilities of a statutory foundation.
(b) The transfer of property by a founder or a contributor
to the statutory foundation, or any disposition made subject to
the terms of the operating agreement of the statutory
foundation, shall not be void, voidable, set aside or defective
in any manner for any reason, including the following:
(i) The law of a foreign jurisdiction prohibits or
does not recognize the concept of a statutory foundation; or
(ii) The statutory foundation, a transfer of property
by a founder or a contributor to a foundation or a disposition
made subject to the terms of the operating agreement of the
statutory foundation avoids or defeats any forced heirship or
legitime right, claim or interest under the law of a foreign
jurisdiction.
17-30-104. Supplemental principles of law.
The principles of law and equity shall supplement this act,
unless in conflict with this act.
17-30-105. Electronic records and signatures.
The provisions of this act governing the legal effect, validity
or enforceability of electronic records or electronic
signatures, and of contracts formed or performed with the use of
such records or signatures, shall be construed to conform to the
requirements of the Electronic Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. § 7002, and supersede, modify and limit
the requirements of the Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act.
17-30-106. Powers of secretary of state.
The secretary of state shall promulgate reasonable rules, forms
and other requirements which are necessary to carry out the
purposes of this act.
ARTICLE 2 - PURPOSE, POWERS AND CAPITAL
17-30-201. Nature, purpose and duration of statutory
foundations.
(a) A statutory foundation shall be an entity distinct
from its founders, contributors, beneficiaries and any other
persons.
(b) Unless stated otherwise in the articles of formation,
a statutory foundation has perpetual duration.
(c) Except for those purposes provided in subsection (e)
of this section, a statutory foundation may be created for any
lawful purpose, whether the statutory foundation is for profit
or for charitable purposes, as defined in W.S. 17-30-102(a)(v).
(i) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(ii) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(d) In addition to those purposes provided in subsection
(c) of this section, a statutory foundation may be organized for
the purpose of holding or investing in other entities or assets,
including those entities or assets that are the property of the
statutory foundation.
(e) A statutory foundation may not be created to act as a
financial institution or an insurer, as defined in W.S. 26-1-
102(a)(xvi).
(f) The purpose of a statutory foundation shall not be
amended or restated unless the articles of formation expressly
provide that the purpose of the statutory foundation "may be
amended," "may be restated" or include words of similar import
or unless an amendment or restatement is required pursuant to a
court order.
17-30-202. Enforcement of charitable purposes.
(a) If the articles of formation or the operating
agreement of a statutory foundation formed for a charitable
purpose do not indicate or otherwise provide for selection of a
particular charitable purpose or beneficiary, or if the
designated charitable purpose cannot be completed or no longer
exists, the court may select one (1) or more charitable purposes
or beneficiaries. The selection shall be consistent with the
intent of the founder to the extent that intent can be
ascertained.
(b) A founder, the board of directors or the protector of
a statutory foundation formed for a charitable purpose may
commence a civil action to enforce the charitable purpose of the
statutory foundation.
17-30-203. Powers of a statutory foundation.
A statutory foundation has the capacity to sue and be sued in
its own name and has the power to take all actions necessary or
convenient to carry on the activities of the foundation.
17-30-204. Property contribution.
(a) The initial property contributed to a statutory
foundation may consist of tangible or intangible property,
whether or not the contribution is made as a gift or otherwise.
(b) After the contribution of initial property to the
statutory foundation, and if permitted by the operating
agreement of the foundation, additional contributions may be
made to the statutory foundation by a founder or any
contributor.
(c) The tangible and intangible property of the statutory
foundation may include:
(i) Initial contributions of property;
(ii) Additional contributions of property;
(iii) Any accumulated income.
ARTICLE 3 - NAME, FORMATION, ARTICLES OF FORMATION, OTHER
FILINGS AND ORGANIZATIONAL DOCUMENTS
17-30-301. Name of a statutory foundation.
(a) The words "statutory foundation", or its abbreviations
"SF" or "S.F.", shall be included in the name of a statutory
foundation formed under this act. A statutory foundation name
shall not:
(i) Contain words indicating or implying that the
foundation is organized for a purpose other than one (1) or more
of the purposes contained in its articles of formation;
(ii) Be the same as, or deceptively similar to in the
determination of the secretary of state, any trademark or
service mark registered in this state. The name shall be
distinguishable by the secretary of state from other business
names as provided in W.S. 17-16-401;
(iii) Contain a word or phrase which indicates or
implies that it is organized under the Wyoming Business
Corporation Act, the Wyoming Statutory Close Corporation
Supplement, the Wyoming Nonprofit Corporation Act, the Wyoming
Limited Liability Company Act or the Wyoming Statutory Trust
Act.
(b) Nothing in this article shall prohibit the use of a
trade name in accordance with applicable law.
17-30-302. Registered office and registered agent.
(a) Each statutory foundation shall continuously maintain
a registered office and registered agent, as provided in W.S.
17-28-101 through 17-28-111, in this state.
(b) The provisions of W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111
shall apply to all statutory foundations.
17-30-303. Formation of statutory foundation; articles of
formation.
(a) One (1) or more persons may act as an organizer to
form a statutory foundation by signing and delivering articles
of formation to the secretary of state. Articles of formation
shall be accompanied by a written consent of appointment signed
by a registered agent.
(b) Articles of formation shall state:
(i) The name of the statutory foundation, which shall
comply with W.S. 17-30-301; and
(ii) The street address of the statutory foundation's
initial registered office and the name of its initial registered
agent at that office.
(c) Articles of formation may state:
(i) The names and addresses of the individuals who
are to serve as the initial directors;
(ii) The name and address of the individual who is to
serve as the initial protector;
(iii) Other provisions not inconsistent with law,
which may include:
(A) The purpose for which the statutory
foundation is organized;
(B) An express statement that the purpose of the
statutory foundation "may be amended", "may be restated" or
words of similar import, pursuant to W.S. 17-30-201(f);
(C) A statement of the duration of the statutory
foundation;
(D) Any provision under this act that is
required or permitted to be stated in the operating agreement.
(d) A statutory foundation is formed when the articles of
formation become effective. The filing of articles of formation
by the secretary of state is conclusive proof that the organizer
has satisfied all conditions required for the formation of a
statutory foundation, except in a civil action commenced by the
state of Wyoming to terminate a statutory foundation. In that
case, a court may require other additional evidence as it
determines appropriate.
(e) The articles of formation may be amended or restated
only if the articles of formation include an express statement
authorizing the amendment or restatement of the articles of
formation.
17-30-304. Signing of records to be delivered for filing
to secretary of state.
(a) A record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing under this act shall be signed as follows:
(i) Except as otherwise provided by this subsection,
a record signed on behalf of a statutory foundation shall be
signed by a person who has appropriate authority granted by the
foundation;
(ii) The initial articles of formation of a statutory
foundation shall be signed by at least one (1) person acting as
founder or organizer;
(iii) A record filed on behalf of a terminated
statutory foundation that has no founders shall be signed by the
person winding up the activities of the foundation under article
9 of this chapter, the organizer or another person appointed by
the board of directors of the foundation;
(iv) Any other record shall be signed by the person
on whose behalf the record is delivered to the secretary of
state or by the person appointed by the board of directors of
the statutory foundation.
(b) Any record filed under this act may be signed by an
agent.
17-30-305. Delivery to and filing of records by secretary
of state; effective time and date.
(a) A record authorized or required to be delivered to the
secretary of state for filing under this act shall be captioned
to describe the purpose of the record and be delivered to the
secretary of state in an authorized medium. The secretary of
state shall file the record upon receipt, unless:
(i) The secretary of state determines that a record
does not comply with the filing requirements of this act;
(ii) The filing fees required by this act or other
provisions of law or past due fees, taxes or penalties have not
been paid.
(b) Upon filing the record, the secretary of state shall
send a copy of the filed record and a receipt for fees to the
person on whose behalf the record was filed.
(c) Upon request and payment of the requisite fee, the
secretary of state shall send to the requester a certified copy
of a requested record.
(d) Except as otherwise provided in this section and W.S.
17-28-103, a record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing under this act shall be effective as of the date of
filing by the secretary of state.
(e) If the secretary of state refuses to file a record
under subsection (a) of this section, the secretary of state
shall return it to the filing party or its representative within
fifteen (15) days after the record was delivered, together with
a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
17-30-306. Correcting filed record.
(a) A statutory foundation or foreign foundation may
deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
correction to correct a record if the record contained
inaccurate information or a defective signature.
(b) A statement of correction shall:
(i) Describe the record to be corrected, including
its filing date, or attach a copy of the record as filed;
(ii) Specify the inaccurate information and the
reason the information is inaccurate or the manner in which the
signature was defective; and
(iii) Correct the inaccurate information or defective
signature.
(c) When filed by the secretary of state, a statement of
correction is effective retroactively as of the effective date
of the record the statement corrects, except that the statement
shall be effective when filed in the context of persons that
previously relied on the uncorrected record and would be
adversely impacted by retroactive effect.
17-30-307. Liability for inaccurate information in filed
record.
(a) If a record delivered to and filed by the secretary of
state under this act contains inaccurate information, a person
that suffers a loss by relying in good faith on the record may
recover damages relating to the loss from the statutory
foundation or foreign foundation if:
(i) The record was delivered for filing on behalf of
the statutory foundation or foreign foundation; and
(ii) The statutory foundation or foreign foundation
had notice of the inaccuracy for a reasonably sufficient time
and was able to correct the record in the period of time before
the record was relied upon.
(b) An individual who signs a record authorized or
required to be filed with the secretary of state under this act
shall affirm, under penalty of perjury, that the information
stated in the record is accurate.
17-30-308. Certificate of existence.
(a) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of
the requisite fee, shall furnish to any person a certificate of
existence for a statutory foundation or a foreign foundation.
(b) A certificate of existence shall state:
(i) The name of the statutory or foreign foundation
used in this state;
(ii) That the statutory foundation was duly formed
under the laws of this state and the date of formation, or that
the foreign foundation is registered in this state;
(iii) Whether all fees, taxes and penalties due under
this act or under other provisions of law have been paid;
(iv) Whether the most recent annual report required
pursuant to W.S. 17-30-703 has been filed by the secretary of
state;
(v) Whether the secretary of state has classified the
statutory foundation or foreign foundation as delinquent;
(vi) Whether articles of termination were delivered
to the secretary of state for filing; and
(vii) Other facts of record maintained by the
secretary of state which are specified by the person requesting
the certificate of existence.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in a certificate
of existence, a certificate of existence issued by the secretary
of state shall be conclusive evidence that the statutory
foundation or foreign foundation is in existence.
17-30-309. Operating agreement; scope, function and
limitations.
(a) The founders or board of directors of a statutory
foundation shall adopt an operating agreement for the foundation
as soon as possible after filing articles of formation with the
secretary of state.
(b) An operating agreement may contain any provision for
managing the business and regulating the affairs of the
statutory foundation that is not inconsistent with this act,
other provisions of law or the articles of formation of the
foundation.
ARTICLE 4 - FOUNDERS
17-30-401. Reservation to founder of power to amend,
revoke, restate or terminate.
(a) Subject to subsections (b) and (c) of this section, a
founder may reserve the following powers to himself, or a
specific number of founders if applicable:
(i) Pursuant to W.S. 17-30-201, the power to amend or
restate the articles of formation of a statutory foundation;
(ii) Pursuant to W.S. 17-30-201, the power to amend
the purposes of the statutory foundation;
(iii) The power to amend, revoke or restate the terms
of the operating agreement of the statutory foundation;
(iv) The power to terminate the statutory foundation.
(b) A founder must expressly reserve those powers
specified in paragraphs (a)(i) and (ii) of this section in the
articles of formation of the statutory foundation. The founder
may expressly reserve those powers specified by paragraphs
(a)(iii) and (iv) of this section in the articles of formation.
(c) Unless the articles of formation or operating
agreement of a statutory foundation provide otherwise, any
powers reserved to a founder in subsection (a) of this section
shall lapse on the death, dissolution or termination of the
founder.
(d) A founder shall expressly reserve those powers
specified in paragraphs (a)(iii) and (iv) of this section in the
operating agreement of the statutory foundation.
17-30-402. Protection from founder's successors.
(a) The heirs, spouse or creditors of a founder shall not:
(i) Amend or restate the articles of formation of a
statutory foundation;
(ii) Amend the purpose of a statutory foundation, if
any;
(iii) Terminate the statutory foundation.
ARTICLE 5 - DIRECTORS AND PROTECTORS
17-30-501. Board of directors.
(a) A statutory foundation shall maintain a board of
directors.
(b) Unless the articles of formation or operating
agreement of a statutory foundation provide otherwise:
(i) The board of directors of the foundation shall
have the authority to exercise all powers of the foundation and
to manage foundation affairs;
(ii) The board of directors shall consist of one (1)
or more persons;
(iii) One (1) or more founders may be appointed as a
director; and
(iv) No director shall simultaneously serve as a
director and a protector for the same statutory foundation.
(c) A board of directors shall conduct the affairs of the
statutory foundation in accordance with the articles of
formation and operating agreement of the statutory foundation,
as well as this act and any other applicable provision of law.
(d) Each director shall act:
(i) In good faith; and
(ii) In a manner not opposed to the best interests of
the statutory foundation.
(e) An act of a director shall be retroactively valid
despite any defect that may be found in:
(i) The appointment of the director; or
(ii) The qualifications of the director.
17-30-502. Liability of directors.
A director is not personally liable for the acts, omissions,
obligations, debts or other liabilities of a statutory
foundation, whether arising in contract, tort or otherwise.
17-30-503. Protector.
(a) If a statutory foundation has a charitable purpose,
the foundation shall maintain a protector in relation to that
purpose.
(b) If a statutory foundation has any purpose permitted
under this act other than a charitable purpose, then the
foundation may have a protector in relation to that purpose.
(c) Except as otherwise provided by law and by W.S. 17-30-
501, a founder or other person may be appointed as the protector
of a statutory foundation.
(d) The operating agreement of a statutory foundation may
authorize a protector to approve or disapprove any specified
action of the board of directors of the statutory foundation.
17-30-504. Protector as a fiduciary.
A protector shall serve as a fiduciary to the extent of
authority and duties granted under the terms of the operating
agreement.
17-30-505. Liability of protector.
(a) A protector shall not be personally liable for the
acts, omissions, debts, obligations or other liabilities of a
statutory foundation, whether arising in contract, tort or
otherwise.
(i) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(ii) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(c) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
17-30-506. Conflict of interest transactions.
(a) A sale, encumbrance or other transaction involving the
investment or management of the property of the statutory
foundation which is entered into by a director or protector for
the personal account of the director or protector or which is
otherwise affected by a conflict between the fiduciary or
personal interests of the director or protector is voidable by a
beneficiary affected by the transaction unless:
(i) The transaction was authorized by the terms of
the operating agreement;
(ii) The transaction was approved by a court;
(iii) The beneficiary did not commence a judicial
proceeding within the time specified by W.S. 4-10-1005;
(iv) The beneficiary consented to the transaction,
ratified the transaction or released the director or protector
pursuant to W.S. 4-10-1009; or
(v) The transaction involves a contract entered into,
or claim acquired by the director or protector, before the
person became or contemplated becoming a director or protector.
ARTICLE 6 - BENEFICIARIES
17-30-601. Beneficiaries.
(a) The articles of formation or operating agreement of a
statutory foundation may provide for the distribution of
property of the foundation to one (1) or more beneficiaries.
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this section, a
beneficiary of a statutory foundation shall not have the right
to, or interest in, property of the statutory foundation unless
such right or interest arises by express terms stated in the
operating agreement of the statutory foundation.
17-30-602. Interests; units and shares.
(a) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(b) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(c) No creditor of a beneficiary shall have any right to
obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or equitable
remedies with respect to, the property of the statutory
foundation.
(d) Repealed by Laws 2021, ch. 98, § 2.
(e) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
operating agreement, the transferee of the beneficial interest
of a beneficiary in the statutory foundation shall have all the
rights and duties of a beneficiary of the statutory foundation,
except those provided in subsection (f) of this section.
(f) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
operating agreement, if a beneficiary of a statutory foundation
becomes entitled to receive a distribution, the beneficiary has
the status of, and is entitled to all remedies available to, a
creditor of the statutory foundation with respect to the
distribution. The operating agreement may provide for the
establishment of record dates with respect to distributions by a
statutory foundation.
(g) The operating agreement may authorize the statutory
foundation to issue units or shares having the same or separate
rights, powers or duties with respect to specified property,
payments or other interests of the statutory foundation. The
operating agreement may provide the terms or conditions of units
or shares issued by the statutory foundation.
(h) A person may receive units or shares issued pursuant
to subsection (g) of this section without:
(i) Being or becoming a beneficiary or contributor of
the statutory foundation;
(ii) Acquiring any rights or duties of a beneficiary
of the statutory foundation; or
(iii) Making or being obligated to make a
contribution to the statutory foundation.
(j) No creditor of a holder of units or shares issued by a
statutory foundation shall have any right to obtain possession
of, or otherwise exercise legal or equitable remedies with
respect to, the property of the statutory foundation.
17-30-603. Limitation of transferability of rights.
Subject to the operating agreement of the statutory foundation,
a beneficial interest in a foundation is transferable.
ARTICLE 7 - RECORDS AND REPORTS
17-30-701. Right to information.
(a) Unless the operating agreement of a statutory
foundation provides otherwise, upon written request by a
beneficiary, the foundation shall provide, within a reasonable
time, a copy of the operating agreement of the foundation to the
beneficiary. Information regarding beneficiaries other than the
beneficiary making a request under this section may be redacted.
(b) Upon written request by a protector, a statutory
foundation shall provide all information requested by the
protector within a reasonable time. After the death of the last
founder of a statutory foundation and if there is no protector,
the foundation shall provide all information requested by a
beneficiary within a reasonable time, upon written request by a
beneficiary.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in this section, no
beneficiary shall have the right to receive information related
to the administration, operation or affairs of a statutory
foundation.
17-30-702. Recordkeeping and identification of statutory
foundation property.
(a) The board of directors of a statutory foundation shall
keep and maintain adequate records regarding the administration
of the foundation.
(b) The board of directors of a statutory foundation may
invest property of two (2) or more statutory foundations as a
whole as long as the board maintains clear records indicating
the respective interests of each foundation.
17-30-703. Annual report for secretary of state.
(a) Every statutory foundation formed under the laws of
this state and every foreign foundation that obtains a
certificate of registration shall file an annual report, under
penalty of perjury, with the secretary of state on or before the
first day of the month of formation. The annual report shall
contain the address of the principal office of the statutory
foundation or the foreign foundation.
(b) If an annual report does not contain the information
required by this section, the secretary of state shall promptly
notify the reporting statutory foundation or foreign foundation
in writing and return the annual report for correction.
(c) Every statutory foundation formed under the laws of
this state and every foreign foundation registered in this state
shall preserve annual reports at its principal office for three
(3) years after submission to the secretary of state.
17-30-704. Fees; annual fee.
(a) The secretary of state shall collect the following
fees from statutory foundations and foreign statutory
foundations:
(i) Filing the original articles of formation or
issuing a certificate of authority for a foreign statutory
foundation, a fee of two hundred fifty dollars ($250.00);
(ii) Filing amended articles of formation, a fee of
one hundred dollars ($100.00);
(iii) Filing the annual report required under W.S.
17-30-703, due and payable on or before the date of the annual
filing, a fee of one hundred dollars ($100.00);
(iv) A fee for other services provided by the
secretary of state which is not established by this section,
including other filings, service of process and copying,
provided the fee shall not exceed the actual cost of the
service.
ARTICLE 8 - RIGHTS AND LIMITATIONS OF CREDITORS
17-30-801. Creditor claim against founder.
The property of a statutory foundation contributed by a founder
or a contributor, and all income, appreciation and proceeds
thereof, shall not be subject to the claims of a founder's or a
contributor's creditor, including any claims for forced heirship
or legitime right.
ARTICLE 9 - TERMINATION
17-30-901. Termination.
(a) A statutory foundation may be terminated, and its
activities wound up, upon the occurrence of any of the
following:
(i) An event or circumstance provided in the
operating agreement or articles of formation of the foundation
that results in or authorizes termination;
(ii) Upon consent of all adult beneficiaries, the
founder and the protector, if any, agree to terminate the
statutory foundation, provided that this consent is only valid
to the extent that termination is not inconsistent with a
material purpose of the statutory foundation;
(iii) Upon a finding of a court that the purpose of
the statutory foundation can no longer be achieved.
17-30-902. Cancellation of articles of formation.
(a) The articles of formation of the statutory foundation
shall be cancelled upon the completion of termination and
winding up of the foundation. A certificate of cancellation
shall be filed with the secretary of state and shall set forth:
(i) The name of the statutory foundation;
(ii) The date of filing of its articles of formation;
and
(iii) Any other information the board of directors
determines is necessary or advisable for inclusion.
(b) The certificate of cancellation shall be effective as
of the filing date.
17-30-903. Claims against terminated statutory foundation.
(a) A terminated statutory foundation may publish notice
of termination and, in the notice, request persons with claims
against the foundation to present them in accordance with the
notice.
(b) The notice authorized by subsection (a) of this
section shall:
(i) Be published at least once in a newspaper of
general circulation in the county of this state in which the
principal office of the terminated statutory foundation was
located or, if the foundation does not have a principal office
in this state, in the county in which the designated office of
the foundation is or was last located;
(ii) Describe the information required to be
contained in a claim and provide a mailing address to which a
claim may be sent; and
(iii) State that a claim against the foundation is
barred one hundred twenty (120) days after the date of first
publication of the notice.
(c) A creditor may file a claim against the assets of a
terminated statutory foundation within the earlier of:
(i) One hundred twenty (120) days after the
termination of the statutory foundation;
(ii) If the terminated statutory foundation publishes
a notice under subsection (a) of this section, one hundred
twenty (120) days after the first publication of a notice
complying with subsection (b) of this section; or
(iii) One hundred twenty (120) days after a known
creditor has been mailed notice, by certified mail return
receipt requested. As part of notice under this paragraph,
notice shall inform a known creditor:
(A) Of the information required to be included
in a claim;
(B) Of the name of the terminated statutory
foundation and the mailing address to which a claim may be sent;
and
(C) Of the deadline for the known creditor to
make a claim, one hundred twenty (120) days after a notice is
mailed by certified mail return receipt requested.
(d) A creditor failing to file a claim within the times
set forth in this section is prohibited from making a claim
against the assets of a terminated statutory foundation.
17-30-904. Administrative forfeiture of authority and
articles of formation.
(a) If the registered agent of the statutory foundation
has filed its resignation with the secretary of state and the
foundation has not replaced its registered agent, or the
statutory foundation is without a registered agent or registered
office in this state for any reason, the foundation shall be
deemed to be operating in this state without authority and to
have forfeited any rights or privileges acquired under the laws
of this state.
(b) A forfeiture under subsection (a) of this section
shall be made effective as follows:
(i) The secretary of state shall mail by first class
mail or submit by electronic means a notice of the failure of
the statutory foundation to comply with subsection (a) of this
section; and
(ii) Unless compliance is made within sixty (60) days
of mailing or electronic submission, the statutory foundation
shall be deemed defunct and to have forfeited its articles of
formation filed in this state.
(c) A statutory foundation, at any time within two (2)
years after a forfeiture under subsection (a) or (b) of this
section, may be revived and reinstated by filing the necessary
statement under this act and paying a reinstatement fee
established by the secretary of state by rule, together with a
penalty of two hundred fifty dollars ($250.00). A reinstatement
fee under this subsection shall not exceed the costs of
providing the reinstatement service. The foundation shall retain
its registered name during the two (2) year reinstatement period
under this section.
(d) If a statutory foundation has failed to pay any fee
required by the secretary of state under W.S. 17-30-704 or any
penalties imposed under W.S. 17-28-109, the statutory foundation
shall be deemed to be operating within this state without
authority and to have forfeited any rights or privileges
acquired under the laws of this state.
(e) A forfeiture under subsection (d) of this section
shall be made effective as follows:
(i) The secretary of state shall provide notice to
the statutory foundation at its last known mailing address by
first class mail or submit by electronic means a notice of the
failure of the statutory foundation to comply; and
(ii) Unless compliance is made within sixty (60) days
of the date of mailing or electronic submission of the notice,
the statutory foundation shall be deemed defunct and to have
forfeited its articles of formation filed in this state.
(f) A statutory foundation, at any time within two (2)
years after a forfeiture under subsection (d) of this section,
may be revived and reinstated by paying the delinquent fees.
(g) Upon reinstatement of a statutory foundation under
this section, the reinstatement shall relate back to and take
effect as of the date the forfeiture was made effective under
this section and the statutory foundation may resume carrying on
operations as if the forfeiture was never effective.
(h) A statutory foundation shall be deemed to be operating
within this state without authority, to have forfeited any
rights or privileges acquired under the laws of this state and
shall be deemed to have forfeited its articles of formation
filed in this state if:
(i) An organizer, founder or any other person
authorized to act on behalf of the foundation signed a document
he knew was false in any material respect with intent that the
document be delivered to the secretary of state for filing;
(ii) The statutory foundation has failed to respond
to a valid subpoena; or
(iii) The public interest is served by forfeiture and
the statutory foundation, its founder or any other person
authorized to act on behalf of the statutory foundation:
(A) Failed to provide records to the registered
agent as required by this act;
(B) Provided fraudulent information or failed to
correct false information upon request of the secretary of state
on any filing under this act;
(C) Cannot be served by either the registered
agent or by the secretary of state acting as the agent for
process.
(j) The secretary of state may classify a statutory
foundation as delinquent and as awaiting forfeiture of its
articles of formation at the time the secretary of state mails
or electronically submits any notice required under this section
to the foundation.
17-30-905. Appeal from rejection of reinstatement.
Appeals from decisions of the secretary of state made under this
act shall occur as provided in W.S. 17-16-1423.
17-30-906. Distribution upon termination.
Upon the occurrence of an event terminating a statutory
foundation, including forfeiture under this section, the board
of directors shall proceed expeditiously to distribute the
property of the foundation as provided in the articles of
formation or the operating agreement of the foundation.
ARTICLE 10 - JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS
17-30-1001. Role of court in administration.
(a) The court may intervene in the administration of a
statutory foundation only to the extent its jurisdiction is
invoked as provided in this act or as otherwise provided by law.
(b) A statutory foundation is not subject to continuing
judicial supervision unless ordered by a court.
(c) A civil proceeding to approve or disapprove a proposed
decision or transaction of a statutory foundation may be
commenced by the board of directors of the foundation.
17-30-1002. Power of court to give directions.
(a) Upon application to the court by a founder, protector
or statutory foundation, the court may issue a declaratory
judgment regarding the following:
(i) The meaning and effect of a provision in the
articles of formation or operating agreement of the foundation;
(ii) The administration of the property or purpose of
the foundation;
(iii) The function of the board of directors of the
foundation;
(iv) Such other matters as determined by the court to
be relevant to the statutory foundation and its purpose.
(b) If there is no express power to amend the purpose of a
statutory foundation in the articles of formation, then a
founder or the protector may apply to a court for an order to
amend the purpose stated in the articles of formation in
accordance with the probable intent of the founder and subject
to the following:
(i) The purpose stated in the articles of formation
has been fulfilled;
(ii) The purpose stated in the articles of formation
cannot be carried out in accordance with the intent of the
founder;
(iii) The purpose stated in the articles of formation
provides a use for only part of the property of the foundation;
(iv) The purpose stated in the articles of formation
cannot be completed or no longer exists.
17-30-1003. Sealing and availability of documents.
Except for information that is otherwise publicly available, the
privacy of persons who have organized a statutory foundation
shall be protected in any judicial proceeding. A filed document
or court order issued concerning a statutory foundation shall be
sealed and shall not be made a part of the public record of the
proceeding except as otherwise required by law. A filed document
or court order issued shall be available to the court, a
founder, the board of directors, a protector, the attorney of
any of the persons specified in this section and any other
interested person as the court may order upon a showing of need.
ARTICLE 11 - CONTINUANCE AND TRANSFER
17-30-1101. Continuance.
(a) Consistent with subsection (d) of this section, a
foreign foundation organized under the laws of a foreign
jurisdiction may apply to the secretary of state for
registration under this act, upon acknowledgement by the foreign
jurisdiction that the domicile of the foreign foundation in that
jurisdiction has terminated.
(b) The secretary of state may issue a certificate of
registration upon receipt of an application supported by
articles of continuance specified by subsection (e) of this
section together with the other statements, information and
documents required by this section.
(c) Upon issuance of a certificate of registration by the
secretary of state, the foreign foundation shall continue to
operate under the laws of this state as if the foreign
foundation had been organized as a statutory foundation in this
state. The secretary of state may impose limitations or
conditions on a certificate of registration as appropriate.
(d) The secretary of state shall cause notice of issuance
of a certificate of registration to be given to the proper
officer of the foreign jurisdiction in which the foreign
foundation was previously organized.
(e) Articles of continuance filed with the secretary of
state by a foreign foundation under this section shall contain:
(i) A certified copy of the original articles of
formation of the foundation, including any amendments thereto,
or its equivalent basic charter or other authorization;
(ii) The name of the foreign foundation and the
foreign jurisdiction in which the foundation was lawfully
organized;
(iii) The date of organization of the foreign
foundation in the foreign jurisdiction;
(iv) The principal mailing address of the foreign
foundation;
(v) The name and address of the proposed registered
agent in this state;
(vi) Any additional information specified for
articles of formation under W.S. 17-30-303.
(f) An application for articles of continuance shall be
executed by any member of the board of directors of the foreign
foundation or any officer authorized to execute the application
on behalf of the foundation.
(g) The provisions of the articles of continuance may vary
from the provisions of the articles of formation of the foreign
foundation, the equivalent basic charter or other authorization
in the foreign jurisdiction only if those variations could be
lawfully effectuated by amending articles of formation as
otherwise provided under this act.
(h) Upon issuance of a certificate of registration by the
secretary of state, the articles of continuance shall be deemed
to be the articles of formation of the foreign foundation. The
foreign foundation may elect to incorporate by reference in its
articles of continuance the basic charter or other authorization
adopted in the foreign jurisdiction in which the foreign
foundation was formed, for the purpose of continuing to act
under the charter or other authorization, provided that the
basic charter or other authorization shall be deemed amended to
the extent necessary to make the charter or authorization
conform to this act and other provisions of law.
(j) The existence of a foreign foundation that is issued a
certificate of continuation under this act shall be deemed to
have commenced on the date the foreign foundation commenced its
existence in the foreign jurisdiction in which it was first
formed, organized or otherwise came into being. The laws of
this state shall apply to a foreign foundation continuing under
this act to the same extent as if it had been organized under
the laws of this state from and after the issuance of a
certificate of continuation under this act by the secretary of
state. If a foreign foundation is continued under this act, the
continuance shall not affect the ownership of its property or
its liability for any existing obligations, causes of action,
claims, pending or threatened prosecutions or civil or
administrative actions, or other convictions, rulings, orders or
judgments.
17-30-1102. Transfer of a statutory foundation to another
jurisdiction.
(a) A statutory foundation formed or continued under this
act may, if authorized under subsection (f) of this section and
by the laws of the foreign jurisdiction, apply to the proper
officer of the foreign jurisdiction for a certificate of
registration and to the secretary of state of this state for a
certificate of transfer. The application for a certificate of
transfer shall set forth the following:
(i) The name of the statutory foundation immediately
before the transfer, and if that name is unavailable for use in
the foreign jurisdiction or, if the foundation desires to change
its name in connection with the transfer, the name by which the
foundation will be known in the foreign jurisdiction;
(ii) The name of the foreign jurisdiction to which
the foundation is to be transferred;
(iii) Acknowledgement that the foundation shall
surrender its articles of formation under this act upon transfer
to the foreign jurisdiction; and
(iv) A statement that the transfer was duly approved
by the board of directors in the manner required by subsection
(f) of this section.
(b) The secretary of state shall require that a statutory
foundation transferred under this section maintain an agent for
service of process within this state for at least one (1) year
after the transfer is complete and may impose any conditions the
secretary of state considers appropriate for the protection of
creditors, including the provision of notice to the public of
the application described in subsection (a) of this section, the
provision of a bond or a deposit of funds in an appropriate bank
located in Wyoming and subject to the jurisdiction of the courts
of Wyoming. If any conditions imposed under this subsection are
not met, the secretary of state may refuse to issue a
certificate of transfer.
(c) The secretary of state shall, upon compliance by the
applicant with subsections (a) and (b) of this section and
receipt of payment under subsection (e) of this section,
immediately transmit a notice of issuance of a certificate of
transfer to the proper officer of the foreign jurisdiction to
which the statutory foundation is transferred.
(d) For the purposes of the laws of this state, upon
issuance of a certificate of transfer, the statutory foundation
shall be continued as if it had been organized under the laws of
the foreign jurisdiction and shall become a statutory foundation
under the laws of the foreign jurisdiction, upon issuance by
such foreign jurisdiction of a certificate of registration.
(e) In addition to all other fees and impositions, a
statutory foundation organized or continued under the laws of
this state shall pay to the secretary of state a special fee
established by rule before receiving a certificate of transfer
pursuant to subsection (c) of this section.
(f) A resolution to transfer the statutory foundation to a
foreign jurisdiction shall be adopted by the board of directors
unless the operating agreement of the foundation provides
otherwise.
(g) The statutory foundation may represent to the proper
officer of the foreign jurisdiction to which the statutory
foundation is transferred that the laws of this state permit
such transfer, and may describe the authorization extended by
this section as permitting the continuance or other transfer of
domicile as may be required by the laws of the foreign
jurisdiction, in order for the statutory foundation to be
accepted in that foreign jurisdiction, provided that the
statutory foundation may not misrepresent the requirements or
effects of this section.
CHAPTER 31 - DECENTRALIZED AUTONOMOUS ORGANIZATION SUPPLEMENT
ARTICLE 1 - PROVISIONS
17-31-101. Short title.
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Decentralized Autonomous Organization Supplement."
17-31-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this chapter:
(i) "Blockchain" means as defined in W.S. 34-29-
106(g)(i);
(ii) "Decentralized autonomous organization" means a
limited liability company organized under this chapter;
(iii) "Digital asset" means as defined in W.S. 34-29-
101(a)(i);
(iv) Repealed by Laws 2022, ch. 36, § 2.
(v) "Majority of the members" means more than fifty
percent (50%) of the membership interests eligible to
participate in a vote or any membership interests required
pursuant to the decentralized autonomous organization's articles
of organization or operating agreement. A person dissociated as
a member as set forth in W.S. 17-29-602 shall not be included
for the purposes of calculating the majority of the members;
(vi) "Membership interest" means a member's ownership
right in a decentralized autonomous organization, which may be
determined by the organization's articles of organization or
operating agreement or ascertainable from a blockchain on which
the organization relies to determine a member's ownership right.
A membership interest may also be characterized as either a
digital security or a digital consumer asset as defined in W.S.
34-29-101, if designated as such in the organization's articles
of organization or operating agreement;
(vii) "Open blockchain" means a blockchain as defined
in W.S. 34-29-106(g)(i) that is publicly accessible and its
ledger of transactions is transparent;
(viii) Repealed by Laws 2022, ch. 36, § 2.
(ix) "Smart contract" means an automated transaction,
as defined in W.S. 40-21-102(a)(ii), or any substantially
similar analogue, or code, script or programming language
relying on a blockchain which may include taking custody of and
transferring an asset, administrating membership interest votes
with respect to a decentralized autonomous organization or
issuing executable instructions for these actions, based on the
occurrence or nonoccurrence of specified conditions.
(x) "Publicly available identifier" means an address
that is available publicly and that identifies a smart contract
and may include a uniform resource locator, contract address or
other similar reference.
17-31-103. Application of Wyoming Limited Liability
Company Act.
(a) The Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act applies to
decentralized autonomous organizations to the extent not
inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter, and the powers
provided to the secretary of state by W.S. 17-29-1102 shall
apply to this chapter.
(b) This chapter does not repeal or modify any statute or
rule of law that applies to a limited liability company that is
organized under the Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act that
does not elect to become a decentralized autonomous
organization.
17-31-104. Definition and election of decentralized
autonomous organization status.
(a) A decentralized autonomous organization is a limited
liability company whose articles of organization contain a
statement that the company is a decentralized autonomous
organization as described in subsection (c) of this section.
(b) A limited liability company formed under the Wyoming
Limited Liability Company Act, W.S. 17-29-101 through 17-29-
1102, may convert to a decentralized autonomous organization by
amending its articles of organization to include the statement
required by subsections (a) and (c) of this section and W.S. 17-
31-106.
(c) A statement in substantially the following form shall
appear conspicuously in the articles of organization or
operating agreement, if applicable, in a decentralized
autonomous organization:
NOTICE OF RESTRICTIONS ON DUTIES AND TRANSFERS
The rights of members in a decentralized autonomous organization
may differ materially from the rights of members in other
limited liability companies. The Wyoming Decentralized
Autonomous Organization Supplement, underlying smart contracts,
articles of organization and operating agreement, if applicable,
of a decentralized autonomous organization may define, reduce or
eliminate fiduciary duties and may restrict transfer of
ownership interests, withdrawal or resignation from the
decentralized autonomous organization, return of capital
contributions and dissolution of the decentralized autonomous
organization.
(d) The registered name for a decentralized autonomous
organization shall include wording or abbreviation to denote its
status as a decentralized autonomous organization, specifically
"DAO", "LAO", or "DAO LLC."
(e) A statement in the articles of organization shall
establish how the decentralized autonomous organization shall be
managed by the members, including to what extent the management
will be conducted algorithmically.
17-31-105. Formation.
(a) Any person may form a decentralized autonomous
organization which shall have one (1) or more members by signing
and delivering one (1) original and one (1) exact or conformed
copy of the articles of organization to the secretary of state
for filing. The person forming the decentralized autonomous
organization need not be a member of the organization.
(b) Each decentralized autonomous organization shall have
and continuously maintain in this state a registered agent as
provided in W.S. 17-28-101 through 17-28-111.
(c) A decentralized autonomous organization may form and
operate for any lawful purpose, regardless of whether for
profit.
(d) Repealed by Laws 2022, ch. 36, § 2.
(e) If the articles of organization filed pursuant to
subsection (a) of this section does not include a publicly
available identifier as required by W.S. 17-31-106(b), the
person filing shall have thirty (30) days to provide the
publicly available identifier to the secretary of state. If the
publicly available identifier is not provided within thirty (30)
days, the secretary of state shall dissolve the decentralized
autonomous organization.
17-31-106. Articles of organization.
(a) The articles of organization of a decentralized
autonomous organization shall include a statement that the
organization is a decentralized autonomous organization,
pursuant to W.S. 17-31-104, and shall set forth the matters
required by W.S. 17-29-201.
(b) In addition to the requirements of subsection (a) of
this section the articles of organization shall include a
publicly available identifier of any smart contract directly
used to manage, facilitate or operate the decentralized
autonomous organization.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the
articles of organization and the smart contracts for a
decentralized autonomous organization shall govern all of the
following:
(i) Relations among the members and between the
members and the decentralized autonomous organization;
(ii) Rights and duties under this chapter of a person
in their capacity as a member;
(iii) Activities of the decentralized autonomous
organization and the conduct of those activities;
(iv) Means and conditions for amending the operating
agreement;
(v) Rights and voting rights of members;
(vi) Transferability of membership interests;
(vii) Withdrawal of membership;
(viii) Distributions to members prior to dissolution;
(ix) Amendment of the articles of organization;
(x) Procedures for updating, modifying or otherwise
revising the organization's smart contracts;
(xi) Dispute resolution;
(xii) All other aspects of the decentralized
autonomous organization.
17-31-107. Amendment or restatement of articles of
organization.
(a) Articles of organization shall be amended when:
(i) There is a change in the name of the
decentralized autonomous organization;
(ii) There is a false or erroneous statement in the
articles of organization;
(iii) The decentralized autonomous organization's
smart contracts have been updated or changed; or
(iv) The publicly available identifier has changed.
17-31-108. Operating agreement.
To the extent the articles of organization or smart contract do
not otherwise provide for a matter described in W.S. 17-31-106,
the obligations, rights and duties of the members and operation
of a decentralized autonomous organization may be supplemented
by an operating agreement. An operating agreement may be a
smart contract.
17-31-109. Management.
Management of a decentralized autonomous organization shall be
vested in its members or the members and any applicable smart
contracts. All smart contracts utilized by a decentralized
autonomous organization shall be capable of being updated,
modified or otherwise upgraded.
17-31-110. Standards of conduct for members.
Unless otherwise provided for in the articles of organization or
operating agreement, no member of a decentralized autonomous
organization shall have any fiduciary duty to the organization
or any member except that the members shall be subject to the
implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
17-31-111. Membership interests for decentralized
autonomous organizations; voting.
(a) For purposes of W.S. 17-31-113 and 17-31-114 and
unless otherwise provided for in the articles of organization,
smart contract or operating agreement:
(i) Membership interests in a decentralized
autonomous organization shall be calculated by dividing a
member's contribution of digital assets to the organization by
the total amount of digital assets contributed to the
organization at the time of a vote; or
(ii) If all members have not contributed digital
assets to an organization as a prerequisite to becoming a
member, each member shall possess one (1) membership interest
and be entitled to one (1) vote;
(iii) Repealed by Laws 2022, ch. 36, § 2.
17-31-112. Right of members and dissociated members to
information.
To the extent the information is available on an open
blockchain, members and dissociated members shall have no right
under W.S. 17-29-410 to separately inspect or copy records of a
decentralized autonomous organization and the organization shall
have no obligation to furnish any information to members or
dissociated members concerning the organization's activities,
financial condition or other circumstances.
17-31-113. Membership and withdrawal of members.
(a) Except as specified in subsection (d) of this section,
a member may only withdraw from a decentralized autonomous
organization in accordance with the terms set forth in the
articles of organization, the smart contracts or the operating
agreement.
(b) A member of a decentralized autonomous organization
may not have the organization dissolved for a failure to return
the members' contribution to capital.
(c) Unless the organization's articles of organization,
smart contracts or operating agreement provide otherwise, a
withdrawn member forfeits all membership interests in the
decentralized autonomous organization, including any governance
or economic rights.
(d) Where the articles of organization, operating
agreement and smart contracts for a decentralized autonomous
organization do not specify the manner by which a person:
(i) Becomes a member of a decentralized autonomous
organization, a person shall be considered a member if the
person purchases or otherwise assumes a right of ownership of a
membership interest or other property that confers upon the
person a voting or economic right within the decentralized
autonomous organization;
(ii) Withdraws membership from a decentralized
autonomous organization, the person shall cease to be a member
if the person transfers, sells or alienates all membership
interests or other property that confers upon the person a
voting or economic right within the decentralized autonomous
organization and retains no further right of ownership therein.
17-31-114. Dissolution.
(a) A decentralized autonomous organization organized
under this chapter shall be dissolved upon the occurrence of any
of the following events:
(i) The period fixed for the duration of the
organization expires;
(ii) By vote of the majority of the members of a
decentralized autonomous organization;
(iii) At the time or upon the occurrence of events
specified in the underlying smart contracts or as specified in
the articles of organization or operating agreement;
(iv) The decentralized autonomous organization has
failed to approve any proposals or take any actions for a period
of one (1) year;
(v) The decentralized autonomous organization no
longer performs a lawful purpose or is no longer under the
control of at least one (1) natural person;
(vi) Where all members of the decentralized
autonomous organization have withdrawn in accordance with W.S.
17-31-113.
(b) As soon as possible following the occurrence of any of
the events specified in subsection (a) of this section causing
the dissolution of a decentralized autonomous organization, the
organization shall execute a statement of intent to dissolve in
the form prescribed by the secretary of state.
(c) Any interested party may petition a court of competent
jurisdiction for dissolution of a decentralized autonomous
organization upon the occurrence of any of the events specified
in subsection (a) of this section and upon finding the
occurrence of one (1) or more of the events specified in
subsection (a) of this section the court shall enter an order
dissolving the decentralized autonomous organization.
17-31-115. Miscellaneous.
The articles of organization and the operating agreement of a
decentralized autonomous organization are effective as
statements of authority. Where the underlying articles of
organization and operating agreement are in conflict, the
articles of organization shall preempt any conflicting
provisions. Where the underlying articles of organization and
smart contract are in conflict, the smart contract shall preempt
any conflicting provisions of the articles of organization,
except as it relates to W.S. 17-31-104 and 17-31-106(a) and (b).
17-31-116. Foreign decentralized autonomous organization.
The secretary of state shall not issue a certificate of
authority for a foreign decentralized autonomous organization.
CHAPTER 32 - WYOMING DECENTRALIZED UNINCORPORATED NONPROFIT
ASSOCIATION ACT
17-32-101. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Wyoming
Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association Act."
17-32-102. Definitions.
(a) As used in this act:
(i) "Administrator" means a person authorized by the
members of a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
to fulfill administrative or operational tasks at the direction
of the membership;
(ii) "Charitable purpose" means any purpose of an
organization that has attained exemption under section 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code or any successor section, or that
upon dissolution shall distribute its assets to a public benefit
corporation, the United States, a state or a person that is
recognized as exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code or any successor section;
(iii) "Decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association" or "nonprofit association" means an unincorporated
nonprofit association that meets the following requirements:
(A) Consists of at least one hundred (100)
members joined by mutual consent under an agreement, that may be
in writing or inferred from conduct, for a common nonprofit
purpose except as permitted under W.S. 17-32-104;
(B) Has elected to be formed under this act; and
(C) Is not formed under any other law governing
the nonprofit association's organization or operation.
(iv) "Digital asset" means as defined in W.S. 34-29-
101(a)(i);
(v) "Distributed ledger technology" means a
distributed ledger protocol and supporting infrastructure,
including blockchain, that uses a distributed, shared and
replicated ledger, whether it be public or private, permissioned
or permissionless, and that may include the use of digital
assets as a medium of electronic exchange;
(vi) "Established practices" means the practices used
by a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association without
material change during the most recent five (5) years of the
association's existence, or if the association has existed for
less than five (5) years, during the nonprofit association's
entire existence;
(vii) "Governing principles" means all agreements and
any amendment or restatement of those agreements, including any
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association agreements,
consensus formation algorithms, smart contracts or enacted
governance proposals, that govern the purpose or operation of a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association and the
rights and obligations of the nonprofit association's members
and administrators, whether contained in a record, implied from
the nonprofit association's established practices or both;
(viii) "Member" means a person who, under the
governing principles of a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association, may participate in the selection of the nonprofit
association's administrators or the development of the policies
and activities of the nonprofit association;
(ix) "Membership interest" means a member's voting
right in a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
determined by the nonprofit association's governing principles,
including as ascertained from decentralized ledger technology on
which the nonprofit association relies to determine a member's
voting right;
(x) "Person" means an individual, corporation,
business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, agency,
joint venture, government, governmental subdivision or
instrumentality or any other legal commercial entity;
(xi) "Record" means as defined in W.S. 40-21-
102(a)(xiii);
(xii) "Smart contract" means an automated
transaction, as defined in W.S. 40-21-102(a)(ii), or any
substantially similar analogue or code, script or programming
language relying on distributed ledger technology, including
blockchain, which may include facilitating and instructing
transfers of an asset, administrating membership interest votes
with respect to a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association or issuing executable instructions for these actions
based on the occurrence or nonoccurrence of specified
conditions;
(xiii) "State" means a state of the United States,
the District of Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States;
(xiv) "This act" means W.S. 17-32-101 through 17-32-
128.
17-32-103. Governing law; territorial application.
(a) The law of this state governs any decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association that is formed in this
state.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association's
governing principles shall identify the jurisdiction in which
the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association is
formed.
17-32-104. Profits; prohibitions on distributions and
dividends; compensation and other permitted payments.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may engage in profit-making activities, but profits from any
activities shall be used in furtherance of, or set aside for,
the nonprofit association's common nonprofit purpose.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section,
a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may not pay
dividends or distribute any part of its income or profits to its
members or administrators or persons outside the nonprofit
association.
(c) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may:
(i) Pay reasonable compensation or reimburse
reasonable expenses to its members, administrators and persons
outside the nonprofit association for services rendered,
including with respect to the administration and operation of
the nonprofit association, which may include the provisions of
collateral for the self-insurance of the nonprofit association,
voting or participation in the nonprofit association's
operations and activities;
(ii) Confer benefits on its members and
administrators in conformity with its common nonprofit purpose;
(iii) Repurchase membership interests to the extent
authorized by the nonprofit association's governing principles;
and
(iv) Make distributions of property to members upon
winding up and termination of the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association to the extent permitted by W.S. 17-32-126.
17-32-105. Real and personal property; decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association as beneficiary, legatee or
devisee.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
in its name may acquire, hold, encumber or transfer an estate or
interest in real or personal property.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may be a legatee, devisee or beneficiary of a trust or contract.
17-32-106. Statement of authority as to real property.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall execute and record a statement of authority to transfer an
estate or interest in real property in the name of the nonprofit
association.
(b) An estate or interest in real property in the name of
a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may be
transferred by a person so authorized in a statement of
authority recorded in the office of the county clerk in which a
transfer of the property will be recorded.
(c) A statement of authority shall set forth:
(i) The name of the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association;
(ii) The address in this state, including the street
address, if any, of the nonprofit association. If the nonprofit
association does not have an address in this state, the
statement of authority shall include the nonprofit association's
address out of state;
(iii) The name or title of the person authorized to
transfer an estate or interest in real property held in the name
of the nonprofit association; and
(iv) The action, procedure or vote of the
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association which
authorizes the person to transfer the real property of the
nonprofit association and which authorizes the person to execute
the statement of authority.
(d) A statement of authority shall be executed in the same
manner as a deed. The person who executes the statement of
authority shall not be the named person in the statement of
authority authorized to transfer the estate or interest.
(e) The filing officer may collect a fee for recording the
statement of authority in the amount authorized for recording a
transfer of real property.
(f) An amendment, including cancellation, of a statement
of authority shall meet the requirements for execution and
recording of an original statement. Unless canceled earlier, a
recorded statement of authority or its most recent amendment is
canceled by operation of law five (5) years after the date of
the most recent recording.
(g) If the record title to the real property is in the
name of a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association and
the statement of authority is recorded in the office of the
county clerk in which a transfer of real property would be
recorded, the authority of the person named in a statement of
authority is conclusive in favor of a transferee who gives value
without notice that the person named in the statement of
authority lacks authority.
17-32-107. Liability in tort or contract.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
is a legal entity separate from its members for the purposes of
determining and enforcing rights, duties and liabilities in
contract and tort.
(b) A person is not liable for a breach of a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association's contract merely because
the person is a member, administrator, authorized to participate
in the management of the affairs of the nonprofit association or
considered as a member by the nonprofit association.
(c) A person is not liable for a tortious act or omission
for which a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
is liable merely because the person is a member or administrator
of the nonprofit association, or is a person authorized to
participate in the management of the affairs of the nonprofit
association or considered as a member by the nonprofit
association.
(d) A tortious act or omission of a member, administrator
or other person for which a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association is liable is not imputed to a person
merely because the person is a member or administrator of the
nonprofit association, or is a person authorized to participate
in the management of the affairs of the nonprofit association or
considered as a member by the nonprofit association.
(e) A member, administrator, person authorized to
participate in the management of the affairs of the nonprofit
association, or person considered as a member by the nonprofit
association may assert a claim against the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association. A decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association may assert a claim against
a member, administrator, person authorized to participate in the
management of the affairs of the nonprofit association or person
considered as a member by the nonprofit association.
17-32-108. Capacity to assert and defend; standing.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association,
in its name, may institute, defend, intervene or participate in
a judicial, administrative or other governmental proceeding or
in an arbitration, mediation or any other form of alternative
dispute resolution.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may assert a claim on behalf of its members if:
(i) One (1) or more members of the nonprofit
association have standing to assert a claim in their own right;
(ii) The interests the nonprofit association seeks to
protect are germane to its purposes; and
(iii) Neither the claim asserted, nor the relief
requested requires the participation of a member.
17-32-109. Effect of judgement or order.
A judgment or order against a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association is not by itself a judgment or order
against a member or administrator of the nonprofit association.
17-32-110. Appointment of agent to receive service of
process.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may file in the office of the secretary of state a statement
appointing an agent authorized to receive service of process.
(b) A statement appointing an agent shall set forth:
(i) The name of the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association;
(ii) The address in this state, including the street
address, if any, of the nonprofit association. If the nonprofit
association does not have an address in this state, the
statement shall include the nonprofit association's address out
of state; and
(iii) The name of the person in this state authorized
to receive service of process and the person's address,
including the state address, in this state.
(c) A statement appointing an agent shall be signed and
acknowledged by a person authorized to administer the affairs of
the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association. The
statement shall also be signed and acknowledged by the person
appointed agent, who thereby accepts the appointment.
(d) A filing officer may collect a fee of five dollars
($5.00) for filing a statement appointing an agent to receive
service of process, an amendment or a resignation.
(e) An amendment to a statement appointing an agent to
receive service of process shall meet the requirements for
execution of an original statement.
(f) If the secretary of state refuses to file a statement
appointing an agent, the secretary of state shall return the
statement to the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association or its representative within fifteen (15) days after
the statement was received by the secretary of state, together
with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
17-32-111. Summons and complaint; service on whom.
In an action or proceeding against a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association a summons and complaint
shall be served on an agent authorized to receive service of
process or a person authorized to administer the affairs of the
nonprofit association. If none of them can be served, service
may be made on a member of the nonprofit association.
17-32-112. Claim not abated by change of members,
administrators or persons authorized.
A claim for relief against a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association shall not abate merely because of a change
in its members or persons authorized to administer the affairs
of the nonprofit association.
17-32-113. Venue.
(a) For purposes of venue, a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association is a resident of a county in which:
(i) The nonprofit association has an office; or
(ii) The agent authorized to receive service of
process under W.S. 17-32-110 resides.
17-32-114. Perpetual existence, dissolution, continuation
of existence.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall have perpetual existence unless its governing principles
otherwise specify.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may be dissolved by any of the following methods:
(i) If the governing principles of the nonprofit
association provide a time or method for dissolution, by that
method;
(ii) If the governing principles of the nonprofit
association do not provide a method for dissolution, by approval
of its members in accordance with W.S. 17-32-120;
(iii) If membership in the nonprofit association
falls below one hundred (100) members and the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association does not meet the
requirements of a Wyoming unincorporated nonprofit association
under W.S. 17-22-101 through 17-22-115. In the event membership
in the nonprofit association falls below one hundred (100)
members and the nonprofit association meets the requirements of
a Wyoming unincorporated nonprofit association under W.S. 17-22-
101 through 17-22-115, the entity automatically converts to a
Wyoming unincorporated nonprofit association unless the
governing principles otherwise specify another organizational
statute and the organization meets the statutory requirements of
that organization;
(iv) By court order.
(c) After dissolution, a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association continues in existence until its
activities have been wound up and terminated pursuant to W.S.
17-32-126.
17-32-115. Admission, suspension, dismissal or expulsion
of members.
(a) A person becomes a member in accordance with the
governing principles of the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association. If there are no applicable governing
principles, a person shall be considered a member upon purchase
or assumption of ownership of a membership interest or other
property or instrument that confers a voting right with the
nonprofit association and the person shall continue as a member
absent the person's suspension, dismissal or expulsion pursuant
to subsection (b) of this section, resignation pursuant to W.S.
17-32-116 or the nonprofit association's dissolution and wind-up
pursuant to W.S. 17-32-114 and W.S. 17-32-126.
(b) Subject to the governing principles, a member may be
suspended, dismissed or expelled from a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association. If there are no applicable
governing principles, a member may be suspended, dismissed or
expelled by approval of its members in accordance with W.S. 17-
32-120.
(c) Unless otherwise provided for in the governing
principles, suspension, dismissal or expulsion of a member does
not relieve the member of any obligation incurred, or commitment
made by the member, before the suspension, dismissal or
expulsion.
17-32-116. Member resignation.
(a) A member may resign as a member of a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association in accordance with the
governing principles of the nonprofit association. If there are
no applicable governing principles, a member shall be deemed to
have resigned as a member upon the disposal, whether voluntary
or involuntary, of all membership interests or other property or
instruments that confer upon the person a voting right within
the nonprofit association.
(b) Unless otherwise provided for in the governing
principles, resignation of a member does not relieve the member
of any obligation incurred, or commitment made by the member,
before the resignation.
17-32-117. Duties of members.
(a) Unless otherwise provided for in the governing
principles, a member shall not have any fiduciary duty to a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association or to any
other member of the nonprofit association solely by reason of
being a member.
(b) All members shall be subject to the implied
contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
17-32-118. Member has no agency powers.
(a) A member is not an agent of a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association solely by reason of being a
member.
(b) A person's status as a member does not prevent or
restrict laws other than this act from imposing liability on a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association because of
the member's conduct.
17-32-119. Member interests transferable.
Except as otherwise provided in the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association's governing principles, a member interest
or any right thereunder is freely transferable to another person
through conveyance of the membership interest or other property
that confers upon a person a voting right within the nonprofit
association.
17-32-120. Approval by members.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in the governing
principles, a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall have the approval of the majority of membership interests
participating in a vote to:
(i) Suspend, dismiss or expel a member;
(ii) Select or dismiss an administrator;
(iii) Adopt, amend or repeal the governing
principles;
(iv) Sell, lease, exchange or otherwise dispose of
the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association's
property;
(v) Dissolve the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association under W.S 17-32-114;
(vi) Undertake any other act outside the ordinary
course of the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association's activities;
(vii) Determine the policy and purpose of the
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall have the approval of its members in accordance with its
governing principles to perform any acts or exercise a right
that the governing principles require to be approved by members.
(c) Unless otherwise provided for in the governing
principles, membership interest in a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association shall be calculated in
proportion to a member's voting rights within the nonprofit
association.
17-32-121. Utilization of distributed ledger technology.
(a) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may provide for its governance, in whole or in part, through
distributed ledger technology, including smart contracts.
(b) The governing principles for a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association may:
(i) Specify whether any distributed ledger technology
utilized or enabled by the decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association will be fully immutable or subject to
change by the nonprofit association and whether any distributed
ledger will be fully or partially public or private, including
the extent of a member's access to information;
(ii) Adopt voting procedures, which may include smart
contracts deployed to distributed ledger technology that provide
for the following:
(A) Proposals from members or administrators in
the decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association for
upgrades, modifications or additions to software systems or
protocols;
(B) Other proposed changes to the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association's governing principles; and
(C) Any other matters of governance or
activities within the purpose of the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association.
17-32-122. Consensus formation algorithms and governance
process.
(a) In accordance with its governing principles, a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may:
(i) Adopt any reasonable algorithmic means for
establishing consensus for the validation of records, as well as
for establishing requirements, processes and procedures for
conducting operations or making organizational decisions with
respect to the distributed ledger technology used by the
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association; and
(ii) In accordance with any procedure specified
pursuant to W.S. 17-32-121, modify the consensus mechanism, as
well as the requirements, processes and procedures or substitute
a new consensus mechanism, requirements, processes or procedures
that comply with this state's law and the governing principles
of the nonprofit association.
17-32-123. Selection of administrators; rights and duties
of administrators.
(a) Unless otherwise provided for in the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association's governing principles, the
members of a nonprofit association may select the nonprofit
association's administrators in accordance with W.S. 17-32-120.
(b) If no administrators are selected, none of the members
shall be considered administrators for the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association.
(c) No decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall be required to have an administrator, and the rights and
duties of all administrators shall be established as part of the
authorization of authority to act as an administrator.
(d) If in a record, the governing principles of a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may limit or
eliminate the liability of an administrator to the nonprofit
association or its members for money damages for any action
taken, or failure to take any action, as an administrator except
liability for:
(i) The amount of financial benefit improperly
received by an administrator;
(ii) An intentional infliction of harm on the
nonprofit association or its members;
(iii) An intentional violation of criminal law;
(iv) Breach of the duty of loyalty should one exist,
unless, following full disclosure of all material facts to the
nonprofit association members, the specific act or transaction
that would otherwise breach the duty of loyalty is authorized or
ratified by approval of the disinterested members pursuant to
W.S. 17-32-120;
(v) Improper distributions.
17-32-124. Right to inspect records.
(a) Except as provided by subsection (b) of this section,
on reasonable notice, a member or administrator of a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association shall be
entitled to an electronic record of any record maintained by the
nonprofit association regarding the nonprofit association's
activities, financial condition and other circumstances, to the
extent the information is material to a member or
administrator's rights and duties under the nonprofit
association's governing principles or this act.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall not be obligated to provide records requested from a
member or administrator if access to the information is
contained in a record available to the member or administrator
on decentralized ledger technology.
(c) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may impose reasonable restrictions on access to and use of
information that may be provided under this section, including
by designating the information confidential and imposing
nondisclosure or other safeguarding obligations on the recipient
of the information. In a dispute concerning the reasonableness
of a restriction under this subsection, the nonprofit
association shall have the burden of proving reasonableness.
(d) A former member or administrator may have access to
information to which the former member or administrator was
entitled to as a member or administrator if:
(i) The information relates to the period of time
during which the former member or administrator was a member or
administrator;
(ii) The former member or administrator seeks the
information in good faith; and
(iii) The former member or administrator satisfies
the requirements of subsection (a) through (c) of this section
with respect to the information.
(e) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
shall not be obligated to collect and maintain a list of members
or individual member information, including the names or
addresses of its members.
17-32-125. Indemnification; advancement of expenses.
(a) Unless otherwise provided in its governing principles,
a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may
reimburse a member or administrator for authorized expenses
reasonably incurred on behalf of the nonprofit association.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may indemnify a member or administrator for any debt, obligation
or other liability incurred in the course of the member or
administrator's activities on behalf of the nonprofit
association. To be eligible for indemnification, an
administrator must have complied with the duties stated in W.S.
17-32-123. If in a record, a nonprofit association's governing
principles may broaden or limit this right of indemnification.
(c) If a person is made, or threatened to be made, a party
in a proceeding based on that person's conduct in the affairs of
a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association, that
person is entitled, upon written request to the nonprofit
association, including through decentralized ledger technology,
to receive payment of or reimbursement by the nonprofit
association, of reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees
and disbursements, incurred by that person in advance of the
final disposition of the proceeding. To be entitled to these
payments or advances the person making the request shall make a
written affirmation that the person has a good faith belief that
the criteria for indemnification in subsection (a) of this
section have been satisfied and that the person will repay the
amounts paid or reimbursed if it is determined that the criteria
for reimbursement have not been satisfied. No payment or
reimbursement under this subsection shall be made without prior
approval, in a record, of the disinterested members under W.S.
17-32-102.
(d) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of a member or
administrator for liability asserted against or incurred by the
member or administrator in that capacity, whether or not the
nonprofit association would have the power to indemnify or
advance expenses to the member or administrator against the same
liability under this section.
(e) These rights of reimbursement, indemnification and
advancement of expense apply to former members or administrators
for activities undertaken on behalf of the decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association while they were members or
administrators.
17-32-126. Winding up; termination.
(a) A dissolved decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association shall wind up its operations and the nonprofit
association shall continue after dissolution only for the
purpose of winding up.
(b) In winding up a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association, the members:
(i) Shall discharge the nonprofit association's
debts, obligations and other liabilities, settle and close the
nonprofit association's business and distribute any remaining
property:
(A) As required by state law other than this
chapter requiring assets of an association to be distributed to
another entity or person with similar nonprofit purposes;
(B) In accordance with the nonprofit
association's governing principles. In the absence of applicable
governing principles, to the current members of the nonprofit
association in proportion to their membership interests; or
(C) If neither subdivision (A) or (B) of this
paragraph applies, in accordance with the law of unclaimed
property contained in W.S. 34-24-101 through 34-24-140.
(ii) May:
(A) Authorize an administrator to wind up the
nonprofit association in accordance with W.S. 17-32-120. Any
administrator so authorized shall owe the nonprofit association
a duty of care in the conduct or winding up of the nonprofit to
refrain from grossly negligent or reckless conduct, willful or
intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of the law;
(B) Preserve the nonprofit association's
operations and property as a going concern for a reasonable
time;
(C) Prosecute and defend actions and
proceedings, whether civil, criminal or administrative;
(D) Transfer the nonprofit association's
property;
(E) Settle disputes by mediation or arbitration;
(F) Perform other acts necessary or appropriate
to the winding up.
(iii) If the members of a nonprofit association do
not appoint an administrator or administrators to wind up the
nonprofit association, the members shall owe the nonprofit
association a duty of care in the conduct or winding up of the
nonprofit association's operations to refrain from engaging in
grossly negligent or reckless conduct, willful or intentional
misconduct or a knowing violation of the law.
17-32-127. Mergers.
(a) As used in this section:
(i) "Constituent organization" means an organization
that is merged with one (1) or more other organizations and
includes the surviving organization;
(ii) "Disappearing organization" means a constituent
organization that is not the surviving organization;
(iii) "Governing statute" means the statute that
governs an organization's internal affairs;
(iv) "Organization" means a decentralized
unincorporated nonprofit association, an unincorporated
nonprofit association, a general partnership, including a
limited liability partnership, a limited partnership, including
a limited liability limited partnership, a limited liability
company, a business or statutory trust, a corporation or any
other legal or commercial person having a governing statute. The
term includes a domestic or foreign organization regardless of
whether the organization is organized for profit;
(v) "Organizational document" means the basic records
that create the organization and determine its internal
governance and the relations among the persons that own it, have
an interest in it or are members of it;
(vi) "Surviving organization" means an organization
into which one (1) or more other organizations are merged.
(b) A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association
may merge with any organization that is not expressly prohibited
by the law.
(c) A merger involving a decentralized unincorporated
nonprofit association is subject to the following requirements:
(i) Each of the constituent merging organizations
shall comply with its governing law;
(ii) Each party to the merger shall approve a plan of
merger in accordance with its governing principles. The plan
shall be in a record and shall include the following provisions:
(A) The name and form of each organization that
is party to the merger;
(B) The name and form of the surviving
organization and, if the surviving organization is to be created
by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(C) The terms and conditions of the merger,
including the manner and basis for converting the interests in
each constituent organization into any combination of money,
interests in the surviving organization or other considerations;
(D) If the surviving organization is to be
created by the merger, the surviving organization's
organizational documents that are proposed to be in a record;
and
(E) If the surviving organization is not to be
created by the merger, any amendments to be made by the merger
to the surviving organization's organizational documents that
are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
(iii) The plan of merger shall be approved by the
members of each decentralized unincorporated nonprofit
association that is a constituent organization in the merger,
subject to W.S. 17-32-120. If a member of a nonprofit
association that is party to a merger will have personal
liability with respect to an obligation of a constituent or
surviving organization, the consent in a record of that member
to the plan of merger shall also be obtained;
(iv) Subject to the contractual rights of third
parties, after a plan of merger is approved and at any time
before the merger is effective, a constituent organization may
amend the plan or abandon the merger as provided in the plan, or
except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, with the same
consent as was required to approve the plan;
(v) Following approval of the plan, a merger under
this section shall be effective if:
(A) A constituent organization is required to
give notice to or obtain the approval of a governmental agency
or officer in order to be a party to a merger, the notice has
been given and the approval has been obtained; and
(B) The surviving organization is a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association, as specified
in the plan of merger and upon compliance by any constituent
organization that is not a nonprofit association with any
requirements, including any required filings in the office of
the secretary of state, of the organization's governing statute;
or
(C) The surviving organization is not a
decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association under the
state law governing the surviving organization.
(d) When a merger becomes effective:
(i) The surviving organization continues or comes
into existence;
(ii) Each constituent organization that merges into
the surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate entity;
(iii) All property owned by each constituent
organization that ceases to exist vests in the surviving
organization;
(iv) All debts, obligations or other liabilities of
each constituent organization that ceases to exist continue as
debts, obligations or other liabilities of the surviving
organization;
(v) An action or proceeding pending by or against any
constituent organization that ceases to exist may be continued
as if the merger had not occurred;
(vi) Except as prohibited by other law, all of the
rights, privileges, immunities, powers and purposes of each
constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in the
surviving organization;
(vii) Except as otherwise provided in the plan of
merger, the terms and conditions of the plan of merger take
effect;
(viii) The merger shall not affect the personal
liability, if any, of a member, administrator or manager of a
constituent association for a debt, liability or obligation of
the nonprofit association incurred before the merger is
effective; and
(ix) A surviving organization that is a foreign
organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this
state to enforce any debt, obligation or other liability owed by
a constituent organization, if before the merger the constituent
organization was subject to suit in this state on the debt,
obligation or other liability. A surviving organization that is
a foreign organization and not authorized to transact business
in this state appoints the secretary of state as agent for
service of process for the purpose of enforcing a debt,
obligation or other liability under this subsection.
(e) Property held for a charitable purpose under the law
of this state by a domestic or foreign organization immediately
before a merger under this section becomes effective shall not,
as a result of the merger, be diverted from the objects for
which it was donated, granted or devised, unless, to the extent
required by or pursuant to the law of this state concerning
nondiversion of charitable assets, the organization obtains an
appropriate order of the attorney general or of the district
court in a proceeding for which the attorney general has been
given notice specifying the disposition of the property.
(f) A bequest, devise, gift, grant or promise contained in
a will or other instrument of donation, subscription or
conveyance that is made to a disappearing organization and that
takes effect or remains payable after the merger inures to the
benefit of the surviving organization. A trust obligation that
would govern property if transferred to the disappearing entity
applies to property that is instead transferred to the surviving
organization under this section.
17-32-128. Conversion of entities.
A decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association may effect
a conversion by complying with the applicable provisions of W.S.
17-26-101 and any applicable provisions of the nonprofit
association's governing principles.
17-32-129. Supplemental principles of law.
Principles of law and equity supplement this act unless
displaced by a specific provision of this act.