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Business enterprise: business entities

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Uploaded on
June 21, 2023
Number of pages
52
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Marsellus botha
Contains
Business entities

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lOMoARcPSD|10435457




BUS ENTERPRISE LAW/ BUSINESS ENTITIES


Business Enterprise Law (University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg)




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BUSINESS ENITITIES
BUSINESS STRUCTURES


 In South African law there are 5 types of business organisations/ structures
 Types of business structures include:
 Sole trader/proprietorship
 Partnership
 Company
 Close corporation
 Business trust
 Factors that must be considered when choosing a type of business structure include:
 Who bears the risk?
 How is capital raised?
 What is the management structure?
 Who exercises control?
 Will there be perpetual succession?
 Is there space for growth and expansion?
 Taxation liability
 Legal and administrative formalities and costs




THE SOLE TRADER/ PROPRIETERSHIP

 Are the single legal owners of their business
 They exercise complete control
 They provide their own capital and bear all the legal responsibility for their business
 They share profits alone and are liable for all losses alone
 Are personally liable for debts incurred by the business
 Due to there being no limited liability for sole traders, there is no difference drawn between
their personal asset and their business assets, therefore personal assets can be used to pay
off business debts
 Depending on the type of business conducted, no registration may be required
 DISADVANTAGES: - Personal liability for debts of the business
- Limited expansion of growth due to limited capital




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- Lack of legal continuity
- Increased tax liability
 Financial statements are not audited




THE PARTNERSHIP

 An association formed with the intention to make a profit
 A partnership is a business structure aimed at making and sharing profits
 Cannot be formed with the objective of being a charity/ non- profit
 Partnership is formed through a partnership agreement which may be in writing, orally
discussed or tacitly implied through conduct
 Consists of a minimum of two partners and a maximum of twenty partners
 All partners must participate in the management of the business and each get a share of the
net profit of the business
 Partners are jointly owners of the assets of the partnership
 Immoveable property must be registered in the names of the partners
 Partnership liabilities are liabilities of the individual partners
 Partners are thus jointly, severally and ultimately liable for all debts and
liabilities of the partnership
 Partners share net profits according to proportions agreed upon in the partnership
agreement, be it equally or based on contribution
 If no proportion agreement, profits are shared according to the value of each
partners contribution
 If this is not possible due to one partner having contributed skill or labour,
then profits are shared equally
 DISADVANTAGES: - Does not have perpetual succession
- Automatic dissolution of the partnership occurs when one partner
decides to exit partnership, death, insolvency or retirement and
results in the need for creating a new partnership
- Legal continuity is disrupted by the entry or exit of any partner
- Partnerships not subject to income tax
 Financial statements not audited




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THE COMPANY

 Is a structure that is endorsed by law with the capacity to acquire legal rights and be subject
to legal duties
 PUBLIC COMPANY: formed to raise large sums of money from the public in return for shares
issued to them that are transferable
 PRIVATE COMPANY: formed where shareholders contribute their own funds to the capital of
the company in return for shares that are not transferrable
 Has a separate legal personality from the members who compose it
 The company is the legal owner of itself, property and assets bought in its name and not the
shareholders or members as it is a separate legal person



CASE: Dadoo Ltd v Krugersdorp Municipality Council

 Court found that even if there is a one-man company, all property and assets would
belong to the company and not to the one-man.




 All property bought for the company is registered in the company’s name and all profits
belong to the company
 Debts and liabilities also belong to the company and not to separate share holders
 A company can sue and be sued in its own name
 ADVANTAGES: -Has limited liability, therefore creditors can claim debts from the company
only
-Have perpetual succession= enables shareholders to sell their shares
without affecting legal existence of company
-Have legal continuity= can exist even if members or shareholders change
-Growth and expansion viable
-Formation of a public company requires just one shareholder
-Can be formed with the objective of being a non-profit
 DISADVANTAGES: -Compliance with legal formalities for the registration of a company
-Company must be registered with the Companies and Intellectual
---Property Commission




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