The Importance Of Keeping Minute Books

By Krystal Branch


One of the requirements by law for all registered firms is that they maintain up-to-date records of deliberations and resolutions that arise at the firm official meetings. The records are contained in a binder or bound book and should be maintained at the firm registered office or official address for accessibility to all members of that firm. Minute books are basically binders or just files housing all corporate key resolutions and deliberations.

There are several documents that are required to be part of minute books. These include the certificates of incorporation and articles of incorporation, the minutes arising from official meetings such as those held by directors, shareholders and managers, the resolutions from the said meetings, the register of shareholders and that for ledgers, the share certificates, the agreements by shareholders and several other documents are may be specified by the company law.

The legal requirements for minute book vary from one jurisdiction to the other. While some laws do not specifically state that it must be kept by a corporation, there are a number of documents that are specifically outline in most jurisdictions as having to be maintained in an organized manner in a central place. The attempt to fulfill this requirement by itself brings about the minute book.

Other than for legal obligation, proper documentation of company records comes with several other advantages. It makes the management and general operation smoother as retrieval and reference can be achieved much faster. This also saves on unnecessary expenses, reduces wastage of man hour and contributes to overall profitability. This may not be the case if locating such documents was to be done at a future date long after it is overdue.

The other significance of keeping documents in order is to avoid unnecessary penalties, delay in change or ownership structure such as mergers, takeover, selling the corporation, going public (initial public offer). In case the corporation is in default of notice filings that are mandatory, its certificate of incorporation risks being cancelled. The document also comes in handy when performing internal audit, external audit and government audit where the documents are required.

Maintaining minute books can be done through different approaches. Most of organizations prefer to do it themselves. This however requires a detailed understanding of best practices by those charged with this duty. The other common practice is to hand over the duty to a lawyer who will charge small fee and take over the annual updating of documents.

If the duty is trusted in hands of a lawyer, the firm benefits from their experience in legal matters covering documentation of records and deliberations, updating of documents is done well on time and the documents are more secured as they are out of reach of unauthorized employees and other individuals who may have conflict of interest.

Given the important role minute books play in any organization, the proper maintenance practice must be carried out with the view of fulfilling legal requirements while at the same time saving organization resources that might be wastage from improper record keeping. As such, standards must be set in regards to this form of documentation.




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