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One does not own an incorporation. Incorporation is the process by which a corporation is created. In fact, one does not really own a corporation either. One may own shares issued by a corporation, perhaps even all of the shares, but ownership of even all the shares of a corporation does not mean that you own the corporation. Ownership of shares of a corporation merely gives you certain rights. These include the right to vote in the election of directors and the right to receive any dividends. A corporation exists independently from the shareholders, and is often referred to as an artificial person.
Chain properties are like a chain of food shops, for example. There are three ownership models. 1. Corporate ownership, where each store in the chain is owned by the corporation 2. Franchise ownership, where the stores are owned by individual or corporate owners other than the central corporation. They pay the central corporation franchise fees and services fees for the right to operate under the corporate name. 3. Mixed model. Burger King Corporation owns some stores while franchise owners own others.
A common stock gives the investor part ownership in the corporation, right to a percentage of the company's future profits and voting rights at the annual stockholders' meeting. With preferred stock the holder does not have voting rights in the corporation. The holder however, are guaranteed a certain amount of dividend each year.
Europeans believed they had a right to claim ownership of American.
Title
yes you are right
Ownership is the legal right to possess, use, and dispose of a property or asset as one sees fit.
ownership
Which is not a right of the common stockholder in a corporation?a. the right to vote in the election of the board or deirectorsb. the right to receive a minimum amount of dividendsc.the right to sell their stock to anyone the choosed. the right to share in assetsupon liquidation
Preemptive right is the right belonging to existing shareholders of a corporation.
which one was eliminated in the right to vote race,gender,religious test or property ownership
In the theory of economic law, resources ownership refers to the right of some owner, under property law, to own, use, change, or sell resources they have a right to at their leisure.