a common seal of a private limited company is the official signature of the company being a separate entity. it must contain a company name and should be used on all valid documents or on any document to be valid. any person authorised by the company to enter into an agreement with others should have his signature and company's common seal to justify its validity.
To destroy a corporate seal, you must first ensure that you have the legal authority to do so, as the seal is often considered a legal representation of the company. Once you have obtained the necessary permissions, you can physically destroy the seal by cutting, burning, or otherwise rendering it unusable. It is important to properly document the destruction of the seal and update any relevant records to reflect its disposal.
seal says astra corporation Massachusetts 1961 common stock #7821
There weren't any federally-issued $20 silver certificates dated 1909 but at that time many private banks printed their own bills under federal charter. Please post a new, separate question with more information. If your bill has the name of a private bank on it, include that name. Also note the seal color - at that time they weren't standardized so a blue seal didn't indicate that a bill was a silver certificate.
what is the value of a 1953 two dollar bill with a red seal
A 1929 5 dollar bill from Chase is pretty common and probably worth between $5 and $8. However the seal should be brown rather than red. Red seals were used on United States Notes, while 1929 $5 bills were issued as National Currency Notes.
a leapord seal
This is not a copyright issue but the answer is no. Separate Federal law prohibits use of the presidential seal for commercial purposes such as a company's logo. You could sell reproductions of the seal such as for t-shirts, paperweights, coffee mugs and such, and most likely no one is going to care. But you could not use it as a corporate logo. Not without getting permission of the White House, anyway,
look at the stupid seal! if the card is a 1st edition, the seal has to be gold. this is also true for limited edition cards. Unlimited vesions have silver seals. 1st edition/limited edition = gold seal Unlimited = silver seal. unlimiteds can't have a gold seal
The ring seal is the smallest seal in the Arctic. It is a member of the genus Phoca, and species Hispida.
i think it was a common seal, normally callled harbour seal.
Common Seal and Grey Seal.
The UK has two species of seal, the grey seal and the common seal.
limited companies are companies which have incorporated association(it is an association of two or more people registered with registrar of companies) which is an artificial person, created by law having common seal( having an official signature for the company) and perpetual succession( company still exists or continuous existence apart from its shareholder. withdrawal of any shareholder does not affect the company) limited companies are called joint stock companies because many people contribute capital to the company. companies, where the owner of the business allow others run their company in return for small payment or certain amount which is known as royalties, are called franchise companies. the owner is known as franchiser. and the person who pays royalty and run the business is called franchisee. so franchise and limited compnies are totally different businesses
skoda
They both have faces.
The Weddell seal and the Leopard seal are common, although the list also includes Antarctic Fur seals, Crabeater seals and Ross Seals. These are the most common seals on earth. Because there are no land predators, their numbers are large.
leopard seals are most common