Adjust text :
Font size: normal Font size: larger Font size: largest
This page in other language: EnglishEnglish
Coddan Home Page Welcome to Coddan Contact Us How to Contact Us Companies Registration FAQ Company Incorporation FAQ Company Formation News Company Formation News
 
Track your order status online and via e-mail
U.K. LIMITED COMPANIES U.K. LLP U.K. GUARANTEE COMPANIES OFFSHORE COMPANIES
COMPANIES IN THE USA COMPANIES LAW U.K. TAXATION DIRECTORS & SECRETARIES GUIDE
Online company order Ready made companies Prices and fees Legal Terms Glossary Common Information

Company Name Check

Business Service Levels

Apply for a Consultation Click the link to request initial consultation

Print this Page

directors & secretaries guide

















RELATED SERVICES












RELATED SERVICES
BANKING SERVICES



BANKING SERVICES
We Accept
 
 
online order forms

Member of the Federation of Small Businesses
 Nominee Director Service for Public Records for one year:
 
 It is a perfectly legal device which preserves the privacy of an individual. It is designed to help a person who would rather not disclose their interest or association with a given corporate body.
 The Nominee Director cannot and will not enter into any business contract or financial or moral commitment.
 
 Coddan will act as Nominee Company Director for limited companies on an annual basis.
 This service is primarily designed to help people keep non-trading or dormant companies fully compliant with the law and perhaps to protect the identities of the persons actually controlling the company.
 At the same time the appointed nominees are not actually entitled to manage the company.
 We provide the beneficial owner with a Power of Attorney empowering him to run the business, manage the company's activities and open and operate the company's bank accounts.
 Nominee Director will only sign company accounts and annual returns prepared by the accountants of the company.
E-Quick Plan
£ 125.00Renewal fees from £125.00
Click here to see all packages
(click here for other packages)

Company Formation Home Page  >>  Company Directors & Secretary Guide >>  Company Directors - Appointment

UK COMPANY DIRECTORS. APPOINTMENT OF DIRECTOR. DIRECTOR'S APPOINTMENT AND REMOVAL

Every company must have formally appointed company officers at all times. This means at least one director and a company secretary for a private limited company, and at least two directors and a company secretary for a public limited company. The director, or directors, must manage the company's affairs in accordance with its articles of association and the law. Certain responsibilities apply to all directors, whether executive or non-executive, and to all types of company whether trading or not. The company secretary is the chief administrator of the company.

A limited company's sole director cannot also be the company secretary. Although, the same person can be both director and company secretary provided there is another company director. A company director is appointed to manage the affairs of a company in accordance with its articles of association and company law. Anyone can become a company director unless: "you are an undischarged bankrupt or disqualified by a court from holding a directorship, unless given leave to act in respect of a particular company or companies". There is no minimum age limit in the companies act for a UK company director to be appointed in England and Wales. However, he or she must be able to consent to their own appointment.
Finding and Using Information on This Page:  Company Director Appointment Checklist | Status of Directors | Registering the Appointment | 'Register' of Interests in Contracts | 

Important Links

Coddan is one of the foremost and most economical providers of company formation and online company registration services in the UK. We offer you Company Formation in England & Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland. To start with corporation tax rates are much lower than income tax rates. Finally, registering a company with your spouse allows you to split your income which almost always results in a lower tax bill. We incorporate over 95% of our companies within 6 hours. Electronic submission of information means that we can register a company with the required director, secretary, registered office and shareholders.
When first setting-up a business there are many issues to consider. You need to decide whether or not to incorporate your business, and to choose a structure for your business. There are several types of legal business entities which you can choose to operate as. For more information on these choices, follow the links below. We advise that professional legal and financial advice is obtained before a final choice of business entity is made.

Sole Trader (Self-Employed)
Limited Company
Public Company
Company Limited by Guarantee
Limited Liability Partnership
Branch or Place of Business

Coddan is a leading service provider in the field of English, Scottish and Irish company formation and company registration. We can help you in starting a business in England & Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland. Over 95% of our companies are incorporated within 6 hours. The electronic submission of information enables a fast company start-up satisfying all of the required legal formalities: a director, a secretary, a registered office and shareholders. Our electronic filing software has been approved by Companies House (Companies House (Companies Registry, Secretary of State) is an Executive Agency of the United Kingdom Government Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)).
Suggested Reading
 company formation  company formations 








Live Help Live Help:
Live Help is a real time "chat" feature which enables you to interact with a customer service representative without a phone call. Get answers to your questions while using our website. Clicking the "Live Help" button will start an on-line session with one of our representatives. Live Help is currently available during normal business hours. Outside of the above opening hours, our business center will be closed. When you click on the button, you will see an e-mail form that will allow you to send us a mail with your questions. Live Help is free! There are no hidden fees. We offer the service as a courtesy to our website visitors.

Dear visitors, while having a chat session with a customer, we are frequently requested to give a piece of advice on tax planning or business structuring. We would like to inform you that it is against our principles to provide online advice pertaining to these issues. The points that may be covered during a session include service description, package or service price, navigation at our website, ways of making an order, methods of payment etc. Yet, if you wish us to provide you with advice on tax or business structuring, you should be aware that this service is chargeable.

If you have any questions then please E-Mail or call us: 0800 081 1510 or +44 (0) 207 637 3881, fax: +44 20 7681 3318.
Contact Registered Agent

COMPANY DIRECTOR APPOINTMENT CHECKLIST

The following checklist seeks to highlight the areas that a new director should have confirmed:

What are the terms of appointment, service agreement, duties, reporting structure, etc.? How is the appointment evidenced? - Check authority. How are payments of fees, expenses etc., made?

Obtain a copy of latest accounts and management accounts (and any supplementary information) to enable appointee to consider financial state of company. Obtain a copy of the Articles of Association to determine the powers (and restriction of powers) of directors and officers, and a copy of the minutes of the board for the previous year and company for previous five years to check: a) compliance and b) alterations to Articles.

NB: This check will also provide valuable background information on the tactics and strategy adopted by the board, disclose any authorities granted by the board on an individual or committee basis, which may require further investigation, etc.

Check file regarding filing of documentation with Registrar of Companies. Check provision of statutorily required information. Check statutory books for up-to-date entries. Obtain copy of directors' and officers' liability insurance policy and of renewal note. Check if the Articles grant an indemnity against personal costs and liabilities incurred as a result of acting as an officer of the company. Obtain a copy of all loan notes, guarantees, charges, etc.

Check any requirement for qualification shareholding, and, if so, acquire such shares (avoiding any price-sensitive periods). NB: if the Articles require a qualification shareholding which the director fails to take up, the appointment is invalid, but the appointee can be held liable for acts undertaken until the share qualification is acquired.

Prepare a list of companies and/or matters in which the appointee has an interest, and with which the company may be trading or negotiating. These potential conflicts of interest must be disclosed within five days of appointment (and subsequently when they arise). Whether they are allowed to subsist, and/or the director can vote on any such matter (or even form part of the quorum during the discussion), and/or take any profit made from such interests must be checked with the Articles.

Check other board members' interests are noted and what they are. Establish whether any shadow director(s) exist(s), and, if so attempt to ensure that their details are recorded in the various registers, etc. Request a copy of any code of ethics or equivalent applicable to directors and/or senior members of the management of the company.

Request a schedule of board meetings and arrangements for obtaining information for discussion/decision at such meetings. The Articles should be consulted to check what is required to make a correct appointment. In most cases a director's appointment can be made only at a properly convened and constituted board meeting.

WARNING: It can be embarrassing (to say the least) for a company to attempt to appoint to its board a person who has been disqualified from so acting. It may be prudent for the company secretary discreetly to check the Register of Disqualified Persons (held and updated by the Registrar of Companies).

Not all directors involved in failed companies are disqualified and to provide such "track record" information, the business information/credit agency Experian (www.experian.com/bi) maintains a database showing whether directors have previously been involved in such companies.

STATUS OF DIRECTORS

Nowhere in legislation is the term director defined. Various descriptions of directors are used - often without full appreciation of the implications of such names.

Status of Directors Executive: 
A member of the board authorised to carry out certain day-to-day functions including entering into contracts and managing staff and assets. Such a person is almost certainly an employee as well as an officer and the paperwork concerning their appointment should reflect this.

Non-Executive: 
Most company boards consist predominantly of fulltime executives. Since it can be difficult for such executives to retain the overall and objective view of the company that their duties as directors require, it has become increasingly common to appoint non-executive directors to boards. Drawn from senior management (and often retired former directors) from other industries, these directors have no executive responsibilities, but provide executive directors with advice and input based on their experience. Since they do not depend for their living on the salary drawn from so acting, they can be far more objective regarding the progress (or lack of progress) of the company, and, in essence, require answers to questions the executive directors may least want asked. It is also easier for such a director to question the legality or appropriateness of certain actions.

For example, in the Guinness affair the "wrongdoing" of certain of the executive directors, was eventually challenged by the non-executive directors. Should the actions complained of continue, non-executive directors will find it easier to resign in protest, with possible attendant publicity, not least since they will not normally be dependent on their income from the company. Non-executive directors rank equally with (and have exactly the same responsibilities as) other directors in all respects. Both the Institute of Directors and the Stock Exchange are very much in favour of the extension of the non-executive director concept, whilst draft legislation from the European Union calls for there to be a majority of non-executive directors on the boards of all listed PLCs.

Chairman: 
A member of the board, executive or non-executive, elected to chair the board by the board members. Although often described as such, the chairman is not chairman of the company but simple of the board and, depending on the wording of the Articles Of Association, may be chairman of the board only "for the time being".

Managing Director (Chief Executive): 
In many organisations the functions of chairman and managing director are vested in one person. There has been criticism of this practice, critics inferring that the concentration of power in one person's hands is detrimental to the overall control of the company. However, research seems to suggest that the retention of the twin powers in one person tends to improve the performance of companies, compared to those where the functions are split.

Where there is a separate managing director function, it is more usual for the chairman to be non-executive and to look outwards and interface with external parties, leaving the managing director to ensure other board members and management who report to him/her carry out the requirements of the board and their own responsibilities - that is essentially an internal role.

However, it is difficult to be precise about this since companies operate in different ways - e.g. letting the managing director assume a greater external role, whilst the Chairman adopts a lower profile.

To a certain extent this is inevitable since the personalities and talents of the persons themselves may well affect the range of duties they undertake. Legally the managing director may be in a different position from every other director and his powers, responsibilities and provision of his re-election need to be checked in the Articles of Association. Under some Articles, a proportion (often a third) of the directors must retire at each Annual General Meeting of the company shareholders and seek re-election by those shareholders at that meeting. A managing director, however, is often excluded from this requirement.

Alternate Directors: 
Act as a proxy for the appointee and have the right to receive all data and items sent to other directors. A director is legally entitled to appoint an alternate but only if it is allowed under his company's Articles and the appointment is usually made subject to the agreement of the rest of the board.

Associate or Local Directors: 
If allowed by the Articles, a company may be able to grant to an employee the rank of "director" to indicate that the person carries a high level of authority. Such people are not usually company directors and they should not use the title in such a way as to suggest that they are.

Courtesy titles such as "Director of ..." may be used to grant a level of authority to a person who is not a board member and may not even be an employee.

Nominee Directors: 
Are sometimes appointed by (for example) a major shareholder who wishes to exercise some control over the board and company. Nominee directors owe obligations to two separate bodies and may need to take care to avoid conflicts of interests. A nominee director may have enhanced voting rights (e.g. a vote exercised by a nominee may rank greater than the combined votes of all other members). In such a case the company may be regarded as a subsidiary of the shareholder appointing the nominee director, with all the implications that such a relationship entails.

Sole Director: 
Since the 1989 Companies Act came into effect companies have been allowed to have just one shareholder. LTD companies have always been allowed to have just one director (although a sole director cannot also be company secretary). It is perfectly legal for the sole shareholder to appoint himself sole director. However, there is an inherent danger in that if the director dies or unable to act in some other way, there is no shareholder to replace the director and the company will be unable to continue to trade until the ownership of the share(s) is determined - something that could take several weeks at least.

Silent or Sleeping Directors: 
Directors have a duty of care from which they cannot be absolved. If a person accepts the appointment of director he accepts full legal liability for the actions of the company. If he fails to attend board meetings he still has such liability even though he may have no knowledge of what is going on. Basically it is impossible for a director to delegate his responsibility (and liability) for operating the company. Ignorance of what is going on (as of the law) is no excuse.

REGISTERING THE APPOINTMENT

Register of Directors and Secretaries: 
Registering Director AppontmentThe first directors and secretary are required to complete Form 10 and send it to the Registrar. Thereafter each director/secretary is required to complete Form 288(a) and arrange for it to be filed with the Registrar within fourteen days of their appointment. As well as signing to indicate their consent to act (to ensure that the director knows of the appointment) full personal details as required (including any former name) must be given. Failure to provide such personal data is an offence subject to an initial plus a daily fine.

These details include private addresses, which are needed in case the Registrar requires to serve official notice (e.g. for failure to file accounts, etc.). Despite this there is a preference amongst some directors to try not to disclose their private address. This breaches company law. There are proposals to allow directors who are subject to serious personal threat to file a "service address" rather than their personal address. The number of directors able to take advantage of this relaxation is likely to be extremely small. All changes (e.g. names, nationality, address, resignation) must also be filed within fourteen days (on Form 288(c)). The Register of Directors must show all the details, and changes, required to be filed with the Registrar.

Register of Other Directorships: 
Currently the names of all companies of which the director has been a director in the previous five years must also be notified to the Registrar and shown in a register. Since this may be subject to considerable change (not least by passage of time "losing" former directorships) the requirement to update such changes should not be overlooked. However, the Registrar has indicated that there is no necessity to file Form 288(c) on each occasion of a change to this data. The former requirement to state all such directorships on the Annual Return has been dropped although until there is a change in company law, the company's own register must continue to be kept.

Register of Director's Interests: 
Details of each director's interests in the shares of the company and any subsidiary, fellow subsidiary or holding company must be notified to the company within five days of the person's appointment, and all changes thereafter must be separately notified within five days of their occurrence. This obligation not only relates to shares held personally by the director, but also to shares held by the director's spouse and any minor children (see Companies Act 1985 Section 325). In addition, any share options (and changes including their exercise) issued by the company to a director (or his spouse or infant children) must also be recorded. The only exceptions to this requirement are: if the director holds the shares as a trustee (i.e. there is no personal interest in them); if the director is also a director of the company's holding company which already holds all such details; or if the holding is in a company incorporated overseas.

'REGISTER' OF INTERESTS IN CONTRACTS

Under Section 317 of Companies Act 1985, directors are obliged to notify their company of any interest they may have in contracts (or proposed contracts) being made by the company with a third party.

Interests are defined as either being: GENERAL - that is that the director has an interest in all matters concerning a named third party. Such a statement could be made upon the director's appointment; or SPECIFIC - that a director has an interest in a particular contract. Such a declaration must be made at the first board meeting which considers the proposed contract or on the director becoming aware of the interest and/or of the contract.

There is no requirement for the company to keep a register of such interests, but directors themselves may feel it prudent that such a register should be kept as evidence that they have informed the company, not least since failure to notify an interest is an offence punishable by initial and daily fines.
Contact Registered AgentIncorporate Online

Search Coddan Search Coddan Terms and Agreement Coddan sitemap
Should I Register a Limited Company? Guide to Starting a Business English & Welsh Companies Formation Irish Company Formation
Northern Irish Company Formations Offshore Company Formation UK Guarantee Company Incorporation Bearer Shares Companies Formations
Incorporate a Holding Company Incorporate in Delaware Incorporate in New York Incorporate in Florida
Tips for Starting Up a Small Business Setting Up a New Business Guide Small Business Banking for Startups UK Trademark Registration
Business for Sale Buy an Existing Business Off the Shelf Company Advice on VAT Registration
VAT Registration for a New Business Eligibility to Work in the UK Buy a Business Buy a Limited Company
Starting Limited Company Apostille Seal Setting-Up a Limited Liability PartnershipOpening a Bank Account
Back to top
Copyright © 1993-2008. All rights reserved. The logo and the Coddan company brand are registered trademarks of Coddan CPM Ltd. Coddan CPM Ltd is a private limited company registered in England, whose registered number is 05370296, and whose registered office address is 5 Percy street, London W1T 1DG, VAT registered number is 864 142 527. Coddan CPM Ltd is committed to respecting the data which we hold on you. Your details are processed and kept securely in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998, DTA registration number is PZ9265799. The content of this site is protected under applicable copyright and trademark laws. Personal use of material is permitted for research and/or information purposes only.

Limited company formation and small business start-up advice - we are offering companies registrations in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, USA and offshore jurisdictions. Our simple and cost-effective business starting-up service has various packages available to suit all needs. Expert advice and cost efficient business registration services to assist companies with their statutory obligations, including business administration, bookkeeping, accounting and annual accounting and annual return preparation. We can also help you to introduce and arrange a business bank account in the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland, Cyprus, Gibraltar and in many other offshore countries.

All content within this site, including, but not limited to text, software, graphics, logos, icons and images are the property of the Coddan CPM Ltd. Except as provided herein, no portion of the materials on these pages may be reprinted or republished in any form without the express written permission of Coddan CPM Ltd. Permission is granted to print copies of informational articles for your own use and review, provided that source attributions and copyright notices are maintained. All of the information contained on this web site is not meant to be advice, nor should it be followed. The information on this site pertains to UK law only and is offered as a public service. It is not intended to give legal advice about a specific legal problem, nor does it create an attorney-client relationship. Due to the importance of the individual facts of every case, the generalizations we make may not necessarily be applicable to any particular case. Changes in the law could at any time make parts of this web site obsolete. Coddan does not represent nor warrant the accuracy of any of the information contained herein, nor should it be relied upon.

In the event of Companies House rejecting an application or submission you will have three days to re-submit the application with appropriate corrections at no extra charge. We reserve the right to cancel the contract between us if one or more of the goods or services that you ordered was listed at an incorrect price due to a typographical error or an error in the pricing information received by us from our supplier. If we do cancel your order for this reason, we will notify you by email and will credit your account with any sum deducted by us from your credit card as soon as possible but in any event within 30 days of your order. We will not be obliged to offer any additional compensation for disappointment suffered. Products are delivered using Royal Mail recorded delivery post, or e-mail (as appropriate), unless otherwise stated. Where you request an alternative method of delivery, you must meet those costs. Services are provided using reasonable skill and care. Products and services will be provided in accordance with the timescales set out in the Consumer Protection (Distance Selling) Regulations 2000 unless otherwise agreed with you. Website Last Updated: 05.09.2008