This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. Learn more

LPC Law Notes Business Law and Practice Notes

Loans To Directors Notes

Updated Loans To Directors Notes

Business Law and Practice Notes

Business Law and Practice

Approximately 649 pages

A collection of the best LPC BLP notes the director of Oxbridge Notes (an Oxford law graduate) could find after combing through dozens of LPC samples from outstanding students with the highest results in England and carefully evaluating each on accuracy, formatting, logical structure, spelling/grammar, conciseness and "wow-factor".

In short these are what we believe to be the strongest set of Business Law and Practice notes available in the UK this year. This collection of notes is fully updat...

The following is a more accessible plain text extract of the PDF sample above, taken from our Business Law and Practice Notes. Due to the challenges of extracting text from PDFs, it will have odd formatting:

Loans to Directors

Company and Transaction

Identify whether the company is a Plc, a Ltd, or a Ltd connected with a Plc.

Identify the nature of the transaction: is it a loan, quasi-loan, guarantee, security or credit transaction.

Identify who benefits from the transaction: a director, a director of a holding company or a person connected to one of the above (s.252 & s.253)

Shareholder Approval

Shareholder approval is required whenever a loan is made from a company to its director (s.197(1)(a)); in addition approval is required for loans made to the director of a holding company (s.197(2)).

The following restrictions only apply to Plcs or Ltds connected with a Plc. Shareholder approval is required whenever a loan is made to a connected person to a director (s.200(2)(a)); approval is required for loans made to a connected person of a director of a holding company (s.200(3)).

No approval is required where a holding company gives a loan to a connected person of the Ltd company’s director.

The Ltd company will not need to give any approval if they are exempt under s.197(5) or s.200(6) if they are a wholly owned subsidiary. In this case only the holding company will need to give approval (s.197(2) & s.200(3)).

These rules also apply to credit transactions (s.201(2)(a)) and quasi-loans (s.198(2)(a) & s.199(1)).

Shareholder Resolution

Shareholder approval must be completed using an ordinary resolution (s.281(3)) before a company can do the above.

The resolution must not be passed until a memo containing information relating to the amount, purpose and nature of the transaction is detailed (s.197(4)). The memorandum of the term of the loan must be available for 15 days before the meeting (s.197(3)(a)-(b)).

The resolution can be passed by a written resolution as long as the proposed terms of the loan is attached to the resolution (s.197(3)(a)-(b)).

Statutory Exceptions

If loans do not exceed 10,000 then no shareholder approval is required (s.207(1)).

If credit transactions do not exceed 15,000 then no shareholder approval is required (s.207(2)). Credit transactions which are in the court of business and on no more favourable terms than would have been offered to a third party then no shareholder approval is required (s.209(1)).

Money lending companies that act in the course of business and give loans on no more favourable terms that would be offered to the public...

Buy the full version of these notes or essay plans and more in our Business Law and Practice Notes.

More Business Law And Practice Samples