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Joint Stock Companies Act 1856
UK Government Coat of Arms
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Statute book chapter: 19 & 20 Vict. c.47 introduced_by=Robert Lowe
Territorial extent: England and Wales, Scotland
Dates
Date of Royal Assent: 1856
Commencement: 1856
Repeal date:
Other legislation
Related legislation: Companies Act 2006
Repealing legislation:
Status: Unknown

The Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 (19 & 20 Vict. c.47) was a consolidating statute, recognised as the founding piece of modern UK company law legislation.

Unlike other Acts of Parliament that preceded it, the 1856 Act provided a simple administrative procedure by which any group of seven people could register a limited liability company for themselves.

Contents

[edit] Enactment

The Joint Stock Companies Bill was introduced to Parliament by the then Vice President of the Board of Trade, Mr Robert Lowe. In doing so he proclaimed the right of every citizen to have freedom of contract and with it obtain limited liability for operating a business. Companies had until recently been prohibited, as a result of the Bubble Act and the stock market panics of the early 18th century. There was still a lot of suspicion of companies, so Lowe refuted the idea that a limited company is inherently subject to fraud, and proposed the suffix of "Ltd" to make businesses aware of limited liability.

A company formed on the principle of limited liability carries on the face of it something like prudence and caution. Its shareholders seem to say, "we have entered into a partnership, but it is impossible to tell what may happen, and since the company may fail, we will not risk all we possess in the undertaking...[1]

My object at present is not to urge the adoption of limited liability. I am arguing in favour of human liberty - that people may be permitted to deal how and with whom they choose without the officious interference of the state; and my opinion will not be shaken even though very few limited companies be established. Every man has a right to choose for himself between the two principles, and it is ill advised legislation which steps in between him and the exercise of that right. It is right the experiment should be tried; and, in my judgment, the principle we should adopt is this, - not to throw the slightest obstacle in the way of limited companies being formed - because the effect of that would be to arrest ninety-nine good schemes in order that the bad hundredth might be prevented; but to allow them all to come into existence, and when difficulties arise, to arm the courts of justice with sufficient powers to check extravagance or roguery in the management of companies, and to save them from the wreck in which they may be involved.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ HC Deb. 1 February 1856, v.140, Col.130
  2. ^ HC Deb. 1 February 1856, v.140, Col.131

[edit] References

  • Harris, R. (2000). Industrialising English Law: Entrepreneurship and Business Organisation, 1720–1844. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-66275-3. 
  • Hunt, B.C. (1936). The Development of the Business Corporation in England, 1800–1867. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 
  • Mayson, S.W et al. (2005). Mayson, French & Ryan on Company Law. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-928531-4. 



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