I spent some more time looking into the Business Corporation Act of British Columbia. The minimum requirements to form a legal company in the Province of BC are to register:
- A Notice of Incorporation
-> name each incorporator (no address required)
-> numerate the initial share distribution
-> signed and dated by each incorporator
- The Articles of Incorporation
-> these form the regulations or "laws" of the company
-> if this document is not submitted, the "default articles" are assumed
The incorporators are not required to use the
default Articles of Incorporation, and it appears the agreement can be modified in its entirety only subject to some minor formatting requirements defined in the Business Corporation Act. I thought it would be interesting to slowly go through the "default" Articles to see what still makes sense for a company existing largely in bitcoin space, and what needs to change. I'll start with Section 2 because Section 1 is just references to other Acts and definitions of terms.
Incorporation Agreement
Part 2 — Shares and Share Certificates
Form of share certificate
2.1 Each share certificate issued by the Company must comply with, and be signed as required by, the Business Corporations Act.
According to the Business Corporations Act, the signing must be "manual." At first I thought that meant "by hand," but it doesn't. I think it is more accurate to say that a human has to initiate the signature--think of it like shares held by a company need to be stored "offline" so that the company's shares can't get "goxxed."
I would modify this point to say something about digital signatures being the preferred method of signing, and time-stamping in the blockchain be the preferred method of issuance (or the preferred media to which the shares are written).
Right to share certificate
2.2 Each shareholder is entitled, without charge, to one certificate representing the share or shares of each class or series of shares held by the shareholder.
Seems reasonable.
Also note that there is a legal distinction between the share certificate and the shareholder. It seems that the official record of share ownership is the registry that the company must maintain, and one that is tied to a name and address. The certificate isn't the ownership, instead it is both a way for the shareholder to
demonstrate ownership, and, by signing the certificate, a way to endorse ownership to another person. So colored coins would work the same way. The coins are just the certificates and the company keeps the official registry of ownership (to real names and addresses) on a secure server.
No modification required for this point.
Sending of share certificate
2.3 Any share certificate to which a shareholder is entitled may be sent to the shareholder by mail and neither the Company nor any agent is liable for any loss to the shareholder because the certificate sent is lost in the mail or stolen.
What is this "mail" they speak of?
I think this point can be eliminated entirely, or replaced by something that describes the way the digital shares will be sent from the company to the share holder.
Replacement of worn out or defaced certificate
2.4 If the directors are satisfied that a share certificate is worn out or defaced, they must, on production to them of the certificate and on such other terms, if any, as they think fit,
(a) orderthecertificatetobecancelled,and
(b) issue a replacement share certificate.
This is no longer possible. Eliminate this point entirely.
Replacement of lost, destroyed or wrongfully taken certificate
2.5 If a person entitled to a share certificate claims that the share certificate has been lost, destroyed or wrongfully taken, the Company must issue a new share certificate, if the person
(a) so requests before the Company has notice that the lost,destroyed or wrongfully taken share certificate has been acquired by a protected purchaser,
(b) provides the Company with an indemnity bond sufficient, in the judgment of the directors, to protect the Company from any loss that the Company may suffer by issuing a new certificate, and
(c) satisfies any other reasonable requirements imposed by the Company.
It
is possible to lose, destroy or have a share wrongfully taken. I think this point is pretty good as is. For example, I think even if someone loses their private key, the company would still be required to re-issue the share certificates because the "official" ownership record is the company's registry and not the colored coins themselves. What's helpful solving "double spends" here is that the company can take an indemnity bond in case the shareholder actually sold his shares to someone else (and the company later learns this when the owner registers the endorsement).
I might go into more detail about the way the "indemnity bond" would work in such a case in this point. It would be useful to have a clear protocol for dealing with share fraud.
Certificate not to be replaced after registration of transfer
2.51 A person entitled to a share certificate may not assert against the Company a claim for a new share certificate under Article 2.5 if
(a) the share certificate has been lost, apparently destroyed or wrongfully taken and the person fails to notify the Company of that fact within a reasonable time after the person has notice of it, and
(b) the Company registers a transfer of the shares represented by the certificate before receiving a notice of the loss, apparent destruction or wrongful taking of the share certificate.
This is pretty useful as is. It gives the company an "out" when the company
knows that shares claimed as "lost" were already registered to another person (because a chain of digital signatures exists and there is no evidence of fraud or theft).
Splitting share certificates
2.6 If a shareholder surrenders a share certificate to the Company with a written request that the Company issue in the shareholder’s name 2 or more certificates, each representing a specified number of shares and in the aggregate representing the same number of shares as the certificate so surrendered, the Company must cancel the surrendered certificate and issue replacement share certificates in accordance with that request.
This point needs to be reworked. There is no longer a need for the shareholder to surrender share certificates in order to get them "split up." A protocol like open-assets (colored coins) already takes care of this.
This point should be updated to work with the new efficient share-management technology.
So far so good. 19 more sections to go