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View/Open - Research Commons - The University of Waikato

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the transformation <strong>of</strong> shares as readily marketable commodities and liquid assets. 25<br />

As owners <strong>of</strong> the shares, shareholders are also the owner <strong>of</strong> the company although<br />

separate legal entity precludes ownership <strong>of</strong> assets which belong to the company. 26<br />

Subsequently, shareholders‟ control over the company decreased, and finally, they<br />

are perceived to be in the similar position as creditors; outsiders who advance loans<br />

to the company in exchange for company‟s pr<strong>of</strong>its. 27<br />

7.3 Doctrine <strong>of</strong> Capital Maintenance<br />

<strong>The</strong> purpose <strong>of</strong> this doctrine is to balance the scale which tends to tip in favour <strong>of</strong><br />

shareholders due to the separate legal entity principle. This doctrine does not imply<br />

that capital funds will remain throughout the life <strong>of</strong> the company because to do so<br />

would require the company to guarantee the company‟s solvency which is quite<br />

impossible since there is always likelihood for the company to lose in trading; a risk<br />

which creditors are well aware <strong>of</strong>. 28 Creditors, however, have the right to expect that<br />

the company will not utilise money for purposes contrary to its objects. 29<br />

25 Paddy Ireland “Company Law and the Myth <strong>of</strong> Shareholder Ownership” (1992) 62 MLR 32 at 41.<br />

26 Ibid.<br />

27 Ibid, at 43; Adolf A Berle and Gardiner C. Means <strong>The</strong> Modern Corporation and Private Property<br />

(<strong>The</strong> Macmillan Company, New York, 1932); Adolf A Berle and Gardiner C. Means <strong>The</strong> Modern<br />

Corporation and Private Property (Revised ed., Harcourt, Brace & World, 1968) at 244.<br />

28 Trevor v Whitworth (1887) 12 App Cas 409.<br />

29 Trevor v Whitworth (1887) 12 App Cas 409 at 423-424 when Lord Watson stated “Paid up capital<br />

may be diminished or lost in the course <strong>of</strong> the company‟s trading; that is a result which no<br />

legislation can prevent; but persons who deal with, and give credit to a limited company, naturally<br />

rely upon the fact that the company is trading with a certain amount <strong>of</strong> capital already paid…and<br />

they are entitled to assume that no part <strong>of</strong> the capital which has been paid into the c<strong>of</strong>fers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

company has been subsequently paid out, except in the legitimate course <strong>of</strong> business”.<br />

155

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