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De Facto Corporation And Corporation By Estoppel




''De facto'' corporation and '''corporation by estoppel''' are both terms that are used by Court s to describe circumstances in which a business organization that has failed to become a '''''de jure'' Corporation ''' (a corporation by law) will nonetheless be treated as a corporation, thereby shielding Shareholder s from liability.


''DE FACTO'' CORPORATION

In order for a ''de facto'' corporation to be created, the following elements must exist:

#There must be an incorporation Statute that lays out the various requirements under which legal incorporation can be accomplished;
#There must have been a good faith attempt to comply with the statute by the intended incorporators;
#:For example, if the Articles Of Incorporation were mailed to the appropriate office, but addressed to the wrong person, lost in the mail, or not filed by the corporation by the time the corporation began acting in an official capacity.
#There must have been act made on the corporation's behalf by its purported officers or Agents .
If all of these requirements are met, then the business will be treated as a corporation for all purposes, except with respect to acts by state itself. However, most states will not apply this doctrine to protect a person who was ''aware'' that the incorporation effort was defective at the time that they purported to act on behalf of the corporation.


CORPORATION BY ESTOPPEL

Corporation by estoppel, on the other hand, applies against someone who deals with a business ''as if it were'' a corporation, irrespective of whether there was a good faith effort by the business to incorporate. The person doing business with such an entity may later be Estopped from arguing that it is not in fact a corporation, in an attempt to reach the assets of the incorporators. For the same reason, defendants who had acted as a corporation will be estopped from denying liability as a corporation when sued by a plaintiff who had relied on the defendant's corporate form when dealing with the defendant.


DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ''DE FACTO'' CORPORATION AND CORPORATION BY ESTOPPEL

Unlike a ''de facto'' corporation, the theory of corporation by estoppel only applies to Contract claimants, not Tort claimants, because contract claimant should have known the nature of the entity with which they were doing business.