Corporations Act 2001
A company has the legal capacity and powers of an individual both in and outside this jurisdiction. A company also has all the powers of a body corporate, including the power to: (a) issue and cancel shares in the company; (b) issue debentures (despite any rule of law or equity to the contrary, this power includes a power to issue debentures that are irredeemable, redeemable only if a contingency, however remote, occurs, or redeemable only at the end of a period, however long); (c) grant options over unissued shares in the company; (d) distribute any of the company ' s property among the members, in kind or otherwise; (e) grant a security interest in uncalled capital; (f) grant a circulating security interest over the company ' s property; (g) arrange for the company to be registered or recognised as a body corporate in any place outside this jurisdiction; (h) do anything that it is authorised to do by any other law (including a law of a foreign country).
A company limited by guarantee does not have the power to issue shares.
Note 1: For a company ' s power to issue bonus, partly-paid, preference and redeemable preference shares, see section 254A .
Note 2: A CCIV ' s power to issue shares is affected by sections 1230 and 1230B .
124(2)
A company ' s legal capacity to do something is not affected by the fact that the company ' s interests are not, or would not be, served by doing it.
124(3)
For the avoidance of doubt, this section does not: (a) authorise a company to do an act that is prohibited by a law of a State or Territory; or (b) give a company a right that a law of a State or Territory denies to the company.
124(4)
Subsection (1) does not prevent a mutual entity that is a company limited by guarantee issuing MCIs.
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