Procedure · Michigan

How to run an annual meeting in Michigan

An annual meeting of shareholders is required under every common-law corporation statute. Under Michigan Business Corporation Act, the procedure follows the universal pattern with the jurisdictional specifics noted below.

Statutory framework
Michigan Business Corporation Act
StatuteMichigan Business Corporation Act
Short citationMBCA
Relevant sectionsstate corporation statute (annual meeting and consent provisions)
RegistryMichigan LARA Corporations Division
At a glance
  • Notice must be given a minimum number of days in advance (varies by jurisdiction; typically 21 days)
  • Quorum is set in the bylaws (typically a majority of voting shares)
  • Standard agenda: financial statements, auditor report, director elections, auditor appointment
  • Written consent of shareholders substitutes for the meeting in most jurisdictions, with constraints
  • Audited financial statements may be required depending on shareholder count and revenue

In Michigan

In Michigan, the procedure to run an annual meeting operates under Michigan Business Corporation Act. The substantive steps mirror the universal pattern, with the applicable provisions found in state corporation statute (annual meeting and consent provisions). The Michigan LARA Corporations Division is the primary public-record destination for any filings flowing from the procedure. Diligence counsel will reconcile the corporation's internal records against the public record at Michigan LARA Corporations Division as part of the standard review.

Steps

  1. Set the date and prepare the financial statements

    The board sets the meeting date, subject to the statutory window. The corporation's financial statements for the most recent fiscal year are prepared and (if applicable) audited or reviewed. The auditor or independent accountant signs off on the statements. The directors approve the statements for presentation to shareholders. Without approved statements, the meeting cannot complete its statutory business.
  2. Prepare the notice of meeting and proxy materials

    The notice of meeting sets out the date, time, place (or electronic meeting platform), and the matters to be considered. The standard matters are: receipt of the financial statements and auditor's report, election of directors, appointment of auditor, and any other business permitted by the bylaws. Proxy forms are prepared and included with the notice; the proxy form permits a shareholder unable to attend to direct a proxy holder how to vote. For private corporations with a small shareholder base, the proxy infrastructure may be informal, but the substance is the same.
  3. Send the notice within the statutory window

    Notice is delivered to every shareholder of record as of the record date set by the board. The minimum notice period varies (DGCL § 222 requires 10-60 days for stock corporations; CBCA s. 135 requires 21-60 days; Companies Act 2006 requires 21 days). The notice is sent by the method specified in the bylaws (typically post or electronic mail). A shareholder may waive notice in writing, which is the standard practice for small private corporations where all shareholders are reachable and consent.
  4. Hold the meeting

    On the meeting date, the meeting is convened. The chair confirms quorum (typically a majority of voting shares present or represented by proxy). The minutes-taker records attendance. The chair walks through the agenda in order. The financial statements are received; questions are taken. Directors are elected for the next term; the slate may be uncontested or contested depending on the corporation. The auditor is appointed for the next year. Any other business listed in the notice is considered. The meeting is then adjourned.
  5. Pass the resolutions

    Each agenda item that requires a vote is passed as a shareholder resolution: appointment of the auditor, election of each director (typically slate election, sometimes individual), and approval of any other items. Voting is by show of hands unless a shareholder demands a poll, in which case voting is by share count. The resolutions are recorded in the minutes and may be repeated as separate written resolutions for the minute book.
  6. Prepare and approve the minutes

    The minutes record the meeting: attendance, quorum confirmation, the agenda items considered, the resolutions passed, the vote counts (or unanimity), and the time of adjournment. The minutes are signed by the chair and the secretary. At the next meeting (or by written resolution shortly after), the directors approve the minutes as accurate.
  7. File the meeting materials in the minute book

    The notice of meeting, proxy forms received, attendance list, financial statements approved, auditor's report, executed resolutions, and signed minutes all go into the minute book. The annual filing (annual return, annual report, confirmation statement, etc.) with the corporate registry may flow from the meeting; the filing is made within the statutory window.

Common mistakes

  • Meeting held outside the statutory window. The corporation misses the deadline (typically 15 months from the last meeting, or 6 months from fiscal year end, depending on the statute). The meeting must still be held; in many jurisdictions, missed-meeting penalties or corporate-registry consequences follow.
  • Quorum not confirmed. The minutes don't record whether quorum was achieved. Diligence counsel reads the omission as an open question on whether the resolutions passed are valid.
  • Director elections not recorded individually. A slate of directors is elected without identifying which directors. Years later, the corporate registry's record of directors disagrees with the minute book and reconstruction is difficult.
  • Written-resolution path used where the statute requires a meeting. A private corporation tries to substitute written consent for the meeting where the statute requires unanimous consent and one shareholder hasn't signed. The resolutions are invalid until the consent is unanimous or a proper meeting is held.
  • Financial statements not approved before the meeting. The financial statements are presented at the meeting but the directors haven't approved them in advance. The statements then can't be presented as approved by the board.
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FAQ

Common questions

In most jurisdictions, yes. The CBCA, OBCA, and most US state statutes require annual shareholder meetings for all corporations. The UK Companies Act 2006 exempts private companies from the AGM requirement but still requires the annual filings. Delaware requires annual meetings for stock corporations under § 211.

Sometimes. The CBCA, OBCA, and most provincial statutes permit unanimous written consent. Delaware permits majority written consent under § 228, which is one of the operational advantages of Delaware incorporation for small corporations. The UK permits written resolutions for private companies under Companies Act 2006 s. 288. The written-consent path is faster but requires the signature threshold to be met.

Depends on the jurisdiction and the corporation's size. CBCA s. 163 permits audit waiver by unanimous shareholder consent for non-distributing corporations. Most US states don't require audits for private corporations. UK private companies above certain thresholds (turnover, balance-sheet total, employees) require audited accounts. If shareholders or lenders require audited statements, the corporation must obtain them regardless of the statutory minimum.

The annual meeting is the meeting required by statute, with a standard agenda (financial statements, director elections, auditor appointment). A special meeting is convened on a specific matter outside the annual cycle: approving a merger, amending the articles, dealing with a director removal, etc. Notice requirements and quorum may differ; the bylaws control the specifics.

Yes, in every modern jurisdiction. The CBCA, OBCA, DGCL, and Companies Act 2006 all permit electronic attendance at shareholder meetings. The bylaws may set conditions (notice that the meeting is electronic, technical reliability, ability to communicate). Pure-electronic meetings (no physical location) are increasingly common.

The meeting must still be held. Many jurisdictions impose penalties or registry consequences for missed annual filings flowing from the meeting (the annual return or annual report may be tied to the meeting). The corporate registry may dissolve the corporation for prolonged non-filing. Holding a late meeting is always preferable to not holding the meeting.
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