company secretaries' duties and responsibilities
Which companies need a Company Secretary?
Every company must have a secretary: Section 283(1) of the Companies
Act 1985.
A sole director cannot also be the secretary: Section 283(2)
Does a company secretary need any qualifications?
Only the secretary of a public company needs to be qualified.
What are the duties of a company secretary?
The duties of a company secretary are not specified by the Act, but
are usually contained in his/her contract of employment.
Special duties
As the secretary is an officer of the company under section 744 of the
Act he/she may be criminally liable for defaults committed by the company,
e.g. failure to file, in the time allowed, details of any change in the
company’s directors’ and secretary’s details and the
company’s annual return.
The secretary may also have to make out a statement of the company’s
affairs if an administrative receiver or a provisional liquidator is
appointed, or if a winding up order is made. (Sections 47 and 131 of
the Insolvency Act 1986)
Other Duties
In addition the company secretary usually undertakes the following duties:
1. Maintaining the statutory registers. These are:
- the register of members (section 352);
- the register of directors and secretaries (section 288);
- the register of directors’ interests (section 325);
- the register of charges (section 407); (section 422 for Scottish
companies) and
- (for public companies only) the register of interests in shares
2. Ensuring that statutory forms are filed promptly. You cannot simply
send a letter to notify the Registrar of Companies that you wish to change
the situation of the company’s registered office or that changes
have been made among directors or secretaries or their particulars. You
should normally use forms 287 and 288a/b/c as appropriate. The annual
return form 363s may also be used in some circumstances if due at the
convenient time. Changes of directors’ and secretaries’ details
must be notified within 14 days. There are many other forms which need
to be delivered to the Registrar.
3. Providing members and auditors with 21 days written notice of an
annual general meeting and 14 days written notice of a meeting other
than an annual general meeting or a meeting to pass a special resolution.
If you are the secretary of an unlimited company the written notice required
is 7 days.
4. Sending the Registrar of Companies copies of every resolution or
agreement to which section 380 applies, e.g. special and extraordinary
resolutions.
5. Supplying, not less than 21 days before a meeting at which the company’s
accounts are to be laid, a copy of the accounts to every member of the
company, every debenture holder and every person who is entitled to receive
notice of general meetings: section 238 of the Act.
6. Keeping, or arranging for the keeping, of minutes of directors’ meetings
and general meetings.
7. Supplying copies of the company’s accounts and other documents
to those entitled to them, and ensuring that people entitled to do this
can inspect company records. For example, members of the company and
members of the public are entitled to a copy of the company’s register
of members, and members of the company are entitled to inspect the minutes
of its general meetings and to have copies of these minutes.
8. Although it is no longer a requirement for a company to use a company
seal, if it does so the secretary is usually responsible for its custody
and use. (Company seals are not supplied by Companies House or by the
Department of Trade and Industry. They can be purchased from law stationers
or company formation agents).
Does a company secretary have any powers?
The Act does not give the secretary any specific powers, but they do
allow him/her to sign the following re-registration applications:
- the re-registration of a limited company as unlimited: section 49(4)
of the Act;
- the re-registration of an unlimited company as limited: section 51(4);
- the re-registration of a public company as a private company: section
53(1)(b); and
- the re-registration of a private company as a public company: section
43(3);
The secretary is also allowed to sign most of the forms prescribed under
the Companies Act.
What rights does a company secretary have?
The rights of a company secretary depend on the terms of his/her contract
with the company.
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