Introduction
The Corporate Affairs Commission
hereinafter referred to as “the Commission” or CAC for short, is one of the
major regulatory bodies of companies in Nigeria. The body is a creation that
came into being by virtue of the Companies and Allied Matters Act (hereinafter
referred to as CAMA) Cap 50, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, now Cap C20 of the
Laws of the Federation, 2004. Principally, the Commission is one of the
innovations of CAMA that gives the Commission the responsibility of
incorporation of companies, registration of Business Names, Incorporation of
Trustee of certain committees, bodies, associations and other regulations. CAMA
also introduced Corporate audit Committee, insider trading, codified the duties
of directors, the fundamental principles emanated in the rules of Fossal Foss V
Harbottle, the rule in Royal British Bank V Turguard.
Before the advent of CAC, the
Companies Act of 1968 was the Act that regulated the activities of companies in
Nigeria. The present CAMA was borne out of draft documents prepared by the
Nigerian Law Reform Commission in an effort to reform and improve on the
Companies Act of 1968, which could no longer address the various challenges
associated with the regulation and supervision of Companies in Nigeria.
In the pre-oil boom era of the
Nigerian Economy (1970-1979), the then company legislation was severally
criticized. “…One of the major criticism of the Act
is that, it is little more than the
putting together of some Sections of the repealed Companies Act Cap 37 and some
Sections of the U.K Companies Act 1948, instead of taking the bold step of
codifying both the statutory and case law on companies…”1 The preparation of
such a code would have provided the opportunity for reviewing and modifying
some of the more inconvenient common law rules.
In its Report on the reform of Nigeria
Company Law 1988, the Nigerian Law Reform Commission commentary on the above
inadequacy and some others observed that “with paucity of Nigerian cases on
Company Law and the present heavy cost of obtaining English Law reports and
textbooks, that difficulty in finding the law in this country can be well
imagined…”2
As a result of these numerous problems
in our company laws as hitherto mentioned, the Nigerian Law Reform Commission
was set up among other reasons “to evolve a comprehensive body of Legal
Principles and Rules governing Companies and suitable for the circumstances of
the country. These rules was to facilitate business activities in the country
and protect the interest of the investors, the public and of the nation as a
whole”3
TOPIC: AN APPRAISAL OF THE ROLE OF CORPORATE AFFAIRS COMMISSION AS A REGULATORY BODY UNDER NIGERIAN COMPANY LAW
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 78
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock

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