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Corporation sole

Type of legal entity


Type of legal entity

A corporation sole is a legal entity consisting of a single ("sole") incorporated office, occupied by a single ("sole") natural person.{{cite web| url = https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200708/jtselect/jtstatin/180/18010.htm| title = S.I. 2008/1957: extract from the explanatory memorandum prepared by the Ministry of Justice| last = Ministry of Justice| date = 21 October 2008| publisher = publications.parliament.uk

Ecclesiastical origins

Most corporations sole are church-related, although some political offices of the United Kingdom (e.g., many of the secretaries of state), Canada, and the United States are corporations sole.

The Catholic Church continues to use corporations sole in holding titles of property: as recently as 2002, it split a diocese in the US state of California into many smaller corporations sole and with each parish priest becoming his own corporation sole, thus limiting the diocese's liability for any sexual abuse or other wrongful activity in which the priest might engage. This is, however, not the case everywhere, and legal application varies. For instance, other U.S. jurisdictions have used corporations at multiple levels.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints uses the corporation sole form for its president, which is legally listed as "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints".

Iglesia ni Cristo was registered as corporation sole with the Insular Government of the Philippines in 1914.

The Crown

Main article: The Crown

Within most constitutional monarchies, notably the Commonwealth realms, the Crown is a nonstatutory corporation sole. Although conceptually speaking, the office and officeholder retain dual capacities in that they may act both in a corporate capacity (as monarch) and in an individual capacity (as a private person), they are inseparably fused in law; there is no legal distinction between the office and the individual person who holds it. The Crown (state) legally acts as a person when it enters into contracts and possesses property.

The sovereign's status as a corporation sole ensures that all references to the king, the queen, His Majesty, Her Majesty, and the Crown are synonymous, referring to exactly the same legal personality over time, though the identity is in at least some cases also asserted by statute without reference to the concept of corporation sole. While natural persons who serve as sovereign pass on, the sovereign never legally dies; thus the corporate nature of the office of sovereign ensures that the authority of the state continues uninterrupted. In other words, the sovereign is made a corporation sole to prevent the possibility of disruption or interregnum, thereby preserving the stability of the Crown (state). For this reason, at the moment of the demise of the sovereign, a successor is immediately and automatically in place.

As a corporation sole, the legal person of the sovereign is the personification of the state and consequently acts as a guarantor of the rule of law and the fount of all executive authority behind the state's institutions.

Secular application in the United States

Every state of the United States recognizes corporations sole under common law, and about a third of the states have specific statutes that stipulate the conditions under which that state recognizes the corporations sole that are filed with that state for acquiring, holding, and disposing of title for church and religious society property.

Examples of corporations sole in the United Kingdom

Governmental

  • The Crown (sometimes regarded as a corporation aggregate)
  • Administrator of Japanese Property (abolished)
  • Auditor General for Wales
  • Chief Executive of Skills Funding
  • Children's Commissioner for England
  • Children's Commissioner for Wales
  • Commissioner for Older People for Northern Ireland
  • Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis
  • Comptroller and Auditor General
  • The Corporate Officer of the House of Commons and the Corporate Officer of the House of Lords, two corporations established by the Parliamentary Corporate Bodies Act 1992
  • Duke of Cornwall (inhabited by the Prince of Wales)
  • Duke of Lancaster (inhabited by the monarch)
  • Information Commissioner
  • Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime (London)
  • Judicial Appointments and Conduct Ombudsman
  • Lord Mayor of London
  • Official Custodian for Charities
  • Immigration Services Commissioner
  • Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland
  • Public Services Ombudsman for Wales
  • Public Trustee
  • Pubs Code Adjudicator
  • Receiver for the Metropolitan Police District (abolished)
  • Registrar General
  • many secretaries of state in the United Kingdom (various; most recently Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs)
  • Solicitor for the affairs of the Duchy of Lancaster
  • Treasury Solicitor
  • London Fire Commissioner

Private entities

  • Da'i al-Mutlaq

In the Church of England

  • Archbishop of Canterbury
  • Archbishop of York
  • Bishops of the Church of England
  • Deans of the Church of England
  • Rectors and Team Rectors in the Church of England
  • Vicars in the Church of England

Examples of corporations sole in New Zealand

  • Public Trustee (until 2001)
  • Māori Trustee
  • Privacy Commissioner

Examples of corporations sole elsewhere

  • The Diocese of Hong Kong
  • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in the office of its Presiding Bishop
  • Director of National Parks, Australian government
  • Governor General of Canada
  • Minister of the Government, Republic of Ireland
  • Public Trustee
  • The Archbishop of Manila
  • The Archbishop of New York
  • Office of the sovereign of Canada
  • The Catholic Bishop of Chicago, A Corporation Sole- The Archdiocese of Chicago
  • (Former) Administrator of the Southern Electricity Supply of New South Wales

References

References

  1. [http://www.insolvencydirect.bis.gov.uk/freedomofinformation/technical/TechnicalManual/Ch73-84/Chapter%2075/Part%201/Part%201.htm Technical Manual], Insolvencydirect.bis.gov.uk
  2. (December 2010). "Draft Cabinet Manual (para 102)". Cabinet Office.
  3. (14 December 2018). "Detroit Archdiocese transfers assets; critics say it's a shell game".
  4. (27 March 2008). "Phoenix parishes to be separate corporations".
  5. "LDS Corp. — The church's long journey to stay on the right side of the law and its principles".
  6. (14 July 1914). "Iglesia Ni Cristo Registration Document".
  7. (2014). "Royal Succession and the Canadian Crown as a Corporation Sole: A Critique of Canada's Succession to the Throne Act, 2013". Constitutional Forum.
  8. {{Harvnb. Blackstone. 1809
  9. (2007). "British Government and the Constitution: Text and Materials". Cambridge University Press.
  10. Lagassé, Philippe. (3 February 2013). "The Queen of Canada is dead; long live the British Queen".
  11. {{Harvnb. Lagassé. Bowden. 2014
  12. Blackstone, William. (1809). "Commentaries on the Laws of England". A. Strahan.
  13. Lordon, Paul. (1991). "Crown Law". Butterworths.
  14. {{Cite canlaw. (1985). fr-CA. (''Sa Majesté'', ''la Reine'', ''le Roi'' ou ''la Couronne'')".
  15. {{cite legislation UK. (1978)
  16. (2014). "[[Halsbury's Laws of England]]".
  17. {{Harvnb. Lagassé. Bowden. 2014
  18. {{Cite canlaw. (1985)
  19. {{cite CanLII. (2013)
  20. "The Modern Corporation Sole (from 93 DICKINSON LAW REVIEW, FALL 1988)".
  21. (1988). "The Modern Corporation Sole". Dickinson Law Review.
  22. "The execution of deeds and documents by or on behalf of bodies corporate".
  23. {{Cite legislation UK. (1952)
  24. {{Cite legislation UK. (2006)
  25. {{Cite legislation UK. (2009)
  26. Dunford, John. (1 November 2010). "Review of the Office of the Children’s Commissioner (England)".
  27. {{cite legislation UK. (2000)
  28. (2011). "Commissioner for Older People Act (Northern Ireland) 2011".
  29. {{Cite legislation UK. (1992)
  30. {{Cite legislation UK. (1992)
  31. {{Cite legislation UK. (2018)
  32. "OG38 A1 – What is a corporation?". [[Charity Commission]].
  33. "Learn about the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland".
  34. "Public Trustee". Ministry of Justice.
  35. (4 August 2023). "Pubs Code Adjudicator".
  36. "Metropolitan Police (Receiver) Act 1861: Section 1". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  37. {{cite legislation UK. (2020)
  38. "Duchy of Lancaster Act 1920: Section 3". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  39. "Treasury Solicitor Act 1876: Section 1". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  40. "Governance - London Fire Commissioner". London Fire Brigade.
  41. "Dawat-e-Hadiyah (England) Act 1993". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  42. (3 August 1832). "Ecclesiastical Corporations Act 1832". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  43. "Practice Guide 08". Land Registry.
  44. (17 October 2006). "Clause 155 – Companies required to have at least one director who is a natural person".
  45. "Parsonages Act 1838: Section 16". [[The National Archives (United Kingdom).
  46. "Part 4: Client Service Performance of the Māori Trustee". Office of the Auditor-General New Zealand.
  47. (28 November 2014). "2014 Annual Report: A signal year for privacy law". Privacy Commissioner.
  48. "Hong Kong e-Legislation".
  49. "ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION AND BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION ACT 1999 - SECT 514A Continuation". Australian government.
  50. [http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/G-9/page-1.html#docCont Governor General’s Act], R.S.C., 1985, c. G-9, § 2.
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