Company Secretary Information
The
following information has been designed to give you an understanding
of the role of a company secretary and the legal obligations
involved. If you want to start your own limited company
and would like an experienced company secretary then SFS
can fill this role.
Does every company need a secretary?
Yes. According to the Companies Act every company
must have a secretary. A sole director cannot also be the
secretary. Therefore, a company must have at least two officers,
a director and a company secretary. However, it is possible
for the company secretary to also be a director of the company.
Do
you need us to provide you with a nominee company secretary
to fulfill this requirement? Please see our Nominee
Services page for details.
Does a company secretary need any qualifications?
The company secretary of a private limited company
(LTD) needs no formal qualifications. It is up to the directors
to ensure that a person has appropriate knowledge and experience
to act as a secretary of the company. In the case of a public
limited company (PLC), the secretary will normally be expected
to be professionally qualified as a lawyer, accountant or
company secretary, though previous experience as secretary
of a PLC may also be taken into account.
Disqualification
as a director either by order of court or through bankruptcy
will prevent an individual acting as a company secretary
unless a court specifically allows this.
Does the secretary have to be a UK citizen?
No. Except for occasional restrictions imposed by the government
on the activities of certain foreign nationals a director
or secretary can be of any nationality and can live anywhere
in the world.
What are the duties of a company secretary?
They are not specified by the Companies Act, but are usually
contained in an employment contract.
Special
duties
As the secretary is an officer of the company, they may
be criminally liable for defaults committed by the company.
For example failure to file any change in the details of
the company's directors and secretary, 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.
Other duties
The company secretary usually undertakes the following duties:
Maintaining the statutory registers. These are
-the register of members
-the register of directors and secretaries
-the register of directors' interests
-the register of charges
-for public companies only, the register of interests in
shares
If
you need a company register please see our company
documents page.
Ensuring
that statutory forms are filed promptly.
You
cannot simply send a letter to notify the Registrar that
you wish to change the situation of the company's registered
office or that changes have occurred among directors or
secretaries or their particulars. You should normally use
Companies House forms 287 and 288a, b or c as appropriate.
You may also use the annual return Form 363s in some circumstances
if the return is due at the convenient time. Changes of
directors' and secretaries' details must be notified within
14 days. This is just an example as there are many other
forms that need to be delivered to the Registrar.
Providing members and auditors with notice of meetings.
You must
give them 21 days written notice of an annual general meeting.
You must give them 14 days written notice of a meeting which
is neither 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.
Sending the Registrar copies of resolutions and agreements.
You must send the Registrar copies of every resolution
or agreement to which section 380 applies, for example special
and extraordinary resolutions, within 15 days of them being
passed.
Supplying
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. You must send accounts at least
21 days before a meeting at which they are to be laid.
Keeping,
or arranging for the keeping, of minutes of directors' meetings
and general meetings.
Ensuring that people entitled to do so, 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.
Custody
and use of the company seal.
Companies no longer need to have a company seal but if they
do, the secretary is usually responsible for its custody
and use. For details on our company seals see our company
seals page.
Complimentary
duties
Particularly
in small companies, the company secretary is often expected
to take on other duties as well. At all times, the company
secretary's principal responsibility is to the directors.
It may make sense for the company secretary to take on other
administrative responsibilities .
For
example:
-PAYE and payroll.
-VAT registration.
-insurance and pensions.
-Managing the company's premises and facilities.
Company
secretaries are often asked to take on responsibility for
legal matters in general. They might be required to advise
the directors on their duties, and to ensure that they comply
with corporate legislation and the Memorandum and Articles
of Association of the company. A company secretary might
also be asked to ensure that they comply with other legislation,
including data protection and health and safety legislation.
They might be asked to sign leases on behalf of the board,
or to act as signatory for the board more generally, for
example on the bank account or statutory documents. A company
secretary might be asked to take responsibility for arranging
adequate insurance to protect the company and the directors.
Company secretaries are also frequently involved in negotiations
with outside advisers, including accountants and lawyers.
Does
a company secretary have any powers?
No,
but the Companies Act allows them to sign re-registration
applications, for example the re-registration
of a limited company as unlimited. The secretary is also
allowed to sign most of the forms prescribed under the Companies
Act.
What
rights does a company secretary have?
They
depend on the terms of his or her contract with the company.
The secretary has no special rights under the Companies
Act.
What could
go wrong?
The job of company secretary in any company involves some
potential liabilities, as shown below.
In
practice, it is the qualified company secretaries, employed
by public companies, with employment contracts which spell
out all the responsibilities, who are most likely to be
prosecuted for any serious wrongdoing. An unqualified company
secretary, employed by a small private company, is unlikely
to be prosecuted unless he or she is knowingly involved
in serious wrongdoing. In any company, it is the company's
directors who have primary legal responsibility. Directors
and company secretaries could be held jointly liable for
failures to meet the provisions of the Companies Act (except
for filing company accounts, for which directors alone are
responsible).
What
are the potential liabilities?
You
could incur fines or even criminal charges for failure to
file the Annual Return. You could, potentially, be disqualified
, prosecuted or made liable for company debts if the law
is broken. You could be subject to criminal proceedings,
if the company trades fraudulently, or if company funds
are misappropriated. If you are also a director, you could
be held personally liable for the company's debts, if there
has been wrongful trading. Failure to ensure that the directors
are acting properly in the conduct of the business could
leave you with personal responsibility for its debts.
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