Governance Documents definition

Governance Documents means any articles of incorporation, corporate by-laws, limited liability company operating agreement, shareholder agreements, membership and partnership agreements and other similar organizational documents of a Person, together with any applicable charters, codes of conduct, governance guidelines and other similar documents setting forth policies and practices relating to the management and governance of such Person.
Governance Documents means the Master Community Declaration (if any), the Building JOPD and any other document, instrument or agreement Registered or required to be Registered in respect of the Master Community, the Building, and/or the Unit in accordance with the Jointly Owned Property Law or any other Applicable Law. A copy of the Building JOPD is attached to the Disclosure Statement;

Examples of Governance Documents in a sentence

  • Reorganized CURO shall be authorized to issue a certain number of shares of New Equity Interests pursuant to its Governance Documents.

  • The Governance Documents will prohibit the issuance of non-voting Equity Securities to the extent required under Bankruptcy Code section 1123(a)(6).

  • Any Holder’s acceptance of New Equity Interests shall be deemed as its consent to the terms and conditions of the Governance Documents, as the same may be amended or modified from time to time following the Effective Date in accordance with their terms.

  • Each of the Reorganized Debtors will file its Governance Documents with the applicable Secretaries of State and/or other applicable authorities in its respective state, province, or country of incorporation in accordance with the corporate laws of the respective state, province, or country of incorporation to the extent such filing is required for each such document.

  • As of the Effective Date, the term of the current members of the board of directors or other Governing Body of CURO shall expire and such Persons shall be deemed to have resigned from the board of directors of CURO, and the members for the initial term of the New Board shall be appointed in accordance with the Governance Documents.


More Definitions of Governance Documents

Governance Documents means, with respect to any Person (other than a natural Person), such Person’s Regulations (or Bylaws), Operating Agreement (or Limited Liability Company Agreement), Partnership Agreement or equivalent governing documents, together with any amendments to any of the foregoing.
Governance Documents means each Debtor’s (or Reorganized Debtor’s, as context requires) respective certificate of incorporation, certificate of formation, bylaws, charter, trust agreement, indenture, limited liability company agreement, partnership agreement, shareholder agreement and such other formation and constituent documents, either in effect prior to the Effective Date or as amended, restated or otherwise modified as of the Effective Date, as the context requires.
Governance Documents means the legal document(s) by which any Person (other than an individual) establishes its legal existence or which govern its internal affairs as well as any agreements governing the rights of holders of Equity Interests with respect to such Equity Interests or the governance of the issuers of such Equity Interests. For example, the “Governance Documents” of a corporation would be its certificate of incorporation, by-laws and shareholder agreement (if any), the “Governance Documents” of a limited partnership are its certificate of limited partnership and its limited partnership agreement or other similar agreement (if any) and the “Governance Documents” of a limited liability company are its certificate of formation and its operating agreement or other similar agreement (if any).
Governance Documents means all and any of each Council’s Standing Orders, Scheme of Delegation, Financial Regulations and Contract Standing Orders.
Governance Documents means, with respect to any entity, all documents (i) pursuant to which the legal existence of the entity is established (including, by way of example, the articles of organization of a limited liability company); (ii) that were adopted or approved by the owners, board of directors, managers or other similar management authority of the entity and set forth provisions for the regulation and management of the entity’s internal affairs (including, by way of example, the by-laws of a corporation); and (iii) that are binding upon any owners of the entity and establish the governance, economic and/or other rights of such owners in their capacity as such (including, by way of example, the partnership agreement of a partnership or the operating agreement of a limited liability company).