Should Marriage Between First Cousins Be...
Family & Relationships1 min ago
Where can I find out who owns a limited company?
It's listed at Companies House but I could not find any names of owners.
No best answer has yet been selected by TrciaT. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.rebby - to add to what others said, you obviously are mistaken. As other users have said a company is owned by its shareholders. I suspect that what you're thinking of, is the fact that a company's assets are not owned by anyone, but are owned by the company itself because of the corporate veil principal from Solomon v Solomon. (I may have spelt the name wrong, but people will know which case I mean).
Miss Zippy - it's technically risky to assume that the ownership and control of a company rest in the hands of the same person(s). In a private company the separation is admittedly less pronounced, but a certain degree usually exists. I realise I'm perhaps coming across as petty, but I've studied this for a long time, and the separation of ownership and control is the biggest challenge that faces modern companies. (Obviously I'm not questioning the rest of your answer! :-) )
january_bug, no you're not coming across as petty at all as I too have studied law in detail (LLB (Hons) and LLM in Commercial Law) so appreciate where you're coming from. You are, of course, correct about the "academic" separation of powers, but (as Co Sec of 17 private limited companies and director of one) I was talking from practical experience (which can differ hugely from what you learn in the lecture theatre as I'm sure you'll appreciate), where it is more often than not the case that the owners and controllers are the same people.
Yeah, you're right. As someone with a legal background I'm sure you spotted my cautious language! :-) However, I'm sure you'll agree with me that the major problem of separation of ownership and control, shirking, is rather simply yet beautifully illustrated by the number of us at work, yet on here!!! :-p :-)
PS My LLM was in law & economics, so I did the economic analysis of business organisations (focusing on companies) but obviously didn't look at it from other angles as you must have done, so your views will be more rounded on this one than mine, I suspect! :-)