- Title
- An historical analysis of the development of a company as a single enterprise and the impact on group company taxation
- Creator
- Els, Tania
- ThesisAdvisor
- Stack, E
- Subject
- Taxation -- South Africa
- Subject
- Taxation -- History
- Subject
- Taxation -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Subject
- Business enterprises -- South Africa
- Subject
- Business enterprises -- Taxation -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Subject
- Corporation law -- South Africa
- Subject
- South Africa. Income Tax Act, 1962
- Subject
- South Africa. Companies Act, 2008
- Subject
- Separate legal personality
- Subject
- Group taxation
- Date
- 2020
- Type
- text
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MCom
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/154241
- Identifier
- vital:39628
- Description
- The company is considered a separate legal entity in both legislation and jurisprudence. The “veil” separating the company and its shareholders is a doctrine entrenched in company law that originated centuries ago. The doctrine is based on conditions that existed during a period that commenced with trading forms less complicated than the corporate groups found today. Trading forms known as guilds could be traced back to 1087, which gradually developed into regulated companies and, in the last century, into the joint-stock company form. The modern era has seen the development of groups of companies carrying on business as economic units. Company law, in regulating business forms, has failed to acknowledge the corporate group as a new business entity. The main purpose of this research was to analyse the origins of the separate legal personality of a company and its relevance for the present corporate group structures. The research aimed to understand company law and jurisprudence in South Africa in relation to the legal personality of a company and a corporate group. The final objective of this reform-orientated doctrinal research thesis was to provide clarity on the need to consider granting separate legal identity to corporate groups in recognition of their economic unity. A historically contextualised analysis was carried out on the development of trading through unregulated forms of businesses to the creation of the company as a regulated entity. The development of the legal persona of a company in legislation as well as jurisprudence was critically analysed in on the context of companies within a corporate group. A case study of a South African corporate group was used to highlight the different characteristics of the companies doing business in the form of a corporate group. The thesis concluded by recommending that legal personality should be extended to include a corporate group in order to facilitate the introduction of a group taxation regime.
- Format
- 113 pages, pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Commerce, Accounting
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Els, Tania
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Thumbnail | File | Description | Size | Format | |||
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View Details | SOURCE1 | TR 20-92.pdf | 710 KB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details |