§ 6024. Infant securityholders. 1. A corporation may treat an infant who holds shares, capital notes or debentures of such corporation as having capacity to receive and to empower others to receive dividends, interest, principal and other payments and distributions, to vote or express consent or dissent, in person or by proxy, and to make elections and exercise rights relating to such shares, capital notes or debentures, unless, in the case of shares, the corporate officer responsible for maintaining the list of stockholders or the transfer agent of the corporation or, in the case of capital notes or debentures, the paying officer or agent has received written notice that such holder is an infant.

Terms Used In N.Y. Banking Law 6024

  • Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
  • Corporation: means and includes all banks, trust companies, safe deposit companies, investment companies, mutual trust investment companies, and, to the extent not provided otherwise under any regulation of the superintendent of financial services promulgated pursuant to the provisions of section fourteen-e of this chapter, stock-form savings banks and stock-form savings and loan associations. See N.Y. Banking Law 1001
  • Statute: A law passed by a legislature.

2. An infant holder of shares, capital notes or debentures of a corporation who has received or empowered others to receive payments or distributions, voted or expressed consent or dissent, or made an election or exercised a right relating thereto, shall have no right thereafter to disaffirm or avoid, as against the corporation, any such act on his part, unless prior to such receipt, vote, consent, dissent, election or exercise, as to shares, the corporate officer responsible for maintaining the list of stockholders or its transfer agent, or in the case of capital notes or debentures, the paying officer or agent had received written notice that such holder was an infant.

3. This section does not limit any other statute which authorizes any corporation to deal with an infant or limits the right of an infant to disaffirm his acts.