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(Code 1981, §14-3-702, enacted by Ga. L. 1991, p. 465, § 1; Ga. L. 2004, p. 508, § 31.)
This section is based both on the Model Act and on its Business Code counterpart. Subsection (a)(1) provides that a special members' meeting may be called by the board or by the person or persons designated in the articles or bylaws. Subsection (a)(2) authorizes holders of at least 5% of the voting power to call a special meeting, unless the articles or bylaws provide otherwise. The Business Code counterpart requires the holders of 25% of the voting power to call special meetings, unless the articles or bylaws provide for a greater or lesser percentage. Business corporations with 100 or fewer shareholders may not impose a greater percentage requirement than 25%, however. See Code Section 14-2-702(a)(3).
Subsection (c) authorizes a self-help remedy for members who have demanded a special meeting which the corporation has refused to call. This provision is based on a recognition that forcing such members to resort to litigation to compel a special meeting could have the practical effect of rendering the members' right to call such meetings useless, because members will often lack the economic incentive or ability to pursue litigation. This subsection authorizes those who seek the meeting to call the meeting themselves following a wrongful refusal of the corporation to call the meeting. Access to a membership list may be critical to members seeking to call a special meeting. For rules relating to membership lists, see section 14-3-720 and Article 16. If the self-help remedy is of no avail because the membership list is wrongfully withheld, litigation expenses to obtain a court-ordered meeting may be recovered under section 14-3-703(c).
- No abuse in granting a second faction's motion for an interlocutory injunction to restrain the first faction from attempting to act on behalf of a Vietnamese Buddhist Temple, incorporated as a nonprofit Georgia corporation, or from holding themselves out as officers, directors, or agents of the Temple, as: (1) the Temple's articles of incorporation clearly allowed it to have members; and (2) the court was authorized to find that all members of the Temple were given the requisite notice of the June, 2004 meeting, and that more than 50 percent of the members appeared at the meeting and voted unanimously to elect the second faction to the board. Nguyen v. Tran, 287 Ga. App. 888, 652 S.E.2d 881 (2007).
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