I bought some shares in a Australian Proprietary Company.
The owner told me he only wanted to sell 30% of the shares and keep 70% for himself. But due to needing more capital he was forced to sell another 20%. Now he has never paid for these shares but on selling them claimed they are his and the company owes him for the 20% sold because it was his money?
Now this does not sound right to me at all but can someone confirm this.
I bought some shares in a Australian Proprietary Company.
The owner told me he only wanted to sell 30% of the shares and keep 70% for himself. But due to needing more capital he was forced to sell another 20%. Now he has never paid for these shares but on selling them claimed they are his and the company owes him for the 20% sold because it was his money?
Now this does not sound right to me at all but can someone confirm this.
When you start a company, you put capital into and are issued shares, you can then sell these shares if you want, or you can even create new shares and issue them to other people.
I am a bit confused, are you saying it’s a public company? Is it listed on any exchange?
When you start a company, you put capital into and are issued shares, you can then sell these shares if you want, or you can even create new shares and issue them to other people.
I am a bit confused, are you saying it’s a public company? Is it listed on any exchange?
When you start a company, you put capital into and are issued shares, you can then sell these shares if you want, or you can even create new shares and issue them to other people.
I am a bit confused, are you saying it’s a public company? Is it listed on any exchange?
Well he's got no idea what he's talking about. What's the nature of the business? The founder doesn't sound like someone you want to be trapped in a pty ltd company with.
this reads as though you do not know/understand the company set-up/structure
the best thing for you to do is take all paperwork and see a company tax accountant (accredited)
as that accountant can tell you concisely your rights and how much you actually own (whom you can sell to and what, how much, you have the right to on-sell)