An Act to incorporate The Strathcona Club of the Town of Strathcona
Chamber
alberta
Stage
Introduced
This bill grants legal incorporation status to The Strathcona Club located in the Town of Strathcona.
Key Changes
- Formally creates The Strathcona Club as a legally incorporated body
- Grants the club the ability to own property and enter into contracts
- Establishes the club's legal name and organizational identity
- Defines the powers and governance structure of the incorporated club
Gotchas
- The bill text could not be extracted from the PDF, so specific provisions, membership rules, or governance details could not be verified
- This appears to be a historical private bill; the Town of Strathcona later amalgamated with Edmonton, Alberta, which may affect the club's current legal status
- Private incorporation acts like this were common before modern general incorporation statutes made individual acts unnecessary
Who's Affected
- Members of The Strathcona Club
- Residents of the Town of Strathcona
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The bill text could not be extracted from the PDF, so specific provisions, membership rules, or governance details could not be verified
- This appears to be a historical private bill; the Town of Strathcona later amalgamated with Edmonton, Alberta, which may affect the club's current legal status
- Private incorporation acts like this were common before modern general incorporation statutes made individual acts unnecessary
Summary
This is a private bill that formally incorporates The Strathcona Club of the Town of Strathcona as a legal entity. Incorporation gives the club a recognized legal identity, allowing it to own property, enter contracts, and conduct business in its own name rather than through individual members. This type of legislation was historically common in Canada before general incorporation laws made it easier for organizations to incorporate without a specific act of Parliament. The bill would have established the club's legal existence, defined its powers, and set out basic governance rules. The Town of Strathcona was a separate municipality that later amalgamated with Edmonton, Alberta, so this bill likely dates from the late 19th or early 20th century when such private incorporation acts were standard practice.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses