An Act to incorporate The High River Club
Chamber
Alberta
Stage
Introduced
This bill formally incorporates The High River Club as a legal organization under Alberta law.
Key Changes
- Grants The High River Club legal status as an incorporated body
- Allows the club to own property and enter into contracts as a legal entity
- Separates the club's legal identity from that of its individual members
- Establishes the club's existence under Alberta provincial law
Gotchas
- The full text of this bill is not available online, so specific provisions cannot be verified
- This bill is from 1906, Alberta's first legislative session, when private incorporation bills were a common legislative practice before general incorporation statutes were widely used
- Similar bills in the same session incorporated other clubs, suggesting this was a routine administrative process rather than a significant policy matter
Who's Affected
- Members of The High River Club
- Residents of High River, Alberta
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The full text of this bill is not available online, so specific provisions cannot be verified
- This bill is from 1906, Alberta's first legislative session, when private incorporation bills were a common legislative practice before general incorporation statutes were widely used
- Similar bills in the same session incorporated other clubs, suggesting this was a routine administrative process rather than a significant policy matter
Summary
This is a private bill from Alberta's very first legislative session in 1906. Its purpose was to give The High River Club official legal status as an incorporated organization. Incorporation allows a club or organization to own property, enter into contracts, and operate as a recognized legal entity separate from its individual members. This type of bill was very common in early Canadian provincial legislatures. Before general incorporation laws were widely available, clubs, companies, and organizations often needed a specific act of the legislature to become legally incorporated. Bills like this one were routine administrative matters handled by the new Alberta Legislature shortly after the province was created in 1905. The full text of this bill is no longer available online, so specific details about the club's structure, membership rules, or powers cannot be confirmed. Based on similar bills from the same session, it likely established the club's name, defined its purposes, and granted it basic corporate powers.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses