subsidiary

Corporate StructureLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, a subsidiary refers to an entity that is owned or controlled by a larger parent company or corporation. It signifies a part of a larger structure, often detailing ownership structures within corporate law.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine a big company owns a smaller company. The small company is the 'subsidiary.' This means one business is owned by another business, like a parent company owning a subsidiary company. Think of it as a part of a bigger legal structure.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it defines the ownership structure and hierarchy within a corporate framework. It is crucial in determining liability, asset allocation, and the overall legal structure of a group of businesses.

Visual model

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01

A parent corporation owning a subsidiary company.

02

A holding company structure where one entity controls another.

Document context

How subsidiary shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A subsidiary is a company or division that is owned by a parent company or holding company. In corporate law, it denotes a distinct legal entity that operates under the control of a larger entity, often for tax, operational, or structural purposes.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it defines the ownership structure and hierarchy within a corporate framework. It is crucial in determining liability, asset allocation, and the overall legal structure of a group of businesses.

When does it matter?

It usually appears when discussing corporate structures, asset transfers, or defining the relationship between parent and subsidiary entities in legal agreements or statutory provisions.

Where is it usually seen?

It is commonly seen in corporate charters, shareholder agreements, asset disposition documents, and tax filings where ownership structure needs to be clearly defined.

Who is affected?

The affected parties are the parent company (the owner) and the subsidiary entity (the owned part), as well as shareholders who hold interests in both entities.

How does it work?

Practically, a subsidiary dictates which entity holds the legal title. For instance, if Company A owns Subsidiary B, the legal relationship defines how assets flow between them, impacting liability and operational control.

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