James2
Senior List
Dan,
You have obviously NEVER studied law. I can tell this, because you attempted to compare the laws of a sport and the laws of business (Corporations Law)- a tenious comparison indeed.
1) You say that a court would not find that Player A had played for two clubs, if he had played for the Swans from 93-96.
You are wrong. I refer to Corporations Law s119:
"A company comes into existence as a body corporate at the beginning of the day
on which it is registered. The company's name is the name specified in the
certificate of registration."
When a company registers, they receive an ACN. An ACN is unique; a company cannot have two ACN's. This is basic Corps. Law, if any judge were to find that a company could have two ACN's, the law would be fatally undermined.
The reason the situation regarding the Swans was never explained, is symptomatic of the belief that the law and sporting competitions and clubs, should have nothing to do with each other. Nevertheless, KS is correct.
You are also incorrect regarding your statement about the AFL being a different company to the VFL. A company can change its trading name, but still be the same legal entity. Companies are identified by ACN's, NOT trading names, therefore, the AFL and the VFL are the same (read my previous post).
Danni,
The Brisbane Lions do have a different ACN. The Brisbane Lions AFC Pty Ltd, are a completely new company, established in 1996. In a merger, the two (or however many) clubs that merge to form the new entity, are wound up and deregistered. However, this has not happened with the Brisbane Bears or Fitzroy. Both are still trading. It is certainly curious and leaves some questions regarding the circumstances of the Brisbane-Fitzroy agreement.
Cheers.
You have obviously NEVER studied law. I can tell this, because you attempted to compare the laws of a sport and the laws of business (Corporations Law)- a tenious comparison indeed.
1) You say that a court would not find that Player A had played for two clubs, if he had played for the Swans from 93-96.
You are wrong. I refer to Corporations Law s119:
"A company comes into existence as a body corporate at the beginning of the day
on which it is registered. The company's name is the name specified in the
certificate of registration."
When a company registers, they receive an ACN. An ACN is unique; a company cannot have two ACN's. This is basic Corps. Law, if any judge were to find that a company could have two ACN's, the law would be fatally undermined.
The reason the situation regarding the Swans was never explained, is symptomatic of the belief that the law and sporting competitions and clubs, should have nothing to do with each other. Nevertheless, KS is correct.
You are also incorrect regarding your statement about the AFL being a different company to the VFL. A company can change its trading name, but still be the same legal entity. Companies are identified by ACN's, NOT trading names, therefore, the AFL and the VFL are the same (read my previous post).
Danni,
The Brisbane Lions do have a different ACN. The Brisbane Lions AFC Pty Ltd, are a completely new company, established in 1996. In a merger, the two (or however many) clubs that merge to form the new entity, are wound up and deregistered. However, this has not happened with the Brisbane Bears or Fitzroy. Both are still trading. It is certainly curious and leaves some questions regarding the circumstances of the Brisbane-Fitzroy agreement.
Cheers.






