Corporate Meeting Minutes — Quebec (Procès-verbal)
Create a Quebec corporate meeting minutes document (procès-verbal d'assemblée) compliant with the Loi sur les sociétés par actions (LSAQ) and CCQ arts. 335-354. Covers annual general meetings, extraordinary meetings, and board of directors meetings. Includes quorum verification, agenda adoption, resolution text and votes, and secretary certification.
What Is a Corporate Meeting Minutes — Quebec (Procès-verbal)?
A Quebec corporate meeting minutes document (procès-verbal d'assemblée) is the official written record of the deliberations, discussions, and resolutions adopted at a formal corporate meeting held by a Quebec corporation or other legal person subject to Quebec corporate law. This essential governance document is required by the Loi sur les sociétés par actions (LSAQ, RLRQ c. S-31.1) and by articles 335 to 354 of the Civil Code of Quebec (Code civil du Québec, C.c.Q.) which govern the deliberations and decisions of legal persons.
The procès-verbal serves multiple critical purposes in corporate governance. It provides a permanent, legally admissible record of corporate decisions, demonstrating that the corporation's management has followed proper procedures and that decisions were validly adopted. It protects directors, officers, and shareholders by documenting who was present, what was decided, and how votes were cast. It is the primary evidence that resolutions were properly adopted when questioned by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), the Registraire des entreprises du Québec (REQ), tax authorities, banks, or courts.
Quebec corporate meeting minutes must be drafted in French pursuant to the Charter of the French Language (Charte de la langue française, Bill 96), as they are legal documents produced in Quebec for a Quebec corporation. The document must be kept in the corporation's minute book (registre des procès-verbaux) at the registered office or at another location designated by the board of directors.
The template covers three main types of corporate meetings: the annual general meeting (assemblée générale annuelle, AGA), which must be held within the time limits specified in the LSAQ or CBCA; the extraordinary or special general meeting (assemblée générale extraordinaire or spéciale), called for specific urgent or significant matters; and board of directors meetings (réunions du conseil d'administration), which are the primary decision-making forum for the management of the corporation's affairs.
When Do You Need a Corporate Meeting Minutes — Quebec (Procès-verbal)?
A corporate meeting minutes document is needed every time a Quebec corporation holds a formal meeting at which decisions are made. This occurs in several recurring and occasional situations.
Annual general meetings are the most common scenario. Under the LSAQ, a Quebec corporation must hold an annual general meeting within 15 months of the preceding annual general meeting, or 18 months after incorporation in the case of a newly formed company (LSAQ art. 144). At the AGM, shareholders must approve the annual financial statements, elect directors for the upcoming year, and appoint an auditor if required. A procès-verbal is mandatory for this meeting.
Extraordinary or special meetings are called whenever shareholders need to approve fundamental changes to the corporation, such as amendments to the articles of incorporation, an amalgamation with another corporation, a sale of substantially all assets, a change of name, a capital reorganization, or the dissolution of the corporation. These decisions require a special resolution (résolution spéciale) approved by at least two-thirds of the votes cast, and must be documented in a procès-verbal.
Board of directors meetings are held regularly throughout the year and address operational matters such as the appointment or removal of officers, approval of contracts above a certain threshold, declaration of dividends, approval of annual budgets, and any other matter within the directors' authority. Minutes of board meetings must be kept in the corporate record book.
Meeting minutes are also needed when a bank, an investor, a lender, a government authority, or a counterparty to a significant contract requires evidence that a corporate decision was validly authorized. For example, opening a business bank account in Quebec typically requires a certified extract of the board resolution authorizing the account and designating signing officers. Similarly, a notary completing a real estate transaction on behalf of a corporation will require corporate resolutions authorizing the purchase or sale.
Finally, meeting minutes are essential at the time of a corporate audit, a tax review, a due diligence process for a sale of the business, or a dispute among shareholders, directors, or the corporation and a third party.
What to Include in Your Corporate Meeting Minutes — Quebec (Procès-verbal)
A comprehensive Quebec corporate meeting minutes document must contain several essential elements to be legally valid and practically effective under the LSAQ and applicable Quebec corporate law.
First, complete identification of the corporation is required: the full legal name (dénomination sociale), the Quebec enterprise number (NEQ) assigned by the Registraire des entreprises du Québec, the address of the registered office, and the governing corporate legislation (LSAQ for Quebec corporations, CBCA for federal corporations with operations in Quebec).
Second, the type and nature of the meeting must be clearly specified, whether it is an annual general meeting, an extraordinary or special meeting, a board of directors meeting, or a class meeting. The mode of convocation must be stated — whether formal written notice was provided to all participants within the required period, or whether all participants signed a waiver of notice.
Third, the date, time, and location of the meeting are essential. If the meeting was held by electronic means (videoconference, teleconference), this must be noted, as the LSAQ expressly permits electronic participation under article 150.
Fourth, the chair and secretary of the meeting must be identified. The chair presides over the meeting and declares it open and closed, while the secretary records the minutes and certifies their accuracy.
Fifth, the full list of persons present must be recorded, including each participant's full name, capacity (shareholder, director, officer, observer), and if applicable, the number and class of shares they hold or represent. Absent persons and the existence of any proxies must also be noted.
Sixth, quorum verification is a non-negotiable element. The chair must confirm on the record that the quorum required by the articles, bylaws, or the LSAQ has been met before the meeting can proceed. If quorum is not met, the meeting cannot validly adopt resolutions.
Seventh, the agenda as adopted by the meeting must be set out. Any amendments to the proposed agenda should be noted.
Eighth and most importantly, each resolution must be set out in full: the resolution number, the complete text using the standard formulation "IL EST RÉSOLU QUE…", and the vote result (adopted unanimously, adopted by majority, or rejected), with the number of votes for, against, and abstaining where relevant.
Finally, the minutes must be certified by the secretary as a true and accurate record of the meeting's proceedings and signed by both the chair and the secretary, with the date of signing.
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