LawWiki
HomeCodesSearchGlossaryAPIAbout
LawWiki

Plain English summaries of California law with zero-hallucination AI. Every summary is verified against official source text.

Product

  • Search
  • Codes
  • About

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer

© 2026 LawWiki. All rights reserved.

HomeCorporations CodeCh. 1§ 166 Corporate Shareholder Distributions

§ 166 Corporate Shareholder Distributions

Corporations Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 166 Corporate Shareholder Distributions

This law explains what counts as a company giving cash or property to its owners, like paying dividends or buying back shares, and says when that giving is considered to happen.

Key Takeaways

  • •Any cash or property a corporation gives to shareholders – like dividends, share buy‑backs, or sinking‑fund payments – is called a “distribution to its shareholders.”
  • •The timing of a distribution is: for dividends, the date the dividend is declared; for share buy‑backs, the date the cash or property actually changes hands; special rules apply when shares are exchanged for debt or held in a trust for a sinking fund.
  • •Certain actions are NOT treated as distributions: court‑ordered cancellation of shares, board‑approved rescission of shares when it meets specific safety tests, and repurchases of shares issued under Section 408 if the board decides it’s in the company’s best interest.

Example

A corporation decides on March 1 to pay each shareholder $5 in cash as a dividend. The law says the distribution happens on the date the dividend is declared, so March 1 is the official date of the distribution.

Because the company announced the cash payment on March 1, that is the date the law treats as the distribution, even if the money is actually sent out later.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 166 Corporate Shareholder Distributions

“Distribution to its shareholders” means the transfer of cash or property by a corporation to its shareholders without consideration, whether by way of dividend or otherwise, except a dividend in shares of the corporation, or the purchase or redemption of its shares for cash or property, including the transfer, purchase, or redemption by a subsidiary of the corporation. The time of any distribution by way of dividend shall be the date of declaration thereof and the time of any distribution by purchase or redemption of shares shall be the date cash or property is transferred by the corporation, whether or not pursuant to a contract of an earlier date; provided, that where a debt obligation that is a security (as defined in Section 8102 of the Commercial Code) is issued in exchange for shares the time of the distribution is the date when the corporation acquires the shares in the exchange. In the case of a sinking fund payment, cash or property is transferred within the meaning of this section at the time that it is delivered to a trustee for the holders of preferred shares to be used for the redemption of the shares or physically segregated by the corporation in trust for that purpose. “Distribution to its shareholders” shall not include (a) satisfaction of a final judgment of a court or tribunal of appropriate jurisdiction ordering the rescission of the issuance of shares, (b) the rescission by a corporation of the issuance of it shares, if the board determines (with any director who is, or would be, a party to the transaction not being entitled to vote) that (1) it is reasonably likely that the holder or holders of the shares in question could legally enforce a claim for the rescission, (2) that the rescission is in the best interests of the corporation, and (3) the corporation is likely to be able to meet its liabilities (except those for which payment is otherwise adequately provided) as they mature, or (c) the repurchase by a corporation of its shares issued by it pursuant to Section 408, if the board determines (with any director who is, or would be, a party to the transaction not being entitled to vote) that (1) the repurchase is in the best interests of the corporation and that (2) the corporation is likely to be able to meet its liabilities (except those for which payment is otherwise adequately provided) as they mature. (Amended by Stats. 1996, Ch. 497, Sec. 26. Effective January 1, 1997.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

distribution to its shareholdersdividendpurchase or redemption of its sharessinking fund paymentrescissionrepurchase

Related Statutes

  • § 25501 Civil Liability For Misrepresentation
  • § 25507 Statute Of Limitations
  • § 101 Statutory Construction Rules
  • § 102 Corporation Applicability Scope
  • § 103 Federal Corporation Immunity

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Corporations Code. Section 166.
View Official Source