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HomeCorporations CodeCh. 15§ 6518 Corporate Dissolution Final Order

§ 6518 Corporate Dissolution Final Order

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

§ 6518 Corporate Dissolution Final Order

Key Takeaways

  • •A court can officially close down a company if all its money matters are settled, debts are paid, and remaining assets are given to the right people.
  • •The court checks if the company filed its final tax return and handled all its debts properly before shutting it down.
  • •If the company can't meet all the rules, the Attorney General can ask the court to close it down anyway if it's too hard or impossible to follow them.
  • •Once the court says the company is closed, it stops existing, and the people in charge are no longer responsible for it, unless the court says otherwise.

Example

A small toy company goes out of business because it ran out of money.

The company pays off its workers and suppliers, sells its leftover toys, and files its final tax papers. Then, a court checks everything and officially closes the company, meaning it doesn’t exist anymore, and the owners aren’t responsible for it.

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

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 6518 Corporate Dissolution Final Order

(a) Upon the final settlement of the accounts of the directors or other persons appointed pursuant to Section 6515 and the determination that the corporation’s affairs are in condition for it to be dissolved, the court may make an order declaring the corporation duly wound up and dissolved. The order shall declare: (1) That the corporation has been duly wound up, that a final franchise tax return, as described by Section 23332 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, has been filed with the Franchise Tax Board, as required under Part 10.2 (commencing with Section 18401) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code and that its known debts and liabilities have been paid or adequately provided for, or that those debts and liabilities have been paid as far as its assets permitted, as the case may be. If there are known debts or liabilities for payment of which adequate provision has been made, the order shall state what provision has been made, setting forth the name and address of the corporation, person or governmental agency that has assumed or guaranteed the payment, or the name and address of the depositary with which deposit has been made or such other information as may be necessary to enable the creditor or other person to whom payment is to be made to appear and claim payment of the debt or liability. (2) That its known assets have been distributed to the persons entitled thereto or that it acquired no known assets, as the case may be. (3) That the accounts of directors or such other persons have been settled and that they are discharged from their duties and liabilities to creditors and members. (4) That the corporation is dissolved. (b) In an action brought by, and at the request of, the Attorney General, the court may make an order declaring that a corporation is wound up and dissolved without meeting the requirements in subdivision (a), upon a finding by the court that it is impossible or impracticable to meet some or all of those requirements. (c) The court may make such additional orders and grant such further relief as it deems proper upon the evidence submitted. (d) Upon the making of the order declaring the corporation dissolved, corporate existence shall cease except for the purposes of further winding up if needed; and the directors or such other persons shall be discharged from their duties and liabilities, except as otherwise ordered by the court and in respect to completion of the winding up. (Amended by Stats. 2008, Ch. 715, Sec. 2. Effective January 1, 2009.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

corporationdissolutionliabilityterminationclaimdirectortaxation codesettlement

Related Statutes

  • § 12628 Corporate Dissolution Final Order
  • § 8518 Corporate Dissolution Final Order
  • § 12620 Involuntary Dissolution Complaint
  • § 5237 Director Liability For Distributions
  • § 7236 Director Liability For Distributions

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Corporations Code. Section 6518.
View Official Source