The
English version of this document is for guidance only.
The Arabic version is the governing text.
Article
1 :
The
Ministry of Commerce shall create a Register in the cities
specified by a decision issued by the Minister of Commerce
covering all the provinces of the Kingdom, in which the names
of the merchants and companies and all the data specified
in this Law are registered.
Article
2 :
Every
merchant, once his capital reaches one hundred thousand riyals,
shall, within thirty days of the date of opening his place
of business or the date of owning one or of the date on which
his capital reaches the said sum, shall submit an application
to register his name in the Commercial Register of the area
where his place of business is located, whether it is a head
office or a branch or an agency. The application shall include
the following data:
-
The full name of the merchant,
his title, place and date of birth, nationality, a specimen
of his signature and a specimen of the signature of his
agent (if any).
-
The trade name (if any).
-
The type of business activity
engaged in by the merchant and the starting date.
-
The merchant's capital.
-
The name of the manager, his
place and date of birth, nationality, place of residence
in the Kingdom and the extent of his powers.
-
The name of the head office
of the merchant, address, registration number, the branches
and agencies inside or outside the Kingdom and the business
activity of each.
Article
3 :
The
managers of companies formed in the Kingdom shall apply for
registration in the Commercial Register within thirty days
of the date on which its articles of association are recorded
by the notary public and shall apply to register any branch
within thirty days of the date on which it was formed. A copy
of the company's articles of association and its bylaws, if
applicable, shall be enclosed therewith. The application shall
also include the following data:
-
The type of the company and
its trade name.
-
The company's activity.
-
The company's capital.
-
The date of the company's
incorporation and expiration.
-
The names of general partners
in general or limited partnerships and the place and date
of birth, address and nationality of each of them.
-
The names of the managers
of the company and the signatories on its behalf and the
place and date of birth of each, his address, nationality
and a specimen of his signature, and a statement specifying
the extent of their powers with respect to management and
signature, and specifying the actions which they are not
authorized to take (if any).
-
The addresses of the head
office of the company and its branches and agencies, inside
and outside the Kingdom.
Article
4 :
The
merchant, the manager of the company or the liquidator shall
apply to make an entry on the Commercial Register for any
amendment relating to the data already registered, within
thirty days of the date of amendment in accordance with the
procedure specified by the implementing regulations.
Article
5 :
Every
one registered in the Commercial Register shall deposit with
the Commercial Register Office within thirty days of the date
of registration, a certificate of membership in the Chamber
of Commerce and Industry.
Article
6 :
Foreign
companies licensed to open a branch or an office in the Kingdom
shall apply to register this branch or office in the Commercial
Register within thirty days of the date of its opening, enclosing
all the documents specified by the implementing regulations.
Article
7 :
The
merchant, his heirs or the liquidator, as the case may be,
shall apply to the Commercial Register Office to strike off
the registration in the following cases:
-
Upon the merchant's permanently
abandoning his business.
-
Upon the merchant's death.
-
Upon the completion of the
liquidation of the company.
The
application shall be submitted within ninety days of the occurrence
of the cause of cancellation of registration. If the parties
concerned did not apply for cancellation, the Commercial Register
Office, after investigating the cause and ascertaining its
occurrence and after giving notice to the parties concerned
by registered mail, shall automatically effect the cancellation,
after thirty days of the date of notice, unless the (Commercial
Register) Office receives from the party concerned, during
this period, evidence to the contrary.
In
case of a final judgment or decision to cancel the registration,
pursuant to the applicable laws, the competent Commercial
Register Office shall effect the cancellation immediately
upon notification of the judgment or decision.
Article
8 :
The
Commercial Register Office shall ascertain the fulfillment
of conditions required for registration, entry, or cancellation.
It may ask the applicant to submit documents supporting the
data given in his application. The (commercial) Register Office
may reject the application by a reasoned decision within thirty
days of the date of submission.
Article
9 :
Everyone
registered in the Commercial Register shall indicate in all
correspondence, printed materials, stamps and sign boards
his commercial registration number, in addition to his name,
and the name of the city where he is registered. All the data
shall be provided in Arabic.
Article
10 :
The
judicial authorities which issue the following judgments and
orders shall inform the competent Commercial Register Office
thereof, within thirty days of the date on which the judgment
or order becomes final.
-
Judgments of declaration of
bankruptcy and cancellation thereof.
-
Judgments of rehabilitation.
-
Judgments to interdict a merchant
or to attach his property, or removals thereof.
-
An order issued to revoke
permission to engage in business or to restrict the permission
in relation to a minor or a person under interdiction.
-
Judgments concerning separation
of partners or dismissal of managers.
-
Judgments of dissolution of
a company or of its invalidity and appointment of liquidators
or their dismissal.
-
Judgments validating, rescinding
or invalidating a judicial settlement.
-
An order issued to start the
procedures of a settlement to avoid bankruptcy, and a judgment
issued to validate, cancel or invalidate it.
-
Judgments of conviction in
cases of fraud, forgery and bribery.
The
competent Commercial Register Office shall make an entry of
the above judgments and orders immediately upon notification
thereof.
Article
11 :
Anyone
may obtain a copy extracted from the Commercial Register of
any merchant or company. In case there is no registration,
a certificate to that effect shall be given to the person
concerned. Such an extract shall not include judgments of
declaration of bankruptcy if judgment of rehabilitation was
rendered. Neither shall it include judgments of interdiction
or attachment, in case of removal thereof.
Article
12 :
Officials
named by a decision of the Minister of Commerce shall investigate
and record violations of the provisions of this Law and decisions
for its implementation. The procedures of investigation and
recording shall be specified by regulations to be issued by
the Minister of Commerce. Such regulations shall provide for
the observance of good conduct by the investigating officers
in executing their duties, and they shall present to the person
concerned a proof of their identification, official capacity
and the purpose of their visit. The regulations shall specify
the times during which places of business may be visited for
the purpose of investigation and the authority that has the
right to grant permission to enter such places for the purpose
of inspection, when necessary.
Article
13 :
The
data provided in the Commercial Register is considered evidence
for or against the merchant as of the date on which it was
registered. No data obligatorily registered or entered shall
be used against any other party, unless such an action is
taken. However, this party may use this data against the merchant
or the company if such a party has an interest therein.
Article
14 :
Anyone
who submits an application to an official authority, in his
capacity as a merchant, his application shall not be accepted
in such capacity unless he is registered in the Commercial
Register.
Article
15 :
Without
prejudice to any more severe punishment provided for by another
law, a party that violates the provisions of this Law shall
be punished by a fine of not more than fifty thousand riyals.
In determining the fine, the gravity of the violation, repetition
thereof, the capital of the merchant and the injury suffered
by others as a result of that violation shall be taken into
account.
Article
16 :
The
penalties provided for in this Law shall be imposed by a committee,
formed by a decision issued by the Minister of Commerce, of
three members one of whom, at least, must be an expert in
commercial laws.
Article
17 :
A
resolution by the Council of Ministers shall specify the application
fees for registration, entries to amend data previously registered
or for extracting data from the Register or for obtaining
a certificate to the effect that there is no registration.
No fees shall be charged for an application to cancel registration
nor for extracts required by governmental agencies for official
purposes.
Article
18 :
Parties
concerned may object before the Minister of Commerce against
decisions taken by the Commercial Register Office and the
decisions of the committee responsible for imposing penalties,
within thirty days of the date of notification of the decision.
The refusal of the Commercial Register Office to take a decision
or its failure to take a decision, which it should have taken
in accordance with laws and regulations, shall be deemed a
decision.
Parties
concerned may also file a grievance with the Board of Grievances
against the decisions of the Minister of Commerce issued in
connection with their objections, within thirty days of the
date of their notification of the Minister's decision. If
a decision is not made by the Minister in connection with
the objection submitted to him, within a maximum of sixty
days from the date of objection, the person objecting may
file a grievance with the Board of Grievances against the
decision of the Commercial Register Office or the decision
of the committee responsible for imposing penalties, within
thirty days of the expiration of the period specified for
the Minister to issue a decision.
Article
19 :
This
Law shall hereby repeal the Law of Commercial Register issued
by the Royal Order No. 21/1/4470 dated 9/11/1375H and its
implementing regulations as well as all provisions that are
inconsistent with this Law.
Article
20 :
This
Law shall be published in the Official Gazette and shall come
into force after ninety days of the date of publication. Those
registered in the Commercial Register, prior to the coming
into effect of this Law, shall be given a grace period of
one year from the date of this Law's coming into effect to
adjust their status in accordance with its provisions. The
Minister of Commerce shall issue the regulations and decisions
necessary for its implementation.
Explanatory
Note of
the
Law of Commercial Register
Article
1 of the Law of Commercial Court issued by High Order No.
32, dated 15 Muharram 1350 [2 June 1931], defined the merchant
as: “a person engaged in commercial transactions and makes
such engagement his profession”. The Law subjected merchants
to a number of obligations aimed at organizing commercial
activities, such as the obligation to book-keeping and the
requirement of registration in the Commercial Register. Article
4 of the Law of Commercial Court permits any adult, or any
person who reaches adulthood, to engage in all types of commerce.
For this reason the Law of Commercial Register, as is the
case with the Law of Commercial Books and other laws relating
to merchants, provides no definition for the merchant to whom
it applies. The definition provided by the Law of Commercial
Court is taken to be sufficient.
The
Law of Commercial Court, obligated the merchant to keep certain
commercial books and provided a set of regulations for their
organization. However, due to the development of commercial
activity and the resulting insufficiency of the organization
stated in the Law of Commercial Court in connection with commercial
books, a new law for commercial books was issued by Royal
Decree No. M/61, dated 17 Dhu al-Hijjah 1409 [20 July 1989],
embodying a comprehensive organization of commercial books.
In
the year 1375 Hijri [1955-1956], the Law of Commercial Register
was issued. As indicated in its provisions, the objective
of this Law was to list the merchants and companies engaged
in commerce in each city in the Kingdom, and to gather data
on merchants in order to give any interested party access
to information he is interested in having about them. The
Law did not establish any important legal effects for registration
in the Commercial Register, as the information entered in
the Register was not considered to be evidence for or against
the merchant. Likewise, the Register had no publicizing function.
The Law also failed to mention some data relating to the commercial
activity, which third parties would be interested to have.
Moreover, since it was the desire of the Government to be
lenient with merchants, due to the fact that the Law was newly
introduced, the Law intentionally prescribed few fines, of
no more than the maximum of five hundred riyals, to be imposed
by a decision of the Director General of Internal Commerce
at the Ministry of Commerce.
In
line with modern trends, which consider the Commercial Register
not only a statistical tool and a source of information about
the status of merchants but also a method of legal publication
for parties to whom the Law applies, it has become necessary
to amend the Law of Commercial Registration in order to meet
these trends, remedy its failure to mention some of the information
that must be recorded as well as reconsider the specified
penalties and the authority that imposes them.
Article
1 of the Law required the Ministry of Commerce to set up a
Register in the cities to be specified by a decision of the
Minister of Commerce, covering all the provinces of the Kingdom.
The names of the merchants and companies shall be entered
in that Register in addition to the information provided for
in the Law. According to Article 2, each merchant whose capital
reaches one hundred thousand riyals shall, within thirty days
of the date on which his capital reaches the said sum or the
date on which he opens or owns a place of business, apply
to enter his name in the Commercial Register of the area where
his place of business is located. The application shall include
the information provided for in this article. This article
remedied the previous law's failure to require certain information
by requiring that the capital of the merchant and the extent
of the manager's authorities be stated, to be known to others
so that they may deal with him on the basis thereof. The purpose
of specifying the sum mentioned in this article is to exempt
small merchants from the obligation of registration to make
things easy for them. This, however, does not mean barring
them from applying for registration in the Register if they
think it is in their interest, since such exemption is just
a license in their favor. Likewise, Article 3 requires the
managers of companies incorporated in the Kingdom to apply
for recording these companies in the Commercial Register within
thirty days of the date on which the Notary Public records
their articles of association; and to apply for recording
any branch thereof within thirty days of the date of establishment
of the branch. With the application shall be attached the
documents required by this article, and it shall provide the
information specified therein. This article has required the
provision of information which was not included in the previous
Law and which practical experience showed the importance thereof,
such as the extent of authorities of the company's manager,
the persons authorized to sign on its behalf and the actions
they are not authorized to take, if any. This way, others
will have full knowledge when dealing with them, especially
since the Law considers the information recorded in the Register
evidence for or against the merchant.
Moreover,
in order to make others be aware of any amendment of the information
recorded in the Commercial Register, the Law adopted the idea
of continuous updating of the information recorded in the
Register. Article 4 requires the merchant, the manager of
the company or the liquidator to apply for entering any amendment
of the information previously recorded in the Commercial Register
within thirty days of the date of amendment.
The
Law of the Chambers of Commerce and Industry requires each
merchant registered in the Commercial Register to become a
member of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the area
where his head office is located. Therefore, in order to implement
this rule, and to ensure the performance of this obligation,
in addition to the desire to enable the Chambers of Commerce
and Industry to rely on their own resources, Article 5 requires
every person registered in the Commercial Register to deposit
with the Commercial Register Office, within thirty days of
the date of registration, a certificate of his membership
in the Chamber.
Since
the Law permits the licensing for a foreign company to open
a branch or a representative office to supervise its activities
in the Kingdom and to facilitate communications with the head
office, and in order to confine these companies to the licensed
activity without being engaged in any other activity, Article
6 requires these companies to apply for registering such a
branch or office within thirty days of the date of its opening,
enclosing with their applications the documents specified
by the implementing regulations.
Article
7 provides for the cancellation of registration in the Commercial
Register in four cases: final abandonment by the merchant
of his commercial activity, death of the merchant, liquidation
of the company, or issuance of a ruling or judgment by the
competent authority to cancel the registration, as in the
case of cover-up. This article has given the merchant, his
heirs or the liquidator in the first three cases, a longer
period to apply for cancellation; i.e., ninety days instead
of thirty days to allow them ample time to apply for cancellation.
If they do not apply within this period, the competent Commercial
Register Office, after verifying the cause of cancellation
and after notifying the persons concerned and the expiration
of thirty days after the notification, shall cancel the commercial
registration automatically unless the Office receives from
the person concerned a denial of the event. In the fourth
case, the Commercial Register Office shall cancel the registration
immediately upon notification of the cancellation judgment
or decision.
To
ensure confidence and trust by others in the accuracy of the
information recorded in the Commercial Register, Article 8
requires the Commercial Register Office to ascertain the fulfillment
of the conditions necessary for registration, entering or
cancellation of the information.
To
enable the Office to do so, this article authorizes it to
require the applicant for registration, entering or cancellation
to present the supporting documents of the accuracy of the
information required to be registered; otherwise, the Office
may reject the application by a reasoned decision.
To
give effect to the publicizing function of the Commercial
Register, Article 9 requires that each merchant or company
state the commercial registration number and the name of the
city in which either is registered in all correspondence,
printed materials, stamps and sign boards, and shall place
the commercial registration number at the front of his business,
next to his business name, provided that all information be
written in Arabic in order to make it easy for others to peruse
the information recorded in the Commercial Register. Moreover,
Article 10 requires the judicial authorities that issue any
of the judgments or orders specified in this article to inform
the Commercial Register Office of such judgment or order,
and it requires the Office to make an entry of the judgment
or order in the Commercial Register as soon as it is informed
of it. Article 11 allows every person – in order to know the
position of the merchant or company – to obtain from the Commercial
Register Office an extracted copy of the page of the Register
assigned for each merchant or company. In case there is no
registration, the applicant shall be given a certificate to
that effect. However, to protect the reputation of the merchant
or company, the Commercial Register Office is prevented by
this article from including in the extracted copy judgments
of declaration of bankruptcy, if a rehabilitation judgment
is rendered, and judgments of interdiction or of attachment
of property, if revoked, on the grounds that the disclosure
of such information injures the reputation of the merchant
without benefiting others.
Article
12 entrusted the Minister of Commerce with the task of naming
of the employees who would ensure the execution of the provisions
of the Law of Commercial Register and the decisions made for
the implementation thereof, in addition to the task of investigating
any violation, similar to other Commercial Laws like the Law
of Commercial Books and the Law of Commercial Agencies. In
order to ensure proper conduct by these employees in discharging
their duties, and for them to know the extent of their authorities,
this article provides that the procedures of investigation
shall be specified by rules to be issued by the Minister of
Commerce. Regulations should provide for some of the issues
specified in this article, the times during which the commercial
places may be visited for the purpose of investigation and
the authority entitled to give permission to enter the places
for the
purpose
of inspection where necessary.
In
accordance with the modern trend of giving certain legal effects
to the registration in the Commercial Register, Article 13
recognizes the determinative effect of the information recorded
in the Commercial Register as of the date of registration.
Nevertheless, this article allows any other person to use
as evidence data which should have been recorded or entered
but was not, if such person has an interest in doing so.
Accordingly,
if a merchant or a company records the name of the manager
in the Commercial Register and specifies his authorities by
stating that he may conclude contracts the value of which
is one million riyals, for example, then all contracts concluded
by that manager within his authorities are binding on the
merchant or the company as long as no entry has been made
in the Register indicating the change of the manager' name
or amendment of his authorities. On the other hand, if such
merchant or company appoints a new manager without recording
his name in the Commercial Register and this manager, in this
capacity, concludes a contract with another person on behalf
of the merchant or the company and this other person was aware
of the manager's capacity and the extent of his authorities,
then this person is entitled to require performance of such
a contract if he has an interest in doing so, on the grounds
that this manager is the legal representative of this merchant
or company, even if his name is not entered in the Commercial
Register.
To
encourage merchants to register in the Commercial Register,
Article 14 requires that in order for a person to claim the
capacity of a merchant in dealing with official authorities
he must be registered in the Commercial Register.
In
order that merchants may not neglect to apply for registration
in the Commercial Register and to prevent them from giving
incorrect information, the penalties prescribed for violating
the provisions of the Law of Commercial Register have been
amended by making them severer, to reach fifty thousands riyals,
as provided in Article 15 of the Law, in line with other laws
that govern commercial activities such as the Law of Commercial
Books and the Law of Commercial Agencies where the penalty
for violating their provisions reaches fifty thousands riyals.
This article provides also for the factors which should be
taken into consideration when determining the fine, namely
the seriousness and frequency of the violation, the capital
of the merchant and the damage suffered by others as a result
of the violation.
To
conform with other commercial Laws and for the sake of necessary
objectivity, Article 16 entrusts the imposition of the penalties
provided for in the Law of Commercial Register to a committee,
to be formed by a decision of the Minister of Commerce, of
three members one of whom at least shall be a specialist in
commercial laws, instead of imposing these penalties by decisions
of the Director General of the Internal Trade Department,
according to Article 19 of the previous Law of Commercial
Register.
In
accordance with the general rule which requires that fees
shall be imposed only by or pursuant to a law and to ensure
the flexibility required for amending these fees whenever
necessary, and in conformity with the current practice of
specifying the fees of the Commercial Register by a resolution
of the Council of Ministers, Article 17 authorizes the Council
of Ministers to specify the fees due for every application
for registration or for making an entry indicating amendment
of information previously entered or for any extracted copy
of the pages of the register and also for any certificate
to the effect that there is no registration.
To
protect the interest of parties to whom this Law applies,
and to ensure its proper application, Article 18 gives the
right to the parties concerned to object to the decisions
of the Commercial Register Office and the decisions of the
committee responsible for the imposition of penalties before
the Minister of Commerce and to file a grievance against the
decisions of the Minister with the Board of Grievances.
To
avoid any confusion arising from the repeal of the previous
Law of Commercial Register and its replacement by the new
Law, Article 19 provides for the repeal of the Law of Commercial
Register issued by Royal Order No. 21/1/4470 dated 9 Dhu al-Qa'dah
1375 [18 June 1956], and its implementing regulations and
all provisions that are inconsistent therewith.
Article
20 specifies the date on which the Law becomes effective to
be ninety days from the date of its publication in the Official
Gazette. To enable those registered in the Commercial Register
prior to the effective date of this Law to make the necessary
adjustments to conform with its provisions, they are given
a grace period of one year from the date of its coming into
effect to do so. Moreover, this article also authorizes the
Minister of Commerce to issue the regulations and decisions
necessary to implement the provisions of this Law.
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