Bill PR41 explained in plain English
Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd. Act, 2016
Ontario legislature bill summary, status, timeline, sponsor, votes, and official sources.
At a glance
Official Legislative Assembly of Ontario snapshot for 41st Parliament, 1st Session. Representative vote breakdowns appear when the Assembly publishes an Ayes and Nays page for the bill.
Our plain-language take, written for civic education.
Source: By PoliticalData.ca
The Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd. Act, 2016 revives the dissolved corporation to its previous legal standing.
This Ontario Act allows Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd. to be revived. The company was voluntarily dissolved on May 21, 2015. The Act restores the company to its legal position as if it had not been dissolved, meaning it regains its property, rights, privileges, and franchises, and is subject to its liabilities, contracts, disabilities, and debts, as they existed at the time of dissolution. This revival is intended to allow the company to deal with property that was in its name when it was dissolved. The Act came into effect on the day it received Royal Assent.
- Revives Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd.
- Restores the company to its legal position as if it had not been dissolved.
- Restores all of the company's property, rights, privileges, and franchises.
- Makes the company subject to all its liabilities, contracts, disabilities, and debts.
- Specifies that the revival is subject to any rights acquired by any person after the company's dissolution.
- Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd.
- Steven Long (applicant and former director/officer)
- Any person who acquired rights after the company's dissolution
- Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd. is restored to its legal position, including all its property, rights, privileges, and franchises.
- Bud Monahan Guitar Sales & Service Ltd. remains subject to all its liabilities, contracts, disabilities, and debts.
- The revival is subject to any rights acquired by any person after the company's dissolution.
- The Act came into force on the day it received Royal Assent (June 9, 2016).
- The Act does not specify the exact nature of the 'certain property' that the applicant wishes to deal with.
- The Act states the revival is 'subject to any rights acquired by any person after its dissolution', but does not detail how these rights will be managed or prioritized.
The corporation is revived and restored to its legal position as it was before its dissolution, subject to certain conditions.
Source: Section 1
The Act comes into force on the day it receives Royal Assent.
Source: Section 2
Generated using AI from official bill text. Not legal advice. It is written by PoliticalData.ca for civic education, automatically checked and spot-reviewed before publishing.
Official textProcess Snapshot
Vote Summary
This bill does not have a published recorded division in the current official sources, so representative-by-representative vote counts are not shown.
No published representative vote breakdown
The current official sources do not publish a recorded division breakdown for this bill, so there is no representative-by-representative table to show.
Official sources
Status, sponsor, votes, and timeline on this page are drawn from these official legislative sources and public records. Each summary above is attributed to its own source.
How this data is sourced