Company names-Starr Bowkett

Before you can register some company names, you need to apply for ministerial consent. Your application should address the criteria for assessment outlined by Treasury.

How to apply for consent

To apply for ministerial consent, you must write a letter asking for consent to use the name. Your application should reference the 'Treasury Guidelines' outlined below and include any other evidence or claims in support of your submission.

The fee for applying for ministerial consent is $1,485.

Once complete, send your application and the fee to:

Australian Securities & Investments Commission
Ministerial Consent Applications
PO Box 4000
Gippsland Mail Centre, VIC 3841

We'll provide a written response to you as soon as a decision has been made.

Treasury Guidelines

Below is an excerpt from Treasury's Guidelines for Ministerial Consent to Body Corporate Names under the Corporations Act 2001. Your application for consent should reference the guidelines under the section 'Words governed by special purpose legislation'.

For a full copy of the guidelines, visit www.treasury.gov.au.


**Start Treasury Guideline**

Introduction

Purpose of the guidelines

These guidelines set out the procedures to be followed and the criteria to be applied in considering applications for the Commonwealth Minister’s consent to body corporate names that are otherwise not available for reservation or registration under the Corporations Act 2001 (the Corporations Act). Bodies corporate in this context include companies, foreign companies and registrable Australian bodies. Consent is granted under subsection 147(2) or 601DC(2) for purposes of Parts 2B and 5B of the Corporations Act.

Responsible Commonwealth Ministers

The Commonwealth Ministers who have responsibility for the administration of the Corporations Act are the Commonwealth Treasurer, the Minister for Revenue and Assistant Treasurer, and the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer.

Ministerial Consent

A name that would not otherwise be available is available if the Commonwealth Minister has consented to the name being available under subsections 147(2) and 601DC(2) of the Corporations Act. The Minister’s consent may be given subject to conditions (Corporations Act, subsections 147(3) and 601DC(3)). If a condition for the granting of ministerial consent has been breached, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission may direct the relevant body to change its name under section 158 or 601DJ.

Delegation of Minister’s powers and Direction to the Delegate

The Minister’s powers under subsections 147(2) and 601DC(2) have been delegated to certain senior officers of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (Corporations Act, subsection 1345A(1A)). The Minister’s delegate is required to have regard to any written guidelines issued by the Minister that are in force (Corporations Act, subsection 1345A(2)). The Guidelines contained in this document are guidelines that have been issued by the Minister.

The overall policy consideration in considering applications

The overall policy consideration in considering applications under subsection 147(2) or 601DC(2) to the use of body corporate names is whether the proposed name would be likely to mislead persons dealing with the body about the nature of the body’s activities.

The following Guidelines outline the policy criteria that will normally be applied in considering applications for consent to proposed body corporate names including specific words or phrases.

However, each application is to be considered on its merits, having regard to the individual circumstances involved.

Review of decisions

Under subsection 1317B(1) of the Corporations Act, decisions made under subsection 147(2) and 601DC(2) of the Corporations Act are reviewable by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal under the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975.

Words governed by special purpose legislation

GUIDELINES FOR THE USE IN BODY CORPORATE NAMES OF THE WORDS ‘STARR BOWKETT’

Regulation

Subregulations 2B.6.01(2) and 5B.3.01(2) respectively of the Corporations Regulations provide that, for paragraphs 147(1)(c) and 601DC(1)(c) of the Corporations Act, a name is unacceptable for registration if it is unacceptable under the rules set out in Part 2 of Schedule 6 of the Regulations.

Rule 6203(b) provides that a name is unacceptable for registration if the name contains a word or phrase specified in an item in Part 3 of Schedule 6 of the Regulations, an abbreviation of that word or phrase, or a word or phrase or an abbreviation having the same or a similar meaning.

Item 6318 in Part 3 of Schedule 6 specifies the words ‘Starr Bowkett’. (Rule 6204(a) expressly permits these words to be used where they must be included in the name of a registrable Australian body or a registered Australian body because of the law under which it is incorporated or registered.)

Starr Bowkett societies are an old form of building society. Their objects are to make loans on the security of real estate, for the purpose of assisting shareholders to buy or to build homes. Loans are granted to shareholders that win a ballot involving the drawing of lots. The building society continues until all the shareholders have received loans. They are regulated under State and Territory legislation

The intention of this regulation is to avoid the situation where a body corporate breaches the State and Territory Legislation by conducting business using a name made available under the Corporations Act.

Criteria for the Assessment of Applications

Consent will normally be granted to the use in body corporate names of the words ‘Starr Bowkett’ or words having a similar meaning, if:

  1. the body corporate is permitted under State and Territory legislation to use those words in carrying on business;

  2. the body corporate is related to another body corporate that is required or permitted to use similar words in its name.

The applicant for the incorporation of a new body corporate seeking to use the words ‘Starr Bowkett’ in its name is required to provide evidence that the relevant regulatory authorities in the jurisdictions where the applicant proposes to operate have consented to the use of these words in the applicant’s proposed name.

**End Guideline**


Last updated: 25/07/2013 12:00