New Year’s Eve Inc. ![]() Articles of Incorporation . . .
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January 20, 1984 Dear Mr. Bumppo: |
vised Statutes 271A.270, at paragraph 2:
![]() ![]() ![]() corporation requirements has reduced the complexities of preparing the articles and removed pitfalls that otherwise beset the uninitiated. . . . ![]() ![]() rate purpose is of primary importance.” |
nected with the corporation is capable of having such relations with either “the past” or “the future” is patently absurd. ![]() ![]() clause is imprecise surplusage. |
to which any rational meaning can be attach- ed. Very truly yours, Ann Z. Stewart, Attorney |
January 23, 1984
Dear Ms. Stewart: |
it all the time. ![]() ![]() law of Kentucky or the United States a- gainst fucking with the future generally, and I dare say you cannot either. |
other, in the vast majority of articles of incor- poration tendered to the Secretary of State, and which is clearly surplusage in light of KRS 271A.270(2), which states, “It shall not be necessary to set forth in the articles of incorporation any of the corporate powers enumerated in this chapter.” ![]() ![]() surplusage is, moreover, specifically permit- ted by KRS 271A.270(1)(c), which provides that the purposes of a corporation may be stated in the articles “to be, or to include, the transaction of any or all lawful business for which corporations may be incorporated un- der this chapter.” |
the past, but to fuck plenty with the future”
– as surplusage, but not the third, “to transact any other lawful business for which corpora- tions may be organized under KRS 271A.” Your exclusive challenge, plus your statement that you are “of the opinion that [the] first clause adds nothing to the understanding of these enumerated purposes,” has led the in- corporator to question whether he has en- countered not a challenge for lawfulness of his stated purpose but, rather, censorship. |
State’s apparent lust for “rational meaning”) that the corporation, while letting bygones be bygones, will nonetheless attempt to change the course of events in the future – which could be said, after all, to be the purpose, in one way or another, of every person, wheth- er natural or artificial, that has any notion of progress or restoration. ![]() ![]() purpose of New Year’s Eve Inc. is surplus- age, then so is the stated purpose of every dynamic person in Kentucky, whether cor- porate or natural. |
stated purposes of New Year’s Eve Inc. Rather than specify each effort the corpora- tion might make to change the course of e- vents (which might be practically impossible), the incorporator has, in step with “the trend toward simplification of incorporation re- quirements,” merely stated the purpose to be “to not fuck much with the past, but to fuck plenty with the future.” |
erroneous, particularly legally. ![]() ![]() v. California, 403 U.S. 15 (1971); Hess v. Indiana, 414 U.S. 105 (1973; this is the fa- mous “Fuck the Draft” T-shirt case); Colum- bus v. Fraley, 70 Ohio Ops. 2d 335 (1975), and Re Welfare of J., Minn., 263 NW 2d 412 (1978) . . . . — The same phraseology was included in the |
states on postcards. ![]() ![]() cards was returned by the U.S. Postal Ser- vice as undeliverable on account of taste or censorship, and the resultant subscription leads me to believe that most, if not all, of the postcards were delivered. — The phraseology you have challenged was |
— The incorporator’s stated purpose was ratified by a large number of prospective shareholders, including not only adults but also children aged two months to 16 years, from a number of states, including Kentucky, and was the basis of John M. Greer’s win- ning the status of incorporator (at a New Year’s Eve party December 31, 1983). |
tendered for filing.
Sincerely, Natty Bumppo |
“Over hamburgers sold!”