You are here

What’s the difference between void ab initio and voidable?

What’s the difference between void ab initio and voidable?

What’s the difference between void ab initio and voidable?

A shelter manager for the Delaware SPCA claimed that the board’s decision to fire him from his job was void ab initio and therefore ineffective because the board was comprised of less than 20 individuals as required by a special state law. A federal District Court in Delaware has dismissed the count of the complaint for wrongful termination, but granted leave for the manager to plead facts to show that the termination was voidable. Under Delaware law, the Court said, a board’s actions are void ab initio, i.e. from the beginning, if they are “illegal acts or acts beyond the authority of the corporation which are not ratifiable because the corporation cannot, in any case, lawfully accomplish...

lock The full text of this article is available to paid subscribers only. Login or subscribe to read more

 

Sign-up for our weekly Q&A; get a free report on electioneering