Illinois Code § 805 ILCS 5/12.25

Revocation of Dissolution.
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) A corporation may revoke
its dissolution within 60 days of the effective date of
dissolution if the corporation
has not begun to distribute its assets or has not commenced a proceeding
for court-supervision of its winding up under Section 12.50.

 
(b) The corporation's board of directors, or its incorporators if shares
have not been issued and the initial directors have not been designated,
may revoke the dissolution without shareholder action.

 
(c) Within 60 days after the dissolution has been revoked
by the corporation, articles of revocation of dissolution
shall be executed and filed in duplicate in accordance with Section 1.10
of this Act and shall set forth:

 
 
(1) The name of the corporation.

 
 
(2) The effective date of the dissolution that was 
 
revoked.

 
 
(3) A statement that the corporation has not begun to 
 
distribute its assets nor has it commenced a proceeding for court-supervision of its winding up.

 
 
(4) The date the revocation of dissolution was 
 
authorized.

 
 
(5) A statement that the corporation's board of 
 
directors (or incorporators) revoked the dissolution.

 
(d) When the provisions of this Section have been complied with, the
Secretary of State shall file the articles of
revocation of dissolution.
Failure to file the revocation of dissolution as required in subsection
(c) hereof shall not be grounds for the Secretary of State to reject the
filing, but the corporation filing beyond the time period shall pay a
penalty as prescribed by this Act.

 
(e) The revocation of dissolution is effective on the date of filing thereof
by the Secretary of State and shall relate back
and take effect as of the date of
dissolution
and the corporation may resume carrying on business as if dissolution had
never occurred.

revoked.
distribute its assets nor has it commenced a proceeding for court-supervision of its winding up.
authorized.
directors (or incorporators) revoked the dissolution.

‹ Prev All Illinois sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.