From: | Harold Luntz <hluntz@gmail.com> |
To: | Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au> |
obligations@uwo.ca | |
Date: | 25/06/2021 09:24:54 |
Subject: | Re: Adverse Possession of Shareholder Rights |
Neal asks: 'if someone denies you a right to vote which you should be able to exercise, what cause of action do you have?" Ashby v White (1703) 92 ER 126, of course , answered this question in a constitutional context. The headnote in the ER reads: A man who has a right to vote at an election for Members of Parliament may maintain an action against the returning officer for refusing to admit his vote. Tho' his right was never determined in Parliament. And tho' the persons for whom he offered to vote were elected." Probably doesn't help here.
A bit of distraction for me.
Harold.
Harold Luntz AO
Professor Emeritus
Law School
The University of Melbourne
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