Annual Report — Small Business — Form 10-KSB
Filing Table of Contents
Document/Exhibit Description Pages Size
1: 10KSB Annual Report -- Small Business 69 351K
2: EX-2.1 Plan of Reorganization 8 56K
3: EX-3.1 Articles of Incorporation 4 32K
4: EX-3.2 Articles of Incorporation 1 17K
5: EX-3.3 Articles of Incorporation 16 75K
6: EX-3.4 By-Laws 18 86K
7: EX-10.1 Material Contracts 58 245K
16: EX-10.10 Material Contracts 18 76K
17: EX-10.11 Material Contracts 4 30K
18: EX-10.12 Material Contracts 4 30K
19: EX-10.13 Material Contracts 4 30K
20: EX-10.14 Material Contracts 4 30K
21: EX-10.15 Material Contracts 4 30K
22: EX-10.16 Material Contracts 4 31K
23: EX-10.17 Material Contracts 4 30K
24: EX-10.18 Material Contracts 17 66K
25: EX-10.19 Material Contracts 4 30K
8: EX-10.2 Material Contracts 13 53K
26: EX-10.20 Material Contracts 4 30K
27: EX-10.21 Material Contracts 4 30K
28: EX-10.22 Material Contracts 4 30K
29: EX-10.23 Material Contracts 4 30K
30: EX-10.24 Material Contracts 4 30K
31: EX-10.25 Material Contracts 4 30K
32: EX-10.26 Material Contracts 3 26K
33: EX-10.27 Material Contracts 3 27K
34: EX-10.28 Material Contracts 4 30K
35: EX-10.29 Material Contracts 4 30K
9: EX-10.3 Material Contracts 30 127K
36: EX-10.30 Material Contracts 4 30K
37: EX-10.31 Material Contracts 4 30K
38: EX-10.32 Material Contracts 4 30K
39: EX-10.33 Material Contracts 4 30K
40: EX-10.34 Material Contracts 4 30K
41: EX-10.35 Material Contracts 4 31K
42: EX-10.36 Material Contracts 4 31K
43: EX-10.37 Material Contracts 4 30K
44: EX-10.38 Material Contracts 2 22K
45: EX-10.39 Material Contracts 3 26K
10: EX-10.4 Material Contracts 30 126K
46: EX-10.40 Material Contracts 3 26K
47: EX-10.41 Material Contracts 3 27K
48: EX-10.42 Material Contracts 1 19K
49: EX-10.43 Material Contracts 18 82K
50: EX-10.44 Material Contracts 16 77K
51: EX-10.45 Material Contracts 13 55K
52: EX-10.46 Material Contracts 8 38K
53: EX-10.47 Material Contracts 30 110K
54: EX-10.48 Material Contracts 17 75K
55: EX-10.49 Material Contracts 17 81K
11: EX-10.5 Material Contracts 10 40K
56: EX-10.50 Material Contracts 3 23K
57: EX-10.51 Material Contracts 6 33K
58: EX-10.52 Material Contracts 3 29K
59: EX-10.53 Material Contracts 80± 299K
60: EX-10.54 Material Contracts 9 51K
12: EX-10.6 Material Contracts 10 40K
13: EX-10.7 Material Contracts 8 45K
14: EX-10.8 Material Contracts 7 36K
15: EX-10.9 Material Contracts 12 59K
61: EX-21.1 Subsidiaries 1 14K
62: EX-27 Financial Data Schedule 1 16K
EX-3.4 — By-Laws
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Exhibit 3.4
BYLAWS
OF
BOULDER CAPITAL OPPORTUNITIES, INC.
ARTICLE I
Offices
The principal office of the corporation shall be designated from time to
time by the corporation and may be within or outside of Colorado.
The corporation may have such other offices, either within or outside
Colorado, as the board of directors may designate or as the business of the
corporation may require from time to time.
The registered office of the corporation required by the Colorado
Business Corporation Act to be maintained in Colorado may be, but need not be,
identical with the principal office, and the address of the registered office
may be changed from time to time by the board of directors.
ARTICLE II
Shareholders
Section 1. Annual Meeting. The annual meeting of the shareholders shall
be held during the month of September of each year on a date and at a time fixed
by the board of directors of the corporation (or by the president in the absence
of action by the board of directors), beginning with the year 1997, for the
purpose of electing directors and for the transaction of such other business as
may come before the meeting. If the election of directors is not held on the day
fixed as provided herein for any annual meeting of the shareholders, or any
adjournment thereof, the board of directors shall cause the election to be held
at a special meeting of the shareholders as soon thereafter as it may
conveniently be held.
A shareholder may apply to the district court in the county in Colorado
where the corporation's principal office is located or, if the corporation has
no principal office in Colorado, to the district court of the county in which
the corporation's registered office is located to seek an order that a
shareholder meeting be held (i) if an annual meeting was not held within six
months after the close of the corporation's most recently ended fiscal year or
fifteen months after its last annual meeting, whichever is earlier, or (ii) if
the shareholder participated in a proper call of or proper demand for a special
meeting and notice of the special meeting was not given within thirty days after
the date of the call or the date the last of the demands necessary to require
calling of the meeting was received by the corporation pursuant to C.R.S.
Section 7- 107-102(1)(b), or the special meeting was not held in accordance with
the notice.
Section 2. Special Meetings. Unless otherwise prescribed by statute,
special meetings of the shareholders may be called for any purpose by the
president or by the board of directors. The president shall call a special
meeting of the shareholders if the corporation receives one or more written
demands for the meeting, stating the purpose or purposes for which it is to be
held, signed and dated by holders of shares representing at least ten percent of
all the votes entitled to be cast on any issue proposed to be considered at the
meeting.
Section 3. Place of Meeting. The board of directors may designate any
place, either within or outside Colorado, as the place for any annual meeting or
any special meeting called by the board of directors. A waiver of notice signed
by all shareholders entitled to vote at a meeting may designate any place,
either within or outside Colorado, as the place for such meeting. If no
designation is made, or if a special meeting is called other than by the board,
the place of meeting shall be the principal office of the corporation.
Section 4. Notice of Meeting. Written notice stating the place, date,
and hour of the meeting shall be given not less than ten nor more than sixty
days before the date of the meeting, except that (i) if the number of authorized
shares is to be increased, at least thirty days' notice shall be given, or (ii)
any other longer notice period is required by the Colorado Business Corporation
Act. Notice of a special meeting shall include a description of the purpose or
purposes of the meeting. Notice of an annual meeting need not include a
description of the purpose or purposes of the meeting except the purpose or
purposes shall be stated with respect to (i) an amendment to the articles of
incorporation of the corporation, (ii) a merger or share exchange in which the
corporation is a party and, with respect to a share exchange, in which the
corporation's shares will be acquired, (iii) a sale, lease, exchange or other
disposition, other than in the usual and regular course of business, of all or
substantially all of the property of the corporation or of another entity which
this corporation controls, in each case with or without the goodwill, (iv) a
dissolution of the corporation, or (v) any other purpose for which a statement
of purpose is required by the Colorado Business Corporation Act. Notice shall be
given personally or by mail, private carrier, telegraph, teletype,
electronically transmitted facsimile or other form of wire or wireless
communication by or at the direction of the president, the secretary, or the
officer or persons calling the meeting, to each shareholder of record entitled
to vote at such meeting. If mailed and if in a comprehensible form, such notice
shall be deemed to be given and effective when deposited in the United States
mail, addressed to the shareholder at his address as it appears in the
corporation's current record of shareholders, with postage prepaid. If notice is
given other than by mail, and provided that such notice is in a comprehensible
form, the notice is given and effective on the date received by the shareholder.
If requested by the person or persons lawfully calling such meeting, the
corporation shall give notice thereof at corporation expense. No notice need be
sent to any shareholder if three successive notices mailed to the last known
address of such shareholder have been returned as undeliverable until such time
as another address for such shareholder is made known to the corporation by such
shareholder. In order to be entitled to receive notice of any meeting, a
shareholder shall advise the corporation in writing of any change in such
shareholder's mailing address as shown on the corporation's books and records.
When a meeting is adjourned to another date, time or place, notice need
not be given of the new date, time or place if the new date, time or place of
such meeting is announced before adjournment at the meeting at which the
adjournment is taken. At the adjourned meeting the corporation may transact any
business which may have been transacted at the original meeting. If the
adjournment is for more than 120 days, or if a new record date is fixed for the
adjourned meeting, a new notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given to each
shareholder of record entitled to vote at the meeting as of the new record date.
A shareholder may waive notice of a meeting before or after the time and
date of the meeting by a writing signed by such shareholder. Such waiver
shall be delivered to the corporation for filing with the corporate records.
Further, by attending a meeting either in person or by proxy, a shareholder
waives objection to lack of notice or defective notice of the meeting unless the
shareholder objects at the beginning of the meeting to the holding of the
meeting or the transaction of business at the meeting because of lack of notice
or defective notice. By attending the meeting, the shareholder also waives any
objection to consideration at the meeting of a particular matter not within the
purpose or purposes described in the meeting notice unless the shareholder
objects to considering the matter when it is presented.
Section 5. Fixing of Record Date. For the purposes of determining
shareholders entitled to (i) notice of or vote at any meeting of shareholders or
any adjournment thereof, (ii) receive distributions or share dividends, or (ii)
demand a special meeting, or to make a determination of shareholders for any
other proper purpose, the board of directors may fix a future date as the record
date for any such determination of shareholders, such date in any case to be not
more than seventy days, and, in case of a meeting of shareholders not less than
ten days, prior to the date on which the particular action requiring such
determination of shareholders is to be taken. If no record date is fixed by the
directors, the record date shall be the date on which notice of the meeting is
mailed to shareholders, or the date on which the resolution of the board of
directors providing for a distribution is adopted, as the case may be. When a
determination of shareholders entitled to vote at any meeting of shareholders is
made as provided in this Section, such determination shall apply to any
adjournment thereof unless the board of directors fixes a new record date, which
it must do if the meeting is adjourned to a date more than 120 days after the
date fixed for the original meeting.
Notwithstanding the above, the record date for determining the
shareholders entitled to take action without a meeting or entitled to be given
notice of action so taken shall be the date a writing upon which the action is
taken is first received by the corporation. The record date for determining
shareholders entitled to demand a special meeting shall be the date of the
earliest of any of the demands pursuant to which the meeting is called.
Section 6. Voting Lists. The secretary shall make, at the earlier of ten
days before each meeting of shareholders or two business days after notice of
the meeting has been given, a complete list of the shareholders entitled to be
given notice of such meeting or any adjournment thereof. The list shall be
arranged by voting groups and within each voting group by class or series of
shares, shall be in alphabetical order within each class or series, and shall
show the address of and the number of shares of each class or series held by
each shareholder. For the period beginning the earlier of ten days prior to the
meeting or two business days after notice of the meeting is given and continuing
through the meeting and any adjournment thereof, this list shall be kept on file
at the principal office of the corporation, or at a place (which shall be
identified in the notice) in the city where the meeting will be held. Such list
shall be available for inspection on written demand by any shareholder
(including for the purpose of this Section 6 any holder of voting trust
certificates) or his agent or attorney during regular business hours and during
the period available for inspection. The original stock transfer books shall be
prima facie evidence as to the shareholders entitled to examine such list or to
vote at any meeting of shareholders.
Any shareholder, his agent or attorney may copy the list during regular
business hours and during the period it is available for inspection, provided
(i) the shareholder has been a shareholder for at least three months immediately
preceding the demand or holds at least five percent of all outstanding shares of
any class of shares as of the date of the demand, (ii) the demand is made in
good faith and for a purpose reasonably related to the demanding shareholder's
interest as a shareholder, (iii) the shareholder describes with reasonable
particularity the purpose and the records the shareholder desires to inspect,
(iv) the records are directly connected with the described purpose and (v) the
shareholder pays a reasonable charge covering the costs of labor and material
for such copies, not to exceed the estimated cost of production and
reproduction.
Section 7. Recognition Procedure for Beneficial Owners. The board of
directors may adopt by resolution a procedure whereby a shareholder of the
corporation may certify in writing to the corporation that all or a portion of
the shares registered in the name of such shareholder are held for the account
of a specified person or persons. The resolution may set forth (i) the types of
nominees to which it applies, (ii) the rights or privileges that the corporation
will recognize in a beneficial owner, which may include rights and privileges
other than voting; (iii) the form of certification and the information to be
contained therein, (iv) if the certification is with respect to a record date,
the time within which the certification must be received by the corporation, (v)
the period for which the nominee's use of the procedure is effective, and (vi)
such other provisions with respect to the procedure as the board deems necessary
or desirable. Upon receipt by the corporation of a certificate complying with
the procedure established by the board of directors, the persons specified in
the certification shall be deemed, for the purpose or purposes set forth in the
certification, to be the registered holders of the number of shares specified in
place of the shareholder making the certification.
Section 8. Quorum and Manner of Acting. One-third of the votes entitled
to be cast on a matter by a voting group shall constitute a quorum of that
voting group for action on the matter. If less than one-third of such votes are
represented at a meeting, a majority of the votes so represented may adjourn the
meeting from time to time without further notice, for a period not to exceed 120
days for any one adjournment. If a quorum is present at such adjourned meeting,
any business may be transacted which might have been transacted at the meeting
as originally noticed. The shareholders present at a duly organized meeting may
continue to transact business until adjournment, notwithstanding the withdrawal
of enough shareholders to leave less than a quorum, unless the meeting is
adjourned and a new record date is set for the adjourned meeting.
If a quorum exists, action on a matter other than the election of
directors by a voting group is approved if the votes cast within the voting
group favoring the action exceed the votes cast within the voting group opposing
the action, unless the vote of a greater number or voting by classes is required
by law or the articles of incorporation.
Section 9. Proxies. At all meetings of shareholders, a shareholder may
vote by proxy by signing an appointment form or similar writing, either
personally or by his duly authorized attorney-in-fact. A shareholder may also
appoint a proxy by transmitting or authorizing the transmission of a telegram,
teletype, or other electronic transmission providing a written statement of the
appointment to the proxy, a proxy solicitor, proxy support service organization,
or other person duly authorized by the proxy to receive appointments as agent
for the proxy, or to the corporation. The transmitted appointment shall set
forth or be transmitted with written evidence from which it can be determined
that the shareholder transmitted or authorized the transmission of the
appointment. The proxy appointment form or similar writing shall be filed with
the secretary of the
corporation before or at the time of the meeting. The appointment of a proxy is
effective when received by the corporation and is valid for eleven months unless
a different period is expressly provided in the appointment form or similar
writing.
Any complete copy, including an electronically transmitted facsimile, of
an appointment of a proxy may be substituted for or used in lieu of the original
appointment for any purpose for which the original appointment could be used.
Revocation of a proxy does not affect the right of the corporation to
accept the proxy's authority unless (i) the corporation had notice that the
appointment was coupled with an interest and notice that such interest is
extinguished is received by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized
to tabulate votes before the proxy exercises his authority under the
appointment, or (ii) other notice of the revocation of the appointment is
received by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized to tabulate votes
before the proxy exercises his authority under the appointment. Other notice of
revocation may, in the discretion of the corporation, be deemed to include the
appearance at a shareholders' meeting of the shareholder who granted the proxy
and his voting in person on any matter subject to a vote at such meeting.
The death or incapacity of the shareholder appointing a proxy does not
affect the right of the corporation to accept the proxy's authority unless
notice of the death or incapacity is received by the secretary or other officer
or agent authorized to tabulate votes before the proxy exercises his authority
under the appointment.
The corporation shall not be required to recognize an appointment made
irrevocable if it has received a writing revoking the appointment signed by the
shareholder (including a shareholder who is a successor to the shareholder who
granted the proxy) either personally or by his attorney-in-fact, notwithstanding
that the revocation may be a breach of an obligation of the shareholder to
another person not to revoke the appointment.
Subject to Section 11 and any express limitation on the proxy's
authority appearing on the appointment form, the corporation is entitled to
accept the proxy's vote or other action as that of the shareholder making the
appointment.
Section 10.Voting of Shares. Each outstanding share, regardless of
class, shall be entitled to one vote, except in the election of directors, and
each fractional share shall be entitled to a corresponding fractional vote on
each matter submitted to a vote at a meeting of shareholders, except to the
extent that the voting rights of the shares of any class or classes are limited
or denied by the articles of incorporation and by the resolution of the board of
directors authorizing the issuance of the shares of any particular class, as
permitted by the Colorado Business Corporation Act. Cumulative voting shall not
be permitted in the election of directors or for any other purpose. Each record
holder of shares of common stock shall be entitled to vote in the election of
directors and shall have as many votes for each of the shares owned by him as
there are directors to be elected and for whose election he has the right to
vote.
At each election of directors, that number of candidates equaling the
number of directors to be elected, having the highest number of votes cast in
favor of their election, shall be elected to the board of directors.
Except as otherwise ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction upon a
finding that the purpose of this Section would not be violated in the
circumstances presented to the court, the shares of the corporation are not
entitled to be voted if they are owned, directly or indirectly, by a second
corporation, domestic or foreign, and the first corporation owns, directly or
indirectly, a majority of the shares entitled to vote for directors of the
second corporation except to the extent the second corporation holds the shares
in a fiduciary capacity.
Redeemable shares are not entitled to be voted after notice of
redemption is mailed to the holders and a sum sufficient to redeem the shares
has been deposited with a bank, trust company or other financial institution
under an irrevocable obligation to pay the holders the redemption price on
surrender of the shares.
Section 11. Corporation's Acceptance of Votes. If the name signed on a
vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment, or proxy appointment revocation
corresponds to the name of a shareholder, the corporation, if acting in good
faith, is entitled to accept the vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment or
proxy appointment revocation and give it effect as the act of the shareholder.
If the name signed on a vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment or proxy
appointment revocation does not correspond to the name of a shareholder, the
corporation, if acting in good faith, is nevertheless entitled to accept the
vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment or proxy appointment revocation and to
give it effect as the act of the shareholder if: (i) the shareholder is an
entity and the name signed purports to be that of an officer or agent of the
entity; (ii) the name signed purports to be that of an administrator, executor,
guardian or conservator representing the June 28, 1996 shareholder and, if the
corporation requests, evidence of fiduciary status acceptable to the corporation
has been presented with respect to the vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment
or proxy appointment revocation; (iii)the name signed purports to be that of a
receiver or trustee in bankruptcy of the shareholder and, if the corporation
requests, evidence of this status acceptable to the corporation has been
presented with respect to the vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment or proxy
appointment revocation; (iv) the name signed purports to be that of a pledgee,
beneficial owner or attorney-in-fact of the shareholder and, if the corporation
requests, evidence acceptable to the corporation of the signatory's authority to
sign for the shareholder has been presented with respect to the vote, consent,
waiver, proxy appointment or proxy appointment revocation; (v) two or more
persons are the shareholder as co-tenants or fiduciaries and the name signed
purports to be the name of at least one of the co-tenants or fiduciaries, and
the person signing appears to be acting on behalf of all the co-tenants or
fiduciaries; or (vi) the acceptance of the vote, consent, waiver, proxy
appointment or proxy appointment revocation is otherwise proper under rules
established by the corporation that are not inconsistent with this Section 11.
The corporation is entitled to reject a vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment
or proxy appointment revocation if the secretary or other officer or agent
authorized to tabulate votes, acting in good faith, has reasonable basis for
doubt about the validity of the signature on it or about the signatory's
authority to sign for the shareholder. Neither the corporation nor its officers
nor any agent who accepts or rejects a vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment
or proxy appointment revocation in good faith and in accordance with the
standards of this Section is liable in damages for the consequences of the
acceptance or rejection.
Section 12. Informal Action by Shareholders. Any action required or
permitted to be taken at a meeting of the shareholders may be taken without a
meeting if a written consent (or counterparts thereof) that sets forth the
action so taken is signed by all of the shareholders entitled to vote with
respect to the subject matter thereof and received by the corporation. Such
consent shall have the same force and effect as a unanimous vote of the
shareholders and may be stated as such in the document. Action taken under this
Section 12 is effective as of the date the last writing necessary to effect this
action is received by the corporation, unless all of the writings specify a
different effective date, in which case such specified date shall be the
effective date for such action. If any shareholder revokes his consent as
provided for herein prior to what would otherwise be the effective date, the
action proposed in the consent shall be invalid. The record date for determining
shareholders entitled to take action without a meeting is the date the
corporation receives a writing upon which the action is taken.
Any shareholder who has signed a writing describing and consenting to
action taken pursuant to this Section 12 may revoke such consent by a writing
signed by the shareholder describing the action and stating that the
shareholder's prior consent thereto is revoked, if such writing is received by
the corporation before the effectiveness of the action.
Section 13. Meetings by Telecommunication. Any or all of the
shareholders may participate in an annual or special shareholders' meeting by,
or the meeting may be conducted through the use of, any means of communication
by which all persons participating in the meeting may hear each other during the
meeting. A shareholder participating in a meeting by this means is deemed to be
present in person at the meeting.
ARTICLE III
Board of Directors
Section 1. General Powers. All corporate powers shall be exercised by or
under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the corporation shall be
managed under the direction of its board of directors, except as otherwise
provided in the Colorado Business Corporation Act or the articles of
incorporation.
Section 2. Number, Qualifications and Tenure. The number of directors of
the corporation shall be fixed from time to time by the board of directors,
within a range of no less than one or more than five. A director shall be a
natural person who is eighteen years of age or older. A director need not be a
resident of Colorado or a shareholder of the corporation.
Directors shall be elected at each annual meeting of shareholders. Each
director shall hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders
following his election and thereafter until his successor shall have been
elected and qualified. Directors shall be removed in the manner provided by the
Colorado Business Corporation Act.
Section 3. Vacancies. Any director may resign at any time by giving
written notice to the corporation. Such resignation shall take effect at the
time the notice is received by the corporation unless the notice specifies a
later effective date. Unless otherwise specified in the notice of resignation,
the corporation's acceptance of such resignation shall not be necessary to make
it effective. Any vacancy on the board of directors may be filled by the
affirmative
vote of a majority of the shareholders or the board of directors. If the
directors remaining in office constitute fewer than a quorum of the board, the
directors may fill the vacancy by the affirmative vote of a majority of all the
directors remaining in office. If elected by the directors, the director shall
hold office until the next annual shareholder's meeting at which directors are
elected. If elected by the shareholders, the director shall hold office for the
unexpired term of his predecessor in office; except that, if the director's
predecessor was elected by the directors to fill a vacancy, the director elected
by the shareholders shall hold office for the unexpired term of the last
predecessor elected by the shareholders.
Section 4. Regular Meetings. A regular meeting of the board of directors
shall be held without notice immediately after and at the same place as the
annual meeting of shareholders. The board of directors may provide by resolution
the time and place, either within or outside Colorado, for the holding of
additional regular meetings without other notice.
Section 5. Special Meetings. Special meetings of the board of directors
may be called by or at the request of the president or chief executive officer,
or any director. The person or persons authorized to call special meetings of
the board of directors may fix any place, either within or outside Colorado, as
the place for holding any special meeting of the board of directors called by
them, provided that no meeting shall be called outside the State of Colorado
unless a majority of the board of directors has so authorized.
Section 6. Notice. Notice of any special meeting shall be given at least
two days prior to the meeting by written notice either personally delivered or
mailed to each director at his business address, or by notice transmitted by
telegraph, telex, electronically transmitted facsimile or other form of wire or
wireless communication. If mailed, such notice shall be deemed to be given and
to be effective on the earlier of (i) three days after such notice is deposited
in the United States mail, properly addressed, with postage prepaid, or (ii) the
date shown on the return receipt, if mailed by registered or certified mail
return receipt requested. If notice is given by telex, electronically
transmitted facsimile or other similar form of wire or wireless communication,
such notice shall be deemed to be given and to be effective when sent, and with
respect to a telegram, such notice shall be deemed to be given and to be
effective when the telegram is delivered to the telegraph company. If a director
has designated in writing one or more reasonable addresses or facsimile numbers
for delivery of notice to him, notice sent by mail, telegram, telex,
electronically transmitted facsimile or other form of wire or wireless
communication shall not be deemed to have been given or to be effective unless
sent to such addresses or facsimile numbers, as the case may be.
A director may waive notice of a meeting before or after the time and
date of the meeting by a writing signed by such director. Such waiver shall be
delivered to the corporation for filing with the corporate records. Further, a
director's attendance at or participation in a meeting waives any required
notice to him of the meeting unless at the beginning of the meeting, or promptly
upon his arrival, the director objects to holding the meeting or transacting
business at the meeting because of lack of notice or defective notice and does
not thereafter vote for or assent to action taken at the meeting. Neither the
business to be transacted at, nor the purpose of, any regular or special meeting
of the board of directors need be specified in the notice or waiver of notice of
such meeting.
Section 7. Quorum. A majority of the number of directors fixed by the
board of directors pursuant to Section 2 or, if no number is fixed, a majority
of
the number in office immediately before the meeting begins, shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of business at any meeting of the board of directors.
If less than such majority is present at a meeting, a majority of the directors
present may adjourn the meeting from time to time without further notice, for a
period not to exceed sixty days at any one adjournment.
Section 8. Manner of Acting. The act of the majority of the directors
present at a meeting at which a quorum is present shall be the act of the board
of directors. No director may vote or act by proxy at any meeting of directors.
Section 9. Compensation. By resolution of the board of directors, any
director may be paid any one or more of the following: his expenses, if any, of
attendance at meetings, a fixed sum for attendance at each meeting, a stated
salary as director, or such other compensation as the corporation and the
director may reasonably agree upon. No such payment shall preclude any director
from serving the corporation in any other capacity and receiving compensation
therefor.
Section 10. Presumption of Assent. A director of the corporation who is
present at a meeting of the board of directors or committee of the board at
which action on any corporate matter is taken shall be presumed to have assented
to the action taken unless (i) the director objects at the beginning of the
meeting, or promptly upon his arrival, to the holding of the meeting or the
transaction of business at the meeting and does not thereafter vote for or
assent to any action taken at the meeting, (ii) the director contemporaneously
requests that his dissent or abstention as to any specific action taken be
entered in the minutes of the meeting, or (iii) the director causes written
notice of his dissent or abstention as to any specific action to be received by
the presiding officer of the meeting before its adjournment or by the
corporation promptly after the adjournment of the meeting. A director may
dissent to a specific action at a meeting, while assenting to others. The right
to dissent to a specific action taken at a meeting of the board of directors or
a committee of the board shall not be available to a director who voted in favor
of such action.
Section 11. Committees. By resolution adopted by a majority of all the
directors in office when the action is taken, the board of directors may
designate from among its members an executive committee and one or more other
committees, and appoint one or more members of the board of directors to serve
on them. To the extent provided in the resolution, each committee shall have all
the authority of the board of directors, except that no such committee shall
have the authority to (i) authorize distributions, (ii) approve or propose to
shareholders actions or proposals required by the Colorado Business Corporation
Act to be approved by shareholders, (iii) fill vacancies on the board of
directors or any committee thereof, (iv) amend articles of incorporation, (v)
adopt, amend or repeal the bylaws, (vi) approve a plan of merger not requiring
shareholder approval, (vii) authorize or approve the reacquisition of shares
unless pursuant to a formula or method prescribed by the board of directors, or
(viii) authorize or approve the issuance or sale of shares, or contract for the
sale of shares or determine the designations and relative rights, preferences
and limitations of a class or series of shares, except that the board of
directors may authorize a committee or officer to do so within limits
specifically prescribed by the board of directors. The committee shall then have
full power within the limits set by the board of directors to adopt any final
resolution setting forth all preferences,
limitations and relative rights of such class or series and to authorize an
amendment of the articles of incorporation stating the preferences, limitations
and relative rights of a class or series for filing with the Secretary of State
under the Colorado Business Corporation Act.
Sections 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 12 of Article III, which govern meetings,
notice, waiver of notice, quorum, voting requirements and action without a
meeting of the board of directors, shall apply to committees and their members
appointed under this Section 11.
Neither the designation of any such committee, the delegation of
authority to such committee, nor any action by such committee pursuant to its
authority shall alone constitute compliance by any member of the board of
directors or a member of the committee in question with his responsibility to
conform to the standards of care set forth in Article III, Section 14 of these
bylaws.
Section 12. Action Without a Meeting. Any action required or permitted
to be taken at a meeting of the directors or any committee designated by the
board of directors may be taken without a meeting if a written consent (or
counterparts thereof) that sets forth the action so taken is signed by all of
the directors entitled to vote with respect to the action taken. Such consent
shall have the same force and effect as a unanimous vote of the directors or
committee members and may be stated as such in any document. Unless the consent
specifies a different effective date, action taken under this Section 12 is
effective at the time the last director signs a writing describing the action
taken, unless, before such time, any director has revoked his consent by a
writing signed by the director and received by the president or secretary of the
corporation.
Section 13. Telephonic Meetings. The board of directors may permit any
director (or any member of a committee designated by the board) to participate
in a regular or special meeting of the board of directors or a committee thereof
through the use of any means of communication by which all directors
participating in the meeting can hear each other during the meeting. A director
participating in a meeting in this manner is deemed to be present in person at
the meeting.
Section 14. Standard of Care. A director shall perform his duties as a
director, including, without limitation his duties as a member of any committee
of the board, in good faith, in a manner he reasonably believes to be in the
best interests of the corporation, and with the care an ordinarily prudent
person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances. In
performing his duties, a director shall be entitled to rely on information,
opinions, reports or statements, including financial statements and other
financial data, in each case prepared or presented by the persons herein
designated. However, he shall not be considered to be acting in good faith if he
has knowledge concerning the matter in question that would cause such reliance
to be unwarranted. A director shall not be liable to the corporation or its
shareholders for any action he takes or omits to take as a director if, in
connection with such action or omission, he performs his duties in compliance
with this Section 14.
The designated persons on whom a director is entitled to rely are (i)
one or more officers or employees of the corporation whom the director
reasonably believes to be reliable and competent in the matters presented, (ii)
legal counsel, public accountant, or other person as to matters which the
director reasonably believes to be within such person's professional or expert
competence, or (iii) a
committee of the board of directors on which the director does not serve if the
director reasonably believes the committee merits confidence.
ARTICLE IV
Officers and Agents
Section 1. General. The officers of the corporation shall be as
determined by the board of directors from time to time, and may include a
president, one or more vice presidents, a secretary, a treasurer, and such other
officers, assistant officers, committees and agents, including a chairman of the
board, assistant secretaries and assistant treasurers, as the board may consider
necessary. Each officer shall be a natural person eighteen years of age or
older. The board of directors or the officer or officers authorized by the board
shall from time to time determine the procedure for the appointment of officers,
their term of office, their authority and duties and their compensation. One
person may hold more than one office. In all cases where the duties of any
officer, agent or employee are not prescribed by the bylaws, or by the board of
directors, such officer, agent or employee shall follow the orders and
instructions of the president of the corporation.
Section 2. Appointment and Term of Office. The officers of the
corporation shall be appointed by the board of directors at each annual meeting
of the board held after each annual meeting of the shareholders. If the
appointment of officers is not made at such meeting or if an officer or officers
are to be appointed by another officer or officers of the corporation, such
appointment shall be made as soon thereafter as conveniently may be. Each
officer shall hold office until the first of the following occurs: his successor
shall have been duly appointed and qualified, his death, his resignation, or his
removal in the manner provided in
Section 3. Section 3. Resignation and Removal. An officer may resign at
any time by giving written notice of resignation to the corporation. The
resignation is effective when the notice is received by the corporation unless
the notice specifies a later effective date.
Any officer or agent may be removed at any time with or without cause by
the board of directors or an officer or officers authorized by the board. Such
removal does not affect the contract rights, if any, of the corporation or of
the person so removed. The appointment of an officer or agent shall not in
itself create contract rights.
Section 4. Vacancies. A vacancy in any office, however occurring, may be
filled by the board of directors, or by the officer or officers authorized by
the board, for the unexpired portion of the officer's term. If an officer
resigns and his resignation is made effective at a later date, the board of
directors, or officer or officers authorized by the board, may permit the
officer to remain in office until the effective date and may fill the pending
vacancy before the effective date if the board of directors or officer or
officers authorized by the board provide that the successor shall not take
office until the effective date. In the alternative, the board of directors, or
officer or officers authorized by the board of directors, may remove the officer
at any time before the effective date and may fill the resulting vacancy.
Section 5. President. Subject to the direction and supervision of the
board of directors, and unless otherwise determined by the board of directors in
its designation of officers from time to time, the president shall be the chief
executive officer of the corporation, and shall have general and active control
of its affairs and business and general supervision of its officers, agents and
employees. Unless otherwise directed by the board of directors, the president
shall attend in person or by substitute appointed by him, or shall execute on
behalf of the corporation written instruments appointing a proxy or proxies to
represent the corporation, at all meetings of the stockholders of any other
corporation in which the corporation holds any stock. On behalf of the
corporation, the president may in person or by substitute or by proxy execute
written waivers of notice and consents with respect to any such meetings. At all
such meetings and otherwise, the president, in person or by substitute or proxy,
may vote the stock held by the corporation, execute written consents and other
instruments with respect to such stock, and exercise any and all rights and
powers incident to the ownership or said stock, subject to the instructions, if
any, of the board of directors. The president shall have custody of the
treasurer's bond, if any.
Section 6. Vice Presidents. Any vice presidents designated by the board
of directors as officers of the corporation shall assist the president and shall
perform such duties as may be assigned to them by the president or by the board
of directors. In the absence of the president, the vice president, if any (or,
if more than one, the vice presidents in the order designated by the board of
directors, or if the board makes no such designation, then the vice president
designated by the president, or if neither the board nor the president makes any
such designation, the senior vice president as determined by first election to
that office), shall have the powers and perform the duties of the president.
Section 7. Secretary. In the event a secretary is designated by the
board of directors as an officer of the corporation, the secretary shall (i)
prepare and maintain as permanent records the minutes of the proceedings of the
shareholders and the board of directors, a record of all actions taken by the
shareholders or board of directors without a meeting, a record of all actions
taken by a committee of the board of directors in place of the board of
directors on behalf of the corporation, and a record of all waivers of notice of
meetings of shareholders and of the board of directors or any committee thereof,
(ii) see that all notices are duly given in accordance with the provisions of
these bylaws and as required by law, (iii) serve as custodian of the corporate
records and of the seal of the corporation and affix the seal to all documents
when authorized by the board of directors, (iv) keep at the corporation's
registered office or principal place of business a record containing the names
and addresses of all shareholders in a form that permits preparation of a list
of shareholders arranged by voting group and by class or series of shares within
each group, that is alphabetical within each class or series and that shows the
address of, and the number of shares of each class or series held by each
shareholder, unless such a record shall be kept at the office of the
corporation's transfer agent or registrar, (v) maintain at the corporation's
principal office the originals or copies of the corporation's articles of
incorporation, bylaws, minutes of all shareholders' meetings and records of all
action taken by shareholders without a meeting for the past three years, all
written communications within the past three years to shareholders as a group or
to the holders of any class or series of shares as a group, a list of the name
and business addresses of the current directors and officers, a copy of the
corporation's most recent corporate report filed with the Secretary of State,
and financial statements showing in reasonable detail the corporation's assets
and liabilities and results of operations for the last three years, (vi) have
general charge of the stock transfer books of the corporation, unless the
corporation has a transfer agent, (vii) authenticate records of the corporation,
and (vii) in general, perform all duties incident to the office of
secretary and such other duties as from time to time may be assigned to him by
the president or by the board of directors. Assistant secretaries, if any, shall
have the same duties and powers subject to supervision by the secretary. The
directors and/or shareholders may however respectively designate a person other
than the secretary or assistant secretary to keep the minutes of their
respective meetings.
Any books, records, or minutes of the corporation may be in written form
or in any form capable of being converted into written form within a reasonable
time.
Section 8. Treasurer. In the event a treasurer is designated by the
board of directors as an officer of the corporation, the treasurer shall be the
principal financial officer of the corporation, shall have the care and custody
of all funds, securities, evidences of indebtedness and other personal property
of the corporation and shall deposit the same in accordance with the
instructions of the board of directors. He shall receive and give receipts and
acquittances for money paid in on account of the corporation, and shall pay out
of the corporation's funds on hand all bills, payrolls and other just debts of
the corporation of whatever nature upon maturity. He shall perform all other
duties incident to the office of the treasurer and, upon request of the board,
shall make such reports to it as may be required at any time. He shall, if
required by the board, give the corporation a bond in such sums and with such
sureties as shall be satisfactory to the board, conditioned upon the faithful
performance of his duties and for the restoration to the corporation of all
books, papers, vouchers, money and other property of whatever kind in his
possession or under his control belonging to the corporation. He shall have such
other powers and perform such other duties as may from time to time be
prescribed by the board of directors or the president. The assistant treasurers,
if any, shall have the same powers and duties, subject to the supervision of the
treasurer.
The treasurer shall also be the principal accounting officer of the
corporation. He shall prescribe and maintain the methods and systems of
accounting to be followed, keep complete books and records of account as
required by the Colorado Business Corporation Act, prepare and file all local,
state and federal tax returns, prescribe and maintain an adequate system of
internal audit and prepare and furnish to the president and the board of
directors statements of account showing the financial position of the
corporation and the results of its operations.
ARTICLE V
Stock
Section 1. Certificates. The board of directors shall be authorized to
issue any of its classes of shares with or without certificates. The fact that
the shares are not represented by certificates shall have no effect on the
rights and obligations of shareholders. If the shares are represented by
certificates, such shares shall be represented by consecutively numbered
certificates signed, either manually or by facsimile, in the name of the
corporation by one or more persons designated by the board of directors. In case
any officer who has signed or whose facsimile signature has been placed upon
such certificate shall have ceased to be such officer before such certificate is
issued, such certificate may nonetheless be issued by the corporation with the
same effect as if he were such officer at the date of its issue. Certificates of
stock shall be in such form and shall contain such information consistent with
law as shall be prescribed by the board of directors. If shares are not
represented by certificates, within a reasonable time following the issue or
transfer of such shares, the corporation
shall send the shareholder a complete written statement of all of the
information required to be provided to holders of uncertificated shares by the
Colorado Business Corporation Act.
Section 2. Consideration for Shares. Certificated or uncertificated
shares shall not be issued until the shares represented thereby are fully paid.
The board of directors may authorize the issuance of shares for consideration
consisting of any tangible or intangible property or benefit to the corporation,
including cash, promissory notes, services performed or other securities of the
corporation. Future services shall not constitute payment or partial payment for
shares of the corporation. The promissory note of a subscriber or an affiliate
of a subscriber shall not constitute payment or partial payment for shares of
the corporation unless the note is negotiable and is secured by collateral,
other than the shares being purchased, having a fair market value at least equal
to the principal amount of the note. For purposes of this Section 2, "promissory
note" means a negotiable instrument on which there is an obligation to pay
independent of collateral and does not include a non- recourse note.
Section 3. Lost Certificates. In case of the alleged loss, destruction
or mutilation of a certificate of stock, the board of directors may direct the
issuance of a new certificate in lieu thereof upon such terms and conditions in
conformity with law as the board may prescribe. The board of directors may in
its discretion require an affidavit of lost certificate and/or a bond in such
form and amount and with such surety as it may determine before issuing a new
certificate.
Section 4. Transfer of Shares. Upon surrender to the corporation or to a
transfer agent of the corporation of a certificate of stock duly endorsed or
accompanied by proper evidence of succession, assignment or authority to
transfer, and receipt of such documentary stamps as may be required by law and
evidence of compliance with all applicable securities laws and other
restrictions, the corporation shall issue a new certificate to the person
entitled thereto, and cancel the old certificate. Every such transfer of stock
shall be entered on the stock books of the corporation which shall be kept at
its principal office or by the person and at the place designated by the board
of directors.
Except as otherwise expressly provided in Article II, Sections 7 and 11,
and except for the assertion of dissenters' rights to the extent provided in
Article 113 of the Colorado Business Corporation Act, the corporation shall be
entitled to treat the registered holder of any shares of the corporation as the
owner thereof for all purposes, and the corporation shall not be bound to
recognize any equitable or other claim to, or interest in, such shares or rights
deriving from such shares on the part of any person other than the registered
holder, including without limitation any purchaser, assignee or transferee of
such shares or rights deriving from such shares, unless and until such other
person becomes the registered holder of such shares, whether or not the
corporation shall have either actual or constructive notice of the claimed
interest of such other person.
Section 5. Transfer Agent, Registrars and Paying Agents. The board may
at its discretion appoint one or more transfer agents, registrars and agents for
making payment upon any class of stock, bond, debenture or other security of the
corporation. Such agents and registrars may be located either within or outside
Colorado. They shall have such rights and duties and shall be entitled to such
compensation as may be agreed.
ARTICLE VI
Indemnification of Certain Persons
Section 1. Indemnification. For purposes of Article VI, a "Proper
Person" means any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a
party to any threatened, pending, or complete action, suit or proceeding,
whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative, and whether formal or
informal, by reason of the fact that he is or was a director, officer, employee,
fiduciary or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of
the corporation as a director, officer, partner, trustee, employee, fiduciary or
agent of any foreign or domestic profit or nonprofit corporation or of any
partnership, joint venture, trust, profit or nonprofit unincorporated
association, limited liability company, or other enterprise or employee benefit
plan. The corporation shall indemnify any Proper Person against reasonably
incurred expenses (including any attorneys' fees), judgments, penalties, fines
(including any excise tax assessed with respect to an employee benefit plan) and
amounts paid in settlement reasonably incurred by him in connection with such
action, suit or proceeding if it is determined by the groups set forth in
Section 4 of this Article that he conducted himself in good faith and that he
reasonably believed (i) in the case of conduct in his official capacity with the
corporation, that his conduct was in the corporation's best interests, or (ii)
in all other cases (except criminal cases), that his conduct was at least not
opposed to the corporation's best interests, or (iii) in the case of any
criminal proceeding, that he had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct was
unlawful. A Proper Person will be deemed to be acting in his official capacity
while acting as a director, officer, employee or agent on behalf of this
corporation and not while acting on this corporation's behalf for some other
entity.
No indemnification shall be made under this Article VI to a Proper
Person with respect to any claim, issue or matter in connection with a
proceeding by or in the right of a corporation in which the Proper Person was
adjudged liable to the corporation or in connection with any proceeding charging
that the Proper Person derived an improper personal benefit, whether or not
involving action in an official capacity, in which he was adjudged liable on the
basis that he derived an improper personal benefit. Further, indemnification
under this Section in connection with a proceeding brought by or in the right of
the corporation shall be limited to reasonable expenses, including attorneys'
fees, incurred in connection with the proceeding.
Section 2. Right to Indemnification. The corporation shall indemnify any
Proper Person who was wholly successful, on the merits or otherwise, in defense
of any action, suit, or proceeding as to which he was entitled to
indemnification under Section 1 of this Article VI against expenses (including
attorneys' fees) reasonably incurred by him in connection with the proceeding
without the necessity of any action by the corporation other than the
determination in good faith that the defense has been wholly successful.
Section 3. Effect of Termination of Action. The termination of any
action, suit or proceeding by judgment, order, settlement or conviction, or upon
a plea of nolo contendere or its equivalent, shall not of itself create a
presumption that the person seeking indemnification did not meet the standards
of conduct described in Section 1 of this Article VI. Entry of a judgment by
consent as part of a settlement shall not be deemed an adjudication of
liability, as described in Section 2 of this Article VI.
Section 4. Groups Authorized to Make Indemnification Determination.
Except where there is a right to indemnification as set forth in Sections 1 or 2
of this Article or where indemnification is ordered by a court in Section 5, any
indemnification shall be made by the corporation only as authorized in the
specific case upon a determination by a proper group that indemnification of the
Proper Person is permissible under the circumstances because he has met the
applicable standards of conduct set forth in Section 1 of this Article. This
determination shall be made by the board of directors by a majority vote of
those present at a meeting at which a quorum is present, which quorum shall
consist of directors not parties to the proceeding ("Quorum"). If a Quorum
cannot be obtained, the determination shall be made by a majority vote of a
committee of the board of directors designated by the board, which committee
shall consist of two or more directors not parties to the proceeding, except
that directors who are parties to the proceeding may participate in the
designation of directors for the committee. If a Quorum of the board of
directors cannot be obtained and the committee cannot be established, or even if
a Quorum is obtained or the committee is designated and a majority of the
directors constituting such Quorum or committee so directs, the determination
shall be made by (i) independent legal counsel selected by a vote of the board
of directors or the committee in the manner specified in this Section 4, or, if
a Quorum of the full board of directors cannot be obtained and a committee
cannot be established, by independent legal counsel selected by a majority vote
of the full board (including directors who are parties to the action) or (ii) a
vote of the shareholders.
Section 5. Court-Ordered Indemnification. Any Proper Person may apply
for indemnification to the court conducting the proceeding or to another court
of competent jurisdiction for mandatory indemnification under Section 2 of this
Article, including indemnification for reasonable expenses incurred to obtain
court-ordered indemnification. If the court determines that such Proper Person
is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification in view of all the relevant
circumstances, whether or not he met the standards of conduct set forth in
Section 1 of this Article or was adjudged liable in the proceeding, the court
may order such indemnification as the court deems proper except that if the
Proper Person has been adjudged liable, indemnification shall be limited to
reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the proceeding and reasonable
expenses incurred to obtain court-ordered indemnification.
Section 6. Advance of Expenses. Reasonable expenses (including
attorneys' fees) incurred in defending an action, suit or proceeding as
described in Section 1 may be paid by the corporation to any Proper Person in
advance of the final disposition of such action, suit or proceeding upon receipt
of (i) a written affirmation of such Proper Person's good faith belief that he
has met the standards of conduct prescribed by Section 1 of this Article VI,
(ii) a written undertaking, executed personally or on the Proper Person's
behalf, to repay such advances if it is ultimately determined that he did not
meet the prescribed standards of conduct (the undertaking shall be an unlimited
general obligation of the Proper Person but need not be secured and may be
accepted without reference to financial ability to make repayment), and (iii) a
determination is made by the proper group (as described in Section 3 of this
Article VI) that the facts as then known to the group would not preclude
indemnification. Determination and authorization of payments shall be made in
the same manner specified in Section 4 of this Article VI.
Section 7. Witness Expenses. The sections of this Article VI do not
limit the corporation's authority to pay or reimburse expenses incurred by a
director in connection with an appearance as a witness in a proceeding at a time
when he has not been a named defendant or respondent in the proceeding.
Section 8. Report to Shareholders. Any indemnification of or advance of
expenses to a director in accordance with this Article VI, if arising out of a
proceeding by or on behalf of the corporation, shall be reported in writing to
the shareholders with or before the notice of the next shareholders' meeting. If
the next shareholder action is taken without a meeting at the instigation of the
board of directors, such notice shall be given to the shareholders at or before
the time the first shareholder signs a writing consenting to such action.
ARTICLE VII
Provision of Insurance
By action of the board of directors, notwithstanding any interest of the
directors in the action, the corporation may purchase and maintain insurance, in
such scope and amounts as the board of directors deems appropriate on behalf of
any person who is or was a director, officer, employee, fiduciary or agent of
the corporation, or who, while a director, officer, employee, fiduciary or agent
of the corporation, is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a
director, officer, partner, trustee, employee, fiduciary or agent of any other
foreign or domestic corporation or of any partnership, joint venture, trust,
profit or nonprofit unincorporated association, limited liability company or
other enterprise or employee benefit plan, against any liability asserted
against, or incurred by, him in that capacity arising out of his status as such,
whether or not the corporation would have the power to indemnify him against
such liability under the provisions of Article VI or applicable law. Any such
insurance may be procured from any insurance company designated by the board of
directors of the corporation, whether such insurance company is formed under the
laws of Colorado or any other jurisdiction of the United States or elsewhere,
including any insurance company in which the corporation has an equity interest
or any other interest, through stock ownership or otherwise.
ARTICLE VIII
Miscellaneous
Section 1. Seal. The corporate seal of the corporation shall be circular
in form and shall contain the name of the corporation and the words, "Seal,
Colorado."
Section 2. Fiscal Year. The fiscal year of the corporation shall be as
established by the board of directors.
Section 3. Amendments. The board of directors shall have power, to the
maximum extent permitted by the Colorado Business Corporation Act, to make,
amend and repeal the bylaws of the corporation at any regular or special meeting
of the board unless the shareholders, in making, amending or repealing a
particular bylaw, expressly provide that the directors may not amend or repeal
such bylaw. The shareholders also shall have the power to make, amend or repeal
the bylaws of the corporation at any annual meeting or at any special meeting
called for that purpose.
Section 4. Gender. The masculine gender is used in these bylaws as a
matter of convenience only and shall be interpreted to include the feminine and
neuter genders as the circumstances indicate.
Section 5. Conflicts. In the event of any irreconcilable conflict
between these bylaws and either the corporation's articles of incorporation or
applicable law, the latter shall control.
Section 6. Definitions. Except as otherwise specifically provided in
these bylaws, all terms used in these bylaws shall have the same definition as
in the Colorado Business Corporation Act.
THE FOREGOING BYLAWS, consisting of eighteen (18) pages, including this
page, constitute the bylaws of Boulder Capital Opportunities, Inc., adopted by
the board of directors of the corporation as of April 22, 1996.
/s/ Robert Soehngen
----------------------------
President
Dates Referenced Herein
| Referenced-On Page |
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This ‘10KSB’ Filing | | Date | | First | | Last | | | Other Filings |
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Filed on: | | 3/20/00 | | | | | | | None on these Dates |
For Period End: | | 12/31/99 |
| | 6/28/96 | | 6 |
| | 4/22/96 | | 18 |
| List all Filings |
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