Corporate subsidiary (Corporation form rather than flow-through form)
Identity of directors is publicly disclosed; certain jurisdictions require disclosure of officers; identity of shareholders of private, non-listed companies is not publicly disclosed in most jurisdictions. In Alberta, the voting shareholders must be disclosed to the Alberta corporate registrar and on the annual returns filed by the corporation each year. In Quebec, the 3 shareholders holding most voting shares must be disclosed to the Quebec corporate registrar and will be disclosed on the public corporate register. In addition, Quebec law requires that the home address and date of birth of all directors and certain officers be filed with the Quebec corporate registrar, though their date of birth is not publicly available and their home address is not publicly available if a business address is also filed. Finally, a valid ID must be filed with the Quebec corporate registrar for each director of a company.
A private company incorporated under federal, Quebec, British Columbia, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and Newfoundland & Labrador corporate law must maintain a register of individuals with significant control over the company. The criteria for determining who is a significant individual vary by jurisdiction and are nuanced, but a common theme is evaluating ownership percentage (any number of shares that is equal to 25 percent or more of the company’s outstanding shares measured by fair market value, depending on jurisdiction) and voting rights (any number of shares that carry 25 percent or more of the voting rights attached to all of the company’s outstanding voting shares). Most jurisdictions do not yet require the transparency registers to be filed with the applicable government; they are simply maintained in the company’s record books and are accessible by certain designated individuals. In Quebec, all individuals with significant control over the company must be publicly disclosed in the Quebec corporate registrar, along with their address and the date upon which they acquired said status. However, some jurisdictions, including Quebec and federal, now require a governmental filing, with certain information being publicly accessible. It appears that other jurisdictions may soon follow suit, with British Columbia already having passed legislation that will impose similar filing and accessibility requirements once in force.