Corporate Compliance & Governance Under the CBCA

Lindawest provides structured advisory services for private corporations subject to the Canada Business Corporations Act. Our engagements focus on statutory compliance frameworks, board-level risk assessments, and alignment of internal governance with federal regulatory standards.

We assist corporate secretaries, general counsel, and executive teams in establishing documented compliance protocols, conducting fiduciary duty reviews, and preparing for regulatory filings. Each engagement is grounded in the current legislative environment and judicial interpretation of director responsibilities.

Our methodology follows the risk management principles outlined in ISO 31000 and the COSO ERM framework, adapted to the specific obligations of Canadian corporate entities. We do not provide legal opinions, but our deliverables support informed decision-making by legal counsel and boards of directors.

Corporate boardroom meeting with documents and laptops

Corporate Compliance & Governance Ratings

Independent assessments from clients and industry bodies on our advisory frameworks under the Canada Business Corporations Act.

Industry Benchmark — 2024 CBCA Alignment Score: 94/100

Our compliance framework was evaluated against federal statutory requirements by an external auditor. The rating reflects full adherence to director duties, record‑keeping, and annual filing obligations under the Canada Business Corporations Act.

Client Feedback — Q3 2024 Risk Assessment Methodology

“The structured approach to governance risk identification saved our board approximately 120 hours of internal review time. The alignment with ISO 31000 and CBCA fiduciary standards was clearly documented.” — General Counsel, mid‑market manufacturing firm.

Peer Review — 2024 Director Liability Advisory

“The due diligence checklists and case law summaries provided a practical defence framework for our directors. The material directly addressed the business judgment rule and recent Ontario Superior Court rulings.” — Corporate Secretary, private holding company.

Client Reference — 2023 Annual Compliance Audit

“Lindawest’s audit of our internal governance procedures identified three gaps in board meeting documentation and two inconsistencies in shareholder resolution filings. All were remediated within the statutory window.” — CFO, federally incorporated services firm.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common inquiries regarding corporate compliance, risk assessment, and CBCA alignment.

What is the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) and who does it apply to?

The CBCA is the primary federal statute governing the incorporation and operation of business corporations in Canada. It applies to any corporation that chooses to incorporate federally, regardless of the province in which it carries on business. Compliance with the CBCA is mandatory for all federally incorporated entities, covering areas such as director duties, shareholder rights, financial disclosure, and annual filings.

What are the key compliance obligations under the CBCA?

Core obligations include maintaining a registered office and records, holding annual general meetings, filing annual returns, preparing financial statements, and adhering to director and officer residency requirements. Corporations must also comply with provisions related to insider reporting, proxy solicitation, and the maintenance of a corporate minute book. Non-compliance can result in administrative penalties or dissolution.

How does a corporate risk assessment align with CBCA requirements?

A formal risk assessment helps directors and officers fulfill their duty of care under the CBCA by identifying, evaluating, and mitigating legal and operational risks. Aligning risk management frameworks with statutory obligations ensures that governance structures are defensible and that due diligence can be demonstrated in the event of a regulatory review or legal challenge.

What is the business judgment rule and how does it protect directors?

The business judgment rule is a legal principle that protects directors from liability for decisions made in good faith, with due diligence, and in the best interests of the corporation. Under Canadian law, courts will generally defer to board decisions that are informed and rational, provided directors have exercised the care, skill, and diligence that a reasonably prudent person would in comparable circumstances.

What records must a federally incorporated company maintain?

A CBCA corporation must maintain a registered office and keep records including articles of incorporation, by-laws, minutes of meetings, resolutions, share registers, and financial statements. These records must be accessible for inspection by directors, shareholders, and authorized government officials. Proper record-keeping is a statutory requirement and a key element of corporate governance.

Contact our compliance team

Visual documentation of key compliance instruments

Governance & regulatory exhibits

CBCA compliance checklist
Statutory obligations

CBCA compliance checklist

Annual return filings, director meeting minutes, and shareholder register maintenance under the Canada Business Corporations Act.

Risk assessment matrix
Risk methodology

Risk assessment matrix

Board-level risk identification using COSO ERM and ISO 31000 frameworks, aligned with fiduciary duty requirements.

Director due diligence record
Legal standards

Director due diligence record

Documentation of director conduct, business judgment rule defences, and indemnification provisions under Canadian corporate law.

Corporate governance framework
Governance structure

Corporate governance framework

Organizational chart and committee mandates for audit, compensation, and risk oversight in private CBCA corporations.

Regulatory filing schedule
Filing calendar

Regulatory filing schedule

Annual and quarterly deadlines for corporate returns, director elections, and shareholder meeting notices under federal jurisdiction.

Internal audit protocol
Audit procedures

Internal audit protocol

Step-by-step compliance audit workflow covering record retention, conflict of interest declarations, and CBCA section reviews.

Basis for selection

Why Lindawest is retained over alternative advisory firms

The following points outline the structural and procedural advantages that distinguish Lindawest from general legal counsel, accounting firms, and boutique governance consultants. Each factor is grounded in statutory requirements under the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) and tested against federal compliance standards.
Statutory precision

Our frameworks are built directly on CBCA provisions, not adapted from generic corporate templates. Every recommendation maps to a specific section of the Act, reducing ambiguity during regulatory review or director scrutiny.

Audit-ready documentation

Deliverables include minute books, registers, and resolution drafts that meet the evidentiary standard expected by the Canada Revenue Agency and provincial securities commissions. No post-engagement reformatting is required.

Director liability insulation

Our risk assessments explicitly address the business judgment rule and the due diligence defence under CBCA s.122. Boards receive a written record of the reasoning process, which courts have cited as a mitigating factor in liability proceedings.

Federal-provincial alignment

We reconcile CBCA obligations with provincial extra-provincial registration requirements and corporate registry filings. This eliminates duplicate compliance work and reduces the risk of administrative penalties for lapsed filings.

No contingent advisory

Lindawest does not structure engagements around transaction fees or success-based compensation. All work is billed on a fixed-fee or hourly basis, removing any incentive to recommend unnecessary restructuring or procedural changes.

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