Common majority ownership definition

Common majority ownership means the same person or group of persons owns more than 50 percent of each entity. If an entity owns a majority interest in another entity, which in turn owns a majority interest in another entity, all entities so related are considered to share common majority interest.

Related to Common majority ownership

  • Required Majority means a required majority, as defined in Section 57(o) of the Act.8

  • Unit Majority means (i) during the Subordination Period, at least a majority of the Outstanding Common Units (excluding Common Units owned by the General Partner and its Affiliates), voting as a class, and at least a majority of the Outstanding Subordinated Units, voting as a class, and (ii) after the end of the Subordination Period, at least a majority of the Outstanding Common Units.

  • Voting Members has the meaning set forth in Section 4.07(b).

  • Simple Majority means a decision made by the Management Committee by more than 50 percent of the votes represented and entitled to be cast at a meeting thereof.

  • Requisite Majority means, as at any particular time, Passenger Operators whose Vehicle departures from the Station, expressed as a percentage of Total Departures, as at the relevant date, together are at least equal to the percentage specified in paragraph 4 of Annex 8 (or such other percentage as the ORR may specify by notice to the Station Facility Owner and to each Passenger Operator as the new percentage which is to apply for these purposes following the entry into, variation, amendment or termination of an access contract permitting a passenger service operator to use the Station, a Change in Control of any Passenger Operator or any event which results in a material change to the proportion of the Total Departures made by trains operated by or on behalf of any Passenger Operator);

  • Majority (as defined in the 0000 Xxx) of the Fund's outstanding voting securities, provided that in either event the continuance is also approved by a majority of the Board of Directors who are not "interested persons" (as defined in said Act) of any party to this Agreement, by vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval. This Agreement is terminable, without penalty, on 60 days' written notice, by the Board of Directors of the Fund or by vote of holders of a majority of the Fund's shares, or upon 90 days' written notice, by the Adviser. This Agreement will also terminate automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in said Act).

  • Outstanding Company Voting Securities means the combined voting power of the then-outstanding voting securities of the Company entitled to vote generally in the election of directors.

  • Majority Vote means a vote made by more than half of the Members who are present at a Meeting and who are entitled to vote and voting at that Meeting upon a resolution put to that Meeting.

  • special majority means the majority of votes described in §11.2 which is required to pass a special resolution. Act and Interpretation Act Definitions Applicable

  • Voting Member means a Member holding one or more Voting Shares.

  • Majority-Owned Subsidiary of a person means a company fifty percent (50%) or more of the outstanding Voting Securities of which are owned by such person, or by a company which, within the meaning of this paragraph, is a Majority-Owned Subsidiary of such person.

  • Founding Members means the collective reference to American Multi-Cinema, Inc., a Missouri corporation, Cinemark Media, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and Regal CineMedia Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company.

  • Majority Shareholder Vote means a vote of “a majority of the outstanding voting securities” (as such term is defined in the 0000 Xxx) of the Trust with each class and series of Shares voting together as a single class, except to the extent otherwise required by the 1940 Act or this Declaration with respect to any one or more classes or series of Shares, in which case the applicable proportion of such classes or series of Shares voting as a separate class or series, as the case may be, also will be required.