A statute is a public law passed by the legislature.
Bylaws are rules that lay down the internal rules of a corporation - they typically state the rights, duties and liabilities of the members of the corporation, as well as the rules relating to transferring and selling shares.
A constitution is a set of rules which governs an organisation while a bylaw is a law in a local area which is delegated to councils by Parliament.
a bylaw is a rule or law set up before something like a club and a law can be bylaws and amendments.
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They are actually the same, these are just other names for them.
State statutes and corporation bylaws require annual shareholder meetings
Tjhey are known as "Statute Law."
directory and mandatory
The revised statutes of Ontario apply only to the citizens of Ontario, whereas the revised statutes of Canada apply to all citizens of Canada, Ontario included.
There is no difference, they mean essentially the same thing. Statutes, are laws enacted by a legislature or other governing body. The written statutes govern resolving the disputes they address in many cases, rather than case law or judge-made law, constitutional law, contract law, etc
Strict construction takes a narrow view of laws, statutes, and the constitution. Broad construction takes a broad view of laws, statutes, and the constitution.
Statutes are written in law and are prohibitions which must be adhered to or you are committing an offence.Ethics is a voluntary code, freely entered into, which are accepted rules, morals and mores of a group, tribe or culture
Corporate statutes, charters and bylaws often require the "right of inspection" by bona fide shareholders, absent nefarious intent (e.g., misappropriation of trade secrets).
There is very little or no difference between states that call their statutes the Penal Code, and the states that call them the Criminal Code.
Bylaws generally govern the lawmaking body itself and serve as internal rules. An ordinance, however, is a local law imposed in the entire jurisdiction.