Minute Books in United States
Practical Information
Note: Some of this information was last updated in 1982
1. The record books in which the clerk of the court (in U.S. law) enters abstracts of all court orders. The clerk records them numerically according to index number. He or she might have separate books for law chancery, divorce, and the like.
2. For corporations, minute books are books that contain records of minutes of shareholders’ and directors’ meetings, a copy of the incorporation procedures, bylaws, and sometimes a register of stock issued.
What is Minute Books?
For a meaning of it, read Minute Books in the Legal Dictionary here. Browse and search more U.S. and international free legal definitions and legal terms related to Minute Books.