Section 6: Dissolution.

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Article L5216-9

French General Code of Local AuthoritiesIn force

Updated 6 Nov 2023

The agglomeration community is dissolved, by decree of the Conseil d'Etat ipso jure when it no longer has more than one member municipality or, at the request of the municipal councils of the member municipalities acquired by a vote of at least two-thirds of the municipal councils of the municipalities concerned representing more than half of the total population of the latter, or of at least half of the municipal councils of the municipalities representing two-thirds of the population, this majority must also necessarily include the municipal council of the municipality whose population is greater than half of the population concerned. This decree determines, in accordance with the provisions of article L. 5211-25-1 and in compliance with the rights of third parties, the conditions under which the agglomeration community is wound up.

The distribution of the staff concerned between the member municipalities may not give rise to a release from management. The staff concerned are appointed to a post at the same level and taking into account their acquired rights. The recipient municipalities bear the corresponding financial costs.

Mariela Petrova

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Working with a corporate lawyer in France — Q&A

Any time a strategic decision changes how the company is owned, governed or contractually bound — incorporation, fundraising, M&A, restructuring, shareholder agreements, or major commercial contracts. Earlier engagement always costs less than later remediation.

A notary (notaire) is a public officer who authenticates specific deeds (mainly real-estate transfers and certain family-law acts). A corporate lawyer (avocat) advises on strategy, negotiates and drafts company documents, and represents you in disputes. The two roles complement rather than overlap.

Yes — most of our clients are foreign suppliers, investors or holding entities. We bridge the gap between French law and your home jurisdiction's expectations and deliver everything bilingually.

The SAS (Société par Actions Simplifiée) is the default choice for most international structures: flexible governance, single shareholder allowed, no minimum capital, and works cleanly with foreign holding entities. We assess SARL, SA, SCI on the merits when the situation calls for it.

Yes — communications with a French avocat are protected by the secret professionnel (Article 66-5 of the Law of 31 December 1971). This protection is broader than the common-law attorney-client privilege and applies to written and oral exchanges.

We work on fixed fees for clearly scoped engagements (incorporation, contract drafting, audits) and on monthly retainers for ongoing advisory. Hourly billing is the exception, not the default. You always know the cost before work starts.

Typical timeline is 2–3 weeks from KYC kick-off to RCS registration, assuming standard documentation. Holding-company structures, foreign-shareholder identification or in-kind contributions can extend this — we flag the gating items at the first meeting.

Absolutely. We routinely coordinate with your in-house counsel, expert-comptable or notaire — pragmatic collaboration is the norm, not the exception. We send them everything they need to do their part without duplicating work.

Mariela Petrova

Mariela Petrova

Avocate au Barreau de Paris

Toque #C2396

15+ Years In Corporate Practice

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Communications protected by professional secrecy — secret professionnel de l'avocat, Article 66-5 of the Law of 31 December 1971.

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