• The only legal way to do substantive company business is at a General Meeting of the Membership, or by way of Written Resolution. Other gatherings, such a 'Owners/Residents' meeting have no legal standing nor do any 'votes' at such meetings.

Here is the relevant extract from the Companies Act 2006 (bold font added).

Part 13: Resolutions and Meetings

Sect 281(1) A resolution of the members (or of a class of members) of a private company must be passed—

(a) as a written resolution in accordance with Chapter 2, or

(b) at a meeting of the members  . . .

Explanatory Note 521.

. . . . the current law (CA 1985) is drafted on the basis that the main way in which shareholder decisions are taken is in general meetings.

The new provisions proceed on the basis that in future this will not be the case for many private companies. Private companies will not be required in future to hold general meetings; instead provision is made for new procedures for decisions to be taken by written resolution.

Explanatory Note 523.

This section [281] provides that members’ resolutions can only be passed in accordance with the provisions of this Part. . . . . Subsection (1) allows a private company to pass a resolution either as a written resolution or at a meeting of the members.