A typical use might be part of a modular application, where the user can choose to install one or more optional modules (or plug-ins). These then get loaded at runtime by the application.
Any files provided by this application for use by the modules (APIs, libraries, frameworks, shared resources etc) would then be found in a 'Common' folder. This is the case with the C:\Program Files\Common Files
folder.
This is useful to module authors, as they then know a reliable location to find their dependencies without having to include them in the module, unnecessarily increasing module size.
This idea can also be extended to similar architectures, e.g. multiple versions of an application with files shared by all versions in a 'Common' folder.
This brings disadvantages too; versioning becomes more complicated as upgrades to the application could also lead to the shared files being updated and becoming incompatible with the installed modules. Old file versions must then be retained in case an old module is still installed.
The meaning of 'Common' here is 'shared' ("something in common") rather than 'frequent' ("commonly seen").