Show Menu
Cheatography

Company Law | Dealing with Insider + Outsiders Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

dealing with insiders + outsiders

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

summary of facts

- briefly state case facts
- mention issues at hand
- topics to which question relates

general introd­uction

before continuing further, we denote a company to be a seperate legal entity (SLP) with its own corporate persoa­nlity, divorce from that of its shareh­olders and directors (Saloman v.Saloman). The operation of such are trascribed within the Companies Act, 2006 (CA, 2006) where subcribers to a company undertake a superv­isory role by becoming shreholder and in appointing directors; transfer executive powers onto them so as to oversee conduct business

key management powers in Model Articles

Rag3. gen. authority to manage company's business bestowed upon directors (Ds)
BoDs are primary weilding organ of company
Howard Smith v. Ampol Petroleum - BoD can take decisions agianst majority SH's wishes
HOWEVER, SH can remove D though simple majority (ordinary resolution of 51%)
decide whether to give SH dividends during general meeting of SH

key member powers in Model Articles

Reg4. shareh­olders (SHs) reserve power to direct Board via special resolution of 75% majority
general meeting - superv­isory role (elect­ion­/re­moval of Ds, share issuance, D renume­ration)
usually call by Board BUT SH with 5% holding to requis­ition meeting (s.303)
COurts empowered to order gen. meeting (s.306) - mostly used where minority seeks to use qorum req. to prevent majority from passing resolu­tions (Union Music v. Watson)
alteration to AoA via special resolution of 75% majority (s.21 CA, 2006)
quorum requir­ement - generally, at least 2 people (s.318 CA, 2006) but may be changed through AoA ammendment
Re Duomatic - unanimous informal consent of SH in decision making is as good as formal resolu­tions

section 21 (CA, 2006)

articles can be amended upon SH's discretion through special resolution
Re Duomatic - informal amendments to AoA are valid
ammend­ements shouldn't benefit majority at minority's expense
Allen v. Gold Reefs - should be exercised bona fide for company's benefit
a) qualified subjective test: judge's opinion not considered | view of reasonable SH in situation condsi­dered
b) Greenhalgh - 'company's benefitas a whole'= was alteration 'discr­imi­natory b/w SHs (VERY HARD TO PROVE)
- 1 area where Courts readily stike down altera­tions- SHARES COMPUL­SORILY BOUGHT (Brown v BAW) [b/c infrin­gement of property rigths]
altern­ati­vely, minority SH can seek statutory minority protection u/s. 994 CA, 2006
HOSTILITY IN COMPANY
valid gen. meeting requires at least 2 SH (s.318), but minority SH may not attend where company only has 2 SH
- here, majority can ask Courts to order a valid meeting where quorum req. isn't met (s.306)
Union Music v. Watson - HOWEVER, where SH agreement where voting rights are mentioned is present, no such grant by Courts
RESTRI­CTION TO ALTERA­TIONS
1. alteration not made 'bona fide' in company's interest, minority can apply to courts & have it overturned (Allen v. Gold Reefs)
rarely succeeds
2. class rights as a SH
Cumbrian Newspapers - class rights= rights not attached to shares || provided to SH by name via AoA || right only enjoyed by subset of SH & isn't an outsider right
3. provisions for entren­chment
provisions within AoA incapable of altera­tions later
usually occur proviso articles requiring unanimous resolution to pass for change to be enforc­eable
 

section 33 (CA, 2006)

AoA is a contract b/w members and the company
- can be amended w/o unanimous consent (only special majority required)
- AoA binds future members of company as well
ENFORC­EMENT OF ARTICLES
1. by company on SH → yes, s.33 (CA, 2006)
2. by SH on company → only where PERSONAL RIGHTS (PR) are affected
- including voting rights, protection of class rights, share transfer, pre-em­ption, claim declared dividend, appoint Ds
however, enfore­cement of such is still contra­dictory
MacDougall v. Gardinaer - right to poll upheld
Pender v. Lushington - right to vote in general meeting upheld
3. by SH on another SH (Interse contract) - unclear
Wood v. Odessa - contract b/w SHs is valid
Salmon v. Quinn - contract b/w SHs unenfo­rceable
Rayfield v. Hands - AoA is directly enforc­eable b/w members
involved quasi-­par­tne­rship & breach of pre-em­ption right in AoA, rights were enforced
4. by outsider (D or Creditor) - no
Salmon v. Quinn - if rights of SH have TANGENTIAL effect n his rights as D
SHAREH­OLDER'S AGREEMENT
due to uncert­ainity of AoA enforc­ement b/w SH, they enter seperate SH agreements
benefit from ease of enforc­ement - Pudden­phatt v. Leith
company is also party to these agreements BUT can't agree to limit its consti­tut­ional rights
Punt v. Symons - company can't contract out of its right to alter AoA
Rusell v. N. Bank- agreement can't be enforced against company

section 39 (CA, 2006)

- objects (principal line of business) of the company
HISTORY
- companies originally viewed as public bodies , acting beyond conferred powers was ultra vires
- ultra vires doctrine served to protect SH & creditors via objects limitation
- BUT doctrine proved probla­matic for Courts (dynamic nature of companies leads to divers­yfing portfolio BUT altering objects was limited + interplay with constr­uctive notice left 3rd party contract unenfo­rce­able)
- origin­ally, Courts approach was strict(Ashbury Railway) but gradually got more lax (Bell Houses)
approch shows acknow­led­gement of companies as a private entity
REFORMS
- reform via s.39, replacing s.35 of 1985 Act (read with s.31) allows companies to now have unlimited objects clause or not mention it at all
- Company's Act, 1985, s.3A & 4 allowed changes to + widening of objects clause
CURRENT LAW
- obliga­tions of UK to European Community led to replcaing constr­uctive notice with 'good faith' requir­ement
- objects can also be altered proviso s.21
- issue of company's powers reduced to whether decision was undertaken by proper authority (s.40)
 

section 40 (CA, 2006)

signing of contact without proper internal authority
- previously doctrine of constr­uctive notice upheld - now indoor management (RBB v. Turquand) enshired u/s. 40
2 requir­ements for principle to be satisfied
action undertaken via actual or apparent authority of D
contract achieved by 3rd party in 'good faith'
ACTUAL AUTHORITY
- expressly or impliedly conferred via AoA or the indivi­dual's poistion (as a D)
- could be i mplied through the position one occupies within the corporate structure (HH v. Brayhead)
APPARENT AUTHORITY
criteria laid out in Freeman v. Buckhurst
4. repres­ent­ation that agent had authority on behalf of company
5. authority granted by person with actual authority
6. contractor (3rd party) induced by such repres­ent­ation to enter into contract

other attrib­ution issues

VICARIOUS LIABILITY UNDER TORT
Campbell v. Paddington - Courts accepted VL for civil liability only (company liable for employee's acts)
PREVIOUSLY, organic thoery was followed - liable individual & company considered a single entity (Asiastic Petroleum)
incomp­atible with Saloman principle + difficulty in attrib­uting fault upon 1 individual
CURRENT LAW follows control theory - attrib­ution of liability by consid­ering who contro­llers of the company were (Meridian Global Funds)
compatible with Saloman principle + advantage of holding lower-rung employees accoun­table (McNicholas)
regard­less, organic theory still holds ground (Moore Stephans)
CORPORATE MANSLA­UGHTER
PREVIOUSLY organic theory was applied here too
corporate structre too complex to attribute MR onto one person (Jenkins v P&O)
CURRENTLY, 'corporate mansla­ughter' introduced by Government through seperate act in 2007
is based around 'manag­ement failure' - management fall far below standard reasonably expected in such circum­stances (R v. Cotswald)

removal of directors

s.168 CA, 2006 - D can be removed by SH by passing ordinary resolution
- employ­ement contract specif­iying time-span for employ­ement will not prevent enforc­ement of removal (s.168(1))
} HOWEVER, if removal in breach contract then Ds have right to compen­sation (s.168(5))
LONG-TERM SERVICE CONTRACTS REQUIRE SH APPROVAL FOR THEM TO BE VALID* (by simple majority)
i.e.; more than 2 years (s.188)