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New trends in piercing the corporate veil (conservative v liberal approaches) 3 December 2013 . Dr Aleka M andaraka – Sheppard Arbitrator LSLC – Maritime Business Forum . New trends in piercing the corporate veil (conservative v liberal approaches) .
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New trends in piercing the corporate veil (conservative v liberal approaches)3 December 2013 Dr Aleka Mandaraka – Sheppard Arbitrator LSLC – Maritime Business Forum
New trends in piercing the corporate veil (conservative v liberal approaches) AMS - LSLC
English lawThe unyielding rock of corporate veil • Salomon v A Salomon (1897): a century old principle: Corporate • Separate juristic personality • Separate rights, responsibilities, and assets from shareholders • Provides way of limiting liability • encourages business development by non-interventionism • NOT ALLOWED BY LAW TO PIERCE THE VEIL, EXCEPT IN SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES AMS - LSLC
How strong is the rock of Salomon? • Most advanced legal systems abide by the principle • But no international uniformity • When the law permits exception to the rule, the effect of piercing is drastic: • disregard of corporate personality • Depriving company or its controllers of advantages they would have obtained by company’s separate personality AMS - LSLC
questions examined by English courts: Would piercing corporate veil be applicable: • For interests of justice? • To what impropriety of controllers? • If there are other remedies in law? • To hold controllers liable under corporate’s contract? AMS - LSLC
Lifting or Piercing veil • Lifting (ordering evidence to peep behind veil for certain legal purpose) • is distinguished from piercing (ultimate result – sanction - remedy) • See Coral Rose (1991) per Staughton LJ • But these terms are confusingly used indiscriminately in many cases • Now ‘Concealment’ cases are equated to lifting – not piercing: (per Lord Sumption – in Petrodel) court is looking behind the veil to discover true facts AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Historical Overview • 1897 to 1966, HL could not overrule itself during this period • Salomon rule applied faithfully • Gilford Motor v Horne (1933) and Jones v Lipman(1962) had been considered (on their facts) classic cases for piercing • In former, a solicitor set up a company to avoid a covenant by previous employers (injunction obtained to prevent him) • In latter, Lipman set up a company to avoid a conveyance transaction and transferred land to company (specific performance granted) – equitable remedies AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Historical Overview • In 1969 Lord Denning MR – encouraged lifting of veil • (Littlewoods Mail Order v IRC) and 1976 (DHN Food Distributors v Tower Hamlets) • for interests of justice – • basis: corporate structure one economic unity • brought uncertainty to safety of corporations • Interventionist years until early 1980s AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Historical Overview In 1978 Lord Keith disapproved of the Denning decisions in Woolfson v Stratclyde • Reaffirmed Salomon • Stated (obiter): ‘appropriate to pierce corporate veil only where special circumstances exist indicating that it is a mere façade concealing the true facts (meaning a deliberate dishonest purpose) • Decision had strong and persuasive influence • InRe Company (1985) CA allowed piercing for interest of justice: but corporate structure used by controller to divert assets to avoid liabilities AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Overview • In 1988 Lord Donaldson MR in EvpoAgnic crystallised legitimacy of one-ship companies (SA jurisdiction undermines it) • In 1989 Adam v Cape CA: • further support of non-intervention with corporate structures • rejected piercing on basis of one economic unity and interest of justice • may be one entity for economic purposes but not one unit for legal purposes • Cape had used corporate form legitimately AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Overview • Freezing injunctions obtained e.gKensington International v Congo (2005) against Vitol and controllers of company • In Linsen v Humpuss (2011) evidence of abuse of corporate structure – good arguable case that • purported sales of vessels to 3rddef were shams to render enforcement of judgment against 1stdef more difficult • But Flaux J discharged the freezing injunction – 3rddef not liable under underlying contract for chartered hire AMS - LSLC
Piercing veil – Overview • In family division judges followed less rigid approach: on basis of ‘what is just and necessary to protect families after divorce • But Munby J in A v A said (2007): • there is not one law of ‘sham’ in the Chancery division and another in the Family division – there is only one law of ‘sham’ to be applied by all courts AMS - LSLC
New trend-limitations? Petrodel v Prest (2013) • ‘sham’ or ‘façade’ considered by Lord Sumption in Petrodelas begging too many questions • Don’t give answer to what is relevant ‘wrongdoing’ by controllers AMS - LSLC
New trend – what impropriety? • Petrodel: If piercing the veil has any role to play, • There must be both controlby shareholder and impropriety • The impropriety is in relation to deliberate evasion of existing and independent liabilities of the controller • whose enforcement the controller deliberately frustrates by interposing the company’s personality • No piercing of veil if there is another remedy in law – no justice imperative AMS - LSLC
New Trend – limitation - VTB Capital v Nutritek • Question: how far the scope of exception to Salomon be extended? • Could controllers become parties to company’s contract? • Burton J held in Gramsci v Stepanovs (2011):arguable case to pierce veil to permit an action against controllers under jurisdiction cl of contact • Disapproved of by CA and indirectly overruled by SC in VTB Capital (2013): • Held: no direct contractual right to jurisdiction AMS - LSLC
New trend – limitations to piercing veil • VTB Capital: no extension of scope of piercing veil to hold controllers contractually liable to claimant for debt of company • Principle could not be invoked to create new liability • Declined to pierce veil when there are other remedies available e.g. tort of deceit or equitable remedies • Flaux J had held same in Lindsay v O’Loughnane(2010) and Warren J in Dadourian v Simms (2006) AMS - LSLC
New trend – limitations to piercing veil Lord Neuberger in VTB Capital andinPetrodel: • ‘piercing veil is a potentially valuable tool to undo wrongdoing in some cases, where there is no other remedy available’ (narrow rule) Lord Sumption in Petrodel: • ‘the recognition of a limited power to pierce veil in carefully defined circumstances is necessary if the law is not to be disarmed in the face of abuse’ (perhaps broader rule?) • WHAT DOES IT MEAN? Over to Simon and Robert • THANK YOU AMS - LSLC