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(Steven Felgate) #1

310 Chapter 11Companies (2): Management, control and winding up


The rule in Foss vHarbottleis a logical extension of Salomon vSalomon and Co Ltd.
That case decided that a company is a separate legal person. It follows that if a company is
wronged it alone has the power to sue.
The rule has the advantage of preventing multiple actions. If every shareholder in every
company was able to sue for any perceived wrong to the company then there would be an
enormous number of potential court cases. However, the rule could obviously be very
unfair to minority shareholders, and now both the courts and statute offer protection to the
minority.

shareholders Statutory protection of minority

Statutory derivative claims
Section 260(1) of the 2006 Act has introduced a new derivative claim. Such a claim is
brought by a member of the company on behalf of the company in respect of a right to sue
which the company has. So any remedy which is ordered will be a remedy in favour of the
company.
Section 261(1) provides that a member of a company who brings a derivative claim must
apply to the court for permission to continue it. At this stage the defendant takes no part
in the proceedings. The court must dismiss the application if it appears to the court that
the application, and the evidence filed by the claimant in support of it, do not disclose a
prime faciecase for giving permission. On hearing the application, s. 261(4) gives the court
three options:
n to give permission for the claim to be continued on such terms as it thinks fit;
n to refuse permission and dismiss the claim; or
n to adjourn the proceedings and give such directions as it thinks fit.
So if the court does not dismiss the claim it has considerable power to impose require-
ments on either side.
Section 260(2) and (3) provide that a derivative claim may be brought only in respect of
two matters. First, in respect of negligence, default, breach of duty or breach of trust by a
director of the company. Second, in pursuance of a court order in proceedings under s. 994
for protection for relief from ‘unfair prejudice’. (Unfair prejudice is considered below on
pp. 311–13.) The first category is the more important and would allow a claim to be brought
whenever a director breached any of the general statutory duties set out ss. 171–177. A
person who becomes a member of a company will be able to bring a claim in respect of acts
which the directors have already committed.
Section 262(3) allows a member of a company to apply to the court for permission to
continue a claim brought by the company as a derivative claim. This section is necessary

Foss vHarbottle (1843)

Two members of a company sued five directors who had sold land to the company for
more than it was worth.
HeldThe shareholders had no right to sue. If the directors had wronged the company then
only the company could sue in respect of that wrong. ( The company was most unlikely to
do this because it was controlled by the very directors who had cheated it!)
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