Gannons Solicitors 020 7438 1060
London solicitors specialising in the law relating to employment, partnerships/LLPs and company commercial
It is rare to see a petition under the Companies Act regarding the payment of excessive remuneration to a director, but the Scottish Outer House of the Court of Session had to deal with just such a case earlier this year.
It involved the sole director of a company, who also owned the majority of the shares. A minority shareholder claimed that the director conducted the company’s affairs in a manner which was unfairly prejudicial to the interests of the company’s members and made a claim to that effect in court (under what is now Section 994 of the Companies Act 2006).
The minority shareholder specifically alleged that no dividends had been paid to shareholders and that:
The Court examined all the evidence, which covered the entire commercial history of the company, before deciding that the director’s conduct was prejudicial to the other shareholders. It ordered that the director be required to buy the petitioner’s shares. The equity value of the company was put at £2,740,642 and a discount of 40 per cent applied because of the petitioner’s minority shareholding. This resulted in his 28.57 per cent shareholding being valued at £469,800.
News categories
See also...