fbpx
Wikipedia

Piercing the corporate veil

Piercing the corporate veil or lifting the corporate veil is a legal decision to treat the rights or duties of a corporation as the rights or liabilities of its shareholders. Usually a corporation is treated as a separate legal person, which is solely responsible for the debts it incurs and the sole beneficiary of the credit it is owed. Common law countries usually uphold this principle of separate personhood, but in exceptional situations may "pierce" or "lift" the corporate veil.

A simple example would be where a businessperson has left their job as a director and has signed a contract to not compete with the company they have just left for a period of time. If they set up a company which competed with their former company, technically it would be the company and not the person competing.[1] But it is likely a court would say that the new company was just a "sham" or a "cover"; and that as the new company is completely owned and controlled by one person that the former employee is deliberately choosing to compete, and so is in breach of that non-competing contract.

Despite the terminology used which makes it appear as though a shareholder's limited liability emanates from the view that a corporation is a separate legal entity, the reality is that the entity status of corporations has almost nothing to do with shareholder limited liability.[2] For example, English law conferred entity status on corporations long before shareholders were afforded limited liability. Similarly, the United States' Revised Uniform Partnership Act confers entity status on partnerships, but also provides that partners are individually liable for all partnership obligations. Therefore, this shareholder limited liability emanates mainly from statute.[2]

Basis for limited liability edit

Corporations exist in part to shield the personal assets of shareholders from personal liability for the debts or actions of a corporation. Unlike a general partnership or sole proprietorship in which the owner could be held responsible for all the debts of the company, a corporation traditionally limited the personal liability of the shareholders.

Piercing the corporate veil typically is most effective with smaller privately held business entities (close corporations) in which the corporation has a small number of shareholders, limited assets, and recognition of separateness of the corporation from its shareholders would promote fraud or an inequitable result.

There is no record of a successful piercing of the corporate veil for a publicly traded corporation because of the large number of shareholders and the extensive mandatory filings entailed in qualifying for listing on an exchange.

Germany edit

German corporate law developed a number of theories in the early 1920s for lifting the corporate veil on the basis of "domination" by a parent company over a subsidiary. These cases have led to an encompassing codification of group law provisions in the AktG 1965 (§§ 291 - 319 AktG). By contrast, a general doctrine of piercing the veil for abuse of the legal personality of the company has never really taken hold in Germany. It was advocated in the fundamental work of Rolf Serick,[3] but rejected by the prevailing "Normanwendungslehre".[4] After a few early cases, the German judiciary did not go down the route of establishing shareholder liability via piercing the veil. In particular, it rejected piercing the veil on grounds of material undercapitalization several times.[5] Today, the only remaining case of shareholder liability via piercing of the corporate veil is the inextricable commingling of the assets of the company and the shareholder ("Vermögensvermischung").[6] But shareholders can be held liable in tort (§ 826 BGB) in the case of an interference destroying the corporation ("existenzvernichtender Eingriff").[7] The corporation must not be stripped, without compensation, of funds that are required to meet its foreseeable future obligations. If these are taken away by the shareholder the corporation may claim compensation, even in an insolvency proceeding. The concept adds a solvency test element to the balance-sheet based rules of capital maintenance under §§ 30, 31 GmbHG and §§ 57, 62 AktG. [8][9]

United Kingdom edit

The corporate veil in UK company law is pierced very rarely. After a series of attempts by the Court of Appeal during the late 1960s and early 1970s to establish a theory of economic reality, and a doctrine of control for lifting the veil, the House of Lords reasserted an orthodox approach. According to a 1990 case at the Court of Appeal, Adams v Cape Industries plc, the only true "veil piercing" may take place when a company is set up for fraudulent purposes, or where it is established to avoid an existing obligation.[10] However, cases were rare and their justification in light of the Salomon principle remained doubtful. In VTB Capital,[11] Lord Neuberger sympathised with rejecting the doctrine altogether, but left the issue undecided because it did not matter for the outcome. Soon afterwards, in Prest v Petrodel,[12] a divorce case where the matrimonial home was not held by the husband but by his company, the Supreme Court confirmed the existence of the doctrine in English law, but narrowed it down to practical irrelevance.[13] The "fraud exception"[14] was dismissed. According to the leading judgement by Lord Sumption, piercing the veil is a subsidiary remedy of last resort that only covers the avoidance of existing obligations ("evasion principle", as opposed to the cases of the "concealment principle" that does not give rise to a claim). On closer analysis, this was said obiter because the Court reached the desired outcome (attribution of the family home to the assets of the husband) by applying trust law. Nevertheless, Prest v Petrodel is generally assumed to state the current law in the UK, even though the restriction of "abuse" to evasion only can be questioned and there were statements in Prest v Petrodel that supported a broader approach.[15] It is noteworthy that under English law, piercing the veil can never be used to make shareholders pay for contractual debts of the company because they have not been party to that contract.[16] In the past, the veil was sometimes ignored in the process of interpreting a statute,[17] and as a matter of tort law it is open as a matter of authority that a direct duty of care may be owed by the managers of a parent company to accident victims of a subsidiary.[18]

Tort victims and employees edit

Tort victims and employees, who did not contract with a company or have very unequal bargaining power, have been held to be exempted from the rules of limited liability in Chandler v Cape plc. In this case, the claimant was an employee of Cape plc's wholly owned subsidiary, which had gone insolvent. He successfully brought a claim in tort against Cape plc for causing him an asbestos disease, asbestosis. Arden LJ in the Court of Appeal held that if the parent had interfered in the operations of the subsidiary in any way, such as over trading issues, then it would be attached with responsibility for health and safety issues.[19] Arden LJ emphasised that piercing the corporate veil was not necessary. There would be direct liability in tort for the parent company if it had interfered in the subsidiary's affairs. The High Court before it had held that liability would exist if the parent exercised control, all applying ordinary principles of tort law about liability of a third party for the actions of a tortfeasor. The restrictions on lifting the veil, found in contractual cases made no difference. This jursidction has been settled to play an important role in the human rights cases [20] and.[21]

"Single economic unit" theory edit

Within the context of competition law, "undertakings" (which may encompass one or more legal persons) might be held liable for relevant infringements. By contrast, it is an axiomatic principle of English company law that a company is an entity separate and distinct from its members, who are liable only to the extent that they have contributed to the company's capital: Salomon v Salomon [1897]. The effect of this rule is that the individual subsidiaries within a conglomerate will be treated as separate entities and the parent cannot be made liable for the subsidiaries' debts on insolvency. Furthermore, it can create subsidiaries with inadequate capitalisation and secure loans to the subsidiaries with fixed charges over their assets, despite the fact that this is "not necessarily the most honest way of trading".[22] The rule also applies in Scotland.[23]

While the secondary literature refers to different means of "lifting" or "piercing" the veil (see Ottolenghi (1959)), judicial dicta supporting the view that the rule in Salomon is subject to exceptions are thin on the ground. Lord Denning MR outlined the theory of the "single economic unit" - wherein the court examined the overall business operation as an economic unit, rather than strict legal form - in DHN Food Distributors v Tower Hamlets.[24] However this has largely been repudiated and has been treated with caution in subsequent judgments.

In Woolfson v Strathclyde BC,[24] the House of Lords held that it was a decision to be confined to its facts (the question in DHN had been whether the subsidiary of the plaintiff, the former owning the premises on which the parent carried out its business, could receive compensation for loss of business under a compulsory purchase order notwithstanding that under the rule in Salomon, it was the parent and not the subsidiary that had lost the business). Likewise, in Bank of Tokyo v Karoon,[25] Lord Goff, who had concurred in the result in DHN, held that the legal conception of the corporate structure was entirely distinct from the economic realities.

The "single economic unit" theory was likewise rejected by the CA in Adams v Cape Industries,[26] where Slade LJ held that cases where the rule in Salomon had been circumvented were merely instances where they didn't know what to do. The view expressed at first instance by HHJ Southwell QC in Creasey v Breachwood[27] that English law "definitely" recognised the principle that the corporate veil could be lifted was described as a heresy by Hobhouse LJ in Ord v Bellhaven,[28] and these doubts were shared by Moritt V-C in Trustor v Smallbone (No 2):[29] the corporate veil cannot be lifted merely because justice requires it. Despite the rejection of the "justice of the case" test, it is observed from judicial reasoning in veil piercing cases that the courts employ "equitable discretion" guided by general principles such as mala fides to test whether the corporate structure has been used as a mere device.[30]

Perfect obligation edit

The cases of Tan v Lim,[31] where a company was used as a "façade" (per Russell J.) to defraud the creditors of the defendant and Gilford Motor Co Ltd v Horne,[32] where an injunction was granted against a trader setting up a business which was merely as a vehicle allowing him to circumvent a covenant in restraint of trade are often said to create a "fraud" exception to the separate corporate personality. Similarly, in Gencor v Dalby,[33] the tentative suggestion was made that the corporate veil was being lifted where the company was the "alter ego" of the defendant. In truth, as Lord Cooke (1997) has noted extrajudicially, it is because of the separate identity of the company concerned and not despite it that equity intervened in all of these cases. They are not instances of the corporate veil being pierced but instead involve the application of other rules of law. Finally, the "fraud exception" was rejected in Prest v Petrodel Resources Ltd.[34]

Reverse piercing edit

There have been cases in which it is to the advantage of the shareholder to have the corporate structure ignored. Courts have been reluctant to agree to this.[35] The often cited case Macaura v Northern Assurance Co Ltd[36] is an example of that. Mr Macaura was the sole owner of a company he had set up to grow timber. The trees were destroyed by fire but the insurer refused to pay since the policy was with Macaura (not the company) and he was not the owner of the trees. The House of Lords upheld that refusal based on the separate legal personality of the company.

Criminal law edit

In English criminal law there have been cases in which the courts have been prepared to pierce the veil of incorporation. For example, in confiscation proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 monies received by a company can, depending upon the particular facts of the case as found by the court, be regarded as having been 'obtained' by an individual (who is usually, but not always, a director of the company). In consequence those monies may become an element in the individual's 'benefit' obtained from criminal conduct (and hence subject to confiscation from him).[37] The position regarding 'piercing the veil' in English criminal law was given in the Court of Appeal judgment in the case of R v Seager[38] in which the court said (at para 76):

There was no major disagreement between counsel on the legal principles by reference to which a court is entitled to "pierce" or "rend" or "remove" the corporate veil. As a matter of law, a duly formed and registered company is a separate legal entity from those who are its shareholders and it has rights and liabilities that are separate from its shareholders. A court can pierce the limited liability of the corporate entity and look at what lies behind it only in certain circumstances. It cannot do so simply because it considers it might be just to do so. Each of these circumstances involves impropriety and dishonesty. The court will then be entitled to look for the legal substance, not the just the form. In the context of criminal cases the courts have identified at least three situations when the corporate veil can be pierced. First if an offender attempts to shelter behind a corporate façade, or veil to hide his crime and his benefits from it. Secondly, where an offender does acts in the name of a company which (with the necessary mens rea) constitute a criminal offence which leads to the offender's conviction, then "the veil of incorporation is not so much pierced as rudely torn away": per Lord Bingham in Jennings v CPS, paragraph 16. Thirdly, where the transaction or business structures constitute a "device", "cloak" or "sham", i.e. an attempt to disguise the true nature of the transaction or structure so as to deceive third parties or the courts.

United States edit

In the United States, corporate veil piercing is the most litigated issue in corporate law.[39] Although courts are reluctant to hold an active shareholder liable for actions that are legally the responsibility of the corporation, even if the corporation has a single shareholder, they will often do so if the corporation was markedly noncompliant with corporate formalities, to prevent fraud, or to achieve equity in certain cases of undercapitalization.[40][41]

In most jurisdictions, no bright-line rule exists and the ruling is based on common law precedents. In the United States, different theories, most important "alter ego" or "instrumentality rule", attempted to create a piercing standard. Mostly, they rest upon three basic prongs—namely:[42]

  • "unity of interest and ownership": the separate personalities of the shareholder and corporation cease to exist,
  • "wrongful conduct": wrongful action taken by the corporation, and
  • "proximate cause": as a reasonably foreseeable result of the wrongful action, harm was caused to the party that is seeking to pierce the corporate veil.

However, the theories failed to articulate a real-world approach which courts could directly apply to their cases. Thus, courts struggle with the proof of each prong and rather analyze all given factors. This is known as "totality of circumstances".[43]

There is also the matter of what jurisdiction the corporation is incorporated in if the corporation is authorized to do business in more than one state. All corporations have one specific state (their "home" state) to which they are incorporated as a "domestic" corporation, and if they operate in other states, they would apply for authority to do business in those other states as a "foreign" corporation. In determining whether or not the corporate veil may be pierced, the courts are required to use the laws of the corporation's home state. This issue can be significant; for example, California law is more liberal in allowing a corporate veil to be pierced, while the laws of neighboring Nevada make doing so more difficult. Thus, the owner(s) of a corporation operating in California would be subject to different potential for the corporation's veil to be pierced if the corporation was to be sued, depending on whether the corporation was a California domestic corporation or was a Nevada foreign corporation operating in California.

Generally, the plaintiff has to prove that the incorporation was merely a formality and that the corporation neglected corporate formalities and protocols, such as voting to approve major corporate actions in the context of a duly authorized corporate meeting. This is quite often the case when a corporation facing legal liability transfers its assets and business to another corporation with the same management and shareholders. It also happens with single person corporations that are managed in a haphazard manner. As such, the veil can be pierced in both civil cases and where regulatory proceedings are taken against a shell corporation.

Factors for courts to consider edit

Factors that a court may consider when determining whether or not to pierce the corporate veil include the following:[43]

  • Absence or inaccuracy of corporate records;
  • Concealment or misrepresentation of members;
  • Failure to maintain arm's length relationships with related entities;
  • Failure to observe corporate formalities in terms of behavior and documentation;
  • Intermingling of assets of the corporation and of the shareholder;
  • Manipulation of assets or liabilities to concentrate the assets or liabilities;
  • Non-functioning corporate officers and/or directors;
  • Significant undercapitalization of the business entity (capitalization requirements vary based on industry, location, and specific company circumstances);
  • Siphoning of corporate funds by the dominant shareholder(s);
  • Treatment by an individual of the assets of corporation as his/her own;
  • Use of the corporation as a façade for personal dealings (alter ego theory)

It is important to note that not all of these factors need to be met in order for the court to pierce the corporate veil. Further, some courts might find that one factor is so compelling in a particular case that it will find the shareholders personally liable. For example, many large corporations do not pay dividends, without any suggestion of corporate impropriety, but particularly for a small or close corporation the failure to pay dividends may suggest financial impropriety.[44]

Examples edit

  • Berkey v. Third Avenue Railway, 244 N.Y. 602, 155 N.E. 914 (1927). Benjamin Cardozo decided there was no right to pierce the veil for a personal injury victim.
  • Perpetual Real Estate Services, Inc. v. Michaelson Properties, Inc. 974 F.2d 545 (4th Cir. 1992).[45] The Fourth Circuit held that no piercing could take place merely to prevent "unfairness" or "injustice", where a corporation in a real estate building partnership could not pay its share of a lawsuit bill
  • Fletcher v. Atex, Inc., 68 F.3d 1451 (2d Cir. 1995),[46] finding insufficient that a parent company so dominated the operations of a subsidiary that the corporate veil should be disregarded.
  • Minton v. Cavaney, 56 Cal.2d 576 (1961).[47] Mr. Minton's daughter drowned in the public swimming pool owned by Mr. Cavaney. Then-Associate Justice Roger J. Traynor (later Chief Justice) of the Supreme Court of California held: "The equitable owners of a corporation, for example, are personally liable...when they provide inadequate capitalization and actively participate in the conduct of corporate affairs."
  • Kinney Shoe Corp. v. Polan, 939 F.2d 209 (4th Cir. 1991).[48] The veil was pierced where its enforcement would not have matched the purpose of limited liability. Here a corporation was undercapitalized and was only used to shield a shareholder's other company from debts.

Internal Revenue Service edit

In recent years, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States has made use of corporate veil piercing arguments and logic as a means of recapturing income, estate, or gift tax revenue, particularly from business entities created primarily for estate planning purposes.[49] A number of U.S. Tax Court cases involving Family Limited Partnerships (FLPs) illustrate the IRS's use of veil-piercing arguments.[50] Since owners of U.S. business entities created for asset protection and estate purposes often fail to maintain proper corporate compliance, the IRS has achieved multiple high-profile court victories.[51][52]

Reverse piercing edit

Reverse veil piercing is when the debt of a shareholder is imputed onto the corporation. Throughout the United States, the general rule is that reverse veil piercing is not allowed.[53] However the California Court of Appeals has allowed reverse veil piercing against a limited liability company (LLC) based largely on the difference in remedies available to creditors when it comes to attaching assets of a debtors' LLC as compared to attaching assets of a corporation.[54][55]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See, e.g., Henn, Harry G.; Alexander, John R. (1983). Law of Corporations (3 ed.). West Group. ISBN 0314092293., ch 7, 344, n 2 for a list of terms the court uses. They are, mere adjunct, agent, alias, alter ego, alter idem, arm, blind, branch, buffer, cloak, coat, corporate double, cover, creature, curious reminiscence, delusion, department, dry shell, dummy, fiction, form, formality, fraud on the law, instrumentality, mouthpiece, name, nominal identity, phrase, puppet, screen, sham, simulacrum, snare, stooge, subterfuge, tool.
  2. ^ a b Eisenberg, Melvin A. (2005). Corporations and Other Business Organizations, Cases and Materials (9 ed.). Foundation Press. ISBN 1587788799., ch 4, 171
  3. ^ Rolf Serick, Rechtsform und Realität juristischer Personen, 1955
  4. ^ Wolfram Müller-Freienfels, AcP 156 (1958), pp. 522-543
  5. ^ BGHZ 31, 258; BGHZ 68, 312; BGHZ 176, 204, pointing to tort liability under § 826 BGB instead
  6. ^ BGHZ 165, 85; BGH NZG 2008, 187, at para. 16
  7. ^ BGHZ 173, 246
  8. ^ Piercing the Corporate Veil in American and German Law - Liability of Individuals and Entities: A Comparative View in: Tulsa Journal of Comparative and International Law, from 3-1-1995
  9. ^ Jan Lieder, "Liability because of existence-destroying interventions", in: Andrea Vicari/Alexander Schall (eds.), Company Laws of the EU, 2020, Part 2: Germany, Chapter 7: Groups of Companies, pp. 397 - 401, at paras. 647 - 661.
  10. ^ e.g. Gilford Motor Ltd v Horne and Jones v Lipman
  11. ^ VTB Capital v Nutritek [2013] UKSC 5, at paras. 121 - 130
  12. ^ Prest v Petrodel Resources [2013] UKSC 34
  13. ^ see Alexander Schall, The New Law of Piercing the Veil in the UK, ECFR 2016, 549 - 574; https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3538410)
  14. ^ eg. Trustor v Smallbone (No 2) [2001] WLR 1177
  15. ^ Lady Hale, at para. 92; Lord Mance, at para. 100
  16. ^ VTB Capital v Nutritek [2013] para 132 - 148 (per Lord Neuberger)
  17. ^ e.g. Daimler v Continental Tyre and Re FG Films Ltd
  18. ^ e.g. Lubbe v Cape Plc
  19. ^ See further, E McGaughey, 'Donoghue v Salomon in the High Court' (2011) 4 Journal of Personal Injury Law 249, on SSRN
  20. ^ Vedanta Resources v Lungowe [2019] UKSC 20
  21. ^ King Okpabi v Royal Dutch Shell [2021] UKSC 3
  22. ^ see The Coral Rose (No 1) [1991], per Staughton LJ.
  23. ^ MacLeod, Ceit-Anna (January 2014). "Case Commentary: Prest v Petrodel". Scottish Parliamentary Review. Edinburgh: Blacket Avenue Press. I (2).
  24. ^ a b [1976]
  25. ^ [1987] (PC)
  26. ^ [1990]
  27. ^ [1992]
  28. ^ [1998]
  29. ^ [2001]
  30. ^ Capuano, Angelo (2009), "The Realist's Guide to Piercing the Corporate Veil", Australian Journal of Corporate Law, 23 (1): 56–94, SSRN 1369110
  31. ^ [1962]
  32. ^ [1933]
  33. ^ [2000]
  34. ^ Prest v Petrodel [2013] UKSC 34
  35. ^ Lindgren, Kevin E.; R. B. Vermeesch (1995), Business Law of Australia, Butterworths, ISBN 0-409-30675-4
  36. ^ [1925] AC 619
  37. ^ David Winch, "Confiscation: lifting the veil of incorporation" 2013-07-04 at the Wayback Machine (2013)
  38. ^ [2009] EWCA Crim 1303
  39. ^ Thompson, Robert B. (1991), "Piercing the Corporate Veil: An Empirical Study", Cornell Law Review, 76: 1036–1074
  40. ^ Gelb, Harvey (December 1982). "Piercing the Corporate Veil - The Undercapitalization Factor". Chicago Kent Law Review. 59 (1). Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  41. ^ Macey, Jonathan; Mitts, Joshua (2014). "Finding Order in the Morass: The Three Real Justifications for Piercing the Corporate Veil". Cornell Law Review. 100. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  42. ^ Rands, William J. (1998). "Domination of a Subsidiary by a Parent" (PDF). Indiana Law Review. 32: 421. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  43. ^ a b Barber, David H. "Piercing the Corporate Veil". Willamette Law Review. 17: 371. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  44. ^ Macey, Jonathan R. (27 March 2014). "The Three Justifications for Piercing the Corporate Veil". Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  45. ^ "Perpetual Real Estate Services, Inc. v. Michaelson Properties, Inc., 974 F.2d 545 (4th Cir. 1992)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  46. ^ "Fletcher v. Atex, Inc., 68 F. 3d 1451 (2d Cir. 1995)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  47. ^ "Minton v. Cavaney, 56 Cal. 2d 576 (1961)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  48. ^ "Kinney Shoe Corp. v. Polan, 939 F. 2d 209 (4th Cir. 1991)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  49. ^ "Notice CC-2012-002" (PDF). Office of Chief Counsel. Internal Revenue Service. 2 December 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  50. ^ Gans, Mitchell M.; Blattmachr, Jonathan G. (2006). "Family Limited Partnership Formation: Dueling Dicta". Capital University Law Review. 35: 1. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  51. ^ Higham, Scott (8 April 2016). "For U.S. tax cheats, Panama Papers reveal a perilous new world". Washington Post. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  52. ^ Blank, Joshua D.; Staudt, Nancy C. (May 2012). "Corporate Shams" (PDF). NYU Center for Law, Economics and Organization. New York University School of Law. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  53. ^ Gaertner, M.J. (1988). "Reverse Piercing the Corporate Veil: Should Corporation Owners Have It Both Ways". William and Mary Law Review. 30: 667. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  54. ^ "Curci Investments, LLC v. Baldwin, Cal. Ct. App. Case No. G052764 (Aug. 10, 2017)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  55. ^ "Stephen Bainbridge". ProfessorBainbridge.com. 12 August 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2017.

References edit

Books
  • TL Hazen and JW Markham, Corporations and Other Business Enterprises (2003) ISBN 0-314-26476-0 pg. 124–144.
Articles
  • AW Machen, 'Corporate Personality' (1910) 24 Harvard Law Review 253
  • J Dewey, 'The Historic Background of Corporate Legal Personality' (1926) 35 Yale Law Journal 655
  • C Alting, 'Piercing the corporate veil in German and American law - Liability of individuals and entities: a comparative view' (1994–1995) 2 Tulsa Journal Comparative & International Law 187
  • AA Berle, 'The Theory of Enterprise Entity' (1947) 47(3) Columbia Law Review 343
  • EJ Cohn and C Simitis, Lifting the Veil' in the Company Laws of the European Continent' (1963) 12(1) 'The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 189
  • H Hansmann, R Kraakman and R Squire, 'Law and the Rise of the Firm' (2006) 119 Harvard Law Review 1333
  • H Hansmann and R Kraakman, 'Toward unlimited shareholder liability for corporate torts' (1991) 100(7) Yale Law Journal 1879

piercing, corporate, veil, lifting, corporate, veil, legal, decision, treat, rights, duties, corporation, rights, liabilities, shareholders, usually, corporation, treated, separate, legal, person, which, solely, responsible, debts, incurs, sole, beneficiary, c. Piercing the corporate veil or lifting the corporate veil is a legal decision to treat the rights or duties of a corporation as the rights or liabilities of its shareholders Usually a corporation is treated as a separate legal person which is solely responsible for the debts it incurs and the sole beneficiary of the credit it is owed Common law countries usually uphold this principle of separate personhood but in exceptional situations may pierce or lift the corporate veil A simple example would be where a businessperson has left their job as a director and has signed a contract to not compete with the company they have just left for a period of time If they set up a company which competed with their former company technically it would be the company and not the person competing 1 But it is likely a court would say that the new company was just a sham or a cover and that as the new company is completely owned and controlled by one person that the former employee is deliberately choosing to compete and so is in breach of that non competing contract Despite the terminology used which makes it appear as though a shareholder s limited liability emanates from the view that a corporation is a separate legal entity the reality is that the entity status of corporations has almost nothing to do with shareholder limited liability 2 For example English law conferred entity status on corporations long before shareholders were afforded limited liability Similarly the United States Revised Uniform Partnership Act confers entity status on partnerships but also provides that partners are individually liable for all partnership obligations Therefore this shareholder limited liability emanates mainly from statute 2 Contents 1 Basis for limited liability 2 Germany 3 United Kingdom 3 1 Tort victims and employees 3 2 Single economic unit theory 3 3 Perfect obligation 3 4 Reverse piercing 3 5 Criminal law 4 United States 4 1 Factors for courts to consider 4 1 1 Examples 4 2 Internal Revenue Service 4 3 Reverse piercing 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBasis for limited liability editSee also Limited liability Corporations exist in part to shield the personal assets of shareholders from personal liability for the debts or actions of a corporation Unlike a general partnership or sole proprietorship in which the owner could be held responsible for all the debts of the company a corporation traditionally limited the personal liability of the shareholders Piercing the corporate veil typically is most effective with smaller privately held business entities close corporations in which the corporation has a small number of shareholders limited assets and recognition of separateness of the corporation from its shareholders would promote fraud or an inequitable result There is no record of a successful piercing of the corporate veil for a publicly traded corporation because of the large number of shareholders and the extensive mandatory filings entailed in qualifying for listing on an exchange Germany editSee also German company law German corporate law developed a number of theories in the early 1920s for lifting the corporate veil on the basis of domination by a parent company over a subsidiary These cases have led to an encompassing codification of group law provisions in the AktG 1965 291 319 AktG By contrast a general doctrine of piercing the veil for abuse of the legal personality of the company has never really taken hold in Germany It was advocated in the fundamental work of Rolf Serick 3 but rejected by the prevailing Normanwendungslehre 4 After a few early cases the German judiciary did not go down the route of establishing shareholder liability via piercing the veil In particular it rejected piercing the veil on grounds of material undercapitalization several times 5 Today the only remaining case of shareholder liability via piercing of the corporate veil is the inextricable commingling of the assets of the company and the shareholder Vermogensvermischung 6 But shareholders can be held liable in tort 826 BGB in the case of an interference destroying the corporation existenzvernichtender Eingriff 7 The corporation must not be stripped without compensation of funds that are required to meet its foreseeable future obligations If these are taken away by the shareholder the corporation may claim compensation even in an insolvency proceeding The concept adds a solvency test element to the balance sheet based rules of capital maintenance under 30 31 GmbHG and 57 62 AktG 8 9 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2010 United Kingdom editSee also UK company law and Corporate veil in the United Kingdom The corporate veil in UK company law is pierced very rarely After a series of attempts by the Court of Appeal during the late 1960s and early 1970s to establish a theory of economic reality and a doctrine of control for lifting the veil the House of Lords reasserted an orthodox approach According to a 1990 case at the Court of Appeal Adams v Cape Industries plc the only true veil piercing may take place when a company is set up for fraudulent purposes or where it is established to avoid an existing obligation 10 However cases were rare and their justification in light of the Salomon principle remained doubtful In VTB Capital 11 Lord Neuberger sympathised with rejecting the doctrine altogether but left the issue undecided because it did not matter for the outcome Soon afterwards in Prest v Petrodel 12 a divorce case where the matrimonial home was not held by the husband but by his company the Supreme Court confirmed the existence of the doctrine in English law but narrowed it down to practical irrelevance 13 The fraud exception 14 was dismissed According to the leading judgement by Lord Sumption piercing the veil is a subsidiary remedy of last resort that only covers the avoidance of existing obligations evasion principle as opposed to the cases of the concealment principle that does not give rise to a claim On closer analysis this was said obiter because the Court reached the desired outcome attribution of the family home to the assets of the husband by applying trust law Nevertheless Prest v Petrodel is generally assumed to state the current law in the UK even though the restriction of abuse to evasion only can be questioned and there were statements in Prest v Petrodel that supported a broader approach 15 It is noteworthy that under English law piercing the veil can never be used to make shareholders pay for contractual debts of the company because they have not been party to that contract 16 In the past the veil was sometimes ignored in the process of interpreting a statute 17 and as a matter of tort law it is open as a matter of authority that a direct duty of care may be owed by the managers of a parent company to accident victims of a subsidiary 18 Tort victims and employees edit Tort victims and employees who did not contract with a company or have very unequal bargaining power have been held to be exempted from the rules of limited liability in Chandler v Cape plc In this case the claimant was an employee of Cape plc s wholly owned subsidiary which had gone insolvent He successfully brought a claim in tort against Cape plc for causing him an asbestos disease asbestosis Arden LJ in the Court of Appeal held that if the parent had interfered in the operations of the subsidiary in any way such as over trading issues then it would be attached with responsibility for health and safety issues 19 Arden LJ emphasised that piercing the corporate veil was not necessary There would be direct liability in tort for the parent company if it had interfered in the subsidiary s affairs The High Court before it had held that liability would exist if the parent exercised control all applying ordinary principles of tort law about liability of a third party for the actions of a tortfeasor The restrictions on lifting the veil found in contractual cases made no difference This jursidction has been settled to play an important role in the human rights cases 20 and 21 Single economic unit theory edit Within the context of competition law undertakings which may encompass one or more legal persons might be held liable for relevant infringements By contrast it is an axiomatic principle of English company law that a company is an entity separate and distinct from its members who are liable only to the extent that they have contributed to the company s capital Salomon v Salomon 1897 The effect of this rule is that the individual subsidiaries within a conglomerate will be treated as separate entities and the parent cannot be made liable for the subsidiaries debts on insolvency Furthermore it can create subsidiaries with inadequate capitalisation and secure loans to the subsidiaries with fixed charges over their assets despite the fact that this is not necessarily the most honest way of trading 22 The rule also applies in Scotland 23 While the secondary literature refers to different means of lifting or piercing the veil see Ottolenghi 1959 judicial dicta supporting the view that the rule in Salomon is subject to exceptions are thin on the ground Lord Denning MR outlined the theory of the single economic unit wherein the court examined the overall business operation as an economic unit rather than strict legal form in DHN Food Distributors v Tower Hamlets 24 However this has largely been repudiated and has been treated with caution in subsequent judgments In Woolfson v Strathclyde BC 24 the House of Lords held that it was a decision to be confined to its facts the question in DHN had been whether the subsidiary of the plaintiff the former owning the premises on which the parent carried out its business could receive compensation for loss of business under a compulsory purchase order notwithstanding that under the rule in Salomon it was the parent and not the subsidiary that had lost the business Likewise in Bank of Tokyo v Karoon 25 Lord Goff who had concurred in the result in DHN held that the legal conception of the corporate structure was entirely distinct from the economic realities The single economic unit theory was likewise rejected by the CA in Adams v Cape Industries 26 where Slade LJ held that cases where the rule in Salomon had been circumvented were merely instances where they didn t know what to do The view expressed at first instance by HHJ Southwell QC in Creasey v Breachwood 27 that English law definitely recognised the principle that the corporate veil could be lifted was described as a heresy by Hobhouse LJ in Ord v Bellhaven 28 and these doubts were shared by Moritt V C in Trustor v Smallbone No 2 29 the corporate veil cannot be lifted merely because justice requires it Despite the rejection of the justice of the case test it is observed from judicial reasoning in veil piercing cases that the courts employ equitable discretion guided by general principles such as mala fides to test whether the corporate structure has been used as a mere device 30 Perfect obligation edit The cases of Tan v Lim 31 where a company was used as a facade per Russell J to defraud the creditors of the defendant and Gilford Motor Co Ltd v Horne 32 where an injunction was granted against a trader setting up a business which was merely as a vehicle allowing him to circumvent a covenant in restraint of trade are often said to create a fraud exception to the separate corporate personality Similarly in Gencor v Dalby 33 the tentative suggestion was made that the corporate veil was being lifted where the company was the alter ego of the defendant In truth as Lord Cooke 1997 has noted extrajudicially it is because of the separate identity of the company concerned and not despite it that equity intervened in all of these cases They are not instances of the corporate veil being pierced but instead involve the application of other rules of law Finally the fraud exception was rejected in Prest v Petrodel Resources Ltd 34 Reverse piercing edit There have been cases in which it is to the advantage of the shareholder to have the corporate structure ignored Courts have been reluctant to agree to this 35 The often cited case Macaura v Northern Assurance Co Ltd 36 is an example of that Mr Macaura was the sole owner of a company he had set up to grow timber The trees were destroyed by fire but the insurer refused to pay since the policy was with Macaura not the company and he was not the owner of the trees The House of Lords upheld that refusal based on the separate legal personality of the company Criminal law edit In English criminal law there have been cases in which the courts have been prepared to pierce the veil of incorporation For example in confiscation proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 monies received by a company can depending upon the particular facts of the case as found by the court be regarded as having been obtained by an individual who is usually but not always a director of the company In consequence those monies may become an element in the individual s benefit obtained from criminal conduct and hence subject to confiscation from him 37 The position regarding piercing the veil in English criminal law was given in the Court of Appeal judgment in the case of R v Seager 38 in which the court said at para 76 There was no major disagreement between counsel on the legal principles by reference to which a court is entitled to pierce or rend or remove the corporate veil As a matter of law a duly formed and registered company is a separate legal entity from those who are its shareholders and it has rights and liabilities that are separate from its shareholders A court can pierce the limited liability of the corporate entity and look at what lies behind it only in certain circumstances It cannot do so simply because it considers it might be just to do so Each of these circumstances involves impropriety and dishonesty The court will then be entitled to look for the legal substance not the just the form In the context of criminal cases the courts have identified at least three situations when the corporate veil can be pierced First if an offender attempts to shelter behind a corporate facade or veil to hide his crime and his benefits from it Secondly where an offender does acts in the name of a company which with the necessary mens rea constitute a criminal offence which leads to the offender s conviction then the veil of incorporation is not so much pierced as rudely torn away per Lord Bingham in Jennings v CPS paragraph 16 Thirdly where the transaction or business structures constitute a device cloak or sham i e an attempt to disguise the true nature of the transaction or structure so as to deceive third parties or the courts United States editSee also US corporate law In the United States corporate veil piercing is the most litigated issue in corporate law 39 Although courts are reluctant to hold an active shareholder liable for actions that are legally the responsibility of the corporation even if the corporation has a single shareholder they will often do so if the corporation was markedly noncompliant with corporate formalities to prevent fraud or to achieve equity in certain cases of undercapitalization 40 41 In most jurisdictions no bright line rule exists and the ruling is based on common law precedents In the United States different theories most important alter ego or instrumentality rule attempted to create a piercing standard Mostly they rest upon three basic prongs namely 42 unity of interest and ownership the separate personalities of the shareholder and corporation cease to exist wrongful conduct wrongful action taken by the corporation and proximate cause as a reasonably foreseeable result of the wrongful action harm was caused to the party that is seeking to pierce the corporate veil However the theories failed to articulate a real world approach which courts could directly apply to their cases Thus courts struggle with the proof of each prong and rather analyze all given factors This is known as totality of circumstances 43 There is also the matter of what jurisdiction the corporation is incorporated in if the corporation is authorized to do business in more than one state All corporations have one specific state their home state to which they are incorporated as a domestic corporation and if they operate in other states they would apply for authority to do business in those other states as a foreign corporation In determining whether or not the corporate veil may be pierced the courts are required to use the laws of the corporation s home state This issue can be significant for example California law is more liberal in allowing a corporate veil to be pierced while the laws of neighboring Nevada make doing so more difficult Thus the owner s of a corporation operating in California would be subject to different potential for the corporation s veil to be pierced if the corporation was to be sued depending on whether the corporation was a California domestic corporation or was a Nevada foreign corporation operating in California Generally the plaintiff has to prove that the incorporation was merely a formality and that the corporation neglected corporate formalities and protocols such as voting to approve major corporate actions in the context of a duly authorized corporate meeting This is quite often the case when a corporation facing legal liability transfers its assets and business to another corporation with the same management and shareholders It also happens with single person corporations that are managed in a haphazard manner As such the veil can be pierced in both civil cases and where regulatory proceedings are taken against a shell corporation Factors for courts to consider edit Factors that a court may consider when determining whether or not to pierce the corporate veil include the following 43 Absence or inaccuracy of corporate records Concealment or misrepresentation of members Failure to maintain arm s length relationships with related entities Failure to observe corporate formalities in terms of behavior and documentation Intermingling of assets of the corporation and of the shareholder Manipulation of assets or liabilities to concentrate the assets or liabilities Non functioning corporate officers and or directors Significant undercapitalization of the business entity capitalization requirements vary based on industry location and specific company circumstances Siphoning of corporate funds by the dominant shareholder s Treatment by an individual of the assets of corporation as his her own Use of the corporation as a facade for personal dealings alter ego theory It is important to note that not all of these factors need to be met in order for the court to pierce the corporate veil Further some courts might find that one factor is so compelling in a particular case that it will find the shareholders personally liable For example many large corporations do not pay dividends without any suggestion of corporate impropriety but particularly for a small or close corporation the failure to pay dividends may suggest financial impropriety 44 Examples edit Berkey v Third Avenue Railway 244 N Y 602 155 N E 914 1927 Benjamin Cardozo decided there was no right to pierce the veil for a personal injury victim Perpetual Real Estate Services Inc v Michaelson Properties Inc 974 F 2d 545 4th Cir 1992 45 The Fourth Circuit held that no piercing could take place merely to prevent unfairness or injustice where a corporation in a real estate building partnership could not pay its share of a lawsuit bill Fletcher v Atex Inc 68 F 3d 1451 2d Cir 1995 46 finding insufficient that a parent company so dominated the operations of a subsidiary that the corporate veil should be disregarded Minton v Cavaney 56 Cal 2d 576 1961 47 Mr Minton s daughter drowned in the public swimming pool owned by Mr Cavaney Then Associate Justice Roger J Traynor later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of California held The equitable owners of a corporation for example are personally liable when they provide inadequate capitalization and actively participate in the conduct of corporate affairs Kinney Shoe Corp v Polan 939 F 2d 209 4th Cir 1991 48 The veil was pierced where its enforcement would not have matched the purpose of limited liability Here a corporation was undercapitalized and was only used to shield a shareholder s other company from debts Internal Revenue Service edit See also United States Internal Revenue Service In recent years the Internal Revenue Service IRS in the United States has made use of corporate veil piercing arguments and logic as a means of recapturing income estate or gift tax revenue particularly from business entities created primarily for estate planning purposes 49 A number of U S Tax Court cases involving Family Limited Partnerships FLPs illustrate the IRS s use of veil piercing arguments 50 Since owners of U S business entities created for asset protection and estate purposes often fail to maintain proper corporate compliance the IRS has achieved multiple high profile court victories 51 52 Reverse piercing edit Reverse veil piercing is when the debt of a shareholder is imputed onto the corporation Throughout the United States the general rule is that reverse veil piercing is not allowed 53 However the California Court of Appeals has allowed reverse veil piercing against a limited liability company LLC based largely on the difference in remedies available to creditors when it comes to attaching assets of a debtors LLC as compared to attaching assets of a corporation 54 55 See also editUS corporate law UK company lawNotes edit See e g Henn Harry G Alexander John R 1983 Law of Corporations 3 ed West Group ISBN 0314092293 ch 7 344 n 2 for a list of terms the court uses They are mere adjunct agent alias alter ego alter idem arm blind branch buffer cloak coat corporate double cover creature curious reminiscence delusion department dry shell dummy fiction form formality fraud on the law instrumentality mouthpiece name nominal identity phrase puppet screen sham simulacrum snare stooge subterfuge tool a b Eisenberg Melvin A 2005 Corporations and Other Business Organizations Cases and Materials 9 ed Foundation Press ISBN 1587788799 ch 4 171 Rolf Serick Rechtsform und Realitat juristischer Personen 1955 Wolfram Muller Freienfels AcP 156 1958 pp 522 543 BGHZ 31 258 BGHZ 68 312 BGHZ 176 204 pointing to tort liability under 826 BGB instead BGHZ 165 85 BGH NZG 2008 187 at para 16 BGHZ 173 246 Piercing the Corporate Veil in American and German Law Liability of Individuals and Entities A Comparative View in Tulsa Journal of Comparative and International Law from 3 1 1995 Jan Lieder Liability because of existence destroying interventions in Andrea Vicari Alexander Schall eds Company Laws of the EU 2020 Part 2 Germany Chapter 7 Groups of Companies pp 397 401 at paras 647 661 e g Gilford Motor Ltd v Horne and Jones v Lipman VTB Capital v Nutritek 2013 UKSC 5 at paras 121 130 Prest v Petrodel Resources 2013 UKSC 34 see Alexander Schall The New Law of Piercing the Veil in the UK ECFR 2016 549 574 https papers ssrn com sol3 papers cfm abstract id 3538410 eg Trustor v Smallbone No 2 2001 WLR 1177 Lady Hale at para 92 Lord Mance at para 100 VTB Capital v Nutritek 2013 para 132 148 per Lord Neuberger e g Daimler v Continental Tyre and Re FG Films Ltd e g Lubbe v Cape Plc See further E McGaughey Donoghue v Salomon in the High Court 2011 4 Journal of Personal Injury Law 249 on SSRN Vedanta Resources v Lungowe 2019 UKSC 20 King Okpabi v Royal Dutch Shell 2021 UKSC 3 see The Coral Rose No 1 1991 per Staughton LJ MacLeod Ceit Anna January 2014 Case Commentary Prest v Petrodel Scottish Parliamentary Review Edinburgh Blacket Avenue Press I 2 a b 1976 1987 PC 1990 1992 1998 2001 Capuano Angelo 2009 The Realist s Guide to Piercing the Corporate Veil Australian Journal of Corporate Law 23 1 56 94 SSRN 1369110 1962 1933 2000 Prest v Petrodel 2013 UKSC 34 Lindgren Kevin E R B Vermeesch 1995 Business Law of Australia Butterworths ISBN 0 409 30675 4 1925 AC 619 David Winch Confiscation lifting the veil of incorporation Archived 2013 07 04 at the Wayback Machine 2013 2009 EWCA Crim 1303 Thompson Robert B 1991 Piercing the Corporate Veil An Empirical Study Cornell Law Review 76 1036 1074 Gelb Harvey December 1982 Piercing the Corporate Veil The Undercapitalization Factor Chicago Kent Law Review 59 1 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Macey Jonathan Mitts Joshua 2014 Finding Order in the Morass The Three Real Justifications for Piercing the Corporate Veil Cornell Law Review 100 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Rands William J 1998 Domination of a Subsidiary by a Parent PDF Indiana Law Review 32 421 Retrieved 9 September 2017 a b Barber David H Piercing the Corporate Veil Willamette Law Review 17 371 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Macey Jonathan R 27 March 2014 The Three Justifications for Piercing the Corporate Veil Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation Retrieved 9 September 2017 Perpetual Real Estate Services Inc v Michaelson Properties Inc 974 F 2d 545 4th Cir 1992 Google Scholar Retrieved 9 September 2017 Fletcher v Atex Inc 68 F 3d 1451 2d Cir 1995 Google Scholar Retrieved 9 September 2017 Minton v Cavaney 56 Cal 2d 576 1961 Google Scholar Retrieved 9 September 2017 Kinney Shoe Corp v Polan 939 F 2d 209 4th Cir 1991 Google Scholar Retrieved 9 September 2017 Notice CC 2012 002 PDF Office of Chief Counsel Internal Revenue Service 2 December 2011 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Gans Mitchell M Blattmachr Jonathan G 2006 Family Limited Partnership Formation Dueling Dicta Capital University Law Review 35 1 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Higham Scott 8 April 2016 For U S tax cheats Panama Papers reveal a perilous new world Washington Post Retrieved 9 September 2017 Blank Joshua D Staudt Nancy C May 2012 Corporate Shams PDF NYU Center for Law Economics and Organization New York University School of Law Retrieved 9 September 2017 Gaertner M J 1988 Reverse Piercing the Corporate Veil Should Corporation Owners Have It Both Ways William and Mary Law Review 30 667 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Curci Investments LLC v Baldwin Cal Ct App Case No G052764 Aug 10 2017 Google Scholar Retrieved 9 September 2017 Stephen Bainbridge ProfessorBainbridge com 12 August 2017 Retrieved 9 September 2017 References editBooksTL Hazen and JW Markham Corporations and Other Business Enterprises 2003 ISBN 0 314 26476 0 pg 124 144 ArticlesAW Machen Corporate Personality 1910 24 Harvard Law Review 253 J Dewey The Historic Background of Corporate Legal Personality 1926 35 Yale Law Journal 655 C Alting Piercing the corporate veil in German and American law Liability of individuals and entities a comparative view 1994 1995 2 Tulsa Journal Comparative amp International Law 187 AA Berle The Theory of Enterprise Entity 1947 47 3 Columbia Law Review 343 EJ Cohn and C Simitis Lifting the Veil in the Company Laws of the European Continent 1963 12 1 The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 189 H Hansmann R Kraakman and R Squire Law and the Rise of the Firm 2006 119 Harvard Law Review 1333 H Hansmann and R Kraakman Toward unlimited shareholder liability for corporate torts 1991 100 7 Yale Law Journal 1879 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piercing the corporate veil amp oldid 1191478676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.