Who can be director?
Type of director
1.executive: being appointed to board and also have an employment contract. Directos’ employement contracts are service contracts/agreements.
2.non executive: appointed to the board but will have no employment contract. They do not receive salary but receive directors’ fee for attending board meetings. Common in public companies (stimes required by law)
Chairperson
De factor directors and shadow directors
Appointment of directors
Shareholder/director divide
When an individual is both a shareholder and a director:
1. In board meeting, they must act as director and promote success of company without thinking of personal interests
2. in GM, they can act as shareholders and vote to promote their interests.
Directors’ actual and apparent authority
Directors service contracts
Removal of directors
Special provisions in AoA or shareholder’s agreement
Notification requirements
Directors’ duties
Why is it difficult to prove breach of duty to promote success of company?
Factors to be considered:
1. consequence in long term
2. interest of employees
3. need to foster company business, relationship with suppliers, customers
4. impact on community and environment
5. desirability of company maintaining a reputation for high standard
6. need to act fairly between members of company.
Because court will apply a subjective test, it is extremely difficult to establish a breach. As long as court is satisfied that director acted in good faith and considered all the above factors, the director will not be in breach.
Duty to avoid conflict of interest
Exceptions to the duty to declare (only applicable to transaction with the company)
Civil consequences of breach of directors duties
Consequences for most fiduciary duties are equitable remedies:
2. 1. account for profit
2. equitable compensation
3. rescission of any contract entered as direct or indirect result of the breach
4. injunction
5. restoration of property transferred as result of breach
Breach for duty to exercise reasonable care is common law damages (same as damages for negligence)
Ratification of breach
Shareholders can ratify a breach or potential breach of a director’s duty by ordinary resolution. (the director (being also a shareholder) can not propose a written resolution/cannot vote in the GM)
Duty to declare of interest in existing transaction or arrangement
E.g. director appointed, 2 months before, company entered a contract with her interest, she must declare.
Failure to declare interest in existing is criminal offense subject to a fine. vs declare interest in proposed transaction is a civil matter.
Claims against directors of insolvent companies
What would constitute wrongful trading?
often brought by liquidator or administrator If:
1. Company has gone into insolvent liquidation or administration
2. Before commencement of winding up, director knew or ought to have concluded there was no reasonable prospect that company can avoide insolvent liquidation
3. that person was director atthe time.
Remedy: court may order the director to make a contribution to the company’s assets, increasing the amount of money payable to creditors.
Defense for wrongful trading
Director will not be liable for wrongful trading if they took every step with a view to minimising potential loss to creditor (what they ought to have known, conclusion they ought to have reached and steps that they ought to have taken).
Standards test that a reasonably diligent person having both:
- general knowledge skill and experience to carried out the function of director: objective test
- general knowledge skill and experience that such director actually has : subjective test.
Fraudulent trading
Misfeasance
Controls on directors