1.1 The subject and the objectives of this book
It would be an understatement to say that shareholder protection is (and has always been) an integral, yet highly complicated, part of modern company law. Jurisdictions go to great lengths to set intricate systems of checks and balances on the administration of corporate affairs and to devise armouries of rights exercisable in and against the company, elaborate in their construction and application, only to protect the varying interests of shareholders. As suggested by its title, this book focuses on a mechanism of shareholder protection known as the derivative action. It aims to investigate whether Greek shareholder law should be reformed and whether and how this mechanism should be introduced into it. The research purports to evaluate, from the perspective of shareholder protection, the applicable Greek legal framework, identify its shortcomings and inquire how the derivative action may address them, with the view of re-establishing the effectiveness and competitiveness of the national law. To achieve these ends, this book conducts (in Part II) a comparative analysis with two jurisdictions which provide for derivative actions, namely Germany and the UK.1
Derivative actions can be broadly defined as follows: in cases where a wrong is suffered by the company, a (group of minority) shareholder(s) (otherwise barred from litigating directly in their own name and on their own behalf, by virtue of the no reflective loss principle and the principle that only the company may litigate its claims through its competent organs â the âproper plaintiff ruleâ) may be allowed to seek remedy on behalf of the company.2 In practice, a derivative action is useful, if not essential, in cases where those in control of the company (thus able to act â and litigate â on behalf of the company or to instruct those with such capacity) are the ones who wronged the company. The wrong will not be remedied, due to this conflict of interests, to the detriment of all involved in the company â and thus its shareholders â but for the wrongdoers, unless another person derives the right to sue them from the company, acting on behalf and for the benefit of the latter.
1 Capital letters will be used herein when referring to this bookâs Parts and Sections, in order to avoid the risk of confusion with other sections or parts of statutes, etc.
2 This is the definition of what is referred herein as âgenuineâ derivative actions. See also the discussion on the features of derivative actions in Harald Baum and Dan W Puchniak, âThe Derivative Action: An Economic, Historical and Practice-Oriented Approachâ in Dan W Puchniak, Harald Baum and Michael Ewing-Chow (eds), The Derivative Action in Asia: A Comparative and Functional Approach (CUP 2012) 7. See Georgios Zouridakis, âIntroducing Derivative Actions in the Greek Law on Public Limited Companies: Issues of Legal Standing and Lessons from the German and UK Experienceâ (2015) 26 ICCLR 271, 272 regarding pp. 3â5 in this Section.
Unlike personal shareholdersâ claims, derivative actions serve the purposes of reinforcing the accountability of those in control of the company and protecting shareholders cumulatively. They do so by removing the impasse which the âproper plaintiff ruleâ may create, when necessary.3 The direct beneficiary of a successful derivative claim is the company only, whilst shareholders benefit indirectly or, more precisely, reflectively. However, the shareholdersâ right to litigate on behalf of the company evidently constitutes a decisive interference in the ordinary administration of corporate affairs. The law has therefore to facilitate the pursuit of meritorious derivative claims whilst, at the same time, weed out and deter litigation that would disturb the efficient running of the company and run contrary to the companyâs and shareholdersâ interests. The difficulty in this task resides in that filters against frivolous and vexatious litigation inherently run the risk of disenfranchising shareholders and preventing meritorious claims from being brought, whilst any incentives to shareholders to enforce the corporate claims may be exploited by malicious litigants.
Derivative actions have been considered by many academics as one of the most potent means of (minority) shareholder protection, assuming thus a cardinal role in corporate governance.4 Notwithstanding being a landmark feature of common law,5 they have progressively expanded to civil law jurisdictions.6 The outspread of provisions on derivative actions throughout Europe during the last decade is evidence of voluntary regulatory convergence, on a matter which institutional harmonisation â through the proposal for a fifth company law directive (whose article 16 provided a minimalistic form of a derivative action) â has so far been unsuccessful in the EU.7 The recent history of one of the core continental jurisdictions of this study, Germany, supports this observation.8 Almost a decade ago, the Gesetz zur UnternehmensintegritĂ€t und Modernisierung des Anfechtungsrechts (âAct on Corporate Integrity and Modernisation of Rescission Lawâ; hereinafter UMAG)9 introduced the new section 14810 to Aktiengesetz (German Stock Corporation Act of 1965) in an attempt to strengthen the protection afforded to minority shareholders.11 The emphasised word alerts the reader of comparative corporate law to the difference from the UK statutory provisions and English common law. Contrary to the continental European approach of conferring the right to sue on behalf of the company only to ex lege minorities, usually determined on the basis of participation in share capital, any shareholder can individually bring a derivative action under English law. This characteristic of derivative actions remained unchanged despite the advent of the new statutory provisions under the Companies Act 2006.12 What also remained largely unaffected, despite various reforms of its national company law statute, is the Greek approach of not providing for a âgenuineâ derivative action.13
3 Known, under common law, as the rule in Foss v Harbottle (1843) 67 ER 189; (1843) 2 Hare 461.
4 Indicatively: Robert C Clark, Corporate Law (Little, Brown 1986) 639; Arad Reisberg, Derivative Actions and Corporate Governance: Theory and Operation (OUP 2007) 9; see also Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Corp 337 US 541 (1949), 548, hailing the derivative action as âthe chief regulator of corporate managementâ.
5 See GR Sullivan, âRestating the Scope of the Derivative Actionâ (1985) 44 CLJ 236: âDerivative actions have been allowed at least since Atwool v. Merryweather (1867) LR 5 Eq 464nâ.
6 For categorisations of jurisdictions into âlegal familiesâ, see the seminal work of RenĂ© David and John EC Brierley, Major Legal Systems in the World Today: An Introduction to the Comparative Study of Law (Simon & Schuster 1978). An explanation for the spread of statutory provisions on derivative actions across jurisdictions from the late nineties onwards may be the normative influence of the âlaw and financeâ literature (see Subsection 2.4.3.2). Evidence supporting this explanation can be found in Italy: see Paolo Giudici, âRepresentative Litigation in Italian Capital Markets: Italian Derivative Suits and (if ever) Securities Class Actionsâ (2009) 6 ECFR 246.
7 OJ C 7 11.1.1991.
8 Notable civil law jurisdictions having introduced derivative actions to their corporate law statutes during the past three decades include Belgium (since 1991 by virtue of Lois coordonnĂ©es sur les sociĂ©tĂ©s commerciales [Belgian Company Code] art 66bis, of 26 July 1991, Moniteur Belge [MB] [Official Gazette of Belgium]), Italy (since 1998, by virtue of Decreto Legislativo 24 febbraio 1998, n. 58 (It.); Testo Unico in Materia di Intermediazione Finanziaria [TUIF] [Rules and Regulations Concerning Stock Market Trading] art 129, D. Lgs. n. 58); and (Peopleâs Republic of) China (since 2005, by virtue of Standing Comm. Natâl Peopleâs Cong, 27 October 2005). For a historical overview of this incident of voluntary convergence, see Martin Gelter, âWhy do Shareholder Derivative Suits Remain Rare in Continental Europe?â (2011â12) 37 Brook J Intâl L 843; Baum and Puchniak (n 2) 2.
9 BGBl I, 2802. On the replacement of the older provisions, see, indicatively, Nikolaos Paschos and Kay-Uwe Neumann, âDie Neuregelungen des UMAG im Bereich der Durchsetzung von HaftungsansprĂŒchen der Aktiengesellschaft gegen Organmitgliederâ (2005) 33 DB 1779; Holger Fleischer, âDas Gesetz zur UnternehmensintegritĂ€t und Modernisierung des Anfechtungsrechtsâ [2005] NJW 3525; see also the decisions in OLG Hamburg, Beschluss vom 19.1.2007 â 11 Wx 33/06, AG 2007 331; Finanzgericht Hamburg Urt. v. 11.09.2009, Az. â 3 K 124/08, DStRE 2010 594, making reference to the UMAG reforms on shareholder-led litigation.
10 Titled: âComplaint Admission Proceedings (Derivative Actions)â.
11 UMAG also amended s 147, which constituted the only possibility for shareholder-initiated representative litigation, analogous and functionally equivalent to derivative actions. However, a form of derivative action was provided in the Law on Corporate Groups (Konzernrecht). See AktG ss 310, 317, 318, 323.
12 Now âderivative claimsâ (as the term applies under CA 2006 Pt 11).
13 (Codified) Law 2190/1920 on (Public) Companies Limited by Shares (Sociétés Anonymes; SAs).
Alas, the Greek law on shareholder litigation on behalf of the company remains somewhat obsolete.14 Despite the fact that members of private limited companies may sue derivatively before Greek courts,15 legislators have continuously refrained from introducing a similar mechanism to the law of public limited companies.16 The provision conceptually and functionally closest to a derivative action under the respective law is the âcompanyâs actionâ whereby a 5% minority may demand that the board brings the action and, in case the board does not comply with this request, the majority of that minority may petition the court to appoint special representatives to bring the claim.17 The companyâs act...