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1. Introduction
Historically, corporate personality arose from the activities of organisations such as religious orders which
were granted rights to hold property and to sue and be sued in their own right (Dewey, 1926). In the
eighteenth century, the concept began to be applied to commercial entities involved in rail building and
colonial trade (Williston, 1888). By far the most significant legal reform in company law arrived in 1844 with
the enactment of the Joint Stock Companies Act1 . It brought a system for simple incorporation of a company
by registration. The Act granted companies full legal personality upon registration. However, the Joint Stock
Companies Act did not come with limited liability for members of joint stock companies. This feature arrived
in 1855 under the Limited Liability Act2 , which was hurriedly replaced by the Joint Stock Companies Act
1856. The Act limited the liability of members to the amount they have invested in the company (Machen,
1910). The company was given legal personality which divorced it from its founding members and thus
considered an entity by law upon incorporation. Limited liability reduced the risk faced by the promoters by
limiting their loss only to the amount invested in the company. However, both corporate personality and
limited liability have remained highly debated issues to this day (James, 2003).
Ever since the House of Lords landscape-shaping decision in Salomon v. A. Salomon Ltd 3 , over a century
ago, there has been a number of legal development aimed at sidestepping the doctrine of corporate
personality and exposing the innards of the company. While statutory exceptions to the doctrine have a long
history, common law has only just started to gather pace in the past three decades. A reminder of the
statutory *Int. J.L.M. 67 and common law exceptions to the corporate personality doctrine, taking into
consideration all recent developments, is indeed a much-welcomed move, in an ever changing business
landscape. This paper explores the statutory and common law exceptions to the separate personality
doctrine.
The landmark decision of the House of Lords in Salomon v. A. Salomon & Co. Ltd 4 cemented both limited
liability and corporate personality in English company law. It did not matter whether Mr Salomon was the
sole controlling member of the company, as Lord MacNaughton explained:
[] the company is at law a different person altogether from the subscribers to the memorandum and,
though it may be that after incorporation the business is precisely the same as it was before and the same
persons are managers and the same hands receive the profits, the company is not in law the agent of the
subscribers or trustee for them5 .
Salomon v. A. Salomon is regarded by many academics and legal practitioners as the most significant case in
English company law. First, it recognised that a company could legitimately be set up to shield its members
and directors from liability. Second, it implicitly acknowledged the validity of the one-man company nearly
a century before single person companies could formally be created. And third, the mere fact that a person
holds shares is not sufficient enough to create a relationship of agency or trusteeship. Due to these three
reasons, there is no doubt that Salomon is the ground upon which English company law stands (Grantham
and Rickett, 1998).
On strict application of the separate entity doctrine, members are not personally liable for the company's
liabilities. Nevertheless, this does not mean that members are not liable to contribute anything. In the UK,
the majority of companies have limited liability and so the liability of the members is mostly limited. The
company can be limited by guarantee or by shares. In the case of guarantee, the liability of the members is
limited to the amount stated in the statement of guarantee6 . For companies limited by shares, the liability of
the members is limited to the amount that is unpaid on their shares 7 . Due to the availability of limited
liability, members who have fully paid up their shares are legally not bound to contribute any further to the
company. Unsurprisingly, the both doctrines were greeted with disquiet in some quarters. It was argued
that whilst limited liability protects the members, it shifts risk and cost from members onto creditors (Moore,
2006). Professor Otto Kahn-Freund lamented that the courts had failed to give protection to business
creditors which should be accessory of the privileges of limited liability and described the House of Lord's
decision as calamitous (Kahn-Freund, 1944).
Over time, judicial discretion and legislative action has managed to find exceptions to the two doctrines. Lord
Denning in Littlewoods Mail Order Stores Ltd v. IRC took the view that incorporation does not fully cast a veil
over the personality of a limited company through which the courts cannot see8 . Going against the doctrine
of corporate personality, he observed that the courts can and often do, pull off the mask. They look to see
what really lies behind. On lifting the veil of incorporation, Staughten LJ in Atlas Maritime v. Avalon Maritime
(the Coral Rose) explained that:
[] to pierce the corporate veil is an expression that I would reserve for treating the rights or liabilities or
activities of a company as the rights or liabilities or activities of its shareholders. To lift the corporate veil or
look behind it, on the other hand, should mean to have regard to the shareholding in a company for some
legal purpose9 .
investigated []10 .
The same point was emphasized by Rogers A.J.A in Briggs v. James Hardie & Co. Ptyt :
There is no common, unifying principle, which underlies the occasional decision of the courts to pierce the
corporate veil. Although an ad hoc explanation may be offered by a court which so decides, there is no
principled approach to be derived from the authorities 11 .
Thus, the fundamental problem with the Solomon decision is not the corporate personality doctrine but the
House of Lords lack of guidance on when to lift the veil. Due to a lack of guidance, courts have been forced
to ignore corporate personality by taking a fact-based approach.
reaching a decision, Slade LJ quoted a key passage from the judgment of Danckwerts LJ in Merchandise
Transport v. British Transport Commission :
[] where the character of a company, or the nature of the persons who control it, is a relevant feature the
court will go behind the mere status of a company as a legal entity and will consider who are the persons as
shareholders or even as agents who direct and control the activities of a company which is incapable of
doing anything without human assistance20 .
The court accepted that the purpose of the corporate group structure set up by Cape Industries had been
used specifically to ensure that the legal liability of a particular subsidiary would fall only upon itself and not
the parent company in England. The court held that:
[] whether or not this is desirable, the right to use a corporate structure in this manner is inherent in our
corporate law [] in our judgement Cape was in law entitled to organise the group's affairs in that manner
[]21 .
In the light of Slade LJ's judgement in Adams v. Cape Industries, DHN is probably now best regarded as an
authority on compensation claims by multi-corporate groups in respect of compulsory acquisition of their
business premises. On this, Flaux J. in Linsen International v. Humpuss Sea Transport PTE observed that:
[] it is not enough to show that a company or a group of companies is closely controlled by an individual or
a family or by a holding company. If the element of control were sufficient in itself, the English courts would
have accepted the concept of the single economic unit which [] has been consistently rejected by our
courts. The claimant who wishes to pierce the corporate veil must show not only control but also
impropriety, in the sense of misuse of the company or the corporate structure to conceal wrongdoing 22 .
The rulings in Adams and Linsen have made DHN largely limited as an exception to the agency principle, but
both cases clearly set out a criterion courts should look at in order to lift the corporate veil in group company
cases.
the contract by transferring the property to a company which he controlled. The court held that specific
performance could be ordered against the company, which Russel J. described as:
[] the creature of the First Defendant, a device and a sham, a mask which he holds before his face in an
attempt to avoid recognition by the eye of equity28 .
He was offered nominal damages for breach of contract.
For fraud to be argued as an exception to the separate entity doctrine, the controller must have the
intention to use the corporate structure in such a way as to deny the plaintiff some pre-existing legal right
(Payne, 1997). In Stone & Rolls Ltd v. Moore Stephens 29 , a one-man company was set up solely as a vehicle
for defrauding banks. The House of Lords held that the company was primarily rather than vicariously liable
for the frauds perpetrated by the sole member or director. The company was denied the defence of turpi
causa (a wrongdoer cannot benefit from the wrongdoing) when they shifted the blame on company auditors
for not detecting the fraud the company was trying to conceal. The decision in this case clearly illustrates
that the corporate veil cannot be used to further fraud. This principle was applied in Kensington
International Ltd v. Congo30 where the court held that various transactions and company structures were a
sham set up with a view to defraud and defeat existing claims of creditors against the Congo.
*Int. J.L.M. 71 As one cannot further fraud using the corporate veil, one cannot also escape liability by
disclosing that they are committing fraud on behalf of someone else. In Standard Chartered Bank v. Pakistan
National Shipping Corp 31 a director presented a bill of lading to a bank, knowing full well that the document
was outdated and the bank would suffer loss by relying on the document to pay the company. The court
lifted the corporate veil and made the director personally liable. However, if it was an employee who had
written the same letters on behalf of the company, it is unlikely that personal liability for the fraudulent acts
would have been imposed. Clearly, his status as a director influenced the court decision.
In fraud cases such as Standard Chartered Bank, Kensington International Ltd and Stone & Rolls Ltd, sham
companies were created to hide the fraud or breach an existing duty. Thus, both fraud and sham companies
as exceptions to the separate entity doctrine should no longer be looked at in isolation.
2.5 Justice
There is no definitive criterion on lifting the corporate veil merely because justice demands. Moreover, courts
have demonstrated inconsistency on this regard (Gallagher and Ziegler, 1990). The interest of justice
argument was postulated in Creasey v. Breachwood Motors 43 . The plaintiff brought a claim for wrongful
dismissal against his former employer. The company ceased trading shortly after the writ was issued and its
assets were transferred to another trading company which had the same controllers. No consideration was
paid for the company's assets although they did pay off all of the company's existing debts. The company
was subsequently dissolved. *Int. J.L.M. 73 The judge ruled that the claim could be brought against the
new company. The court was justified in lifting the veil because the controllers had deliberately shifted
assets out of the company into another in full knowledge of the plaintiff's claim. But Creasey was overruled
by the House of Lords in the later case of Ord v. Belhaven Pubs where Hobhouse LJ observed that:
[] it seems to me inescapable that the case in Creasey v. Breachwood as it appears to the Court cannot be
sustained. It represents a wrong adoption of the principle of piercing the corporate veil and a misuse of the
power granted by the rules to substitute one party for the other following death or succession [] it is
appropriate to pierce the corporate veil only where special circumstances exist, indicating that it is a mere
faade concealing the true facts 44 .
Rather successfully, in Re H (Restraint Order: Realizable Property)45 , the court lifted the corporate veil
merely to impose justice because inability to lift the veil would have allowed the defendants to benefit from
the tax evasion. In that case, the commissioners of customs and excise alleged that the three defendants
had, through two family-run companies, evaded tax duty amounting to 100 million. The commissioners
obtained an injunction on the use of certain property belonging to the two companies. The defendants
argued that this was unlawful as it was they, and not the companies, that had been charged with tax
evasion. It was held that if the companies' separate personalities were observed, the court would have
lacked the jurisdiction to grant the injunction. Accordingly, the court treated the property as if it belonged to
the defendants and the injunction was upheld.
Although justice can sometimes warrant lifting the corporate veil, courts have been very reluctant to rely on
this exception. This is reflected in the inconsistency of court decisions. For example, in Re a Company46 ,
the Court of Appeal stated that the court will use its powers to pierce the corporate veil if it is necessary to
achieve justice47 whereas in Adams v. Cape Industries plc, Slade LJ stated that: the court is not free to
disregard the principle of Salomon [] merely because it considers that justice so requires48 . Thus, the
interest of justice argument remains largely underdeveloped and clarity is needed in order to cement it as a
valid exception to the separate entity doctrine.
3. Statute
Section 16(2) of the Companies Act 2006 grants corporate personality to companies. However, the Act can
set aside corporate personality and impose liability on those behind the veil if some of its provisions are
contravened. A breach of an Insolvency Act 1986 provision and the Company Directors Disqualification 1986
can also result in lifting the corporate veil.
company takes the same or a similar name to the failed company. Section 216 of the Insolvency Act 1986
prohibits any person who was a director (or shadow director) of a failed company during the previous 12
months, for a period of five years afterwards, from setting up a new company with a name suggesting an
association with the old company. For example, in Thorne v. Silverleaf51 , Mr Thorne was Director of three
separate companies all bearing different variations of the same name. Two of these three companies had
entered liquidation while Mr Thorne was a Director. The third company then borrowed money from a Mr
Silverleaf and agreed to pay it back at a set rate. When the company defaulted on this agreement, Mr
Silverleaf demanded an accountants' report which showed he was owed the sum of 135,000. Mr Silverleaf
took Mr Thorne to court and it was argued that as Mr Thorne was a Director of a company with a prohibited
name under Section 216 and that he was personally liable for the outstanding debt under Section 217. The
court ruled in favour of Mr Silverleaf, making Mr Thorne personally liable for the debt.
Phoenix companies are often used because they allow a company to start again and for the profitable
elements of the failed business to survive, offering some continuity to the suppliers. However, phoenix
companies carry a bad reputation because, in the past, some directors deliberately forced their companies
into insolvency in order to buy back the assets at a reduced price while absolving their responsibility for the
liabilities. It is important to mention that under Company Directors Disqualification 1986, the courts can
disqualify directors whose companies had failed as a direct result of their misconduct, for a period of up to
15 years 52 . The Insolvency Act 1986 also gives the liquidator recovery powers to investigate sale
agreements 53 .
[] the office of a director has certain minimum responsibilities and functions, which are not simply
discharged by simply leaving all management functions and consideration of the company's affairs to
another director [] one cannot be a sleeping director60 .
These minimum functions extend, for instance, to compliance with statutory requirements with regard to
maintenance of proper accounting records and maintaining a minimum knowledge of the company's
business and its financial position.
Similarly, in Re Continental Assurance Co of London plc 61 , there was an allegation that the company applied
inappropriate accounting policies which showed the company to be solvent. However, the court found that
for the directors to reach these conclusions would have required of them knowledge of accounting concepts
of a particularly sophisticated nature. Park J. held that an unrealistically high standard of skill is not what is
required. On the facts, he found that the directors took a responsible and conscientious attitude to the
company's position and their responsibilities as directors. The directors did not just accept the figures
which were put before them but they questioned them and were satisfied with the explanations given.
*Int. J.L.M. 76 The rule applies to a person who knew or ought to have known that the company was
insolvent and who did not take every step to minimise the loss to creditors. This does not require any
evidence of fraud but can be hard on those seeking to save their company. In Re Continental Assurance Co.
Ltd, the question was whether to close down and go into liquidation or to trade on and hope to turn the
corner62 . Similarly, in Re Produce Marketing Consortium63 , the company acted as an import agent in the
fruit business and it ran into financial difficulties after a long period of trading. After a few years of
deteriorating results, the company went into creditor voluntary liquidation. The liquidator pursued the
directors for a contribution to the company's assets on the grounds that they ought to have known that there
was no reasonable prospect of the company avoiding insolvent liquidation. The court held that the directors
should not have continued trading. In light of the fact that they went on trading after the poor results
established their failure.
Once liability is established, the court will need to address the extent of any contribution to the company's
assets. According to Knox J. in Re Produce Marketing Consortium Ltd :
[] prima facie the appropriate amount that a director is declared to be liable to contribute is the amount by
which the company's assets can be discerned to have been depleted by the director's conduct which caused
the discretion [] to arise. But Parliament has indeed chosen very wide words of discretion64 .
The directors were jointly ordered to make a contribution of 75,000. Park J. said in Continental Assurance
Co. Ltd that the quantum of liability can be summed up as one of an increase in net deficiency reflecting the
loss to the company of the continued trading but even then there must be a connection between that
increase and the conduct of the directors which resulted in wrongful trading.
To escape liability, the court must be satisfied that every step with a view to minimising the potential loss to
creditors was taken. It is not sufficient for a director to claim that in continuing to trade with the intention of
trying to make a profit that he is within this defence65 . The provision is intended to apply to:
[] cases where, for example, directors take specific steps with a view to preserving or realising assets or
claims for the benefit of the creditors, even if they fail to achieve that result []66 .
Steps such as attempting to secure additional financing, reaching agreements with creditors and taking
professional advice are often accepted (Hawkes and Hargreaves, 2003).
and will lack contractual capacity. Thus, according to Section 51 of the Companies Act 2006, if the
promoters attempt to contract on behalf of, or in the name of pre-incorporated, then they will be personally
liable for such contracts.
*Int. J.L.M. 77 Prior to UK joining the European Community in 1973, it was already established under
common law that pre-incorporation contracts were largely unenforceable and promoters risked personal
liability. First, where a promoter signed the contract as the company's agent, or on behalf of the company,
the promoter would be held personally liable on the contract. The contract would be regarded as being
between the promoter and the third party. For example, in Kelner v. Baxter 67 , Baxter and two others
entered a contract on behalf of a pre-incorporated company to purchase trade stock for its future business.
Later, the company was formed, executed the contract and used the trade stock, but failed to pay for the
stock. The company was not liable as it could not ratify a pre-incorporation contract with retrospective effect
to a date before the company existed. Baxter and others were personally liable. Second, where the promoter
signed the contract using the company's name, or merely added his own name to authenticate that of the
company, then the contract would be with the non-existent company and so would not exist and could not
be enforced by either party. For example, in Newborne v. Sensolid (Great Britain) Ltd 68 , a company
purported to sell goods at a time when it had not been incorporated. The company's name was appended to
the contract as Leopold Newborne (London) Ltd and underneath was the name of Leopold Newborne. When
it was discovered that the company had not been formed, Leopold Newborne commenced proceedings for
breach of contract against the buyers in his own name. The Court of Appeal held that the plaintiff had never
purported to contract to sell nor sold the goods either as principal or agent. The contract was supposed to
be made by the company and Leopold Newborne had merely added his name to verify that the company was
a party. In the circumstances, the contract was a nullity.
As a result of the UK joining the European Economic Community, the UK implemented the First EC Company
Law Directive, of which article seven states:
[] if, before a company has acquired legal personality [] action has been carried out in its name and the
company does not assume the obligations arising from such action, the persons who acted shall without
limit, be jointly and severally liable therefore, unless otherwise agreed.
This article has its replica in Section 51(1) of the Companies Act 2006, which states:
A contract that purports to be made by or on behalf of a company at a time when the company has not been
formed has effect, subject to any agreement to the contrary, as one made with the person purporting to act
for the company or as agent for it, and his personally liable on the contract accordingly.
Section 51 renders a promoter personally liable for the pre-incorporation agreements in all circumstances. In
case the company, once incorporated, wishes to take advantage of a pre-incorporation contract, it cannot
ratify or adopt it. The company would need to enter a new contract with the third party to carry out previous
agreements 69 .
The imposition of personal liability under Section 51 is subject to any agreement in contrary. This means
that a promoter can avoid personal liability by showing that there was an agreement with the other party to
the contract that, upon incorporation, the company would enter a second contract with the other party on
the same terms as the first contract. Novation can be express or implied, but courts need clear evidence that
such an agreement exists 70 . Simply acting as a promoter or agent of a pre-incorporated company is not
enough to infer the existence of a contrary agreement. For example, in Phonogram Ltd v. Lane71 , before
incorporating a company called Fragile Management Ltd Lane contracted with the plaintiff for a loan of
12,000 to finance a pop *Int. J.L.M. 78 group called Cheap, Mean & Nasty. The plaintiff wrote to Lane in
which reference was made to him undertaking to pay. He nevertheless was required to sign and return a
copy for and on behalf of Fragile Management Ltd The company was never incorporated and the group never
performed. The court held that the defendant was personally liable to repay the money advanced.
The same principle applies when the promoters enter into a contract before purchasing an off the self
company, provided that the company existed at the time the contract was entered into, then Section 51
would not apply as a valid contract will exist between the company and the third party. Similarly, Section 51
would not apply where a company changes its name, but the name change has not been registered at the
time the contract is made, as exemplified in Oshkosh B'Gosh Inc v. Dan Marbel Inc Ltd 72 . A company had
passed a resolution to change its name to Oshkosh B'gosh. The contracts were made before the new name
was registered. The director was held not personally liable because a change of name does not affect any
rights or obligations of the company.
4. Conclusion
Having explored the exceptions to the separate personality doctrine, the conclusion is obvious, over a
century after the landscape-shaping House of Lord's decision in Salomon, courts have finally mustered the
courage to look behind the corporate veil and impose liability on agents of the company. The courts have
created five exceptions to the corporate personality doctrine. Of the five exceptions, fraud and sham
companies represent the main exception as it merely recognises a breach of a common law or statutory duty.
However, courts have been able to exercise their powers and recognised the possibility of lifting the
corporate veil on the interests of justice and in tort cases. Although both exceptions remain largely
underdeveloped, the willingness to find new exceptions to the corporate personality doctrine indicates that
courts have moved away from peeping behind the veil of incorporation to staring behind it. However, for the
sake of legal development, courts need to be more consistent when applying the agency exception. Although
courts generally follow the criteria set out in Adams v. Cape Industries, the single economic entity argument
raised in DHN continues to divide opinion in the UK and Australia. Courts need to be more consistent in
applying agency exception. Less controversially, the veil of incorporation can be lifted under statute. There
has been little in terms of development on the statutory exception to the corporate personality doctrine.
However, the challenges of yesteryear remain, especially the high standard of proof required to prove
fraudulent trading and the fear of wrongful trading that leaves many directors unsure on whether to enter
insolvency or not. Thus, common law exceptions to the corporate personality doctrine are slowly being
developed by courts while statutory exceptions have remained largely unchanged.
Rixon, F.G. (1985), Lifting the veil between holding and subsidiary companies, LQR, Vol. 415, p. 102.
Wardman, K. (1994), The search for virtual reality in corporate group relationships, The Company Lawyer,
Vol. 15 No. 6, pp. 179-180.
Williston, S. (1888), History of the law of business corporations before 1800, Harvard Law Review, Vol. II,
pp. 113-114.
Corresponding author
Chrispas Nyombi can be contacted at: [email protected]
Int. J.L.M. 2014, 56(1), 66-81
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The doctrine of novation.
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(1989) BCLC507.
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