Percival V Wright
Percival V Wright
Percival V Wright
Lindley L.J. said in the Re Lands Allotment Company [5] regarding the position of
directors towards shareholders,
“Although directors are not properly speaking trustees, yet they have always been
considered and treated as trustees of money which comes to their hands or which is
actually under their control; and ever since joint stock companies were invented
directors have been held liable to make good moneys which they have misapplied
upon the same footing as if they were trustees, and it has always been held that
they are not entitled to the benefit of the old Statute of Limitations because they
have committed breaches of trust, and are in respect of such moneys to be treated
as trustees". [6]
Swinfen-Eady J. held in the case of the Percival v Wright [7] regarding the directors’
duties towards the shareholders
“The directors of a company are not trustees for individual shareholders and may
purchase their shares without disclosing pending negotiations for the sale of the
company's undertaking" [8] .
The decision in the case of the Percival v Wright [9] has been criticised a lot that it
should not be deduce that the directors can never be placed in a fiduciary
relationship to the members. If the shareholders authorise the directors to
negotiate for them, then the directors owe a duty in the case of a takeover bidder.
The establishment of an agency relationship may be sufficient in the case of a family
company, which depends on the whole surrounding circumstances and the
character of the responsibility which the directors have assumed in a real and
practical sense. [10]
The family characteristic of the company is the most important reason to impose
fiduciary duties on the directors towards the shareholder, this happened in the New
Zealand in the case of Coleman v Myers [11] , in which Mahon J did not follow the
decision of the Percival v Wright [12] , he stated the following:
As it has been discussed that the directors do not have any fiduciary duty to the
shareholders, but some of the judges are of the view that directors have some
discrete duties to the company’s shareholders and these duties are fiduciary in
character. The directors have to fully inform and should avoid misleading the
shareholder when their action or approval is required. The disclosure will relate to
material considerations having an effect on the management of the company. [14]
According to Mr Flannigan the decision in the case of the Coleman v Myers [15] by
the court of appeal of the New Zealand is based on the wrong analysis. The
shareholders complaint was that the director had failed in disclosing about their
financial plans to get all the share of the company, through non disclosure and
misrepresentation. According to the court, failure was the breach of the fiduciary
duty which arose on the basis of the facts. The court distinguished the Percival v
Wright [16] that the directors do not have any fiduciary duty to the shareholders. Mr
Cook said that Percival v Wright [17] ,
“would merely exclude any automatic fiduciary duty, leaving open the possibility of
such a duty falling on a director in particular circumstances".
There is no fiduciary obligation on the directors because the relationship between
the members and the directors is not of a limited access in general but in some
circumstances a limited access can exist. [18]