Piercing the Corporate Veil
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One of the most uncertain areas in company law today is the situation in which a court is willing to set aside the separate legal personality of a company. Separate legal personality i.e. where a company is regarded by the courts as a legal person with its own rights and responsibilities and that it is capable of owning property amongst other things. Laffoy J stated in Fyffes Plc v Dcc Plc & Ors ,
“It has been a fundamental principle of Irish company law since the decision of the House of Lords in Salomon v. Salomon and Company Limited [1897] A.C. 22 that a company registered under the Companies Acts is an artificial legal entity separate and distinct from the members, whether natural or corporate persons, of which it is composed.”
In Salomon v. Salomon and Company Limited as stated by Marc Moore in his recent article, the House of Lords,
“emphasised that the formally separate personality of a company should prevail in the eyes of the law and, consequently, in the opinion of a court, regardless of any economic or moral considerations that might otherwise justify regarding a registered company as the mere extension of its de facto incorporators.”
The facts of the Salomon case were that Mr. Salomon ran a successful leather business as a sole trader. He then set up a company in which he was the main shareholder. He loaned the company money which he secured with the assets of the company. He observed the tenets of company law at all times. He was also the main shareholder and further to that the main creditor due to the loan. The question in this case was whether Mr. Salomon debts should take precedence over the unsecured creditors when the company was wound up. If Mr. Salomon won the case, the creditor would receive no money.
In the High Court, Mr. Salomon lost the case and was ordered to pay the debts. This decision was founded in the idea that the company was his nominee or agent.
Mr. Salomon appealed the decision, where he once again lost the case. It was held here that he had lost because he abused the privileges of incorporation. Lopes LJ stated in relation to this,
“The Act contemplated the incorporation of seven independent bona fide members, who had a mind and will of their own, and were not mere puppets of an individual who, adopting the machinery of the Act carried on his old business in the same way as before, when he was a sole trader. To legalise such a transaction would be scandalous.”
Mr Salomon took the case further to the House of Lords, where he won the case and the foundations of the modern law were laid. The court held that the company was indeed a separate legal entity and separate from its members. Lord McNaughten held,
“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 at law the agent of the subscriber or a trustee for them. Nor are the subscribers as members liable, in any shape or form except to the