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Doctrine of Piercing of Corporate Veil
Doctrine of Piercing of Corporate Veil
1. General Understanding and Meaning:The members of a company assume only a limited liability (to the extent of their
contribution or share holding) for the debts of the company.
In this respect
share companies and private limited companies differ from other forms of
business organizations in that the latter do not enjoy limited liability.1 Thus, this
attribute of a corporation has greatly facilitated the expansion of business,
particularly in the risky ventures. This is because limited liability encourages
greater boldness and risk taking among the business community, so that new
avenues to increasing commerce are explored which in turn provide employment
and adds to the nations economic and financial growth, stability and prosperity.2
Since the liability of the members is limited to their contribution, the companys
creditors cannot extend their hands to the personal property of the share holders.
Hence, due to the protection it offers to share holders, the attribute of limited
liability of a corporation is known as the Veil or Shell of Incorporation. This is
because this attribute covers the share holders in the corporate veil and keeps them
from the reach of outsiders (creditors). The veil or shell is the corporate
1 Cheng Thomas K., Form and substance of the doctrine of piercing the corporate
veil, Mississippi law journal, Vol. 80, No. 2, 2010, p. 510
2 Jesse H. Choper, Jhon C. coffee, Jr. and C. Robert Morris, Jr., Cases and materials
rd
on corporations,(3 ed.), case book series, Little, Brown and Company (Canada
Ltd), Canada, 1989, p. 145
personality of the corporation and the share holders are under the veil of
incorporation.
Although a company on incorporation, as stated earlier, becomes a juristic person
with a distinctive personality of its own, it must not be forgotten that it is brought
into existence by human agency, and as such, may be used as an instrument of its
own commercial or other legitimate activities, or as a mask or cloak for some
fraudulent activity of its promoters, or as a device or stratagem for some illegal or
improper purpose. Where it is used as a cloak or a device, however the court will
not hesitate to ignore the principle of legal persona of the company and look
behind the veil of its incorporation to grant an appropriate relief.
Thus, where a person, to save his business from the clutches of his creditors,
transferred the business to a company formed by him with himself and his wife as
its directors, in consideration of fully paid shares to be allotted to him, or to his
nominees, and was adjudged insolvent on a judgment-creditors petition within two
years of the transfer, it was held that the transfer was void as against the official
assignee under section 55 of the Presidency Towns Insolvency Act since the debtor
in transferring the business of the company had used the company as a mere cloak
for the dishonest purpose of putting his assets beyond the reach of his creditors.3
Where a person who had entered into covenants restraining his transactions caused
a company to be formed which was under his control and did things whioch, if
gone by him would have been a breach of the covenants, an injunction was granted
not only against him but also against the company.4
In Jones v. Lipman,5 Russel J. observedThe defendant company is the creature of the first defendant, a decvice and a
sham, a mask which he holds before his face in an attempt to avoid recognition by
the eye of equity. The case cited illustrates that an equitable remedy is rightly to be
granted against the creature in such circumstances.
However, though limited liability is an advantage for share holders, it may greatly
affect the traditional debtor-creditor relationships. Limited liability can have
negative effects on creditors in different ways.
First, it opens opportunities for both express and tacit misrepresentation in
transactions with creditors. Share holders who employ the corporate form through
which to contract with others may misrepresent the assets of the corporation and
simply walk away if the business fails.
Second, limited liability makes it possible and sometimes attractive to shift assets
out of the corporation after a creditor has extended credit to the corporation. It
would be easy for share holders to distribute assets to themselves- particularly in
case of one-man and family companies-while leaving the debts with their
corporation in violation of creditors right. Or more subtly, share holders or
directors may undertake highly risky (volatile) investments or increase leverage
in order to shift uncompensated risk on to the shoulders of creditors.
All of these opportunistic moves, however, would lose much of their appeal if
share holders did not have the shield of limited liability to protect their personal
assets from the consequences of contractual default on the part of the corporation.
Therefore, the doctrine of lifting (piercing) the veil involves disregarding the
attribute of legal personality of a corporation and reaching to the share holders
and other persons involved in the management of a company who are protected
by the veil.
2. Origin of the Doctrine of Piercing of Corporate Veil:As discussed above, a company is regarded as a distinct legal entity with a
separate existence from its membership and management team. The independent
legal status of the corporate entity is said to cast a veil between the
company and its human constituents- the corporate veil or the shell of
incorporation. This veil serves as a partition or curtain between the company
and its members and is regarded as a privilege for the share holders as it
protects them from the risk of unlimited liability for the debts of the company.6
However, such privilege of limited liability may not always exist for certain
reasons including when the legal personality of a company is used for
illegitimate or unlawful purposes. If it is shown that the legal personality has
been abused and used to the detriment of third parties (creditors), the theory of
legal personality (i.e. the separate and distinct existence of the company from
that of its members) is disregarded and it is looked upon as a collection of
persons instead of a collection of capital.7 Consequently, the individual members
will be held liable for the wrongs caused through the use of the legal entity.
Hence, when this is done by courts or sometimes by statute, it is said that the
corporate entity is disregarded or the veil of incorporation is pierced.
The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil has its origin in the common law
legal system particularly in England.8 Originally, it was a reaction to a rigid
stand of the House of Lords on a famous decision that is known for establishing
the principle of distinct entity of the corporation. In the Salomon V. Salomon &
Co. Ltd case (as stated above) the House of Lords decided that a corporation is
different from its share holders. The House of Lords decided that: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 them. Nor are the subscribers as members liable, in any
shape or form, except to the extent and in the manner provided by the act (law).9
Therefore, this decision established not only one of the most important principles
of corporate personality that a corporation is a distinct entity apart from that of its
shareholders but it also led to the development of another important doctrinepiercing the corporate veil. After this case, the realization that the corporate
personality could be used in a fraudulent manner came into the area of the law
governing corporations. Consequently, the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil
began to assume a certain shape and form and recognized in different forms both
in the common law and civil law legal systems.
8 Supra p. 340
9 Griffin Stephen, Company law: fundamental principles, (4th ed.), Pearson Longman,
2008, p. 6
Thus, piercing the corporate veil refers to the possibility of looking behind the
company- framework (or behind the companys separate personality) to make the
members liable, as an exception to the rule that they are normally shielded by
the corporate shell (i.e. they are normally not liable to outsiders at all, and are
only normally liable to pay the company what they agreed to pay by way of share
purchase price).
Such terms as lifting the veil, breaching the wall of incorporation,
dislodging the corporate veil or piercing the corporate veil are all legal terms
of arts used to denote the same thing (i.e. the denial of the privilege of legal
personality and limited liability).
In short, the piercing of corporate veil doctrine is an exception to the general rules
of limited liability and separate corporate personality. In other words, under the
doctrine, limited liability protection for shareholders and separate corporate
personality may be overridden if certain conditions are met. The courts have
repeatedly asserted that the doctrine is an equitable one and requires a weighing of
the totality of the circumstances. Many states, in general sense, have
promulgated a two-prong (tier) test to apply piercing the corporate veil doctrine
requiring that: There must be such a unity of interest and ownership between the
corporation and its owners that their separate personalities have ceased to
exist in reality. These factors include lack of substantive separation between
the shareholders and the corporation, intertwining, non-observance of
occur if the acts are treated as those of the corporation alone (a fairness
requirement).
Hence, the application of piercing the veil requires the judge to discover the facts
of a particular situation. That is, the determination of a veil piercing claim
requires the judge to ascertain facts such as the extent of overlap in corporate
personnel, non-observance of corporate formalities, and the degree of
shareholder domination of the corporation, unity of interest and ownership and
evaluate them in light of the doctrines underlying values of good faith and
fairness.11 Principally, whether the corporate entity should be set aside comes
down to a question of good faith and honesty in the use of corporate privilege for
legitimate ends. It is asserted that veil piercing is justified when the notion of
legal entity is used to defeat public convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud, or
defend crime. These statements suggest that the corporate veil doctrine requires
good faith and fair use of the corporate entity. This duty of good faith and fairness
as principles of truth and respect in a corporations dealing with its creditors are
some of the substantive objectives of the legal order, or desirable goals or values.
In short, the corporate veil doctrine is non-conclusive. With its reference to
desirable values and its non-conclusiveness, the corporate veil doctrine exhibits
10 Backer, Larry Cata, Comparative Corporate Law: United States, European
Union, China and Japan, Cases and Materials, Carolina Academic Press, Durham,
2002, p. 987
11 Bagrial, Ashok K., Company Law, (12th revised ed.), Vikas Publishing House Pvt.
Ltd., New York, 2007, p.509.
the open- endedness of a standard. That is, there is no single uniform standard for
deciding and justifying veil piercing. The courts make a determination based on
notions of fundamental fairness and justice on a case-to-case basis.
3. Objectives of the Doctrine of Piercing of Corporate Veil:The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil is applied with a view of attaining
different objectives. However, given the variety of corporate veil cases, it is
probably impossible to arrive at a single objective of piercing the veil that
encapsulates all the cases.
These objectives are not mutually exclusive; the courts have expressed a desire
both to compensate and to deter or to avoid unlawful enrichment within one case.
Hence, there are different objectives for the application of piercing the corporate
veil. Some of the principal objectives of piercing the corporate veil are:(i)
have been denied half of its compensation if limited liability were strictly
adhered to. Operation of the limited liability rule would have confined
maximum recovery to the sum of the corporations assets. The doctrine
ignores, or at least mitigates, the assumption that compensation from a
corporation is intended to be subject to an implicit cap (ceiling) under
limited liability.
The assumption is that when a contractual creditor enters into a transaction
with the corporation, it implicitly accepts the fact that its maximum recovery
is limited to the corporate assets. If such a creditor desires extra credit
protection, perhaps in the form of shareholder personal guarantees or real
securities, it should negotiate for it (i.e. the creditor can negotiate with the
company ex ante). Failure to undertake such negotiation is an implied
acceptance of the cap (ceiling) on its maximum recovery imposed by
limited liability.
The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil mitigates the above
assumption due to various reasons.
First, due to the fact that when a contractual creditor transacts with a
corporation, one of the implied terms in the contract is that the integrity and
autonomy of the corporation will be respected and that the corporation will
not be used for improper purposes (i.e. the contractual relationship requires
good faith and fair use of the corporate entity). In this sense, veil piercing
(which is applied at the time when the company is used for improper acts)
can be viewed as judicial enforcement of the implied terms of the
contract (i.e. enforcement of the breach of the implied terms of good faith
and fair use of the
corporate
entity). For
example,
veil
piercing
based
on
(ii)
Prevention of Unjust Enrichment of Shareholders:Prevention of unjust enrichment of the shareholders is the other
objective of the corporate veil piercing doctrine. Unjust enrichment is the
consequence that may result if separate corporate personality is strictly
adhered to (i.e. it is enrichment at the expense of another). In other words,
unjust enrichment is the equitable principle by which one, who has been
enriched at the expense of another, whether by mistake, or otherwise, is
under a duty to return what he has received or its value to the other.14
The benefits received by a corporation are the proceeds of a loan or
purchase money for corporate bonds. To the extent that the corporation, and
by extension the shareholders, receive these benefits without making full
payment for them and the default risks have not been fully compensated for,
the shareholders can be said to have been enriched.15 It is obvious how
shareholders are enriched if these benefits have not been fully paid for.
Shareholders enrichment only becomes unjust if the circumstances under
which it arises can be considered unjust under notions of natural
justice or equity. This means that mere non-satisfaction of corporate
liabilities would not constitute unjust enrichment. It is only when the
13 Solomon, Lewis D., and others, Corporations Law and Policy: Materials and
rd
Problems, (3 ed.), American case book series, West publishing Company, USA,
1994 , p.334
14 Supra Note 12.
15 Ibid.
Deterrence for Future Improper Conduct:Deterrence is another possible objective of veil piercing.
It is a
been plenty of cases in which the courts combined veil piercing with
punitive damages with the express purpose to achieve deterrence.16
The courts combined both personal liability and punitive damages to
deter
liability
with
punitive
courts
implicitly
and
sometimes
differently
for
intentional
improper
conduct