PRB 99-32E
CANADA BUSINESS
CORPORATIONS ACT:
UNANIMOUS SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENTS
Prepared by:
Margaret Smith
Law and Government Division
20 January 2000
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CONTENTS OF CBCA
PROVISION
PROVINCIAL
STATUTES
ISSUES FOR
CONSIDERATION
A.
Whether the Current Definition of Unanimous Shareholder Agreement Needs to Be Clarified
B.
Whether the CBCA Should Be Amended to Impose an Eligibility
Requirement in Addition to the Present Requirement for Unanimity
C.
Whether a Board of Directors Whose Powers Have All Been Transferred
to the Shareholders by Virtue of a Unanimous Shareholder Agreement
Should Be Eliminated
D. From
What Provisions of the CBCA Could Shareholders Opt Out by a
Unanimous Shareholder Agreement?
E.
Whether Section 146(5) of the CBCA Should be Amended to
Clarify the Language Regarding the Transfer of Liabilities from
Directors to Shareholders
CANADA BUSINESS CORPORATIONS ACT:
UNANIMOUS SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENTS
INTRODUCTION
In 1975, a
unanimous shareholder agreement provision was introduced into the Canada Business
Corporations Act (CBCA). Considered innovative when introduced, the provision was
intended to give shareholders of private corporations a measure of flexibility in dealing
with the internal affairs of a corporation. It also overrode the common law rule that
found agreements purporting to fetter the discretion of the directors to be invalid.
This note will
discuss the unanimous shareholder agreement provision of the CBCA.
CONTENTS OF CBCA PROVISION
A unanimous
shareholder agreement is an agreement among all the shareholders of a corporation in
relation to the management of the corporation. It is both a contract between shareholders
and an instrument authorized by statute that deals with the internal governance of the
corporation.
Found in
section 146 of the CBCA, the unanimous shareholder agreement provision provides:
(1) Pooling
agreement -- A written agreement between two or more shareholders may provide that in
exercising voting rights the shares held by them shall be voted as therein provided.
(2) Unanimous
shareholder agreement -- An otherwise lawful written agreement among all the shareholders
of a corporation, or among all the shareholders and a person who is not a shareholder,
that restricts, in whole or in part, the powers of the directors to manage the business
and affairs of the corporation is valid.
(3)
Declaration by single shareholder -- Where a person who is the beneficial owner of all the
issued shares of a corporation makes a written declaration that restricts in whole or in
part the powers of the directors to manage the business and affairs of a corporation, the
declaration is deemed to be a unanimous shareholder agreement.
(4)
Constructive party -- Subject to subsection 49(8), a transferee of shares subject to a
unanimous shareholder agreement is deemed to be a party to the agreement.
(5) Rights of
shareholder -- A shareholder who is a party to a unanimous shareholder agreement has all
the rights, powers and duties of a director of the corporation in question to the extent
that the agreement restricts the powers of the directors to manage the business and
affairs of the corporation, and the directors are thereby relieved of their duties and
liabilities, including any liabilities under section 119, to the same extent.
Section 146(2)
can be used to restrict the powers of the directors of a corporation. The board of
directors continues in place, however, despite its lack of power.
PROVINCIAL STATUTES
The business
corporations laws of some provinces provide for unanimous shareholder agreements, while
those of other provinces do not.
The Alberta Business
Corporations Act, for example, has more detailed provisions than the CBCA and these
itemize areas that can be covered by a unanimous shareholder agreement, including:
management of the business
and affairs of the corporation, including the restriction or abrogation, in whole or in
part, of the powers of the directors; and
ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION
In April 1996,
Industry Canada released a discussion paper on the subject of unanimous shareholder
agreements.(1) Among other things, this paper
reviewed the present CBCA provision, examined a number of specific issues, and set out a
range of options for possible change.
Issues
canvassed in the Discussion Paper included:
A. Whether the Current Definition of Unanimous
Shareholder Agreement
Needs to Be Clarified
Clarifying
the present definition of "unanimous shareholder agreement" involves deciding
whether such an agreement must specifically "restrict" the power of the
directors to manage the corporation.
The Discussion
Paper points out that, at the present time, "unanimous shareholder agreement" is
defined in subsection 2(1) to mean "an agreement described in subsection 146(2) or a
declaration of a shareholder described in subsection 146(3)," both of which specify
that the written agreement or declaration must "restrict" the powers of the
directors to manage the corporation. Therefore, if an agreement "restricts" the
directors powers and is entered into by all shareholders of a corporation, it is a
unanimous shareholder agreement. If, on the other hand, it does not restrict the board's
powers, it is not a unanimous shareholder agreement.(2)
As mentioned
earlier, the broad definition of "unanimous shareholder agreement" in the
Alberta Business Corporations Act includes agreements that regulate:
(i) rights and liabilities of shareholders and other parties to the agreement; (ii)
the election of directors; (iii) management of the corporation, including restriction or
abrogation of the directors powers; and (iv) other matters that a unanimous
shareholder agreement may contain as stipulated by the statute.
In addition,
that statute allows shareholders to deem what would otherwise be a unanimous shareholder
agreement to be a private agreement.
The options
set out in the Discussion Paper with respect to this issue were to:
maintain the status quo: to
qualify as a unanimous shareholder agreement, the agreement would have to restrict the
power of the directors to manage the corporation;
adopt the approach of the
Alberta Business Corporations Act and include a broad definition of unanimous
shareholder agreement, as well as the ability to designate an agreement that would
otherwise be a unanimous shareholder agreement as a purely private agreement;
adopt the Alberta approach
in (ii) above, but further clarify that only a unanimous shareholder agreement could
restrict the powers of the directors.
The Discussion
Paper did not recommend a particular course of action. From a policy perspective, however,
it may be appropriate to broaden the definition of unanimous shareholder agreement so that
such agreements can be adapted to fit the needs of a particular corporation.
B. Whether the CBCA Should Be Amended to Impose
an Eligibility
Requirement
in Addition to the Present Requirement for Unanimity
A
unanimous shareholder agreement must be in writing, be otherwise lawful, and have the
agreement of all the shareholders. There is no restriction on the use of unanimous
shareholder agreements that is based on the number of shareholders or the type of
corporation.
The Discussion
Paper points out that, since use of a unanimous shareholder agreement could lead to the
"override" of some corporate law requirements, some jurisdictions have limited
these agreements to corporations that have no more than a specified number of
shareholders.(3)
The options
outlined in the Discussion Paper with respect to the eligibility issue included:
maintaining the status quo;
limiting the use of
unanimous shareholder agreements to non-distributing corporations or private corporations;
limiting the use of
unanimous shareholder agreements to corporations with 15 or fewer shareholders.(4)
The Discussion
Paper did not come to any conclusions about whether there should be eligibility criteria
for a unanimous shareholder agreement in addition to the present unanimity requirement.
The current approach is largely self-limiting because, once a corporation exceeds a
certain number of shareholders, unanimity may be difficult to achieve. Furthermore,
because unanimous shareholder agreements tend to be used by corporations with a relatively
small number of shareholders, additional limitations may not be necessary.
C. Whether a Board of Directors Whose Powers
Have All Been Transferred to the
Shareholders by Virtue of a Unanimous Shareholder Agreement Should Be
Eliminated
A
unanimous shareholder agreement allows for the transfer of all the rights, powers, duties
and liabilities of the directors to the shareholders of a corporation. The CBCA does not
permit the board to be eliminated, however, even though it has no powers. It has been
suggested that a board may be superfluous when all of the powers have been transferred to
shareholders under a unanimous shareholder agreement.
Some of the
options with respect to this issue outlined in the Discussion Paper include:
maintaining the present
requirement for a board of directors;
permitting shareholders of
smaller corporations (for example, closely held corporations with less than
$5 million in revenues, or as defined by some other specified threshold) to enter
into unanimous shareholder agreements that transfer all the directors rights,
powers, duties and liabilities to the shareholders and eliminate the board. Shareholders
of larger corporations could transfer some, but not all, of the directors powers and
would have to maintain a board of directors;
prohibiting corporate
shareholders from entering into unanimous shareholder agreements to transfer all the
directors powers and eliminate the board (while allowing shareholders who are
natural persons to do so);
permitting corporate
shareholders to enter into unanimous shareholder agreements to transfer all the
directors powers and eliminate the board but require that one or more natural
persons (for example, directors from the parent board) also be parties to the agreement
and that all the directors powers be transferred to the natural persons;
permitting shareholders of
all CBCA corporations to enter into unanimous shareholder agreements to transfer all the
directors powers and eliminate the board;
requiring the elimination of
the board where a unanimous shareholder agreement transfers all the directors
powers.(5)
The Discussion
Paper did not make any recommendations about eliminating the board of directors after the
boards powers have been transferred to the shareholders. It is doubtful that the
CBCA will be amended to allow for the complete elimination of the board. Such a proposal
would be controversial and mark a definite departure from corporate tradition. In the case
of small closely held corporations, however, a stronger case can be made for eliminating
the board since a board may be superfluous after its rights, duties and liabilities have
been transferred to shareholders, who are usually the same persons as the directors.
D. From What Provisions of the CBCA Could Shareholders
Opt Out by a
Unanimous Shareholder Agreement?
Section
146 of the CBCA states that an agreement can restrict, in whole or in part, the powers of
the directors to manage the business and affairs of the corporation. The CBCA expressly
provides the ability to "opt out" of certain provisions through the use of a
unanimous shareholder agreement. These provisions are: section 102 -- the directors
general power to manage the corporation; subsection 6(3) -- power to increase votes
required for shareholder or director actions; section 25 -- directors power to issue
shares; section 103 -- the power to make, amend or appeal by-laws; section 121 -- the
appointment of officers; section 125 -- directors power to set remuneration; section
189 -- borrowing powers of the corporation; and paragraph 214(1)(b) -- the dissolution of
a company by request of a shareholder. It is not clear, however, whether this list is, or
should be, exhaustive.(6)
The Discussion
Paper suggests that it may be appropriate to consider the provisions of the CBCA from
which shareholders may opt out by using a unanimous shareholder agreement. This could be
done by establishing: (1) a comprehensive list of the statutory requirements from which
shareholders could opt out; (2) a list of statutory provisions that might not be affected
by a unanimous shareholder agreement; or (3) a general clause to group either the
statutory provisions that might not be affected or the provisions that might be
overridden.(7)
The Discussion
Paper does not come to any conclusions about whether there should be an exhaustive list of
statutory provisions that can or cannot be overridden by a unanimous shareholder
agreement. It may be useful to have such a list, however, if only to clarify the scope of
a unanimous shareholder agreement.
E. Whether Section 146(5) of the CBCA Should be
Amended to
Clarify
the Language Regarding the Transfer of Liabilities
from
Directors to Shareholders
Section
146(5) of the CBCA does not expressly state that, where a unanimous shareholder agreement
is in place, the shareholders assume the liabilities of which the directors are relieved,
in addition to their "rights, powers and duties." Under the CBCA, it may not be
clear whether shareholders who take on the directors powers under a unanimous
shareholder agreement are subject to related statutory liabilities or whether the
directors continue to be so subject.(8)
The unanimous
shareholder agreement provisions of the Ontario Business Corporations Act, for
example, provide that the shareholders take on the directors liabilities as well as
their duties and that the directors are relieved of their liabilities to the same extent.
The Discussion
Paper outlined several options for dealing with the liability issue. These include:
maintaining the status quo;
and
amending section 146 to
clarify that
the shareholders would
assume the directors liabilities as well as their rights, powers and duties and that
the directors would be relieved of their liabilities to the same extent,
the common-law as well as
the other statutory duties and liabilities of directors would pass to the shareholders,
and
the defences to liabilities
that would have been available to the directors would also be available to the
shareholders.(9)
It is likely
that the CBCA will be amended to clarify that under a unanimous shareholder agreement the
shareholders assume the liabilities of the directors.
(1) Industry Canada, Canada Business Corporations Act,
Discussion Paper, Unanimous Shareholder Agreements, April 1996.
(2) Ibid., p. 22.
(3) Ibid., p. 25.
(4) Ibid., p. 26-27.
(5) Ibid., p. 42-43.
(6) Ibid., p. 52.
(7) Ibid., p.53.
(8) Ibid., p. 29-30.
(9) Ibid., p. 31.
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