Advance notice by the agent and continuation of the contractual relationship

In its judgment No. 668 of 25 May 2012, the Court of Cassation reaffirmed the principle of ultratractivity of the contractual relationship. According to that principle, an agency contract of indefinite duration does not terminate when one of the contracting parties terminates the contract, but only when the notice periodestablished in the interest and for the protection of the non-terminating party.

In the present case, the principal communicated his intention to terminate the contract; in the course of the notice periodthe agent also communicated its intention to terminate the contract.

According to the Court, this very declaration by the agent was to be regarded as an implicit waiver of the notice period, with the result that the agent could not request theindemnity in lieu of notice.

In the present case, therefore, given that "the termination of the relationship remains attributable to the will of the principal, the latter remains obliged to pay the termination indemnity pursuant to Article 1751 of the Civil Code."The agent, in fact, is entitled to the indemnity under Art. 1751 of the Civil Code even when he withdraws from the contract for circumstances that, although not constituting a just cause, are attributable to the principal.

 

 

Next stop: paradise (1991)
Directed by Albert Brooks


The agency contract in Germany.

The purpose of this article is to give the reader some elements for a better understanding of the regulation of the agency contract in Germany, the importance of which is very significant, taking into account the fact that the European directive on the subject of agency was inspired by this model and, consequently, Italian legislation, too, was adapted to it, with the regulatory interventions of 1991 and 1999 the figure 


1) Agency contract and self-employed person.

In German law, the legal figure of the commercial agent is governed by Book 1, Title 7 of the German Commercial Code (HGB- Handelsgesetzbuch) and more precisely by §§ 84-92c. Section 84 HGB opens this title with a definition that qualifies the commercial agent as one who is entrusted by a principal with the task of interceding, in the capacity of an autonomous trader, in business transactions in favour of the latter or of concluding them on its behalf. An agent is one who performs his activity in substantial autonomy and can regulate his own working hours.

This legislative assumption is obviously used in the courts to distinguish the commercial agent from the employee. Case law considers the definition in § 84 Para. I HGB as a general parameter for being able to distinguish the two legal figures, although the circumstances of the case must be taken into account in their entirety and totality.

Given the generic and not easily interpretable character of the concept of autonomy required by § 84 HGB for commercial agents, case law has repeatedly come across this problem. In a well-known ruling of the Federal Labour Court (BAG) in 2003, several contractual agreements were defined as "Arbeitnehmerverdächtig", i.e. which give rise to the suspicion of an employment relationship. Some of them are listed below:

  • request for the transmission of a quarterly forecast on the development of production, covering the individual production departments and a forecast of the percentage assessment of the closing of business of individual customers. Such a request goes beyond the duty to protect the interests set forth in § 86 Para. 1 HGB, which obliges the agent to endeavour to sell products or to complete business, taking into account the interests of the principal;
  • orders to block holidays. This limits the agent's autonomy to determine working hours;
  • the name of the contract is irrelevant for the classification of the legal figure; the absence of an agreement on the beginning and end of the working hours and on the indication of the organisation of the work will be interpreted in favour of the commercial agent's autonomy:

On the contrary, it does not preclude autonomy:

  • the obligation to attend weekly 5-hour conference calls and, in extraordinary cases, to carry out collection orders within a short time,
    the imposition of deadlines for the completion of work, as well as, during the company's settling-in period, the blocking of holidays for a period of 4 to 8 weeks;
  • the communication of production targets, if there remains a considerable margin for self-organisation of working hours:
    an obligation to provide information, unless the agent is obliged to provide copious information on its activities and at short intervals;
  • a quarterly forecast on the development of production certainly exceeds the usual duty to inform, but in itself cannot be regarded as a substantive indication of subordination;
    the agent's prohibition of competition;
  • instructions on working hours, as the employees of the external service also have to adapt to the time requirements of their customers.

According to the OLG (Oberlandesgericht - Court of Appeal) in Koblenz, the type of relationship is explicitly inferred from the personal dependence between the two legal figures and that an economic dependence is neither necessary nor sufficient.
The fact that the agent is linked to the principal through indications and directives that the latter has the power to issue, in general does not affect what is the status of the agent as an independent worker. The employee is one who, unlike the agent, performs his services within an organisation defined by a third party. Relevant for the qualification of the legal figure are the circumstances under which the service is performed and the manner of payment, or purely formal connotations such as the payment of taxes to the social security and health care institutions or the keeping of the agent's personal files.


2) The right to commission.

The agent has according to the § 87 para. 1 HGB right to commission. The agent may exercise this right on all business the conclusion of which has been made possible through an activity attributable to him, or on business concluded with third parties acquired by the agent as clients for business of the same type (§ 87 para. HGB). Therefore, in order to claim the right to commission, it is sufficient to any cooperation of the agent that made it possible for the deal to be concluded.

The parties may, however, agree on an exception clause. Importantly, the second paragraph of Section 87 HGB provides that "the right to the provision ceases when it is certain that the third party does not perform, the sums already received must be returned" ( 87a para. 2 HGB) (so-called star of belief).

It is important to specify that if the principal does not perform the deal completely or partially correctly or in the manner in which it was stipulated, the agent is nevertheless entitled to commission (87-a para. 3 HGB). However, the entitlement to commission shall lapse if the non-performance is attributable to conditions that are not the responsibility of the principal.

La German Supreme Court (BGH - Bundesgerichtshoff) recently ruled on §87a para. 2 HGB specifying that this does not apply if the third party has failed to perform due to a failure to perform on the part of the principal or due to causes attributable to the principal. The Court further specifies that the principal is liable for all situations that led to the non-performance, not only when they are attributable to its personal fault, but also when they are attributable to an entrepreneurial or business risk.

Although it is in the principal's interest to receive the highest number of offers from the agent, the principal's right to decide whether to accept the proposed deal remains unaffected. This decision-making power in the hands of the principal results indirectly from the 86a para. 2 HGBwhich obliges the latter to inform the agent of its intention to accept substantially less business from the agent. This decision-making power is, however, not unlimited: the principal may not refuse completely arbitrarily the conclusion of a procured contract. It must also be emphasised that jurisprudence considers it to be outside the powers of the judge to interfere in the policy of the company, evaluating the decisions taken by the latter. Therefore, the judge must accept any decision that may appear at least plausible.


3. The Area Agent.

Flanking the figure of the agent is that of the area agent (Bezirkshandelsvertreter). This figure is characterised by the fact that he/she has to deal exclusively with an area, entrusted to him/her by the principal or, in other cases, with a specific clientele.

The § 87 para. 2 HGB provides that the area agent is also entitled to commission for business that has been concluded, within the area assigned to him, albeit without his cooperation. Precisely for this reason, it is evident that the appointment of an area agent may have to be rather concealed. It is assumed that the agent may be considered a zone agent if it has been sufficiently clearly qualified as such. In the event of a dispute, the burden of proof falls on the party claiming that the agent is so qualified. Any contractual uncertainties must be clarified by the contracting party.

As for the obligations of the agentThe latter, in carrying out his activity, must look after his area continuously and with particular care, and only by acting in accordance with these criteria will he be entitled to the commission.

A rather recent BGH ruling stated that a business outside the area cannot be considered to be prevented a priori. In fact, if the principal accepts the business, this can be regarded as a tacit enlargement of the area or customer base.

As a rule, an area agent who, with the consent of the principal, carries out activities outside the principal's area or with customers other than those granted, is also entitled to the commission referred to in § 87 para. 1 HGB. However, the parties are free to agree otherwise.


4. Direct sales without producer intervention.

The direct sale to a customer by the manufacturer, despite the fact that the manufacturer has granted a exclusive right to the reseller, is to be considered a breach of contract. But even in the case where exclusivity has not been granted, the manufacturer may not perform at its sole discretion, direct sales to customers in the area the dealer's responsibility.

According to the German Federal Court of Justice, the manufacturer must take due account of and may not, without good reason, oppose the legitimate interests of the retailer who subjects his business and operations to the requirements of the manufacturer.

In a Judgment of the Düsseldorf Court of Appeal of 21.06.2013 (G.R. No. 16 U 172/12) the judges instead denied the existence of a violation of theobligation of loyalty because the manufacturer had not arbitrarily disregarded the legitimate interests of the retailer. In this case, the customers had in fact reiterated that they wanted direct sales from the manufacturer, otherwise they would not have purchased the products.

Considering that the reseller had only a de facto exclusive right, which had not been contractually agreed upon, this decision of the customers constituted, according to the courts, a sufficient reason for the admissibility of direct selling to these customers, especially since the manufacturer had previously offered the reseller a commission payment as compensation.


5. Declaration of bankruptcy and entitlement to commission.

According to the § 115 para. I in correlation with the 116 paragraph I InsO (lnsolvenzordnung - 'bankruptcy law') the opening of bankruptcy proceedings leads to the termination of the agency contractwithout the need to give notice. A continuation of the contractual activities is only possible following an agreement, even tacit, between the agent and the insolvency administrator.

As for the claims to commission accrued following the conclusion of the new contract, these must always be considered as predeductible claims (debts of the estate) § 55 para. I, point InsO. Where the activities carried out by the agent prior to the opening of bankruptcy proceedings have not yet led to the conclusion of a contract with the third party, the entitlement to commission depends on the choice of curator to conclude the deal with the third party or not.

If positivethe right to commission is considered in the light of the 55 paragraph I point InsO as a preferential claim.

Otherwise The right to commission exists in any event irrespective of whether the liquidator has opted to conclude the contract with the third party or has refused it. In such a case, the commission shall be considered an unsecured claim ex § 38 InsO.

A different matter, however, with regard to the agent's entitlement to the non-competition indemnity under the § 90a para. 1 HGBIn this case, the right ceases in the event of termination of the contract following the opening of bankruptcy. At the same time, this event also terminates the agent's non-competition clause that the parties had agreed upon.

Finally, if at the opening of the bankruptcy the contract was already terminated the insolvency administrator may request ex § 103 InsO the maintenance of the non-competition clause and the right to compensation constitutes a claim on the bankruptcy estate.


Supreme Court: abuse of rights also in tax matters.

[:it]For the Court of Cassation, abuse of rights is also possible in tax matters.

The recent judgments 3242/2013 and 4901/2013 reconfirmed that theinstitution of abuse of rights is also applicable in tax matters.

In order to fully understand the dictate, it is first necessary to understand the concept of abuse of rights, being careful to apply a clear distinction between tax evasion and abuse and avoidance.

Unlike other European countries, such as, for example, Germany, Greece, Switzerland and Portugal, Italy has not transposed the principle of abuse of rights as a rule of law. However, at civil law level, doctrine and jurisprudence have developed this widely. An excellent definition was given by the Supreme Court, which provided that "abuse of rights occurs when the holder of a subjective right, even in the absence of formal prohibitions, exercises it in a manner that is unnecessary and disrespectful of the duty of fairness and good faith, causing a disproportionate and unjustified sacrifice of the other contracting party, and in order to achieve results that are different and additional to those for which those powers or faculties were granted"(Cass. Civ. 2009/20106).

In the tax field, the figure of abuse was introduced, Indeed, in its judgment No. 10981 of 13 May 2009, the Court of Cassation, Civil Tax Section, stated that "the prohibition of abuse of rights translates into a general anti-avoidance principle, which precludes the taxpayer from obtaining tax advantages obtained through the distorted use, even if not in conflict with any specific provision, of legal instruments capable of obtaining a tax benefit or saving, in the absence of economically appreciable reasons justifying the transaction, other than the mere expectation of those benefits."

In essence, the concept of abuse of tax law has been a de facto broadening of the concept of avoidance,limited (erroneously) to case studies (Article 37-bis of Presidential Decree 600/1973).

The recent judgments under review, have reaffirmed the applicability of the institution of abuse also in the tax field. Specifically, they ruled that when a taxpayer, exercising a right expressly recognised to him, does not in reality pursue an end worthy of protection by the system, but, on the contrary, achieves an objective that is contrary to it, no judicial protection can be granted to him. In fact, the person abuses the freedom to adopt a certain treatment for his own benefit by exploiting the variety of legal forms that the legal system makes available to him.

Therefore, as opposed to evasion, which occurs when there is a concealment of taxable wealth i.e. the alteration of an economic fact (such as simulation, fictitious interposition), abuse and avoidance, on the contrary, occur when the taxpayer's tax advantage is undue, since it is obtained by exceeding (or abusing) the advantage expressly recognised by a rule, by pursuing an advantage disapproved by the system.

[:]


Supreme Court: bank not obliged to give notice of protest

[:it]According to a rather recent Supreme Court ruling, 12.2.2013 n. 3286, the bank is not obliged to warn the customer prior to the protest of a cheque issued for lack of funds.In the case under analysis, the Supreme Court rejected the ruling of the appeal instance, brought by a bank, wrongly ordered to pay damages to the account holder.

In this case, the Court of Appeal held that a legitimate interest, on the part of the account holder, cannot be detected in the legitimate expectation to be informed of the sending of a cheque for the raising of the protest. Specifically, they pointed out that such an expectation is not protected by our legal system, since its object is a mere factual interest, not at all comparable to a legitimate interest. The Court, on this point, contested the Court of Appeal's reference to the decision of the United Sections No. 500, of 22.7.1999.

It is recalled, briefly, that this last judgment stated that damage may be compensated pursuant to Article 2043 of the Civil Code.only if it concerns "an interest of relevance to the legal system; be it an interest undifferentiatedly protected in the form of a subjective right (absolute or relative) or in the form of a legitimate interest or other interest that is legally relevant and therefore not attributable to mere factual interest."In conclusion, the judgement points out that the damaging event resulting from a protest cannot be attributable to the conduct of the bank, but only to the account holder. The latter, in fact, is always aware of the state of his current account, and for this reason, any protest for lack of funds will be attributable solely to him, since he has no right to prior notice from the bank.

 

[:]


Flash of genius

Software protection. Patentability or copyright?

[:en]How is software protected? Is it patentable? What is copy-right protection?

These questions were answered by the Court of Justice in a landmark judgment of 2.5.2012 (Case C-406/10)with which it interpreted Directive 91/250/EEC.

Specifically, the Court stated that:

  • the programming language and file format of data used within this programme are not protected by copyright on programmes;
  • he who licences a copy of software may, without the authorisation of the copyright holder, observe, study or experiment with the operation of said programme.

Underlying this decision is a policy adopted by Italy and Europe several years ago, which have chosen the path of the software protection through copyrightonly software that produces a technical effect should be considered patentable.

To briefly understand the difference between the two approaches, suffice it to say:

  • copyright is automatically granted to the author under Article 2575 of the Civil Code;
  • the granting of a patent (Art. 2585 of the Civil Code), on the other hand, must be explicitly requested from a patent office, carrying out a prior search to verify the originality of one's creation.

European and Italian legislators have opted for copyright protection of software, at the in order to balance the conflicting interests at stakeon the one hand the technological progress and, on the other hand, the software producers.

In this way, the author was granted the possibility of economic exploitation of the intellectual creation and, at the same time, everyone is allowed to enjoy the progress achieved (post the non-patentability of the product) avoiding the creation of stable positions of cultural and technological monopoly.

 

[:]


La notte prima degli esami

Concordato preventivo: the new requirements for admission to the procedure.

[:it]The debtor may now limit himself to filing the application containing the mere insolvency petition, reserving the right to submit the proposal, the arrangement plan and the necessary documents after the filing.

As is well known, the government on 7 August 2012 enacted into law the so-called "Development Decree".
Several novelties have been introduced, but in any case, this short article will analyse a single legislative change in the area of fallimentarand is of particular interest. Indeed, the reform has changed the requirements for admission to the arrangement procedure. Specifically, the debtor may now limit himself to filing the appeal containing the mere insolvency petition, reserving the right to submit the proposal, the arrangement plan and the necessary documents after the filing of the appeal. The term for such filing is fixed by the court and is between 60 and 120 days. It is also recalled that this deadline can be extended, but by no more than 60 days.

Concerning the effects of filing an appeal, please note that following its publication in the commercial register and until the decree of approval of the composition agreement becomes final, creditors may not commence or continue any enforcement or precautionary enforcement of the debtor's assets, under penalty of nullity. Moreover, if judicial mortgages have been registered in the 90 days preceding the publication of the appeal, they are ineffective against creditors prior to the arrangement. In practice it is sufficient to file an application for admission to the arrangement procedure with the competent court in order to produce the effects under Article 168 of the F.L., i.e. the blocking of enforcement actions. The business plan, on the other hand, can be presented in the following months.

This reform was put in place in order to protect companies in crisis, given the difficult economic situation faced by many companies. As a result of this new legislation, it will be, overcome the use of the technique employed by the concordat companies in order to shield the debtor's assets, i.e. that to establish a destination vicolo on the assets pursuant to Article 2645 ter of the Civil Code, in favour of the creditors of the arrangement, during the period necessary to prepare the plan and file the appeal.

Finally, it should be noted that this technique had recently been made more uncertain, especially following a ruling of 13.3.2012 by the Court of Verona, in which it declared that "the plan of composition cannot be considered feasible where the debtor, prior to filing the application, has established a restriction on its immovable property pursuant to Article 2645-ter of the Civil Code for the declared purpose of avoiding that the disorderly seizure of the assets of the company in crisis may result in a dispersion of value to the detriment of the creditors and prevent an equitable distribution of the effects of the insolvency".

 

 

[:]


Strartup.com

Innovative start-ups. Registration by 17 February 2013.

[:en]It is now official that from 19.10.2012 with the publication of the Development Decree bis in the Official Journalthe existence of incentives for innovative start-upsas included in the otherwise known as Growth Decree.

The requirements for registration are briefly listed in the commercial register site:

  • corporation of Italian law whose shares or quotas representing the share capital are not listed and in which the majority of shares or shares are held by natural persons;
  • are not operational since more than 48 months;
  • carry out business activities in italy;
  • annual production does not exceed the EUR 5 million;
  • do not come distributed the profits;
  • concerns thetechnological innovation of innovative products and services with high technological value;
  • was not formed by a company merger/division or by the transfer of a branch of business;
  • invests at least 20% of the greater value between cost and total value of production in development, or employs doctoral or post-doctoral researchers as employees or collaborators, or holds or files patents for industry and biotechnology;

Concerning facilities the law no. 221 of 17 December 2012 established for, with the intention of facilitating registrationa series of exemptions aimed at setting up and registering the company in the commercial register, tax benefits, as well as exemptions at company law and specific discipline in labour relations in the enterprise.

They remember:

  • that the start-up is raised by the payment of stamp duty and secretarial fees due for entry in the commercial register as well as payment of the annual fee due to the chambers of commerce;
  • has the right to hire staff with fixed-term contracts of minimum duration of 6 months and maximum duration of 36During this time, contracts may also be of short duration and renewed several times. At the end of 36 monthsthe contract may not be renewed any further, if not the last of 12 months thus bringing the amount of the contract to 48 months. After this period, the employee may only continue working in the start-up with an open-ended contract;
  • start-up collaborators may be remunerated by means of stock optionsand external service providers through the work for equity
  • can benefit from priority access to facilitations for the recruitment of highly qualified personnel;
  • were then tax incentives activated for investments in start-ups deriving from companies and individuals for the years 2013, 2014 and 2015;
  • by theIce Agency has ordered assistance in the field regulatory, corporate, tax, real estate, contractual and credit issues, free-of-charge hospitality at major international trade fairs and events, and activities aimed at facilitating the meeting of innovative start-ups with potential investors for early stage and expansion capital.

 

 

 
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Per un pungo di dollari

For a penny. The new company at 1 euro.

[:en]Talking a few days ago with young entrepreneurs, operating in the start-up sector, we wondered about the actual advantages that the introduction of the new 1 Euro company (SRLS - Società a Responsabilità Limitata Semplificata), introduced on 29.8.2012 by the Dm 138/2012.

To get a clearer idea of the features brought about by the new Art. 2463-bis of the Civil Code, it is recalled that:

  • the company may be established by natural persons who have not completed their thirty-five years of age on the date of incorporation;
  • the memorandum of association must be drawn up by public deed in accordance with the standard typed model;
  • the share capital must be between 1 e 10.000 €, subscribed and fully paid up at the date of incorporation;
  • the contribution must be made in money and be paid to the administrative body;
  • the directors must be chosen from among the shareholders;
  • the memorandum of association and entry in the commercial register are exempt from stamp and secretarial duties and no notary fees are payable (registration tax of € 168 and the annual fee to the Chamber of Commerce must therefore be paid).

Reading the regulatory text and also checking the comments of various blogs, law journals and newspapers, it can be seen that this form does indeed bring cost relief (no notary fees are due), but that it does not actually solve what are the real problems of entrepreneurs under 35, namely:

  • preferential tax regimes;
  • tools for facilitate access to financing bankers or subsidies state;

It is necessary to remember that the problem of social capital is in fact relative, suffice it to say that the 10 thousand euro of capital required to set up a normal limited company, do not remain frozen in the bank, but may be used by members. In fact, once established, the sum is actually paid into the company's account and can be used to buy machinery, computers, pay salaries and suppliers, register trademarks and so on. Furthermore, if there are at least two partners, it is sufficient to pay EUR 2,500, a sum that can in turn be used for the fulfilments just mentioned.

In addition to this, the costs for starting up a company will always have to be borne by the young entrepreneurs, who, no matter how lean and light the company may be, will still need to invest a few thousand euros to operate it (computers, machinery, suppliers, etc.).

Lastly, it is noted that the memorandum of association, having to be drafted in accordance with the standard typed model, is, according to a first reading of the provision, not subject to any variation. This feature, which certainly makes it possible to avoid notary fees, is in fact a limitation that is by no means negligible. Suffice it to say, in fact, that such standardisation would make it impossible for the company's managing partners to activate all the options that the law allows in the articles of association of an LLC. These include:

the power to grant special rights to shareholders;

  • the possibility of agreeing on clauses concerning the transfer of shares in the capital (such as non-transferability, pre-emption, approval, clause disposing of the share in the event of the death of the shareholder, co-sale clause, etc.);
  • the possibility of agreeing on causes of termination other than those provided for by law;
  • the possibility of stipulating grounds for exclusion from the company;
  • the provision, in the case of more than one director, of forms of administration other than the BoD;
  • the possibility of providing for a longer deadline for the approval of the budget than the statutory one;
  • the possibility of providing for forms of decision-making by the shareholders other than the general meeting;
  • the possibility of giving shareholders the competence to decide on matters other than those attributed to shareholders by law;
  • the possibility of providing for meeting quorums other than those prescribed by law.

It will certainly be interesting to see how this instrument will be used by new entrepreneurs and to see if this means is an effective incentive for new entrepreneurship.

 

 

[:]


nannimoretti

The shareholder's conflict of interest in shareholders' meeting resolutions.

[:it]Conflict of interest could be defined as the limitation that the shareholder encounters in his right to vote.

It is important to remember that two prerequisites are necessary for this to be effectively configured:

  1. that the partner pursues its own end
  2. that said end contrasts concretely with the general interest of society[1]

The question therefore arises as to what happens if a shareholder with a conflict of interest votes on a resolution of the shareholders' meeting of a public limited liability company to bring a corporate liability action against the director.

While theArticle 2373 of the Civil Code prior to reform expressly sanctioned a ban on voting by the shareholder in conflict of interest, the current layoutInstead, it gives the shareholder the choice between voting by renouncing his potentially conflicting personal interest or abstaining from voting.

Should the latter opt for abstention, Art. 2368 para. 3 provides that the shares are counted towards the attainment of the quorum constitutivebut not for the purpose of calculating that deliberative. It is important to note that the contestability of the resolution is rightly subject to the fact that the vote of the shareholder in conflict of interest was decisive in reaching a quorum.

Therefore, the shareholder's voting right is remitted ex Article 2373 (1) to its appreciation of the consequences that may ensue. The resolution of the shareholders' meeting therefore retains its validity intact unless it was passed with the casting vote of the conflicting shareholder. The latter will then be free to choose whether or not to abstain from voting.[2]

Another question is whether the shareholder-directors may vote on resolutions concerning their respective liabilities. In fact, although Art. 2373 para. 2 expressly states a prohibition for such a hypothesis, the question arises as to whether the shareholders' meeting is called upon to resolve on a liability action of director Caius, Tizio (also a shareholder-director), may exercise his voting right.

An important arbitration award recently expressed itself on this point, stating that: "at in accordance with the principle of vicarious liability, the shareholder's vote on the liability of the other directors is admissible and must therefore be counted towards the quorum for passing a resolution, the prohibition under Article 2373(2) of the Civil Code applying only when the resolution concerns the liability of the voting shareholder himself and not when the resolution concerns the liability of another director"[3].

ABSTRACT

  • for the conflict of interest to exist, it is necessary that the shareholder pursues its own end and that this end is in concrete conflict with the general interest of the company
  • the current provision of Article 2373 gives the shareholder the choice between voting by renouncing his potentially conflicting personal interest or abstaining from voting
  • in the event of abstention, Art. 2368 para. 3 provides that the shares are counted for the purposes of reaching the constitutive quorum, but not for the purposes of calculating the deliberative quorum
  • the appealability of the resolution is subject to the fact that the vote of the shareholder in conflict of interest was decisive for the attainment of the quorum
  • Although Art. 2373 para. 2 prohibits member-directors from voting on resolutions concerning their respective liabilities, in accordance with the principle of vicarious liability, the vote of the member-director on the liability of the other directors is permissible

[1] It must be borne in mind that the interest must be objectively in conflict with the corporate interest. If this is not demonstrated, the resolution cannot be annulled, even if it turns out that the vote was cast e.g. out of personal spite against the directors or to gain an advantage over the other shareholders (Commented Code of S.p.A., Fauceglia - Schiano di Pepe, 2007, UTET)

[2] Corporate Law, Gastone Cottino, pg. 346 ff., 2006 CEDAM

[3] Arbitration Board, 2 July 2009, Jur. comm. 2010, 5, 911, note De Pra

 

 

[:]


Wall Street

Purchase of a shareholding and seller's warranties (by Valerio Sangiovanni).

[:en]Courtesy of the author Valerio Sangiovanni and the publishing house Ipsoa Wolters Kluwer reproduces the article that appeared in Notariat, 2012, pp. 203-213]

by VALERIO SANGIOVANNI

 The warranties offered by the seller to the purchaser of corporate participations normally represent one of the central elements of contracts for the purchase and sale of shares. The matter is of great practical relevance, being the subject - frequently - of nerve-racking negotiations between the parties. In view of such an important subject matter, it is striking that the issue of warranties in sale/acquisition contracts is relatively little dealt with in both case law and doctrine, although probably the presence of few case law decisions is attributable to the fact that disputes on this point are generally settled by arbitration. In this article we will deal with this issue, focusing on the types of clauses that allow the seller's liability to be limited.

1. The Share Purchase Agreement

The Share Purchase Agreement[1] is the contract by which a first party sells (profile of 'transfer') and a second party acquires (profile of 'acquisition') a shareholding[2]. In such a contract, it is quite usual for the seller to offer express warranties in favour of the purchaser (concerning not only the shareholding bought and sold in and of itself, but also - and above all - the substantial characteristics of the underlying company), and it is this profile - of great practical relevance - that we wish to focus on in this article[3].

Assuming that the participation transfer contract is subject to Italian law (a different choice may be made, for example, when one of the parties is foreign)[4]it is to be qualified as a contract of sale, since our legislative definition of a contract by which the ownership of a thing or another right is transferred for the consideration of a price (Art. 1470 of the Civil Code) is fulfilled: the object of the transfer is the shares or quotas of the company (and only indirectly, and pro quotaassets and liabilities of the company), while the price is the consideration that is paid by the buyer. The sale/acquisition contract is a common sale/purchase contract characterised by the fact that the asset bought and sold is a shareholding.

The qualification of an acquisition contract as a sale and purchase explains, at the terminological level, the circumstance that it is sometimes referred to - in practice - as a sale and purchase contract. More frequent, however, is the use of terms such as 'assignment' or 'acquisition'. However, 'acquisition' is nothing other than the same transfer of the shares or stocks seen from the perspective of the party opposite the one that 'transfers'. Ultimately, 'assignment' and 'acquisition' are to be considered synonymous, and the transfer mechanism is well expressed by the single term 'sale', which encompasses both.

With respect to the subject matter of the sale, the expression, although it is recurrent in practice, of 'purchase of a company' does not appear to be correct: in fact, the contract does not concern the company, but only the shareholding that a shareholder holds in the company. Even if the acquisition of shares implies, to the relevant extent, the acquisition of the assets and liabilities pertaining to the company, this only occurs indirectly. The distinction, used by the case law and to which we will return below, between the 'immediate' object of the acquisition (the shareholding) and the 'mediated' object of the acquisition (the assets and liabilities pertaining to the company) therefore appears to be correct.

To tell the truth, the use in practice of expressions such as 'contract of assignment' or 'contract of acquisition' gives rise to misunderstandings not only of a linguistic but also of a substantive nature. Indeed, it is sometimes claimed in doctrine that the contract of 'assignment' or 'acquisition' is not one of the named contracts expressly regulated in our legal system. The debate on the nature of the contract for the sale or acquisition of corporate participations appears in fact to be essentially pointless: indeed, such a contract cannot be considered atypical, but must instead be qualified simply as a 'sale'. The contract could be peacefully referred to by the parties as a 'contract of sale'; what is particular - in the contract of assignment/acquisition - is only its object, consisting of a shareholding.

If the contract for the transfer of corporate shares is to be characterised as a contract of sale, attention must then be paid to the provisions governing warranties in this type of contract, with particular reference to Art. 1490(1) of the Civil Code, according to which the seller is obliged to ensure that the what sold is free from defects rendering it unfit for use or appreciably diminishing its value. What, in the specific context of acquisitions of participations, is the 'thing' sold? As pointed out above, the object of the contract is represented - directly - by the equity interest (and only indirectly by the assets and liabilities included in the equity interest). The real problem of warranties, however, concerns not the participation itself, but the assets and liabilities which the acquisition of the participation brings with it, pro quotawith itself. With regard to the 'mediated' subject matter of the purchase and sale (assets and liabilities), it is a recurring assertion that the provisions on warranties in the sales contract are excessively favourable to the purchaser and, for that reason, not particularly suited to the context of corporate acquisitions. In the context of these transactions, it is usual to seek a better balance between the position of the seller and the buyer. With the share purchase agreement, the seller makes every effort to limit the security it offers the buyer with respect to the assets and liabilities of the company. This limitation of warranty, however, is subject to a precise condition of effectiveness, since the agreement excluding or limiting the warranty has no effect if the seller has in bad faith concealed from the buyer the defects of the thing (Art. 1490(2) Civil Code).

2. The activity of due diligence and the preliminary flow of information

We have seen that whoever buys a shareholding buys, directly, only shares or quotas. By acquiring the status of shareholder, however, he becomes part of a company with assets and liabilities. The main problem for the purchaser is that, being generally - prior to the purchase - an outsider to the company, he does not know its characteristics. If he buys the shareholding without careful prior verification, he may find himself exposed to negative surprises compared to his expectations (where certain assets are overvalued or even non-existent or certain liabilities are undervalued or even hidden). The amount of information available to a person outside the company is normally insufficient to ensure an appropriate assessment of the risks involved in the purchase.

In order to reduce the risks associated with the purchase of company shareholdings, the signing of the shareholding purchase agreement is generally preceded by a so-called 'due diligence"[5]. The expression 'due diligence', of Anglo-Saxon origin, can be translated - literally - as 'due diligence': this is the diligence a prudent buyer uses in making all necessary checks before purchasing a shareholding. In practice, the buyer is normally given the opportunity to carry out a series of checks on the target company: the due diligence can be carried out directly by the buyer or, more frequently, by hiring external experts.

A point that is rarely emphasised is that the activity of due diligence also implies the cooperation of the company whose shares are to be acquired, which must make the required material available on the basis of a list. This activity of preparing the material is the responsibility of the directors of the target company.

It may happen that, faced with a shareholder wishing to sell his shareholding, there is no cooperation on the part of the company in making the requested information available to the potential purchaser. This problem does not arise when the shareholder is also a director of the company, being able - in that capacity - to have direct access to the information and, in principle, to pass it on to third parties. In some cases, however, the shareholder does not hold any administrative office.

The problem of the possible conflict between the shareholder and the company must then be addressed by the shareholder exercising his right to information vis-à-vis the company. By exercising this right, the shareholder collects the material to be made available to the potential purchaser. On this point, however, a distinction must be made between the s.r.l. and the s.p.a.: as is well known, whereas in the former type of company a broad right of the shareholder to information is recognised (Art. 2476(2) of the Civil Code)[6]in the s.p.a. there is no provision in the s.p.a. that provides for such an extensive right of information of the shareholder. Article 2422 of the Civil Code allows shareholders to do little: only to examine the register of shareholders and the register of meetings and resolutions. The legislator takes into account the different nature of the two types of company and, consequently, structures the right to information and control differently. In a company that is usually assumed to have few shareholders, such as the s.r.l., the right of control is recognised to a broad extent; conversely, in a company type such as the s.p.a., which - hypothetically - may have a large shareholder structure, confidentiality is protected to a greater extent. It follows that, whereas in the s.r.l., the shareholder can easily gather the information to be given to the potential purchaser, in the s.p.a., it is by no means self-evident that the shareholder can achieve this result.

In the s.p.a., the problem of the lack of a broad right of control-information of the shareholder can be resolved by reconstructing a duty of information on the part of the directors arising from the general obligation to conduct themselves in good faith in the performance of their duties in the interest of the company[7]. It follows that, where the shareholder's request is not contrary to the company's interest, the managers must comply with it. In order to avoid damage to the company, however, it is certainly advisable to precede the transmission of information by the signing of a confidentiality agreement, whereby the third party undertakes not to disclose and not to use what comes to his knowledge.

However, even in the s.r.l., even in the presence of a broad right of control of the shareholder established directly by law, conflicts may arise between the shareholder and the directors with respect to the exercise of the right to information as a means of permitting - then - third parties access to data and information. Allowing third parties access to the company's documents may be risky in cases where the third party has conflicting interests with those of the company, for example in the event of litigation or in the case of a company engaged in competitive activities. It may therefore happen that the directors oppose the shareholder's request for information.

Returning to the case standard (the one in which there is no internal obstacle in making company information available to the potential buyer), it can be noted that - traditionally - the documentation subject to due diligence was prepared in paper format and was made accessible for a certain period of time in a room set up for that purpose (hence the expression ''paper'').data room"data room). In recent times, it is more common for information to be made available in a virtual mode, which the buyer can access - always for a limited time - electronically.

La due diligence can be more or less wide-ranging depending on the case: the most common types of audit are financial, tax and legal. At the outcome of the due diligencea written report is generally prepared - addressed to the potential purchaser of the participation - describing the main risks involved in the purchase of the shares/shares.

The purpose of the due diligence is twofold. On the one hand, it has a purely informative purpose for the purchaser: to learn more about the characteristics of the target company. On the other hand, the due diligence has a specific objective of identifying the risks that the target presents. Once these risks have been identified, it is up to the clauses of the sales contract to provide adequate protection. There is therefore a close link between the due diligence and the content of the subsequent contract.

The activity of due diligence is sometimes reflected in a special clause in the acquisition contract. Thanks to the preliminary check on the targetthe buyer has become aware of the characteristics of the company in which it wants to acquire a participation, including its critical aspects: this enables it to determine (and agree with the counterparty) the 'right' price for the participation. The seller does not want the buyer to be able, subsequent to the completion of the acquisition, to activate warranties enabling him to obtain compensation (economically equivalent to a price reduction). In order to achieve such a result (i.e. to 'stabilise' the price), the seller insists on the inclusion in the contract of a clause by which the purchaser declares that it has carried out thorough checks on the company and, to the best of its knowledge, has not found any circumstances that would allow it to activate a security. Such a provision prevents improper conduct on the part of the buyer, who could conceivably - having identified the defects in advance - remain silent about them, and then, as soon as the contract is finalised, claim damages.

3. The Most Common Guarantees in Share Purchase Agreements

It is difficult to make a list of the warranties normally contained in a share purchase agreement: practice shows considerable differences from case to case. Much depends on the competence of the lawyers assisting the parties. Also relevant is the level of necessity, more or less stringent, for one party rather than the other to conclude the contract quickly: those who wish to conclude the transaction quickly tend to give less weight to the guarantee clauses, which operate only eventually.

Sometimes the clauses concerning guarantees are written in a particularly analytical manner: this is the contractual technique favoured in Anglo-Saxon countries, where contracts are characterised by being particularly detailed. The analytical listing of warranties is moreover generally accompanied or replaced by closing clauses stating a certain state of facts in a summary manner. With reference, for example, to the matter of litigation, it may be repeated for each matter (environmental, labour, relations with customers and suppliers, etc., etc.) that there are no disputes between the company and third parties; however, it seems more effective to confine oneself to a general clause attesting to the absence of any litigation.

Turning to the content of the clauses, a common distinction is that between guarantees relating to the 'title' of the participation and guarantees relating to the 'content' of the participation.

The 'title' clauses are those that refer directly to the characteristics of the participation and the target from a corporate point of view: e.g. the seller warrants that he is the owner of the shares and that they are free from any third party rights; or the seller warrants that the company has been validly incorporated and is validly existing under the national law governing it. Title clauses are absolutely usual in contracts for the purchase and sale of corporate shares and the seller can hardly refuse to grant such warranties to the buyer. Such clauses are generally not subject to quantitative limitations on damages: even where there are thresholds to the seller's liability, they do not apply to this type of security, which is too basic to be subject to any limitation.

Decidedly more important in practice, and therefore the subject of more negotiations[8]are the guarantees relating to the 'content' of the shareholding (assets and liabilities of the company). They can cover the most diverse topics and vary from case to case, also depending on the sector in which the company is active.

Among the most common warranties in contracts for the acquisition of shareholdings are those concerning the balance sheet[9]. Linked to the guarantees on the balance sheet are those on tax matters, consisting essentially of the assertion that the company has always correctly fulfilled all its tax obligations[10]. From an economic point of view, guarantees regarding labour relations as well as social security and pension contributions may be important. Another group of significant guarantees are those relating to contractual relationships to which the target company is a party[11]. Depending on the circumstances, intellectual property warranties may have significant practical relevance. Environmental warranties are quite common, especially where the company carries out a manufacturing activity or - in any event - one that easily leads to pollution. Another common clause concerns the existence of all administrative authorisations and concessions required for the exercise of the activity. Finally, the catalogue of guarantees normally includes the one on litigation, understood as the exclusion of the existence of pending litigation.

With the activity of due diligence and by the sale and purchase agreement the purchaser seeks to insure itself against the risks resulting from the purchase of the shareholding, in particular against the probability, which - depending on the circumstances - may be greater or lesser, that harm will be caused to the company. Such detriment would reduce the value of the company and thus, pro quotaalso of the shares acquired. Where a certain loss has already occurred prior to the conclusion of the contract (which shall then, more correctly, be referred to as a "liability"), the purchaser shall take it into account ex antei.e. in determining the price he is prepared to pay for the company's shareholding. The underlying idea is that the buyer pays for the shares or units at their 'fair' price, i.e. that which reflects all the assets and liabilities that the company has at the time of purchase.

Contractual warranties, on the other hand, serve to protect the purchaser against circumstances that have not yet produced harm at the time the contract is signed, but may produce it in the near future. The likelihood, whether less or more, of the harm occurring depends of course on the circumstances of the case. By means of the warranty clauses, the seller undertakes to bear the damages that would arise if the event referred to in the contract were to occur within a reasonable time in the future.

Sometimes the danger of damage occurring is particularly high. In the course of due diligence concrete risks may have been identified that may produce, in the short term, the harm feared by the acquirer. One thinks of the case in which the land owned by the company in which one wishes to acquire an interest is being inspected for suspected environmental damage that could, if confirmed, imply an obligation for the company to pay compensation, or one thinks of the hypothesis in which the company is a party to a litigation in which it is a defendant: if the case is lost, the company will be forced to pay a sum of money to a third party. In such cases, the buyer has identified circumstances that may - in the near future - lead to damages. There is no harm at the time the contract is concluded, but the parties are aware that it may soon materialise. In such a situation it is difficult for the buyer to insist on a decrease in price, since the seller will argue that the harm has not yet materialised. These special situations (of concrete and imminent risk) are generally resolved by a so-called "indemnity" clause (indemnity): it is guaranteed in the contract, by an appropriate covenant, that the seller is obliged to indemnify the buyer with respect to any third party claims related to that specific event. The clauses of indemnityPrecisely because they relate to a concrete and imminent danger of harm, they are not subject to quantitative limitations, unlike the guarantees of a generic nature that we will now examine.

In addition to the indemnity, contracts for the purchase and sale of shareholdings usually also contain warranties of a generic type, designed to cover dangers of damage that were entirely abstract at the time the contract was signed. Imagine the case of a company engaged in manufacturing activities, which - on the basis of verifications made in the course of due diligence - appears to comply with all applicable environmental regulations. The buyer may, nevertheless, insist on the inclusion in the contract of a clause guaranteeing such compliance. If, after acquisition, it turns out that there are environmental violations, the clause may be activated by the buyer against the seller in order to obtain damages. These are clauses covering abstract dangers, where the damage not only has not occurred but - in the state of the parties' assessments - is not even likely to occur. In principle, the seller should have no problem consenting to the inclusion of such warranties in the contract, since it is unlikely that the damaging event will occur.

4. Termination and annulment of the contract

What happens if a contractual warranty offered by the seller to the buyer in a contract for the sale of shares is not honoured? The remedies generally provided by law in the presence of defects of the goods are termination of the contract or reduction of the price (Art. 1492(1) of the Civil Code). The problem is that these remedies, which are dictated for sale and purchase in general (and not for the particular case of the sale and purchase of corporate shareholdings), are as a rule not suited to the needs of the parties involved in corporate acquisitions. This applies especially to the 'restitutory' remedies (termination of the contract, but - as we will see below - also avoidance thereof).

With reference to the resolution of the contract, it must be considered that such a declaration would have the effect of rendering the acquisition transaction null and void. But the parties, if they move to buy or sell a participation, are generally determined not to retrace their steps. Moreover, since the termination of the contract is a restitutory remedy, the same conditions prior to the acquisition would have to be recreated. Given the complexity of the transaction, the resolutory remedy is generally unsuitable: restitution would be time-consuming and costly. In some respects, a complete restoration of the pre-acquisition situation may be impossible, since the company may - in the meantime - have undergone significant changes that can no longer be reversed. Wanting to draw a parallel, similar problems arise in the context of takeovers as in the case of mergers. Here the legislature has expressly provided that the only possible remedy is compensatory damages (Art. 2504-quater c.c.) precisely because a declaration of invalidity of the merger would imply restitution that, in complex realities such as that of a company, is not reasonably practicable[12].

As an alternative to termination of the contract, it is possible - for the purchaser of the shareholding - to invoke thecancellation.

Annulment may be claimed for fraudulent intent where the seller has intentionally given untrue information or where the seller has artfully withheld information otherwise decisive for the buyer's consent (Art. 1439 Civil Code).[13]. In practice, however, it is difficult to obtain the annulment of the contract by this route, due to the difficulty of proving the assignor's fraud.[14]. A similar consideration applies to accidental intent, which would legitimise not so much annulment of the contract as compensation for damages (Art. 1440 Civil Code).[15].

From an operational point of view, however, it is more common for the plaintiff to request the annulment of the contract for mistake, on the basis of the assumption that the information provided by the seller - albeit without malice - has caused the buyer to misrepresent reality, leading him to conclude a contract that he would not otherwise have concluded. According to the general rules, this must be an essential mistake (Art. 1429 of the Civil Code) and recognisable (Art. 1431 of the Civil Code).

Examining the case law on the avoidance of contracts for the sale and purchase of shareholdings, it appears that the most recurring mistake is the one concerning the assets of the target company. The purchaser of the shareholding pays a price reflecting, firstly, the net worth of the company (assets less liabilities) and, secondly, generally a premium for obtaining a majority (this 'premium' normally consists of a multiple of the profits realised in the last financial year). The company's assets are thus the starting point for the buyer to 'calculate' the price of the shareholding. Errors may occur in this context, such as to alter the purchaser's free provision of consent. Imagine the case where the share capital is assumed to exist, which has instead been - in whole or in part - lost, or the assumption that the net worth of the company is lower than assumed. If, contrary to the seller's assertion, the capital and/or assets do not exist as promised, the purchaser suffers a loss, consisting of paying a price in excess of the assumed value of the participation.

It should be noted, however, that jurisprudence is hesitant to grant the remedy of contract avoidance for mistake in the case of an erroneous assessment by the purchaser of the economic, financial and asset situation of the target company. As we shall see by analysing some of the most recent precedents on the subject, avoidance may be obtained only where there is an express and specific warranty in the contract as to the assets of the company, but not where such a warranty is lacking. In other words, the pure and simple assignment of units or shares does not imply any guarantee as to the characteristics of the underlying company. If the purchaser desires such a guarantee, it must have it expressly granted in the purchase contract.

Among the most recent interventions of the jurisprudence of legitimacy on the problem of the annulment of the contract of sale of shareholdings can be reported a decision of the Court of Cassation of 2008, according to which the error on the economic evaluation of the thing object of the contract (in the case in point a shareholding) does not fall within the notion of error of fact capable of justifying a pronouncement of annulment of the contract, in so far as the defect in the quality of the object must relate only to the rights and obligations that the contract in concrete terms is capable of conferring, and not to the economic value of the object of the contract, which relates to the sphere of the motives on the basis of which the party has determined to conclude a particular agreement, a sphere not protected by the instrument of annulment, since the legal system does not recognise any protection against the misuse of contractual autonomy and the error of one's own personal assessments, for which each of the parties assumes the risk[16]. This was a case where the contract lacked a specific contractual guarantee of the company's assets.

No different was the solution adopted by a slightly earlier ruling of the Court of Cassation (of 2007), which started from the consideration that the transfer of shares in a joint stock company has as its 'immediate object' the shareholding and only as its 'mediated object' the portion of the company's assets that this shareholding represents[17]. With respect to shares in companies, the qualities of the shares that, according to common appreciation, must be considered determinative of consent, must be limited to those pertaining to the typical function of the shares, i.e. the set of faculties and rights that they confer on their holder in the structure of the company, without any regard to their market value. The regulation of the law is limited to the immediate object (i.e. the shares that are the subject matter of the contract), while it does not extend to the consistency and value of the assets constituting the company's assets, unless the purchaser, in order to achieve that result, has had recourse to an express warranty clause, the result of contractual autonomy, which allows the parties to reinforce, reduce or exclude the warranty by agreement, in such a way as to explicitly link the value of the shares to the declared value of the company's assets. The Supreme Court concludes that an error as to the value of the company, in the absence of a clause to that effect, does not constitute an essential error capable of causing the contract to be void. In the case of a sale of shares in a company - which is assumed to have been concluded at a price not corresponding to their actual value - without the seller having given any guarantee as to the company's assets, the economic value of the shares does not fall within the qualities referred to in Article 1429(2) of the Civil Code concerning essential mistake. Therefore, an action for the annulment of the sale cannot be brought based on an alleged revision of the price by auditing accounting documents (balance sheet and profit and loss account) in order to prove what is nothing more than an error of valuation on the part of the purchaser, even when the company's balance sheet published prior to the sale is false and conceals a situation such as to make the rules on the reduction and loss of share capital applicable. The position taken by the Court of Cassation in this judgment is particularly strong in that even the falsity of the balance sheet is not sufficient to obtain the annulment of the sale contract[18].

In light of these case-law guidelines, the purchaser wishing to adequately guarantee itself must insist on the inclusion - in the contract for the sale of the shareholding - of an appropriate clause on the assets of the target company. Contractual practice shows that such stipulations are quite common.

5. Price Reduction and Damages

Also the price reduction (Art. 1492 of the Civil Code) is not normally an appropriate remedy in the context of corporate acquisitions, since it is reasonable to assume that the seller determines to the transaction in reliance on the valuation of the shareholding that was actually made, without any intention to revise ex post downward the price. In other words, the risk that the seller does not want to run is that the buyer will claim breaches of warranties, immediately after the conclusion of the contract, in order to obtain undue restitution of part of the price paid for the shares. It must be said that, from a strictly economic point of view, price reduction and damages are very similar. Suppose that the participation is sold for 1,000,000 euros and compensation of 100,000 euros is subsequently claimed: once this sum has been returned by the seller to the purchaser, it is as if the real purchase price of the participation was - in total - 900,000 euros. The economic effect of damages consists in a reduction of the purchase price.

In contractual practice it is common to provide, in the event of breach of contractual warranties, only the obligation to compensate the harm suffered by the purchaser. There is normally a clause in the contract that excludes the enforceability of remedies other than damages, excluding in particular the possibility of obtaining termination of the contract and its avoidance. The clause by which this is achieved is that of the"exclusive remedy"(exclusive remedy). In other words, the contract, after stating what warranties are offered by the seller and stating that in case of breach of those warranties the buyer is entitled to damages, provides that the buyer may not assert any other remedy.

The categories of harm that the obligor may be called upon to compensate are various. The seller, on the other hand, has an interest in limiting the types of harm that may be claimed by the buyer. It is therefore usual in negotiations to witness discussions on the types of harm that the seller assumes the obligation to indemnify in the event of a breach of warranties.

In this respect, the most important distinction is that between actual loss and loss of profit (Art. 1223 of the Civil Code), where - obviously - the seller will seek to limit its liability to the first item. The problem of loss of profit may be relevant in the context of acquisitions in two respects: on the one hand, the purchaser generally pays a sum as a premium for the purchase of the participation (on the basis of the assumption that the company will be able to produce profits also in the future), on the other hand, the purchaser aims in any event - irrespective of any profit-linked purchase price - to obtain even greater profits in the future from the participation he acquires (e.g. by achieving synergies with companies he already owns). The economic risk associated with a liability for lost profits may therefore be particularly severe for the seller.

If a circumstance arises that legitimises a claim for damages, the purchaser - in the absence of derogating clauses, and thus on the basis of the general provision of the civil code - could insist on obtaining not only the emerging damage, but also the loss of profit. Imagine the case of a piece of land purchased in the context of the acquisition, which later turns out to be polluted and requires 100,000 euros in clean-up costs; imagine also that the clean-up work requires the closure of the plant for 15 days, resulting in lost profits of 200,000 euros. Depending on how the clause is structured, the purchaser may obtain compensation only for the loss suffered (100,000 euros) or also for the loss of profit (another 200,000 euros). Hence, the assignor's interest in limiting the compensation in the contract to only actual loss.

6. The Duration of Guarantees

In practice, it is rare for the seller to be willing to offer warranties without any limitation in a contract for the purchase and sale of shares; instead, it is quite usual for various limitations to be included in the contract. There are contractual techniques for limiting the extent of the seller's liability arising from the breach of warranties.

A first way to limit the seller's liability has to do with the 'time' factor.

The warranties are contained in the purchase contract and therefore, in principle, attest to circumstances existing at the time of the signing of such contract. The problem is that, as a rule, the contract does not produce the immediate effect of the transfer of the ownership of the participations, having merely obligatory effects: with the preliminary contract, the parties undertake, upon the fulfilment of certain conditions, to conclude - at a future time - the final contract for the transfer of the participations. The need to separate the two steps arises from the fact that a certain intermediate time is normally required to put in place all the necessary fulfilments for the realisation of the transaction (the most frequent reason for the separation of the two steps is the need to obtain, in the meantime, the go-ahead from the authorities antitrust). The signing of the preliminary contract is usually referred to by the English expression of "signing"(subscription), whereas the completion of the contract for the transfer of participations is referred to by the expression "closing"(finalisation or closing of the transaction). A certain period of time (sometimes even several months) may elapse between the conclusion of the purchase contract and the notarial deed. While the seller has an interest in limiting the scope of its warranties to the time of the signing of the contract, the buyer would like those warranties to exist even at the later time when the transaction is finalised with the deed of transfer and payment of the price. Generally the problem is resolved in the sense of distinguishing between representations whose content depends on the seller's fact and those that are independent of it: in the first case the seller may guarantee a certain fact until closingin the second case only until signing.

It is common, in contracts for the sale and purchase of corporate participations, to provide for the duration of guarantees[19]. Evidently seller and buyer, on this point, have opposing interests, the seller wanting the shortest possible collateral and the buyer the longest possible collateral. In this respect, it is useful to distinguish between warranties pertaining to the security (such as the title of the participation in the seller and the absence of encumbrances on it) and other warranties: for the first type of security the seller will generally have no difficulty in providing for particularly long terms; in the case of other warranties, on the other hand, the assignor tends to limit their duration as much as possible. In practice, durations varying between 12 and 36 months are generally agreed upon. In order to limit the duration of the warranties, the seller frequently invokes the argument that, after the first balance sheet has been drawn up, the purchaser cannot have failed to discover the circumstances which may give rise to the activation of the warranties and therefore, if it intends to avail itself of them, it must do so immediately. In short, the buyer's needs must be reconciled with those of the seller who, after a reasonable period of time, wants to be sure not to be called upon for liability in respect of an interest now transferred.

7. Clauses limiting the obligation to pay damages

The liability of the seller of a shareholding is normally limited in contract in quantitative terms.

A clause limiting the scope of the seller's indemnification obligation is the so-called ".de minimis". This clause consists in providing that the seller is not obliged to indemnify the buyer in cases where the damage does not reach a certain minimum threshold (let us assume 10,000 euros): the clause thus fixes a limit below which the buyer is obliged to bear the damage himself, without being able to claim against the other party. This type of clause finds its raison d'être in a judgement of proportionality: in the case of transactions of considerable value, it would be undesirable for the parties - once the acquisition has been finalised - to start quarrelling over trivial matters. A clause 'de minimiswell drafted" must specify what is to happen when the threshold is exceeded. Suppose, in the example given, that the harm amounts to 30,000 euros. It should be specified in the contract whether the purchaser is entitled to claim all of that harm (30,000 euros) or only the part that exceeds the threshold (and thus, in the example given, 20,000 euros may be claimed, 10,000 euros being deducted from 30,000 euros).

Sometimes the clause 'de minimis"is added, in contracts for the purchase and sale of corporate participations, the so-called '.basketball"(literally 'basket', or - more technically - collective threshold). This stipulates that damages may only be claimed by the buyer from the seller if the sum of the individual items of damage exceeds a second threshold (let us assume 100,000 euros). For example, in the case of a single item of damage with a value of 60,000 euros, in the presence of a "basketball" the guarantee - even if it exceeds the minimum limit of €10,000 - cannot be activated unless it is activated together with a second claim which, together with the first claim, exceeds the collective threshold. If, for example, two claims are brought (a first claim of EUR 60,000 and a second claim of EUR 60,000), then both contractual limits are reached. Even in the case of a "basketball"it should be properly provided for in the contract whether the purchaser is obliged to compensate the entire damage or only the part exceeding the second threshold.

The combined effect of a first threshold "de minimis" and a second threshold "basketball"is that the seller is only liable for a particularly serious single loss (in the example given: EUR 100,000) or for the sum of several losses that are not particularly serious, but also not insignificant (in the example given: several losses of at least EUR 10,000 that altogether reach the threshold of EUR 100,000).

A third type of recurring clause in acquisition contracts consists of a maximum threshold (cap) to the seller's equity liability: it is agreed that the seller's liability may in no event exceed a certain amount. This amount generally varies between 10% and 30% of the purchase price of the participation. A distinction is normally made in the contract between warranties relating to the "security" and other warranties. No security (e.g. security relating to the ownership of the participation by the seller and the fact that it is free of encumbrances) is applied to the former. cap. In this case, the indemnification obligation may even be higher than the purchase price of the participation (otherwise a maximum threshold corresponding to the purchase price is provided for). In contrast, for guarantees other than those pertaining to the 'security' it is usual to provide for a maximum amount of the indemnifiable harm.

Other clauses that have the effect of limiting the seller's asset liability vis-à-vis the purchaser are also to a greater or lesser extent to be found in contracts for the sale and purchase of corporate participations.

A frequent clause is that the seller is only liable in the case of 'major' (material) breaches of the guarantees it offers. The problem with this covenant is its vagueness, which tends to lead to disputes between the parties in its interpretation. As soon as, in fact, the buyer were to invoke a warranty, the first objection raised by the seller would be precisely that the alleged breach cannot be considered important. In order to avoid endless discussions and lengthy litigation, it is advisable for the parties to determine already in the contract (e.g. in definitions) the meaning of "importance" (materiality). The materiality clause goes hand in hand with clauses quantitatively limiting the seller's indemnity obligation: to write in the contract that the seller is not liable for damages of less than EUR 10,000 is nothing other than to introduce, in other words, a materiality threshold. From an operational point of view, it is certainly better to concretely indicate the value limit beyond which a warranty may be invoked than to introduce vague clauses on the materiality of the breach.

Another way of limiting the seller's obligation to indemnify is to exclude its liability where third parties may be held liable for the act alleged in the contract. The typical case is that of insurance companies that might cover the harm suffered by the buyer. In this hypothesis the buyer cannot sue the seller since the damage is covered by the insurance. These clauses may be structured in the sense that the buyer may not bring any action against the seller when there is a claim against the insurer, or in the sense that it may bring an action only for the part of the harm which is not covered by the insurance.


[1] On the contract for the sale and purchase of shareholdings, see AA.VV., Contracts for the acquisition of companies and businesses, edited by U. Draetta-C. Monesi, Milan, 2007; G. De Nova, The Sale and Purchase AgreementAn annotated contract, Turin, 2011; L. Picone, Equity Purchase Agreements, Milan, 1995; A. Tina, The Share Purchase Agreement, Milan, 2007.

[2] On the subject of buying and selling shareholdings, see, by way of example, M. Benetti, Transfer of shares: effectiveness, enforceability and exercise of corporate rights, in Company, 2008, 229 ff.; G. Carullo, Observations on the Sale of the Shareholding, in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 954 ff.; G. Festa Ferrante, Buying and selling shareholdings and purchaser protection, in Riv. not., 2005, II, 156 ff.; F. Funari, Transfer of shares and non-competition agreements, in Company, 2009, 967 ff.; F. Laurini, Rules on transfers of limited liability company shares and business transfers, in Soc. Rev., 1993, 959 ff.; F. Parmeggiani, On the subject of the voidability of the sale of shares, in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 1185 ff.; C. Punzi, Disputes relating to disposals and acquisitions of shareholdings and actions that may be brought, in Riv. dir. proc., 2007, 547 ff.; D. Scarpa, Presupposition and contractual balance in the transfer of a shareholding, in Just. civ., 2010, II, 395 ff.; A. Tina, Transfer of Shareholdings and Contract Cancellation, in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 110 ff.

[3] On the subject of guarantees in the purchase and sale of shareholdings, see F. Bonelli, Acquisitions of companies and reference share packages: the seller's guarantees, in Dir. comm. int., 2007, 293 ff.; P. Casella, The two substantial methods of guaranteeing the buyer, in Acquisitions of companies and reference share packages, edited by F. Bonelli and M. De Andrè, Milan, 1990, 131 ff, C. D. Alessandro, Sale of shareholdings and promise of quality, in Just. civ., 2005, I, 1071 ff.; A. Fusi, The sale of shareholdings and the lack of quality, in Company, 2010, 1203 ff.; L. Renna, Notes on a debated topic: the sale of shares or quotas in companies and the transferor's guarantees, in Giur. it., 2008, 365 ff.

[4] For private international law profiles on the transfer of shareholdings, see S. M. Carbone, Conflicts of Laws and Jurisdiction in the Regulation of Bundle Transfers, in Riv. dir. int. priv. proc., 1989, 777 ff.

[5] In matters of due diligence cf. G. Alpa-A. Saccomani, Negotiation procedures, due diligence e memorandum informative, in Contracts, 2007, 267 ff.; L. Bragoli, La due diligence legal in the context of acquisition transactions, in Contracts, 2007, 1125 ff.; A. Camagni, La due diligence in the acquisition and valuation of companies, in Riv. doc. comm., 2008, 191 ff.; C. F. Giampaolino, Role of the Due Diligence and burden of information, in AIDA, 2009, 29 ff.; L. Picone, Negotiations, due diligence and disclosure obligations of listed companies, in Bank, stock exchange, cred. tit., 2004, I, 234 ff.

[6] On the right of control and information of the shareholder, see the monograph by R. Guidotti, Shareholder's control rights in the limited liability company., Milan, 2007. See also, to confine oneself to some recent contributions, P. Benazzo, Controls in the limited liability company: singularity of type or homogeneity of function?, in Soc. Rev., 2010, 18 ff.; D. Cesiano, The (limited?) right of consultation of the member formerly-administrator in the limited liability company., in Company, 2010, 1131 ff.; A. Pisapia, Shareholder control in the S.r.l.: object, limits and remedies, in Company, 2009, 505 ff.; V. Sangiovanni, Right of control of the limited liability company shareholder and statutory autonomy, in Notariat, 2008, 671 ff.; V. Sanna, The scope of the control rights of 'shareholders not participating in the administration' in the limited liability company, in Jur. comm., 2010, I, 155 ff.; F. Torroni, Notes on the subject of the shareholder's powers of control in the limited liability company, in Riv. not., 2009, II, 673 ff.

[7] See, for this approach, U. Tombari, Problems concerning the alienation of the shareholding and the activity of due diligence, in Bank, stock exchange, cred. tit., 2008, I, 70 ff.

[8] Remaining outside the scope of the present study are questions relating to the possible liability for negotiations, which may be asserted by one of the parties in the event that the other party violates the canon of good faith enshrined in Art. 1337 of the Civil Code. On the subject of negotiation liability see recently, in a comparative law perspective, E. A. Kramer, Withdrawal from negotiations: a comparative sketch, in Resp. civ., 2011, 246 ff. (translated by R. Omodei Salè). See also G. Afferni, Pre-contractual liability and breakdown of negotiations: compensable damage and causal link, in Damage resp., 2009, 469 ff.; M. Capodanno, Letters of intent, duties in contrahendo and good faith in negotiations, in Riv. dir. priv., 2008, 305 ff.; C. Cavajoni, Unjustified withdrawal from negotiations and damages, in Contracts, 2007, 315 ff.; G. Gigliotti, Negotiations, minutes and good faith. Liability for unfair conduct, in Corr. mer., 2008, 302 ff.; G. Guerreschi, Pre-contractual liability: free to withdraw from negotiations but up to a certain point, in Damage resp., 2006, 49 ff.

[9] The latest financial statements of the company are generally attached to the contract (or interim financial statements are prepared and attached precisely for the purpose of the acquisition) and the seller warrants that such financial statements are complete, true and give a true and fair view of the company's economic, financial and asset situation, and assumes the obligation to indemnify in the event of any discrepancy between the financial statements and the true state of affairs. Balance sheet guarantees are also important for the determination of the company's purchase price, as the purchase price is normally determined as the sum of the company's net assets and a multiple of the latest profits. On balance sheet guarantees in takeover contracts see R. Pistorelli, The 'analytical' guarantees on balance sheet items, in Acquisitions, cit., 157 ff.

[10] On tax guarantees see A. Pedersoli, Fiscal, social security and ecological guarantees, in Acquisitions, cit., 147 ff.

[11] The guarantee generally concerns the validity of existing contracts and the fact that they will not be terminated as a result of the acquisition. In this regard, it should be noted that contracts to which the target company is a party sometimes contain a change of control clause, which entitles the contractual counterparty of the target to withdraw from the contract in the event of a change of ownership. Should the contract be of considerable economic significance, this could have a significant negative impact on the buyer.

[12] On the subject of merger invalidity, see the monograph by P. Beltrami, Liability for Fusion Damage, Turin, 2008. See also V. Afferni, Invalidity of merger and reform of capital companies, in Jur. comm., 2009, I, 189 ff.; A. Colavolpe, On the subject of invalidity of the deed of merger, in Company, 2008, 483 ff.; P. Lucarelli, Incongruous Exchange Ratio, Merger Invalidity and Remedies: A Relationship Still to be Explored, in Riv. dir. comm., 2001, II, 269 ff.; L. Picone, Invalidity of the merger and shareholder remedies, in Company, 1999, 458 ff.; V. Sangiovanni, Invalidity of merger and damages, in Resp. civ., 2010, 379 ff.

[13] Cass., 12 January 1991, no. 257It has ruled that fraud as a ground for avoidance of a contract may consist either in deceiving with false information or in concealing decisive facts or circumstances from the knowledge of others by silence or reticence.

[14] See, for example, Cass., 12 June 2008, no. 15706, which held that no proof had been provided that the seller of the participation had given false information to the buyer, and therefore rejected the claim for annulment of the contract for fraudulent intent.

[15] Cass., 19 July 2007, No. 16031, in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 103 ff., with a note by A. Tina; in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 1176 ff., with a note by F. Parmeggiani; in Giur. it., 2008, 365 ff., with a footnote by L. Renna, stated that false or omitted statements of fact may entail the obligation for the mendacious or reticent contracting party to pay damages if the other party would have nevertheless determined to conclude the deal but on different terms.

[17] Cass., 19 July 2007, No. 16031, in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 103 ff., with a note by A. Tina; in Jur. comm., 2008, II, 1176 ff., with a note by F. Parmeggiani; in Giur. it., 2008, 365 ff., with a note by L. Renna.

[18] With regard to case law on the merits, we can point out Trib. Roma, 16 April 2009, in Company, 2010, 1203 ff., with a footnote by A. Fusi, who ruled that a contract for the assignment of company shares is voidable when there has been a specific promise by the assignor as to the assets of the company whose shares are involved. According to the court, Roman quality of the thing is anything that may allow it to be enjoyed better and more profitably, and it is therefore plausible that the solidity of the social enterprise, reflected in the value and profitability of the share, constitutes a quality of that share. In the present case, an express guarantee had been given as to the company's assets, which, however, turned out to be different from what had been declared: in particular, the company's very serious debt situation had led to the loss of its entire share capital, whereas the assignor had declared that such capital existed. The case dealt with by the Court of Rome differs from the case dealt with by the Court of Cassation precisely because, in the case decided by the Roman court, there was a specific clause on the company's assets.

[19] On the duration of warranties in acquisition contracts see S. Erede, Duration of guarantees and consequences of their breach, in Acquisitions, cit., 199 ff.

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