Einde inhoudsopgave
The One-Tier Board (IVOR nr. 85) 2012/4.1.5
4.1.5 Evolution of corporate governance
Mr. W.J.L. Calkoen, datum 16-02-2012
- Datum
16-02-2012
- Auteur
Mr. W.J.L. Calkoen
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS601871:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Ondernemingsrecht (V)
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
Van Solinge and Nieuwe Weme (2009), p. 1, where the authors state that in his thesis Van der Heijden defended the notion that the Dutch concept of limited partnership and limited liability for shareholders was of Dutch origin and originated from the water boards; see also Punt (2010), p. 75 et seq.; see also Mr E.J.J. van der Heyden, rewritten by Mr W.C.L. van der Grinten, Handboek van de Naamloze Vennootschap (1955), p. 3 ('Van der Grinten (1955)'), and Van der Grinten (1989), p. 3; see also Gelderblom, De Jong and Jonker (2011), pp. 35-36.
Johan Matthijs de Jongh, Shareholder Activists Avant la Lettre: The 'Compaining Participants' in the Dutch East India Company, 1622-1625', Origins of Shareholder Advocacy, Papers presented at Yale, Millstein Center for Corporate Governance, 6 November 2009 (January 2011), p. 11 ('De Jongh (2011/A)'). For the text of the licence and its translation into English, see Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 33 and 44, and Van Dillen (1958), p. 26.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 44 and 58 and Frentrop (2002), p. 57.
Gelderblom, De Jong and Jonker (2011), p. 48.
De Jongh (2009/B), p. 6.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 44 and Johan Matthijs de Jongh, `Oligarchie en thema en variaties. Zeggenschap van aandeelhouders vóór 1900', in R. Abma, P.J. van der Korst and G.T.M.J. Raaijmakers (eds.), Handboek Onderneming en Aandeelhouder, 00&R-uitgave (2011), p. 7 ('De Jongh (2011/B)'), where he also refers to his 2009 publication in which he describes the pamphlets of 1622 and 1623 and the actions of Isaac Lemaire and Willem Usselinks of 1609.
Gelderblom, De Jong and Jonker (2011), pp. 50-51.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 58; Ferguson (2009), p. 134; and Cadbury (2002), p. 5. Although the Heeren Zeventien had limited liability pursuant to article 42 of the 1602 Octrooi (see Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 65; Van Dillen (1985), p. 27; Gelderblom, De Jong and Jonker (2011), p. 39; and Punt (2010), pp. 104 and 109), plaintiffs did occasionally sue the Heeren Zeventien, Punt (2010), pp. 106-107. For example, in a case about dividends for the heirs of stadtholder William III plaintiffs filed their claim against the Heeren Zeventien; see also Punt (2010), pp. 201-202. Hugo Grotius (Hugo de Groot), the world famous international jurist, also argued that shareholders were not liable, Punt (2010), p. 81, Hugo de Groot in De Zure Belli ac Pacis (1625).
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 43 and 47 and Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 2-3.
Frentrop (2002), p. 85; Ferguson (2008), p. 49; and Van Dillen (1958), p. 32.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 15 and De Jongh (2011/A), p. 36. The Heeren Zeventien were appointed for life and new replacements were chosen by their friends, the city governors, Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 54-55.
De Jongh (2011/A), p. 74.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. XI; Cadbury (2002), pp. 2-3; and De Jongh (2011/A), p. 74.
Van Dillen (1958), p. 28 and Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. XI.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 54.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. XI and Cadbury (2002), p. 3.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. X and 1 and Cadbury (2002), p. 3.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 58 and 225; Lendering (2005), p. 85; and Van der Grinten (1989), p. 4.
Jardine (2008), p.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 109 for Denmark, p. 133 for France, p. 196 for Italy, and p. 234 for the UK, 'EIC throughout the 17
De Jongh (2011/A), p. 80 and Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 66.
According to article 2 of the Octrooi, Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 30.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), pp. 55 and 58.
Gepken-Jager, Van Solinge and Timmerman (2005), p. 57; P. van Schilfgaarde and J.W. Winter, Van de BV en de NV (2009), pp. 31 and 235 ('Van Schilfgaarde and Winter (2009)'); M.J.G.C. Raaijmakers and W.J. de Ridder, Corporate Governance in Nederland (2008) ('Raaijmakers and De Ridder (2008)'); Prof. P.J. Dortmond, 'De one-tier board in een Nederlandse Vennootschap', Nederlands ondernemingsrecht in grensoverschrijdend perspectief, Serie Instituut voor Ondernemingsrecht, deel 40 (2003), p. 111 et seq. ('Dortmond (2003)'); Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 2 and 512; and G.J. Boelens, Oligarchische Clausules in Statuten van N.V's [Oligarchie Clauses in Articles of Association of NVsJ, thesis (1949), p. 90 ('Boelens (1949)').
Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 5 and 512, where it is stated that from then on supervisory directors became an important power, and Dortmond (2003), p. 111 et seq. who confirms this.
Frentrop (2002), p. 104.
De Jongh (2011/A), p. 79 and Mr J.M. de Jongh in an article, `Aandeelhoudersactiviteiten avant la lettre' in a book, Welberaden (2009), p. 270 ('De Jongh (2009)').
Frentrop (2002), p. 111 and De Jongh (2011/A), p. 82.
Van der Grinten (1955), p. 5.
Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 5-6 and 512 and Dortmond (2003), p. 111 et seq.
Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 5-6 and 512; De Jongh (2011B), p. 17; and Punt (2010), p. 112. Punt describes several 18
Van Solinge and Nieuwe Weme (2009), p. 5. NV is the abbreviation of 'Naamloze Vennootschap', which comes from 'Société Anonyme'.
Van der Grinten (1989), p. 512.
J.R. Glasz, Enige beschouwingen over zinvol commissariaat, thesis, Serie Recht en Praktijk, no. 84 (1995), p.160 ('Glasz (1995)'), referring to an advice given by Crookewit of 1880.
Van Solinge and Nieuwe Weme (2009), p. 4 and De Jongh (2011/B), p. 20.
Articles 36-56 of the Commercial Code of 1838. The points mentioned here can be found: (i) and (ii) in article 38, (iii) in article 39, (iv) in article 40, (v) in article 45, (vi) in article 52, (vii) in article 44 and (viii) in article 54.
Frentrop (2002), p. 155 and Brugmans (1969), p. 109.
Brugmans (1969), p. 88.
De Jongh (2011/B), p. 23.
Van Zanden and Van Riel (2000), p. 382, Brugmans (1969), pp. 239-243 and Wennekes (2000), pp. 341-391, also mentioned above.
R.P. Voogd, Statutaire beschermingsmiddelen bij beursvennootschappen, thesis, Serie Vennootschaps- en Rechtspersonen, deel 32 (1989), pp. 4, 40, 55 and 60 ('Voogd (1989)'), and Van Zanden and Van Riel (2000), p. 386 and R. Polak, Wering van Vreemden Invloed uit Nationale Ondernemingen [Protection against foreign influence over national enterprises], thesis (1918), p. 59 ('Polak (1918)'); Staatscourant of 23 June 1989; and Boelens (1949), p. 10.
De Jongh (2011/B), p. 25.
Fentrop (2002), pp. 216-220.
Fentrop (2002), p. 223.
Fentrop (2002), p. 263.
Frentrop (2002), p. 240 and Boelens (1949), pp. 26-80.
W.L.P. Molengraaff, Handelsrecht (1923), p. 244 ('Molengraaff (1923)').
Frentrop (2002), p. 243.
Boelens (1949), pp. 26-80.
Boelens (1949), pp. 93 and 107; and G.H.A. Grosheide, Machtsverhoudingen in NVs [Power division in NVs], advisory report presented to the Royal Netherlands Notarial Organisation (1959), p. 45 ('Grosheide (1959)').
Van der Grinten (1989), p. 512.
Joint and several liability is a consequence of fraternal board membership. See W.L.P.A. Molengraaff; Leidraad van het Nederlandse Handelsrecht (1940), p. 255 ('Molengraaff (1940)'). Joint and several liability, with the possibility of exculpation, was introduced into the regulations governing NVs in 1928 as a copy of a similar provision in the Code on Cooperative Associations, articles 29, 31-32, Molengraaff (1940), p. 307 and H.F.A. Vil mar, Het Nederlands Handelsrecht (1931), p. 151 ('Viillmar (1931)').
These items can be found in the Commercial Code of 1928 as follows: (i) in article 48a, (ii) in article 51b, (iii) in articles 49b and 52, (iv) in article 36d, (v) in articles 36g, 47b, 47c, 591, 59b and 52, (vi) in article 47c and (vii) in articles 53 and 53a-d (the court-appointed investigators were possibly the predecessor of the Enterprise Chamber, which was introduced in 1970).
Couwenbergh and Haenen, Tabaksblat (2008), p. 77.
Voogd (1989), p. 8 and Polak (1918), pp. 25-57, where Polak describes the danger of infiltration by foreigners taking over Dutch companies. Polak himself was not in favour of defence mechanisms.
Voogd (1989), pp. 8-10 and Fentrop (2002), p. 281 and Boelens (1949), pp. 9-25, which arguments were stil valid in 1971, see the brochure of that year of the Foundation Maatschappij en Onderneming, Profs. Kuin, Bosman, Van Doorn and Uniken Venema, pp. 16-20.
Forumbank, HR 21/1/1955, NJ 1959, 43.
Voogd (1989), pp. 20 and 29-191 and Boelens (1949), pp. 107-140.
Voogd (1989), pp. 195-260.
Voogd (1989), pp. 21-27 and F.J.M.A.H. Houben, Het Certificaat, thesis (1942), pp. 33-34 ('Houben (1942)') and Polak (1918), pp. 66-67.
Frentrop (2002), pp. 281-282.
Voogd (1989), p. 25 and Houben (1942), p. 34.
Van Schilfgaarde and Winter (2009), p. 414, nr. 137 (structuur); Van der Grinten (1989), pp. 19-20 and P.J. Verdam, Herziening van het Ondernemingsrecht (1971) ('Verdam (1971)').
Zahn (2005), pp. 264-265.
Van der Grinten was the most influential corporate law professor of that period; the Handbook for the NV and the BV, Van der Grinten (1989) became the corporate law bible.
Naamloze Vennootschap 76/1, January 1989.
E.J.J. van der Heyden, Het Wetsontwerp op de Naamloze Vennootschappen 1925 (1926), p. 69 ('Van der Heyden (1926)'), where he writes 'Risum tenamus, don't let us laugh'.
OGEM, HR 10/1/1990, NJ 1990.
Gucci, HR 27/9/2000, NJ 2000, 653.
RNA, HR 18/4/2003, JOR 2003, 1001.
HBG, HR 21/2/2003, NJ 2003, 182.
Stork, Enterprise Chamber, OK 17/1/2007, JOR 2007/42, the US investors Centaurus and Paulson, who acquired 31.4% in Stork, demanded that Stork split itself into 3 divisions: aerospace, food systems and technical services and sell off the last two. The Stork board reacted stiffly. The communication was not good. Centaurus asked for a meeting with the chairman, who reacted that he did not deal with strategy and referred Centaurus to the CEO. Both Centaurus and Stork approached the Enterprise Chamber, which concluded that the communication between the boards and these two large shareholders was not good and that they were both at fault. The Enterprise Chamber ruled that the board could not use its defence mechanism outside a hostile takeover, merely to protect itself, and certainly not indefinitely, and that the supervisory board could not be dismissed by shareholders and it appointed three super-supervisory directors to be in charge of the negotiations of strategy.
ABN AMRO in Sale LaSalle Bank, HR 13/7/2007, NJ 2007, 434, see note 928 below.
ASMI, 11R 9/7/2010, NJ 2010, 544. The ASMI case is a long winded case that went in and out of the Enterprise Chamber three times. The shareholder activists were unhappy with the founder, CEO, 21% shareholder Del Prado, who as they said ran the company as a family company, appointing his son as his successor and having the supervisory board appoint himself as advisor to that board. The Supreme Court confirmed again that the management board determines the strategy and that the supervisory board supervises strategy. They should be free to do so and decided importantly that the supervisory board does not have the obligation to mediate between shareholders and the managing board but can act as deems fit, which was a point that the Enterprise Chamber had lelt rather vague in its Stork and ASMI decisions. The Supreme Court referred the case back to the Enterprise Chamber, which decided that the investigation would be stopped.
DSM, HR 14/12/2007, NJ 2008, 105.
SER advices Evenwichtig Ondernemingsbestuur of 14 February 2008 ('SER (2008)') and Prof. Dr. K. Cools, Mr P.F.A. Geerts, Prof. Mr M.J. Kroeze and Mr Drs A.C.M. Pijls, Het recht van Enquête (2009) ('Cools, Geerts, Kroeze and Pijls (2009)').
SER (2008), pp. 53-54.
See Annex Peters Code.
Riens Abma, 'De veranderde positie van de aandeelhouder in goed bestuur', Tijdschrift over Governance, no. 2 (2006), pp. 11-12 ('Abma (2006/B)'), see also Assink in Assink and Strik (2009), p. 34, Monitoring Committee Corporate Governance Code of 3 August 2006, p. 10 and SER (2008), p. 33. See also Rapport Nijenrode, Aandeelhoudersbetrokkenheid in Nederland (2010), p. 50 ('Aandeelhouders Rapport Nijenrode (2010)') and )(ander van Uffelen, 'Angelsaksische investeerder rukt op', Volkskrant, 3 April 2010.
Couwenbergh and Haenen, Tabaksblat (2008), pp. 91-93.
Parliamentary Papers II 2008/09, 31763, Memorandum of Reply, 2 May 2011, p. 4.
Assink in Assink and Strik (2009), pp. 41-43.
Couwenbergh and Haenen, Tabaksblat (2008), p. 104.
Van Solinge and Nieuwe Weme (2009), pp. 746-774. See allo SER (2008), p. 40, which mentions that 75% of European countries did not opt out of the limits on defence mechanisms. One of the arguments used in the Netherlands to maintain defence mechanisms is to keep a level playing-field with the US, where defence mechanisms are allowed in reciprocity vis-à-vis the US (see Van Ginneken (2010), p. 86). Another argument is the exceptionally vulnerable position of Dutch boards, see SER (2008), p. 37, because of the low threshold for agenda additions and the easy access to preliminary injunctions in the Enterprise Chamber.
See annex Frijns Code available at http://www.commissiecorporategovemance.nl/page/downloads/DEC_2008_UK_Code_DEF_UIC_pdf.
Prof. S. Schuit, The Chairman Makes or Breaks the Board (2010), p. 33 ('Schuit (2010)').
Early management boards, the VOC and similar companies
The small groups of peat farmers who worked the land beside the streams and rivers around AD 1000 started a tradition of cooperation and free consultation between equals that was designed to achieve consensus. The licences, "octrooien", they received from the Count of Holland were unique arrangements. The tradition of consultation was continued by the dike builders of around AD 1300 who formed waterschappen (water boards) to manage the polders and control the water. The water boards had members, who were fully liable, and supporters, gentlemen of influence who contributed as limited partners.
The partnerships formed for a single sea voyage, the voor compagnieën (precompanies), of the last decade of the 16th century had managers with full liability as well as limited partners, who have been compared to the commendators (sleeping partners) known from societas of Northern Italy in Renaissance times. It is a matter of debate whether these limited partners (i.e. partners whose liability was limited to their contribution) were based on the earlier Italian examples of traders or on the Dutch water boards.1
These companies for a single voyage were already popular before the sea route to the East Indies was discovered. In the years immediately preceding the formation of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) the provincial states of Holland and Zeeland had issued ordinances prohibiting unlicensed voyages.
Dutch East India Company (VOC)
When the States General, inspired by Van Oldenbarnevelt, persuaded all these voor compagnieën (pre-companies) to merge, the VOC received an octrooi for 21 years. It was provided that the contributed capital would be returned to shareholders with accrued profits in the tenth and twentieth years.2 When the VOC was founded it managed to raise just onder 6 5 million guilders from a wide range of investors on the strength of the success and profits of the earlier companies.3 The VOC was less profitable initially because of the costs of the military tasks it was required to perform. Indeed, no dividends were paid in the first few years. Just before the end of its first decade, however, the board paid all investors a dividend of 162.5%, i.e. 6.25% interest per year compounded.4 This was paid partly in cash and partly in kind, which led to arguments about the valuation of the distributed assets. Dividends were paid in 1612, 1613, 1618 and 1620. Then dividend payments stopped, decreasing the value of the shares from 250% to 165%.5 In 1622 and 1623 shareholders and shareholder activists (doleanten) had asked for more rights. By publishing pamphlets they tried to influence public opinion and put pressure on the negotiations between the States General and the Heeren Zeventien for a renewal of the octrooi.6Nevertheless, the States General did not consent to giving the shareholders more rights when they issued a new octrooi.7
Dutch corporate historians tend to cite the VOC of 1602 as the first public limited liability company with fixed paid-up capital. The VOC was a large public company, which indeed had limited liability in the modern sense, a separation of ownership and management and tradable shares.8 The VOC was a merger of some of the East India companies established in various cities in the provinces of Holland and Zeeland and consolidated into Chambers (those of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Middelburg, Delft, Hoorn and Enkhuizen). The VOC's executive board (the Heeren Zeventien) had authority over the six Chambers.9
Shortly afterwards the Wisselbank of Amsterdam was founded. This bank arranged an efficient system for the exchange of currencies and established a system of current accounts and cheques. In 1611, the Amsterdam Exchange (the Beurs) moved to splendid new buildings opposite the City Hall. As a result, the two symbols of Amsterdam's power stood facing each other.10
Differences between the VOC and the English East India Company
For this study it is interesting to note that the most obvious difference between the VOC and the English East India Company (EIC) was the different approach to the power of shareholders. The corporate structure of the VOC reflected the oligarchie nature of the semi-independent city states of the Dutch Republic, with control concentrated in the hands of a small group of directors (the Board of Seventeen or Heeren Zeventien).11 Even after protests of shareholders and the creation of the Committee of Nine, a soit of supervisory board, in 1623, the shareholders still had no influence. The Committee of Nine consisted of major shareholders, but they did not have voting rights at meetings with the Heeren Zeventien. The English EIC was much less oligarchie. In the EIC shareholders, called members, could dismiss directors, and had extensive information and approval rights,12 where each shareholder had a vote in the General Court or Court of Proprietors, comparable to the present-day meeting of shareholders.13 In the VOC, the Heeren Zeventien were appointed by the governing six city "Chambers" out of the members of these city oligarchies, therefore de facto by co-optation.14 In the first phase the VOC directors were even appointed for life.15 EIC directors were appointed for one year and could be dismissed. In the EIC shareholders had considerable power.16 It is interesting to note that the same difference of attitude to the power of shareholders vis-à-vis the board between the Netherlands and the UK can stil be observed in the beginring of the 21st century.
The VOC licence was dated 20 March 1602. The EIC's charter was two years older.17 However, the VOC was larger, having an initial paid-up capital of 6,449,688 guilders and 20 cents as compared with the EIC's start-up capital of £68,000.18 At the conversion rates at that time (9 pounds to 100 guilders)19 this meant the initial capital of the VOC was 10 times higher than that of the EIC. Throughout the 17th century the VOC remained larger than the EIC. The Dutch VOC served as an example not only for the Dutch West India Company of 1621, but also for other European shipping and trading companies in the 17th century.20
The VOC's octrooien of 1602 and 1623: a two-tier board
The Heeren Zeventien formed the executive board of the VOC but were entitled to trade for their private account in the VOC's products. This led to widely criticised conflicts of interest. It should be noted, by the way, that a similar situation developed at the EIC. In 1623 these malpractices were corrected in the VOC by the new octrooi.21
In the first years of its charter from 1602 to 1623, the Heeren Zeventien had features of both a one-tier and a two-tier board. The change in 1623 resulted in a distinction between a management body and a body of supervisors (the Committee of Nine), which was the first instance of a two-tier board.
The right to appoint the Heeren Zeventien was reserved to the constituent founders, i.e. the six Chambers. Amsterdam chose eight directors, Middelburg four and Rotterdam, Delft, Hoorn and Enkhuizen one each. The seventeenth, who was the chairman, was chosen by the last five cities together.22 In the first years the board members were appointed for life. From 1623 directors were appointed for 3-year periods, but could be reappointed, which usually happened because they were appointed by the Chambers from which they came.23 Directors were major shareholders themselves. Each had to invest at least 6,000 guilders. Later this requirement was dropped. The Heeren Zeventien made all the decisions about voyages, ships, budgets, fitting out, crews, cash, provisions, the division of goods brought back from abroad, dates for auctions, the building of new ships and the declaration of dividends. Although some decisions were delegated to bewindhebbers (administrators) of the city Chambers, the Heeren Zeventien clearly exercised all the executive powers of the VOC.
As noted before, shareholders had no say at all in the management of the VOC during the first 21 years. In 1623 the octrooi was up for renwal and the States General had taken into account the complaints of shareholders about malpractices at the top of the VOC. The main innovation was the Committee of Nine. This consisted of nine major shareholders from the various Chambers. The Committee had the task of auditing the VOC 's accounts each year. It also had advisory powers in the event that the Heeren Zeventien wished to sell goods and "other important items". The Committee of Nine was given the right to attend meetings and make recommendations and also to inspect warehouses. This Committee may be regarded as the precursor of the present-day supervisory board.24 By 1720 the name of the Committee of Nine had changed to Raad van Commissarissen, the same name as carried by the present-day supervisory board onder Dutch corporate law.25
Some shareholders wanted the Committee of Nine to have not only advisory rights, but also real voting rights on the board. If this had happened they would have made decisions together with the Heeren Zeventien. In such a case, there would have been a one-tier board of 17 executive directors and 9 non-executive directors. However, this demand by the shareholders was not accepted by the States General. The lobbying of the merchant-regents (i.e. the regenten of the big cities) prevailed,26 and the Committee of Nine remained supervisory directors only.27 There was now a two-tier board. This development came to a business world that was accustomed to the role of outside influentials as sounding board and supporter in the "polder" tradition. Nowadays, many Dutch commentators argue that the country has been used to a board of supervisory directors for about 400 years and that two-tier boards should therefore remain. They have become a feature of Dutch corporate culture.
The so-called Accounting Committee, also established in 1623, was appointed to receive the accounts for the past 21 years from the Heeren Zeventien. The latter more or less boycotted this committee, but could not stonewall the Committee of Nine as it consisted entirely of major shareholders. However, the Heeren Zeventien knew how to deal with these supervisory bodies. They saw to it that their friends were appointed, and they pacified shareholders by paying out substantial dividends. When profits declined in the 18th century, the VOC stil managed to regularly pay out smaller, equalised dividends, thereby satisfying the shareholders who were by this time no longer entrepreneurs but rentiers.28 In the 17th century one or two other companies resembling the VOC were established in the Netherlands, such as the West India Company (WIC) in 1621. All of them had a multi-purpose function, i.e. a mixture of trading and the governance of overseas territories.29
As mentioned previously, the total number of participations entered in the share registers in 1602 was worth nearly six and a half million guilders, to be precise 6,449,688 guilders and 20 cents. This total did not change. Although there were no shares with a fixed nominal amount, registered shareholders were free to sell and transfer their total shareholding or part of it by new registration at the offices of Chambers in the presence of one or two members of the Heeren Zeventien. In practice, it became common to trade participations of 500 guilders, which was a fairly large amount in those days. The entries in 1602 even showed shares of 50 guilders in the name of clerks and chambermaids, subscribed by their benevolent bosses.
Changes to NV law in 1720
In 1720 the Dutch followed the British example, the new charter stated the total outstanding capital, with each share having an equal value. The charter now envisaged regular shareholder meetings. However, the Dutch did not follow the British example of creating a large number of shareholder companies and as a result did not suffer a share bubble and bust, as happened in both France and England. They did create several insurance companies with limited liability, of which the oldest still in existence is the Assurantiesociëteit Stad Rotterdam Anno 1720. In the articles of association of these companies the name commissarissen (supervisory directors) appeared for the first time.30 The responsibility of the supervisory directors varied from simply checking the accounts to a right to veto certain decisions, and even to management tasks. Other insurance companies were founded in 1776, 1807 and 1809. All of them had supervisory boards that verified the accounts on behalf of the main shareholders.31
Dutch corporate law before and after the Code Napoleon
Old company law remained applicable to existing companies. This had already been determined in draft codes prepared by Dutch jurists, including M.S. Asser in 1809. These drafts never became effective. After the Netherlands was incorporated into the French Empire in 1810 the French Code de Commerce became applicable. The old corporate practice and the clauses in articles of association remained applicable for existing companies, because the Code de Commerce saw a corporation as an agreement between shareholders. It followed that shareholders had freedom of organization once they decided the regime of the company, even when that had been established many years previously. The part of the Code de Commerce pertaining to corporate law was short. After the liberation of the Netherlands in 1813, a committee of Dutch jurists was formed to draft a new Commercial Code. This took a long time because of the main discussion point: whether the government would have the power to permit or veto the formation of limited liability companies and dissolve them at its discretion or, at the other extreme, could only check compliance with specific legal requirements. The Commercial Code that was finally enacted in 1838, contained only very brief provisions on company law. It had 21 articles applicable to companies with limited liability, called "NVs" (Naamloze Vennootschappen).32 The language it employed was sweeping and vigorous, as was that of the French Code de Commerce. As the company was seen as an agreement between shareholders, existing companies continued to function onder their existing regime, but, according to French "revolutionary" ideas for new companies, the meeting of shareholders would be the highest organ for new companies. The implications of this last point were less than might have been expected because most companies were old family enterprises in which shareholders and directors were the same persons and the old system of supervisory directors who represented the main shareholders for the purpose of checking the accounts remained in force.33 In practice, supervisory directors did often check the accounts for the shareholders, as there were no external auditors.34 The 1838 Code allowed substantial flexibility and, besides permitting the old system (where the duties of the supervisory directors could be limited to "bare" supervision), provided that the supervisory board could even engage in management.35 The Code of 1838 had the following characteristics:
(i) a notarial deed and government consent were necessary for the articles of association;
registration of companies and directors in trade registers;
personal liability of directors in the case of non-registration and also in the case of non-compliance with the articles of association;
choice between bearer and registered shares;
if a director infringed the articles of association all the directors were jointly and severally liable to third parties (a consequence of fraternal boards);
flexibility of the role of the supervisory board as described above;
managing directors appointed by the meeting of shareholders;
possibility of limiting the voting rights of each shareholder to six votes by a clause in the articles of association;36 the aim of this clause was to make it possible to limit the power of large shareholders and give other shareholders more influence, but the result could be to strengthen the position of the board vis-à-vis the shareholders.
Apart from the Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij, which had a supervisory board that nominated the executive directors,37 only a few other NVs were incorporated between 1838 and 1850. 137 NVs registered by 1850.38 In the following decades several attempts were made to introduce a more detailed code. In the 1880s, the era of many cooperatives and cross-networking, several informal companies ("maatschappijen") actually mentioned in their articles of association that the supervisory board appointed the executive directors.39 This was an oligarchie clause that marked the start of a tradition of defence mechanisms enshrined in the articles of association.
1898 defence mechanism of Royal Dutch Petroleum
Royal Dutch Petroleum, later called Royal Dutch Shell, was formed in 1890.40 Heilco Zijlker had discovered oil in the East Indies and found financiers to back him. The company grew quickly and was listed. The founders and several knowledgeable politicians formed the supervisory board and employed August Kessler and Hugo Loudon as managers. Their sons were later directors of the group. When Henri Deterding joined 6 years later, he proved to be a strong CEO, a rather un-Dutch "imperial" CEO. At first oil was used for lamps and sold thoughout eastern Mia. Deterding cut out the distributors and transport shippers and included these services in the activities of Royal Dutch Petroleum. This was a period of big mergers in the US. John D. Rockefeller was shaping American Standard Oil into a huge conglomerate. From 1898 Dutch corporate culture allowed boards to co-opt their successors. In 1898 Rockefeller approached Royal Dutch Petroleum with a proposal for a merger by public offer. He said that he could provide the company with the capital needed for expansion. The proposal was refused, because Kessler, the CEO, was able to convince his supervisory directors that Royal Dutch had "concessions for everlasting oil fields" and could raise all the necessary capital on the stock exchange. Rockefeller did not give up. He started a "baisse operabon" and the share price of Royal Dutch Petroleum shares fell drastically. Deterding realized that Rockefeller's strategy was to buy enough shares to dominate the general meeting of shareholders and then arrange for that meeting to appoint new supervisory and management directors consisting of Rockefeller's men. This strategy would work because the articles of association of Royal Dutch Petroleum, in keeping with the Commercial Code of that era, gave the general meeting of shareholders the right to appoint members of the boards. Deterding, with the approval of the supervisory directors, asked the Minister of Justice to approve a change to the articles of association in order to create a special class of shares (then known as preference shares and later as priority shares41) to be held by the supervisory directors. Henceforth the supervisory and management directors would be appointed by the meeting of holders of these new shares. This meeting could also block any change in the articles of association. Initially, the Minister of Justice objected because the requested changes were contrary to the general principles of law, but the Colonial Ministry convinced the Dutch government that it was in the national interest to help Royal Dutch Petroleum defend itself against a takeover by Standard Oil. The articles of association were changed accordingly. Thus in 1898, the Dutch corporate community received official sanction for the appointment of boards by co-optation. The times of the VOC with its oligarchie arrangements and govemment help had returned. This had been the trend from 1600 onwards right down to the 19th century.42 Standard Oil gave up trying to take over Royal Dutch when it realized it could never get control even if it acquired a majority of the shares.
Standard Oil then made a tender offer for Moeara Enim ("Enim"), another Dutch oil company extracting oil in Sumatra. This offer was supported by the Enim board. The listed price of Enim doubled and Royal Dutch Petroleum shares fell by 20%. The Enim board called a meeting of shareholders and recommended the offer, arguing that Standard Oil would provide capital for tanker ships. Deterding replied that Royal Dutch Petroleum would be a better partner as it could provide capital on more favourable terms and would respect Enim's independence. Deterding again visited the Minister of Colonies, who said that he might refuse a licence for a merger of Enim and Standard Oil. Standard Oil withdrew. Kessler and Deterding had won the takeover war only to discover the promised "everlasting oilfields" were being rapidly depleted. The board and the supervisory directors were late in informing shareholders and the listed price of Royal Dutch Petroleum dropped by 90%. Enraged shareholders threw stones through the windows of Deterding's house in The Hague.43
Royal Dutch later acquired all the shares of Enim and of Billiton NV, a mining company. In 1901 it entered into a cooperative arrangement with the British Shell Trading and Transport Company. Together they became one of the world's largest oil companies. When they merged in 1906 the company included the oil operabons of the Rothschilds and Gulbenkian. By this time the main product had become petrol, for which Royal Dutch Shell built a large refinery in Rotterdam. It competed intensely with Standard Oil, but concluded a standstill agreement with the Americans in 1928.
Change in company law in 1928
From the 1880s onwards Dutch businesses flourished. The Netherlands played a role in international peace treaties. The Peace Palace in the Hague, sponsored by Andrew Carnegie, was buik Statesmen from all over the world gathered there in 1907 and 1913 to promote world peace. Notwithstanding their efforts, the First World War broke out in 1914. However, the Netherlands stayed neutral, to the benefit of its commerce and industry.
Abraham Kuyper, the founder of the Dutch Reformed Anti-Revolutionary Party, defended the interests of the "kleine luyden" ("little people"). These petty bourgeoisie found a voice in this party, which dominated the centre of Dutch polities at a time when revolutions were spreading over Europe. Efforts were made to reform company law and make it more "democratie". The public started to develop an interest in the shares of listed companies and thought had to be given to company law. On this occasion consensus was once again the basis for a new draft of company law. The new provisions would have created more transparency for shareholders and greater protection of corporate capital and minority rights and introduced director liability. The Minister of Justice introduced the bili in 1910.44 However, the time was not yet ripe and the law was not enacted until 192845 under Justice Minister Donner and only then after lengthy debate. During the First World War the Germany started to buy Dutch shares. There was a fear of Ueberfremdung (dominance by foreigners), but this was not confined to the Netherlands. Dutch companies introduced oligarchic clauses in their articles of association. Other countries created different classes of shares with multiple voting rights.46 Dutch company law allowed other oligarchic clauses in the articles of association, e.g. transfer of shares exclusively to Dutch shareholders, board membership restricted to Dutch nationals, and transfer of shares only to Dutch holding companies.47 In 1920 Philips established such a holding company, which was called NV Gemeenschappelijk Bezit. This company was controlled by the Philips family and owned the majority of the listed shares. Heineken has employed the same system right down to the present day.48 The family owns 51% of the shares in a listed holding company, which owns 51% of the operating company, which is also listed. Hence the family is able to control the business by holding 51% of 51%, i.e. 26.01%.
Between 1910 and 1928 protection measures were extensively discussed in legal and corporate circles. In 1910 the draft of a new Companies Bill would have banned oligarchic clauses. However, the threat of Ueberfremdung during the First World War and the subsequent volatility of currencies led most continental European countries to permit defence techniques. France, Belgium, Switzerland and Germany once again abolished these possibilities in the 1930s.49 The Netherlands kept its oligarchic clauses. By 1928 Justice Minister Donner wished to abolish all oligarchic clauses, but Dutch business strongly objected. As a result, companies could stil include a clause in their articles of association allowing for binding nominations of managing and supervisory directors.50
The Commericial Code of 1928 had 122 articles dealing with NVs, as compared with the 21 articles of the 1838 Code. The main elements of the new code were as follows:
the meeting of shareholders could appoint managing and supervisory directors, but provisions allowing for binding nominations by the holders of a special class of shares — a defence mechanism — remained a legal possibility;
the role of supervisory directors remained flexible;51
publication of financial statements;
the paid up and maximum capital had to be stated in the articles of association;
liability of founders and managing and supervisory directors was increased;
each board member had an obligation to perform his duties properly; all directors were jointly and severally liable for matters that came within their remit unless they could prove that they were not to blame and had not failed to take measures;52
shareholders could ask for an investigation by court-appointed investigators.53
Mergers of Royal Dutch Shell and Unilever
Royal Dutch Petroleum merged with the English Shell Transport and Trading Company (Shell Transport) in 1907 and formed a group with two holding companies, one listed in London and the other in Amsterdam. Each of them owned shares in intermediate holding companies in a ratio of Royal Dutch 60% and English Shell 40% and each was entitled to the dividends from these intermediate holding companies and paid dividend taxes in a ratio of 60:40, as arranged under the terms of an equalisation agreement. In 1929 the UK Lever Brothers merged with Van den Bergh & Jurgens to form Unilever N.V. and Unilever Plc. They too operated as dualheaded companies and were listed in both cities. Each owned 50% of the shares in intermediate holding companies, and under an equalisation agreement each of the top holdings would pay out equal dividends. Both Royal Dutch Shell and Unilever were and still are very successful. The British and the Dutch have played complementary roles in their cooperation.
For example, Morris Tabaksblat, retired CEO of Unilever, has stated that Unilever's corporate culture is a good mix of the informal discussion of the British and the informal decision making of the Dutch.54
Further legal defence mechanisms
The UK never allowed legal defence mechanisms. The UK maintains the "passivity rule", implying that boards should not take any action in shareholder matters. In the US the Ford Company Foundation issued new shares to the public in 1955. The family Ford retained B shares, a small percentage of the newly issued shares, but these shares carried 40% of the votes. At the time this was exceptional for the US.
In the Netherlands, however, it was quite usual to include some sort of defence in the company's articles of association. Polak, already in 1918, had given as the main reason for defence mechanisms the fear of takeovers by foreigners.55 In 1949 Boelens added some more reasons, including (i) dangers resulting from fragmented ownership, (ii) speculators and (iii) the advantage of having a supervisory board, (iv) continuity of the board, (v) freedom of the board to focus on company business without having to worry about shareholders' wishes and actions and (vi) independent shareholders. He concluded "it is awkward to let shareholders decide on important matters".56 This was a clear expression of the idea, then prevalent in Dutch corporate culture, that weak shareholders needed a guardian. Shareholders cannot instruct.
The Supreme Court decision in Forumbank of 195557 made clear that the general meeting of shareholders cannot give instructions to the board. A 60% shareholder had borrowed money from Forumbank and had pledged his shares as security. He then called a shareholders meeting at which the purchase by the company of his and the 40% minority shareholder's share was on the agenda. The managing and supervisory boards objected as did the minority shareholders. The general meeting voted, of course, with the 60% majority shareholder prevailing, in favour of the resolution. The minority shareholder asked the court to declare the resolution null and void. The District Court, Appellate Court and Supreme Court did indeed declare the resolution null and void, confirming that the shareholders meeting could not instruct the managing board.
As stated before, the articles of association of many Dutch companies contain a variety of defences, such as giving the holders of a special class of shares ("prioriteitsaandelen") the right to appoint directors and to take other important decisions in the manner Royal Dutch Petroleum had done in 1898. The Companies Act of 1928 established clearly that companies could enshrine in their articles of association the right of the board of supervisory directors to appoint its members. Co-optation of the members of that board became common practice. By and after the Second World War other oligarchie clauses and clauses limiting the voting rights of shareholders found their way into the articles of association.58
After the Second World War NVs added a new weapon to their arsenal of defence against predators, the right to issue shares to a foundation especially established for that purpose and controlled by management. Usually such shares were preferred shares and the number which the board could issue at low cost was large enough to outvote any predator.59
A defence, already used in 1918, was to issue share certificates to bearer, "certificaten". The idea came from the US voting trusts. A company would transfer shares with voting rights to a trust, controlled by the board of the company, in exchange for "Depository Receipts". In the Netherlands the original shares were transferred to an administration vehicle, "administratiekantoor", sometimes an association or company, but usually a foundation, the board of which had the voting rights of the shares. For each share this administration vehicle issued a bearer certificate, listed on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange. The dividends and other economic rights attached to the shares were passed back to the certificate holders. The board of such a vehicle would be friendly to management, so that management could control the voting rights.60
The system of certificaten was used again in the Second World War. The Amsterdam municipality had to pay a penalty of 30 million guilders to the occupying Germans, because the city had gone on strike. The municipality paid in certificates of Hoogovens, the only Dutch steel company. These certificates had been issued for this purpose by the company and represented an economic or beneficial ownership. The voting rights remained with the administration vehicle, administered by the municipality.61 The Germans accepted this.
In 1954 the committee Hellema found that of the 70 largest companies, listed in Amsterdam, only 4 did not have any form of defence mechanism.62
It is important to note that defence mechanisms can only work, if the law, i.c. the company law codes and jurisprudence, allow them, but it is also essential that the body responsible for permitting of a listing accepts the practice. At the time the responsible body was the "Vereniging voor de Effectenhandel". It could refuse to list the shares of a company, whose articles of association were not to its liking. The board of the "Vereniging voor de Effectenhandel" consisted of brokers and bankers who usually were sympathetic to the wishes of a company's board and were less supportive of activist shareholders.
New Company Laws of 1971
In continental Europe the discussion in the 1950s and 1960s was whether the company's aim should be the maximisation of shareholders value or whether there are other decisive stakeholders' interests.
There was a strong employee interest lobby. There were suggestions to appoint employee representatives on the supervisory board as in Germany.
In 1964 the Committee Verdam on enterprise law laid the basis for later developments.63 The following laws were enacted in the 1970s:
the Works Council Act of 1971 obliging larger enterprises to establish a Works Council, which has rights of advice, consultation on certain board decisions, such as mass dismissals and acquisition or disposal of companies, and consent on employee regulations;
the Law laying down the requirements of a company's annual statements, of profits and loss statements and balance sheet with explanations and the statement of the auditor;
the changes in the Law on Investigation of Enterprises, "Enquêterecht", that could be initiated by shareholders, the public prosecutor and/or trade unions and the establishment of the specialised Enterprise Chamber to deal with these cases, which form the 1990s led to a body of corporate case law; and
the Law on Structure Regime Companies, which provided the Dutch solution for employee influence on the boards of large companies.
All these laws, as well as some additions to the company law in the new Book 2 of the DCC of 1976, described on the next page, referring to the "interest of the company and its enterprises", breathe an atmosphere of pluralism and equal rights for all stakeholder interests, especially including the interest of employees. Another regulation in the atmosphere of that period were the Rules on Mergers of the Social Economie Council, the "SER Fusie Gedragsregels", the first chapter giving consultative rights to trade unions in cases of acquiring or disposing of companies. The SER has been mentioned before as the institution embodying the modern "polder model", as a meeting place for consultation between employers and employees.
The Enterprise Chamber for Enquiry of companies created a body of jurisprudence, from the 1990s concerning the rights and obligations of boards.
The law on structure regime companies is of interest, because the Netherlands chose its own unusual two-tier model called the "Structure Regime", which is relevant to board practices. Although this model was set up to create employee participation in the governance of the company, the consequence was that it elevated the supervisory and management boards to a legal position that made them immune to shareholder criticism, because the supervisory board of large companies were given extra powers of co-opting themselves, appointing the management board and vetoing important decisions.64 This came in addition to the defence mechanisms described above. In 1970 the general view in the Netherlands was that with the widespread shareholder-ownership these fragmented shareholders were only interested in their own profits and therefore companies had to be protected by giving their boards and works councils more power. Most of the power was concentrated in management and supervisory boards. It led to managerial capitalism. The strengthening of the voice of employees was a confirmation of the already existing stakeholder or pluralistic model.
Introduction of Book 2 Dutch Civil Code (DCC), 1976
The new civil code was a project developed some decennia earlier. Professor Meijers wrote many parts of it in the 1930s. Company law was to be dealt with in Book 2 of the new Civil Code, hereinafter to be called Book 2 DCC), the book on legal entities. The text of Book 2 DCC was finalised in 1960 and enacted on 8 April 1976. With respect to the NV (limited liability company, with many shareholders, comparable with the UK Plc, German AG and French SA) and the BV (limited liability company, with a closed number of shareholders, comparable with the UK Ltd., German GmbH and French SarL) Book 2 DCC replaced all the articles 36-58g of the Commercial Code. There were no important changes. The BV had been introduced in 1971. The first articles 1 through 25 of Book 2 DCC are applicable to both the NV and the BV. Articles 64 through 174 deal with the NV and articles 175 through 284 deal with the BV. They are very much alike and most of the articles for the BV are 110 numbers higher than those for the NV. For example, the main article describing the duty of supervisory directors is 2.140 DCC for the NV and 2.250 DCC for the BV. Hereinafter, this study will often refer to 2.140/250 DCC to make clear that a certain point is applicable to both NVs and BVs. Other legal entities, such as the state, provinces, municipalities, church associations, associations, co-operatives and foundations are also dealt with in Book 2 DCC. Then there are chapters on mergers and splitting of legal entities, disputes and enterprise investigation and finally the annual report and accounts, which were changed several times. Annex Book 2 DCC to this book gives a summary of Book 2 DCC. The summary includes the articles of the pending draft articles on one-tier boards, such as 2.129a/239a DCC (Act). One-tier boards are the centrepiece of this book. The alternative option to have a one-tier board instead of the usual two-tier board system was first proposed as a possibility in the Tabaksblat Code. This concept was introduced by the government in a bill, which was accepted by the Second Chamber of Parliament on 9 December 2009 and by the First Chamber of Parliament on 6 June 2011 and is expected to be enacted on 1 January 2012.
Three "Anti-Misuse" of Bankruptcy Acts 1987
In the beginring of the 1980s there were many bankruptcies, many of them the consequence of fraud or fraudulent bookkeeping. First, an Act which made constructors liable for debts of their bankrupt subcontractors, second, an Act holding directors liable for failing to inform the tax and social security premium collector in case of near bankruptcy and third and most important for this study the articles 2:139/248 DCC creating joint and several director liability for sloppy bookkeeping, failing to file accounts and other causes of bankruptcy.
Defence mechanisms maintained, 1987
In 1987 the Committee Van der Grinten65 came to the conclusion that defence mechanisms could be lelt as they were, but that the courts should intervene in extreme cases. In the same period Professor Maeijer spoke in favour of defence mechanisms, in his Silver Jubilee speech in 1987, as a way for the board to act in the "interest of the company.66 This attracted attention at the time, because of the takeover battle between the publishing companies Kluwer and Elsevier. Elsevier wished to take over Kluwer, but Kluwer had defence mechanisms and successfully protected itself.
Discussions about defence mechanisms from 1989
From 1989 the "Vereniging voor de Effectenhandel", the body running the "Beurs", the Association of Stocktraders, supported by the Minister of Finance, Mr Onno Ruding, argued and negotiated for less defence mechanisms or at least less far reaching defence mechanisms. The old boys network of brokers and investment bankers at the top of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange had become less tight. The former, by now, thought that there would be higher volume of trade in a free market without boards that can impede takeovers of "thee companies. In these discussions the Association of Large Listed Companies (VEUO) opposed the Minister of Finance Ruding and his successors Kok and Zalm and the "Vereniging voor de Effectenhandel". The discussion was settled by a compromise: the establishment of the Netherlands first corporate governance committee, the Committee Peters in 1997, which would give more rights to shareholders and lay down a number of obligations for supervisory directors.
Enterprise Chamber injunctions from 1994
In the same period shareholders and other stakeholders got the right to start Enterprise Chamber cases with immediate impact, because they could ask for preliminary injunctions. Asking for an investigation had been theoretically possible since the Companies Act of 1928. At the time Professor Mr E.J.J. van der Heyden was strongly opposed to this idea. He argued that it was against the interests of companies.67 In 1971, as mentioned above, the new Investigation Court, the Enterprise Chamber, was founded, giving shareholders, the prosecutor and unions the right to ask for an investigation. The first big case was OGEM, a huge bankruptcy, where directors were found to have been guilty of serious mismanagement. The receiver in the bankruptcy was the plaintiff and the case made the public aware, to much surprise, that respected directors of such a large public company could mismanage so badly.68
In 1994 an important change was made in the Law of Investigation of Enterprises, "het Enquêterecht", introduced already in 1928 and amended in 1971. The new point was that plaintiffs could ask for immediate injunctions such as blocking decisions or agreements, appointment and dismissal of directors, etc. This led to a large volume of cases concerning smaller unlisted companies and some well published cases involving large listed ones. These large cases are explained in further detail in the section on duties of directors (in sub-section 4.6.4), but are described in summary here to show how effective this 1994 extension of the law was.
The first large case involving injunctive relief requests was the Gucci case of 1999, the handbag war where LVMH, Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy, threatened Gucci NV by silently buying a large percentage of shares and Gucci defended itself by issuing shares to an employee benefit fund, giving it extra votes, in order to outvote LVMH. LVMH asked the court to order that Gucci could not use these extra votes and Gucci asked the court to order that LVMH would not be allowed to vote its recently acquired shares. First, the Enterprise Chamber ordered that none of the parties could vote with the extra shares. However, Gucci's issue of shares to employees had been paid thanks to a huge Joan from Gucci, which transaction was in the end, upon appeal, in 2000, declared as against the tules of financial assistance by the Supreme Court.69
RNA, Rodamco North America N.V., case was the target in the next takeover defence case of 2003, where the target took temporary defence measures. The Enterprise Chamber ordered that these mechanisms could not be used, but in the end they were validated by the Supreme Court.70
HBG, Hollandsche Beton Groep N.V., was the object of the first large shareholder rights case in 2001, where shareholders demanded the right of consultation with the management board on major strategie moves.71 The shareholders got the Enterprise Chamber to order HBG not to enter into a large transaction, but the Supreme Court overturned this decision in 2003.
The subsequent shareholder rights case involved Stork N.V. in 2007, where shareholders wanted a say in strategy (in order to split the group). Shareholders asked for an order that an issue of shares by Stork to a friendly foundation could not be used and Stork asked for an order, that shareholders could not vote out the supervisory board. The Enterprise Chamber found a middle way by deciding that parties had to negotiate and chose the solution of forcing parties to negotiate onder the guidance of 3 super-supervisory board members.72
In the ABN AMRO in Sale LaSalle Bank case of 2007 shareholders asked for the right of veto for the sale of LaSalle Bank by ABN AMRO — and the Enterprise Chamber, indeed, ordered a stay of the transaction, which decision was overturned by the Supreme Court.73
In the ASMI — a large semi conductor producer — case of 2009 in the Enterprise Chamber and the decision of the Supreme Court in 2010 shareholders wanted a say in strategy (wishing to split the group) and got half a victory in the Enterprise Chamber, which stayed all voting and again ordered parties to negotiate to find a solution. This decision, however, was overturned by the Supreme Court.74
In the DSM NV case of 2007 US shareholders asked the Enterprise Chamber to block a special clause in the articles of association of DSM in 2007 the purpose of which was to give higher dividends to shareholders who owned the shares for more than three years. The Enterprise Chamber blocked the arrangement that would have favoured long-term shareholders, but the Supreme Court overturned the decision.75
Since 1994 the volume of Enterprise Chamber cases has grown to about 45 per annum. Most are joint venture cases and cases concerning unlisted closed companies, the Dutch "BVs", comparable to British Ltd's. In those smaller cases the Enterprise Chamber functions well in providing an orderly, third party forum for what would otherwise remain shareholder quarrels. There are about two large cases per annum concerning listed companies. There is some discussion about the way these cases are being handled, mainly because of the danger that the Enterprise Chamber might fall for the temptation to secondguess directors. Both the SER and a group of professors of the Groningen and Rotterdam Universities have published studies on this subject.76 The SER has offered several points of advice. It discussed the suggestion that the Enterprise Chamber follow the concept of the US Business Judgment Rule. It did not go so far, but generally agreed that the US practice of judges giving better motivated judgments with clear tests is a worthwhile example to follow. Mention is made by the SER of Assink's (2007) (thesis), who argues for a Dutch Business Judgment Rule.77
The Peters Code of 1997
The idea of a code of best practices of corporate governance came from the UK, i.e. the Cadbury Code of 1992. The first Dutch code was the Peters Code of 1997. The committee, chaired by Jaap Peters, retired CEO of the large insurance company Aegon, made 40 recommendations. A summary is attached as Annex "Peters". Many of the relevant points — 21 on the supervisory board, 4 on the management board, 8 on shareholders and 7 on compliance — were addressed as recommendations.78 Compliance was not swift but the report did result in lively discussions which formed the base for the Tabaksblat Code of 2004.
Changes in favour of shareholders, 2004
When the Euro was introduced in 1999 shareholder-ownership of Dutch companies rapidly became more international at the same time. Dutch shareholders started to spread their investments to other European companies. Pension funds have since 1996 been free to invest elsewhere. Dutch investors went through the Ahold and the World Online dramas, where boards were alleged to have grossly misinformed the public. In the aftermath Dutch shares were relatively cheap. US and UK investors raised their holdings of Dutch listed shares. While in 1995 37% of Dutch listed shares were owned by foreigners, this jumped to 75% in 2005 and also to 72% in 2009. About half were held by North American and UK investors.79 Suddenly Dutch directors had a different shareholder base to deal with. The foreigners, often with strategie stakes, made it clear that they wanted more influence. In the same period the number of foreign board members of the largest Dutch companies grew to more than a third of all board members.
In 2004 important mies for corporate governance were introduced, the so-called Tabaksblat Code, which apart from describing duties of management and supervisory boards, gave shareholders more rights and supported the elimination or reduction of defence mechanisms.
Furthermore, in that year the Act on the change of the Structure Regime gave shareholders more rights as follows.
Shareholders could now appoint and dismiss the board of supervisory directors. A 1% shareholder or a shareholder holding EUR 50 million could submit an item for the agenda of a shareholders' meeting. Shareholders received the right to veto major transactions that would change the enterprise; they were given say on pay and received the voting right on the share even if they only had a depository receipt ("certificaat"), and the right to start an inquiry procedure and ask for preliminary injunctions in the Enterprise Chamber were to be used more easily.
Since 1999 shareholder activists have been approaching boards of important companies, in some cases causing minor culture shocks. Boards were not used to communicate with critical shareholders, shielded as boards had been by defence mechanisms and by their protected position in structure regime companies, where supervisory boards co-opted themselves and appointed management and could afford to disregard the opinions of shareholders.80
Recent repercussions, 2008
Aggressive actions by shareholder activists and hedge funds, and takeovers of Dutch icons by private equity houses quite rapidly created a backlash and led to second thoughts about such unfettered power for shareholders. Since 2008, the government has proposed bifis to increase the transparency concerning the identity of activist shareholders. These proposals include a reduction of the threshold for mandatory notification of ownership from 5% to 3% and a requirement for shareholders to notify the board if they want to object to the strategy set out by the board. The threshold for adding an item to the agenda of a general meeting is to be raised from 1% to 3%.81 The waiting period for a demand for an agenda point is extended from 60 to 180 days.82 Defence mechanisms will still be allowed. Draft laws limiting the maximum period during which a defence mechanism can be operative to 6 months were shelved and a law restricting the use of certificates was mitigated.83 In the implementation of the EU takeover directive (the 13th European Directive) the Netherlands opted out of many stipulations that would have limited protection devices.84
Monitoring of Code, New Frijns Code 2008
The Tabaksblat Code was followed by monitoring reports, at least each year and the Frijns Code of 2008, which did not deviate from the Tabaksblat Code but did add a few points.85 Generally there is a high degree of compliance with these codes. Annex Frijns gives a summary of the Frijns Code.
Complexity of powers in companies at present:• outside influences
The most recent development can be described as follows: the CEO has become stronger. He stands above his executive colleagues and is not inclined to accept the increasing influence of the supervisory board; the chairman of the supervisory board on the other hand has not become much stronger so there is insufficient balance vis-à-vis this strengthened CEO. This tends to weaken the power of the supervisory board as a whole. This weaker position instead of contributing to the development of strategy might result in supervisory directors limiting their task to monitoring and to work less on strategy development. On the other hand the outside world in the shape of shareholder activists, share-vote advisers, politicians, civil servants and the media are interfering more and more in company matters, which should be a reason for more board discussion about strategy and more proactive participation of supervisory boards in strategy development. Corporate governance has become more complicated.86