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Directors' liability (IVOR nr. 101) 2017/3.2.4
3.2.4 Liability in the event of bankruptcy – article 2:138/248 DCC
mr. drs. N.T. Pham, datum 09-01-2017
- Datum
09-01-2017
- Auteur
mr. drs. N.T. Pham
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS396137:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Ondernemingsrecht / Rechtspersonenrecht
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
Supreme Court, 8 June 2001 ECLI:NL:HR:2001:AB2053, par. 3.7 (Panmo I) and ECLI:NL:HR:AB2021, par. 4.7 (Panmo II), citing the Court of Appeal ’s-Gravenhage, 8 June 1999, ‘manifestly improper management [in terms of art. 2:138/248 DCC, TP] implies that directors can be subject to serious reproach for [their, TP] misbehaviours in the knowledge – objectively determined – that creditors may suffer damage as a result.’ See also Supreme Court, 12 February 2016, ECLI:NL:HR:2016:233, par. 3.5.2 and the conclusion by A-G Wuisman, 20 November 2015, ECLI:NL:PHR:2015:2290, par. 2.13.
Consider the line of reasoning in House of Representatives of the States General, Wijziging van bepalingen van het Burgerlijk Wetboek en de Faillissementswet in verband met de bestrijding van misbruik van rechtspersonen 198-1984, 16631 no. 6, p. 21, manifestly improper management implies, ‘that a director acted irresponsibly with the knowledge – objectively determined – that creditors would suffer [damage, TP] as result.’
See the same line of reasoning in Court of Appeal Leeuwarden, 30 January 2008, ECLI:NL:GHLEE:2008:BC3428, par. 13 (Bokma Reclamebureau B.V.) referring to Panmo.
In Lébol Kittechnieken B.V., several misbehaviours (neglect of duties, improper financial administration, selective non-payment and improper abstraction of company assets) accumulated and resulted in the court’s assumption of the director’s foreseeability of damage to creditors (Court of Appeal ’s-Gravenhage, 28 August 2008, ECLI:NL:GHSGR:2008:BF1833, par. 26). In Vonos Group B.V., the district court placed the cause of Vonos’ bankruptcy in the fact that, without having arranged proper funding, the director caused the company to incur obligations which the company was unable to meet without the specific funding (District Court Amsterdam, 21 March 2007, ECLI:NL:RBAMS:2007:BA4517, par. 4.8).
I will not discuss the issue of immaterial omission in this research and would like to make reference to Supreme Court, 1 November 2013, ECLI:NL:HR:2013:1079, par. 3.6.2 (Verify). In Verify the Supreme Court considered that an immaterial omission is at issue when a director does not fulfil his obligations required in art. 2:248 DCC, but, given the circumstances, this violation does not indicate improper performance of duties.
Supreme Court, 30 November 2007, ECLI:NL:HR:2007:BA6773, par. 3.4 (Blue Tomato).
Directors may also face a claim filed by the bankruptcy trustee representing the interests of the creditors collectively under art. 2:138/248 DCC. To establish directors’ liability, the director must have demonstrably engaged in manifestly improper management and the improper management was an important cause of the company’s bankruptcy. Provided that these conditions are satisfied, a director can be held jointly and severally liable to the bankrupt estate (art. 2:138/248[1] DCC) with the restriction that these type of claims can be filed only on the ground that the improper management took place in the period of three years preceding the company’s bankruptcy. Discharge does not preclude such claim (art. 2:138/248[6] DCC).
In reviewing a director’s conduct under bankruptcy, I am further assuming that the courts use the concept of ‘serious reproach’ to hold a director liable in the face of foreseeability of damage. I assume that manifestly improper management implies ‘serious reproach’. According to parliamentary history, the element ‘reproach’ should be read as implicit in the term ‘improper management’. The term ‘manifestly’ should be understood as an expression of the severity of the reproach that can be made against the director. In other words, ‘the improperness of the director’s action must be beyond doubt’; otherwise the director cannot be held liable.28 Moreover, I understand the Supreme Court’s decision in Panmo I and Panmo II as consistent with the notions in parliamentary history, insofar as manifestly improper management as prescribed in art. 2:138/248 DCC requires that a director can be seriously reproached for his actions or omissions.1
Moreover, I assume that, relative to the aim of protecting creditors under art. 2:138/248(1) DCC, there must be serious violations on the part of a director in order to find the director to be liable. There are indications in case law suggesting that foreseeability of damage to the creditors of the company is an important criterion for establishing the liability of directors.2 In the Panmo cases, the board of Panmo decided that, as part of a rescue plan, the company’ equity capital would be encumbered with the debts of Scarpa, one of the company’s subsidiaries. By accepting the risk of an irrecoverable debt, the board increased the company’s financial risk. The Supreme Court reasoned that the board’s course of action did not involve reasonable knowledge that the creditors of the company would suffer damage.3 I understand this reasoning in Panmo I and II as implying that foreseeability of damage to creditors is an important criterion for courts when adjudging a director liable to a bankrupt estate. Panmo was later applied in Lébol Kittechnieken B.V. and Vonos Group B.V. in which the criterion of foreseeability of damage was made explicit.4
The majority of the claims in the event of bankruptcy are, however, based on art. 2:138/248(2) DCC. Under these articles, liability is presumed if the director violates the following statutory obligations: the duty to maintain proper bookkeeping (art. 2:10 DCC) and the duty to publish the financial statements timely (art. 2:394 DCC). If the director does not comply with one of these statutory obligations, said director may be irrefutably presumed [onweerlegbaar vermoeden] to perform the required duties in a manifestly improper manner (art. 2:138/248[2] DCC). If the company indeed goes bankrupt, it may be furthermore refutably presumed [weerlegbaar vermoeden] that the manifestly improper performance was an important cause of the bankruptcy (art. 2:138/ 248[1] DCC), providing that an immaterial omission [onbelangrijk verzuim] was not at issue.5 To escape liability, the burden of proof rests with the director to show that the bankruptcy was the result of external circumstances other than improper performance.6