Evolution of the derivative action as an enforcement of rights mechanism under the Companies Act 71 of 2008
The purpose of this dissertation a focus on derivative actions as a method a minority shareholder can employ as an enforcement of rights mechanism. In so doing I will be examining the derivative action procedure from its inception in the common law through to the current dispensation. This disser...
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Language: | en |
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University of Pretoria
2017
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2263/60099 Stylianou, A 2016, Evolution of the derivative action as an enforcement of rights mechanism under the Companies Act 71 of 2008, LLM Mini Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/60099> |
Summary: | The purpose of this dissertation a focus on derivative actions as a method a minority
shareholder can employ as an enforcement of rights mechanism. In so doing I will be
examining the derivative action procedure from its inception in the common law
through to the current dispensation. This dissertation describes and explains the rights,
interests and obligations of shareholders and will explore the pitfalls for shareholders
in the implementation of the derivative action as a protective measure. I submit that the
derivative action found under the common law and the previous statutory regime
provided the stepping stone in molding the statutory derivative action evidenced by
section 165 of the Companies Act.
In Chapter 1, I explore the derivative action under the common law as a conceptual
framework and as a movement that initially arose in the renowned case of Foss v
Harbottle. Whose core principles were subsequently embraced by the South African
judiciary.
In Chapter 2 I discuss the availability of the statutory derivative action and the
limitations of section 266. Further, I make a comparative study between the common
law and the statutory derivative action. The comparison is essential in an attempt to
portray that the statutory derivative action refined the common law to a certain extent
in its attempts to provide a minority shareholder protective measure.
In chapter 3 I examine section 165 of the Companies Act to evaluate to what degree the
derivative action has transformed against the backdrop of its statutory predecessor and
the common law. This chapter breaks down the constituent principles of section 165
and examines the requirements necessary to implement the measure.
Finally, in Chapter 4 I make a comparative study with foreign jurisdictions to determine
the extent, if any, section 165 relates to the principles laid down in other jurisdictions. === Mini Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2016. === Mercantile Law === LLM === Unrestricted |
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