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• In the eyes of law, a company is a legal person with a separate entity distinct from its members of
shareholders. In essence it means that there is a veil or curtain separating the legal entity of the company from
its members or shareholders. But in reality there is no such separation between the economic interests of the
company and its members. The members are shareholders are the beneficial owners of the property of the
company and as such they’re economic interest are identical with those of the company.
• The theory of corporate entity is still the basic principle on which the whole law of corporations is based.
But as the separate personality of the company its statutory privilege, it must be used for legitimate business
purposes only. When fraudulent and dishonest use is made of the legal entity, the individuals concerned will
not be allowed to take shelter behind the corporate personality. The Courts will break through the corporate
shell and apply the principle of lifting or piercing the corporate veil. The Court will look behind the corporate
entity and take action as though no entity separate from the members existed and make the members or the
controlling persons liable fro debts and obligations of the company.
• Ordinarily, the Courts recognize the separate legal entity of the company and consider themselves bound
by the principle laid down in the case of Salomon Vs. Salomon & Co. Ltd. They do not lift or pierce the veil of
corporate entity to look at the economic realities behind the legal veil. But in exceptional cases, the courts may
disregard the concept of corporate entity to look at the persons (members or shareholders) behind the
company. They may, so to say lift the corporate veil to probe into the economic realities behind the
scene. This is known as the “lifting or piercing the corporate veil.’
• In Salomon Vs. Salomon & Co. Ltd it was decided that a company has an independent and legal
personality distinct from the individuals who are its members, it has since been held that the corporate veil may
be lifted, the corporate personality may be ignored and the individual members recognized for who they are in
certain exceptional circumstances. The doctrine of the lifting of the veil thus marks a change in the attitude that
law had originally adopted towards the concept of the separate entity or personality of the corporation.
• In general the Courts have made a departure from the principle of corporate entity when there was reason
to suspect that the veil of corporate personality had been used to conceal fraudulent or improper conduct or for
doing things against public policy or public interest.
• In an American case Re Clarks`s Will Stone J has said:
Many cases present avowed disregard of corporate entity…but they all come to just this- courts simply will not
let interposition of corporate entity or action prevent a judgment otherwise required. Corporate presence and
action no more than those of a individual will bar a remedy demanded by law in application to facts. Hence, the
process is not accurately termed one of disregarding corporate entity. It is rather and only a refusal to permit
its presence and action to divert the judicial course of applying law to ascertained facts. The method neither
pierces any veil nor goes behind any obstruction save for its refusal to let one fact bar judgment, which the
whole sum of facts requires.
• But it would not be possible to evolve a rational, consistent and inflexible principle which can be invoked in
determining the question as to whether the veil of the corporation should be lifted or not. Broadly stated, where
fraud is intended to be prevented, or trading with an enemy is sought to be defeated, the veil of a corporation is
lifted by judicial decisions and the shareholders are held to be the persons who actually work for the
corporation.
CASE EXAMPLE
Re: Gilford Motor Co.
In this case, a former employee of the company contracted not to solicit its customers. He formed a separate
company, which resorted to solicitation in violation of the contract. The court restrained the company.
CASE EXAMPLE
Connors Bros. Vs. Connors
In this case, the principle was applied against the Managing Director who made use of his position contrary to
public policy. Here the House of Lords determined the character of the company as enemy company, since the
persons who were de facto in control of its affairs, were residents of Germany, which was at war with England. The
alien company was not allowed to proceed with the action, as that would have meant giving money to the enemy,
which was considered as monstrous and against public policy.
R Vs Registrar of Companies ex p Attorney General (1991) Ms Lindi St Clair set up a company through which to
carry out her trade as a prostitute. She had applied for registration of this company under the names 'Prostitutes
Ltd', 'Hookers Ltd', and 'Lindi St Clair (French Lessons) Ltd' all of which were rejected by the Registrar of
Companies. Eventually the company was registered with the name 'Lindi St Clair (Personal Services) Ltd'. The
Attorney General brought an action to challenge the registration of the company on the grounds that its purposes
were unlawful. Held The Company was struck off the register, as its principal objects were illegal, contracts being
made for sexually immoral purposes being contrary to public policy and illegal.
CASE EXAMPLE
Re: Creasey Vs. Breachwood Motors Ltd.
In this case, the employer, Welwyn Ltd., dismissed its general manager. He issued a writ alleging wrongful
dismissal. Shortly thereafter Welwyn ceased trading. The company paid off all its creditors and then transferred its
remaining assets to another company. The plaintiff obtained a default judgment against the company but by that
time it had no assets and stood dissolved. The transferee company to which the company’s assets were
transferred (Motors) was ordered to pay the decree. The court stated that the takeover of the company’s assets
had been carried out without regard to the separate entity of the company and the interests of its creditors,
particularly the plaintiff. When the directors transferred the company1s assets and business, they did so in total
disregard of their duties as directors and shareholders. Accordingly, it was held that this constituted a case in
which the courts would be justified in lifting the corporate veil and treating Motors liable for the company’s liability to
plaintiff.
CASE EXAMPLE
CIT Vs. Sri Meenakshi Mills Ltd
In this case a branch each of the three assessee mills and a branch of a bank (in which substantial number of share
were held by the assessee mills and a director who occupied special position both in the assessee companies and
the bank) were established in Native State (Pudukottak) outside the taxable territory of the British India with the
intention of helping financial operations of the assessee-mills and the director, who was the moving figure both in
the bank and the asessee–mills, and evading tax. The Court held that the Income tax authorities were entitled to
pierce the veil of corporate entity and to look at the reality of the transaction to examine whether the corporate entity
was being used for tax evasion. In this case, a separate corporate entity was brought into existence outside the
taxable territory with the ulterior motive of evading the tax obligation by the assess mills.
Re; Associated Clothiers
A sale by one company to another having same shareholders and former company owning all shares in the later
could not escape the separate legal entity concept and the transaction was held taxable under the Income tax Act.
Apart from the judicial decisions laying down the situations, which may necessitate the lifting of the corporate
veil, the Companies Act, 1956 itself contains some provisions which allow the ignoring of the legal
fiction of separate entity to identify the real state of affairs.
Other legislations like the Wealth Tax Act, Estate Duty Act and Income Tax Act also make similar provisions
in certain cases. For instance, the Wealth Tax and Estate Duty legislation incorporate statutory formulae for
shares of private companies which disregard the separate corporate entity and impute the owner ship of such
corporate property to the shareholders. Under the Income tax Act, directors of private companies have been
made personally liable for the tax liabilities.
Compliance with mechanical procedure cannot be challenged once the certificate of incorporation is issued
(Benaras Bank Vs Bank of Bihar).
A subscriber cannot, after the issue of the certificate of registration repudiates his subscription on the ground of
misrepresentation, mistake or fraud, although he retains any claims for damages against the person who misled
him (Metal Constituents Ltd. In re)
Where the object of a company is unlawful, it has been held that the certificate of registration is not conclusiveness
for this purpose (Performing Right Society Ltd. Vs. London Theatre of Varieties)