Death of principal director/shareholder intestate

Death of principal director/shareholder intestate

Author
Discussion

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Does anyone have any experience of how to deal with a situation where the main shareholder and 'kingpin' Director of a company dies intestate?

The scenario would be that the junior Directors don't really have a full grip on what's going on financially, or how to run the company.

Is it fairly easy for them to wind the company up (assuming it's nicely solvent) without too much trouble, or is everything put on hold until the assets of the deceased are sorted out?

Eric Mc

121,941 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Can the company function without the deceased director?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
In theory, yes (no one is indispensable). In practice, no - the other Directors lack the necessary knowledge and experience.

Eric Mc

121,941 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
So no.

How many other directors/shareholders are there?

Does the deceased have a spouse/children?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Three, and no.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
The shareholder agreement and/or articles may well cater for this eventuality. (We have a clause that prohibits transfer to another party without unanimous agreement)

Otherwise the directors need to act in the best interest of the company, not themselves.

Eric Mc

121,941 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Equus said:
Three, and no.
You describe the deceased as "the main shareholder".

What do you mean by that precisely?

i.e. how many shares were issued and how were they allocated to each shareholder?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
80% to the deceased, 20% to others (and no clause in the Articles of Association preventing transfer of shares to others, for what it's worth).

Eric Mc

121,941 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
And no shareholders' agreement?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
No

BrabusMog

20,141 posts

186 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
What does the shareholders agreement say?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
BrabusMog said:
What does the shareholders agreement say?
"Shares may be transferred by means of an instrument of transfer in any usual form or any other form approved by the directors, which is executed by or on behalf of the transferor."

"The directors may refuse to register the transfer of a share, and if they do so, the instrument of transfer must be returned to the transferee with the notice of refusal unless they suspect that the proposed transfer may be fraudulent."

BrabusMog

20,141 posts

186 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
And what do these junior directors/shareholders want to do?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
I don't know yet - I'm trying to establish what their options would be. I suspect that they would probably prefer to cease trading and liquidate the company with as little fuss and bother as possible.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
The shares are part of his estate, and follow the usual intestacy rules, so probably his widow or kids.

The other directors vote on appointing any new director. They really need to extract digit and get a handle on their business asap. Accounts? Customer list?

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
As stated above, there are no widow or kids.

The company is perfectly solvent (£10's of K sitting in its bank accounts, no debts), so the question would be whether the remaining Directors could simply wind the company up, and divide that money amongst themselves and the deceased's estate, before the intestacy is resolved.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Equus said:
As stated above, there are no widow or kids.
No siblings, no surviving parents, no aunts or uncles, no relatives AT ALL?

Then congratulations, those shares have just been nationalised...
https://www.gov.uk/inherits-someone-dies-without-w...

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
No siblings, no surviving parents, no aunts or uncles, no relatives AT ALL?
That's not what I said... I said no wife or kids.

There are surviving siblings and parent (who likewise would have no ability or interest in continuing the company), but I am aware that in such circumstances it takes a long time to sort out the intestacy. It would be in everyone's interest to wind the company up immediately, to minimise ongoing costs, if it were possible to do so.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Equus said:
TooMany2cvs said:
No siblings, no surviving parents, no aunts or uncles, no relatives AT ALL?
That's not what I said... I said no wife or kids.
Great, so...
TooMany2cvs said:
The shares are part of his estate, and follow the usual intestacy rules, so probably his widow or kids.
...covers who now owns the shares.

Equus said:
There are surviving siblings and parent (who likewise would have no ability or interest in continuing the company)
No, but they can gift the shares back to those who do have an interest.

Equus

Original Poster:

16,851 posts

101 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
The shares are part of his estate, and follow the usual intestacy rules, so probably his widow or kids.
...covers who now owns the shares.
Covers who WILL own the shares, once the intestacy has been resolved, is my understanding.

My question is what happens in terms of control of the company, during the intestacy period; ie. can it be wound up?