The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors

Magister Legum - LLM === The global financial crisis resulted in a corporate collapse in different parts of the world. The global financial crisis was caused by poor governance. Consequently many countries, including South Africa, began to place more emphasis on good governance. The framework and gu...

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Main Author: Mohiudeen, Safia
Other Authors: Wandrag, Riekie
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6824
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-68242019-07-19T03:12:45Z The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors Mohiudeen, Safia Wandrag, Riekie Directors’ liabilities Partial codification Companies Act Common law Directors’ duties Magister Legum - LLM The global financial crisis resulted in a corporate collapse in different parts of the world. The global financial crisis was caused by poor governance. Consequently many countries, including South Africa, began to place more emphasis on good governance. The framework and guidelines for the development of good governance in South African company law was published by the Department of Trade of Trade and Industry (hereafter DTI) in a document referred to as The South African Company Law for the 21st Century: Guidelines for Corporate Law Reform (hereafter the DTI Policy Document) published by the DTI. The DTI Policy Document recognised the need for a regulatory framework within which enterprises operate to promote growth, employment, innovation, stability, good governance, confidence and international competitiveness. In order to further develop governance, the effectiveness of directors’ standards as well as the liability of directors was also said to have developed. Prior to the development of South African corporate law, liability of directors was to a large extent governed by the common law and the King Codes, despite the existence of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (as amended). As of the 1st of May 2011, corporate law in South Africa appears to have dramatically changed the duties and liabilities of directors. The 1st of May 2011 marked the implementation of Companies Act 71 of 2008 (hereafter the Act). The Act is written in plain language in an attempt to make it more accessible and align it with international trends. The Act has also theoretically changed the roles and duties of directors as well as the liability that they may face in that it potentially changes the existing common law and alters policies and philosophies of corporate law in general. The Act partially codifies the common law and introduces the business judgement rule to South Africa. The business judgment rule will draw a balance between the directors’ ability to steer a company and the shareholders' right to hold directors accountable for their decisions. It is perceived as a mechanism that can be used to balance the tension between these opposing rights. 2019-05-16T10:36:13Z 2019-05-16T10:36:13Z 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6824 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Directors’ liabilities
Partial codification
Companies Act
Common law
Directors’ duties
spellingShingle Directors’ liabilities
Partial codification
Companies Act
Common law
Directors’ duties
Mohiudeen, Safia
The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
description Magister Legum - LLM === The global financial crisis resulted in a corporate collapse in different parts of the world. The global financial crisis was caused by poor governance. Consequently many countries, including South Africa, began to place more emphasis on good governance. The framework and guidelines for the development of good governance in South African company law was published by the Department of Trade of Trade and Industry (hereafter DTI) in a document referred to as The South African Company Law for the 21st Century: Guidelines for Corporate Law Reform (hereafter the DTI Policy Document) published by the DTI. The DTI Policy Document recognised the need for a regulatory framework within which enterprises operate to promote growth, employment, innovation, stability, good governance, confidence and international competitiveness. In order to further develop governance, the effectiveness of directors’ standards as well as the liability of directors was also said to have developed. Prior to the development of South African corporate law, liability of directors was to a large extent governed by the common law and the King Codes, despite the existence of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (as amended). As of the 1st of May 2011, corporate law in South Africa appears to have dramatically changed the duties and liabilities of directors. The 1st of May 2011 marked the implementation of Companies Act 71 of 2008 (hereafter the Act). The Act is written in plain language in an attempt to make it more accessible and align it with international trends. The Act has also theoretically changed the roles and duties of directors as well as the liability that they may face in that it potentially changes the existing common law and alters policies and philosophies of corporate law in general. The Act partially codifies the common law and introduces the business judgement rule to South Africa. The business judgment rule will draw a balance between the directors’ ability to steer a company and the shareholders' right to hold directors accountable for their decisions. It is perceived as a mechanism that can be used to balance the tension between these opposing rights.
author2 Wandrag, Riekie
author_facet Wandrag, Riekie
Mohiudeen, Safia
author Mohiudeen, Safia
author_sort Mohiudeen, Safia
title The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
title_short The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
title_full The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
title_fullStr The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
title_full_unstemmed The effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies Act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
title_sort effect of the partial codification of the common law duties of directors in the companies act 71 of 2008 on the liability of directors
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6824
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