The leave of court requirement for instituting derivative actions in the UK : a ten-year jurisprudential excursion
Abstract
The judiciary-exclusive role to allow or deny the commencement
or continuation of contemporary derivative litigation is one of the
critical aspects of such proceedings. Before the 2006
codification, derivative actions were brought under the common
law as exceptions to the rule in Foss v Harbottle (1843) 67 ER
189. However, after realising intolerable deficiencies in the
common law, the United Kingdom Law Commission (the Law
Commission) recommended that there should be a new
derivative procedure that met modern demands. This resulted in
a statutory derivative remedy which can be activated in terms of
Chapter 1 of Part 11 of the Companies Act, 2006 (United
Kingdom). The effectiveness of legislative regulatory devices
generally, and commercial law-related ones in particular, may to
a greater extent depend on judicial interpretation and
application. A conservative and literal interpretive approach that
is purpose-neutral will significantly undermine the prospect of
the current derivative remedy regime’s achieving the intended
policy objectives. To that end, this contribution examines several
court decisions handed down after the enactment of the 2006
Act and spanning over a period of approximately ten years.
Ultimately, it will be considered whether the leave requirement
in English derivative litigation is proving to be an invaluable and
indispensable procedural prerequisite or an implausible barrier
to honest litigants.
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- PER: 2021 Volume 24 [71]