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When a shareholder dispute in the Netherlands escalates to the point where company assets are at risk, board decisions are being taken unilaterally, or a takeover threatens to bypass minority protections, the question of Ondernemingskamer interim relief Netherlands 2026 moves from theoretical to urgent in a matter of hours. The Ondernemingskamer, the specialised Enterprise Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal, occupies a unique position in Dutch corporate litigation, offering a suite of emergency remedies that no other forum can match in speed or scope.
Updated governance guidance and renewed enforcement priorities in 2026 have intensified the pressure on boards and shareholders alike, making it more important than ever to understand precisely when and how to invoke this court’s interim powers. This guide provides the tactical roadmap that in-house counsel, minority shareholders, directors, and M&A practitioners need to act decisively when the clock is running.
Not every corporate disagreement warrants an emergency application to the Enterprise Chamber. Interim relief before the Ondernemingskamer is a high-impact tool reserved for situations where delay itself will cause irreversible damage. The following decision points should trigger an immediate assessment of whether to file:
If any of these triggers apply, counsel should begin preparing an application immediately, the Ondernemingskamer can, in genuinely urgent cases, hear an application within days.
The Ondernemingskamer is a specialised chamber of the Gerechtshof Amsterdam (Amsterdam Court of Appeal), established under Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek, “BW”). It has exclusive jurisdiction over the enquêteprocedure, the statutory inquiry procedure, and a broad range of interim and definitive measures relating to the policy and affairs of Dutch legal entities. Its panel consists of both professional judges and expert lay members drawn from the business community, giving it a depth of commercial understanding that ordinary courts typically lack.
Standing to file a request with the Ondernemingskamer is governed by the BW and depends on the type of legal entity. For a BV (besloten vennootschap) or NV (naamloze vennootschap), shareholders holding individually or jointly at least 10% of the issued share capital, or shares representing a nominal value of €225,000, may petition the Enterprise Chamber. Trade unions, the company itself (through its board or supervisory board), and, in certain circumstances, the Advocate-General at the Amsterdam Court of Appeal can also file. The statutory thresholds are set out in the BW provisions governing legal persons, ensuring that only parties with a genuine stake can invoke this powerful jurisdiction.
Unlike ordinary civil courts, the Enterprise Chamber is not limited to ordering a party to pay damages or to cease specific conduct. It can intervene directly in the company’s governance, suspending directors, appointing temporary administrators, prohibiting the execution of shareholder resolutions, and ordering that shares be held in trust. This makes the Ondernemingskamer the forum of choice for shareholder dispute interim relief where the core issue is governance failure rather than a purely contractual claim. Arbitration tribunals, by contrast, can grant emergency relief under most institutional rules but lack the power to bind third parties or to make orders with direct corporate-governance effect.
For a broader comparison of international litigation forums and procedures, practitioners should assess jurisdictional advantages early in the dispute lifecycle.
The range of Ondernemingskamer interim measures available in the context of an enquêteprocedure is remarkably broad. The court may grant interim relief both before it orders a formal inquiry and after an inquiry report has been filed. The measures are designed to preserve the status quo, prevent further harm, and stabilise governance pending a definitive resolution.
The Enterprise Chamber can issue an Enterprise Chamber injunction Netherlands practitioners describe as functionally equivalent to a “super-injunction” in corporate matters. This includes orders prohibiting the company or its organs from executing specific resolutions, entering into transactions, or disposing of assets. For example, where a majority shareholder has convened a general meeting to approve a share issuance designed to dilute minority stakes, the Ondernemingskamer may prohibit the meeting from proceeding or declare that any resolution adopted is provisionally without effect.
Where the evidence points to serious mismanagement or a breach of directors’ duties Netherlands law requires, the court can suspend or remove one or more directors and appoint temporary replacements. This is one of the most powerful interim remedies available under Dutch law. The temporary appointee, often an experienced restructuring professional or retired judge, acts in the company’s interest and can stabilise operations while the underlying dispute is resolved. Early indications suggest that 2026 governance enforcement priorities have led to an increased willingness by practitioners to seek this remedy at the interim stage rather than waiting for a full inquiry report.
Even before the Ondernemingskamer decides whether to order a formal inquiry, it may grant a range of provisional measures under the enquêteprocedure. These include the temporary transfer of shares to an independent custodian, the temporary deviation from provisions in the articles of association, and orders requiring specific information to be disclosed. These measures are particularly valuable in situations involving a deadlock in a shareholders’ agreement where the company’s decision-making has ground to a halt.
| Remedy | Typical Grounds | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Prohibition on executing resolutions | Vote manipulation, improper convocation of general meetings | Freezes disputed corporate actions pending full hearing |
| Director suspension or removal | Self-dealing, concealment of material information, breach of fiduciary duties | Neutral temporary director appointed; stabilises operations |
| Temporary transfer of shares to custodian | Deadlock, risk of asset stripping via share transfers | Voting rights exercised by independent custodian |
| Temporary deviation from articles of association | Articles being exploited to entrench control or block legitimate decisions | Specific provisions set aside for a defined period |
| Order for information disclosure | Board refusing to share financial data with shareholders | Access to books, records and forensic data granted |
The decision of which forum to approach for interim injunction shareholders need is often time-critical and has lasting strategic consequences. The answer depends on the nature of the dispute, the relief sought, and the presence (or absence) of an arbitration clause. The comparison table below sets out the key differentiators.
| Forum | Typical Speed for Interim Relief | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Ondernemingskamer | Very fast, urgent hearings possible within days; same-day relief in exceptional cases | Shareholder disputes requiring corporate-governance remedies (director suspension, enquête measures, resolution freezes) |
| Arbitration (emergency arbitrator) | Moderate to fast, emergency arbitrator appointment within hours, but award enforcement may take days | Contractual disputes where an arbitration clause exists and confidentiality is critical |
| Ordinary courts (kort geding) | Fast for standard injunctive relief; hearing typically within two to four weeks | Contract enforcement, tort-based claims, routine injunctions without corporate-governance character |
Industry observers expect the Ondernemingskamer to remain the dominant forum for Dutch corporate litigation involving governance breakdowns, precisely because arbitrators and ordinary courts lack the statutory toolkit to order director removal or share custody. However, where a shareholders’ agreement contains a mandatory arbitration clause, practitioners should consider whether the Ondernemingskamer’s jurisdiction is preserved, recent case law has confirmed that the Enterprise Chamber retains jurisdiction over the enquêteprocedure even in the presence of arbitration agreements, because the inquiry procedure is a matter of public corporate law, not private contract.
Filing for emergency remedies Dutch law provides through the Ondernemingskamer requires meticulous preparation. The following roadmap guides counsel from initial assessment through to hearing and order.
The petition (verzoekschrift) must be filed by a lawyer admitted to the Dutch bar. It should identify the applicant’s standing, set out the factual basis for the claim of mismanagement or policy concerns, specify the interim measures sought, and explain why those measures are urgent. Supporting evidence is attached as exhibits. Key preparation steps include:
The petition is filed with the registry of the Gerechtshof Amsterdam (Ondernemingskamer). In urgent matters, counsel should simultaneously contact the court’s administration to request an accelerated hearing date. The court can accommodate genuine emergencies within days, and in exceptional circumstances, may hear an application on an ex parte basis, without the respondent being present, if notifying the other side would defeat the purpose of the relief sought.
Service of the petition on all interested parties (the company, its board, other shareholders) must comply with Dutch procedural rules. In cross-border situations, additional time for service abroad should be factored into the timeline.
| Stage | Typical Timeline (Urgent Track) | Typical Timeline (Standard Track) |
|---|---|---|
| Petition filed | Day 0 | Day 0 |
| Court contacted for expedited hearing | Day 0–1 | N/A (standard scheduling) |
| Service on respondents | Day 1–3 | Day 1–14 |
| Oral hearing | Day 3–10 | Week 4–8 |
| Interim order issued | Same day or within days of hearing | Within two to four weeks of hearing |
| Appeal (cassation to Hoge Raad) | Within statutory deadline | Within statutory deadline |
Interim orders typically include a detailed operative section specifying the measures imposed, the duration of the measures (often until a further order or definitive decision), and any conditions attached. The Ondernemingskamer frequently attaches dwangsommen (penalty payments) to its orders, a fixed sum payable for each day or each instance of non-compliance. The court may also require the applicant to provide security for costs or damages that the respondent might suffer if the interim measures are later found to have been unwarranted.
When assessing a request for Ondernemingskamer interim relief Netherlands courts apply a multi-factor test that balances speed against fairness. The applicant must demonstrate:
The Ondernemingskamer exercises considerable discretion in calibrating its orders. A measure that effectively removes a founder-director from the company, for instance, will be scrutinised more closely than an order temporarily freezing a single resolution. Penalty clauses are set at levels intended to ensure compliance without being disproportionate, the court takes into account the size of the company and the financial position of the parties. The likely practical effect of the 2026 governance enforcement focus is that courts may look even more critically at situations where a board has disregarded governance codes or shareholder communication obligations, potentially lowering the threshold for intervention in such cases.
The quality of evidence submitted with the initial petition often determines the outcome. In shareholder dispute interim relief applications, the Ondernemingskamer must form a view on urgency and the merits based largely on documentary evidence and written statements. The following checklist covers the essential materials practitioners should assemble before filing.
| Document | Purpose | How to Present |
|---|---|---|
| Current articles of association | Establish governance framework and identify deviations | Certified copy as exhibit |
| Shareholders’ register (share ledger) | Verify applicant’s standing and shareholding percentages | Extract from commercial register + internal ledger |
| Board and shareholder meeting minutes | Evidence of decision-making, conflicts, and procedural irregularities | Chronological bundle with annotations |
| Financial statements and management reports | Show asset dissipation, unusual transactions, or concealment | Audited or draft financials with forensic commentary |
| Correspondence (emails, letters, WhatsApp) | Demonstrate demands made, refusals, bad faith | Paginated exhibit with translations if needed |
| Shareholders’ agreement | Identify deadlock, drag/tag-along, and forum clauses | Highlighted copy with key provisions flagged |
| Expert opinions (forensic accounting, valuations) | Support allegations of mismanagement or unfair value destruction | Signed expert report as standalone exhibit |
| Witness statements | First-hand accounts of board conduct and contested events | Signed, dated statements with deponent details |
| KvK (Chamber of Commerce) extracts | Confirm current director/officer registrations | Recent extract (no older than one week) |
| Prior correspondence with the company | Demonstrate that shareholder has exhausted internal remedies | Chronological bundle with delivery receipts |
Tactical note: framing the relief sought is as important as the evidence itself. Practitioners should avoid overreaching, requesting the removal of the entire board when a single director’s suspension would suffice invites the court to deny the application as disproportionate. Conversely, requesting only an information order when asset dissipation is imminent may leave the applicant unprotected. The scope of the enquêteprocedure guide approach is to match the severity of the remedy to the severity of the governance failure.
Costs in Ondernemingskamer proceedings are generally more moderate than in complex commercial litigation or arbitration. Court registry fees are set by statute and are relatively modest. Legal fees depend on the complexity and urgency of the case; practitioners should budget for accelerated preparation costs when filing on an urgent track.
Where the Ondernemingskamer grants interim measures, it may order the respondent to pay costs. More commonly, penalty payments (dwangsommen) are attached to compliance orders. These penalties accrue automatically upon breach and are enforceable domestically without further court proceedings. For cross-border enforcement, Dutch interim orders can generally be enforced across the EU under the Brussels I Recast Regulation, although practitioners should verify whether the specific interim measure qualifies as a “judgment” within the meaning of the Regulation. The court may, in some cases, require the applicant to furnish security, a bank guarantee or deposit, to protect the respondent against loss if the measures are later reversed.
The following anonymised case vignettes illustrate how interim measures function in real-world disputes.
Case A, Minority shareholder blocked from information. A 15% shareholder in a family-owned BV discovered that the majority shareholder-director had entered into a series of related-party transactions at below-market value. Repeated requests for access to the company’s books and financial records were refused. The minority shareholder filed an urgent petition with the Ondernemingskamer seeking an interim order for information disclosure and the appointment of a temporary director. The court scheduled a hearing within one week, and, upon reviewing board minutes and correspondence, granted both measures on the day of the hearing. The temporary director uncovered additional undisclosed transactions and the full inquiry was subsequently ordered.
Case B, Takeover defence and resolution freeze. During a contested acquisition of an NV, the target company’s board convened an extraordinary general meeting to issue new shares to a friendly party, effectively diluting the bidder’s stake. The bidder, holding 12% of the issued share capital, petitioned the Enterprise Chamber for an immediate prohibition on the share issuance. The Ondernemingskamer heard the application on an expedited basis and issued an order temporarily prohibiting the execution of the issuance resolution, finding that there were justified doubts about whether the board had acted in the interest of the company and all its stakeholders. The case ultimately settled, but the interim order preserved the bidder’s negotiating position during the critical window.
When a governance crisis threatens to cause irreversible harm, speed and preparation determine the outcome. Use the following action checklist:
For specialist guidance on Ondernemingskamer interim relief Netherlands 2026 applications, connect with a qualified practitioner through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tom Teggelaar at Poelmann van den Broek NV, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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