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When a corporate governance dispute in the Netherlands reaches a crisis point, assets at risk, a board locked in deadlock, or a majority shareholder acting against the company’s interests, the Ondernemingskamer (Enterprise Chamber) of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal offers one of the fastest and most powerful emergency forums available to shareholders, directors and other stakeholders. An Ondernemingskamer shareholder action in the Netherlands can move from filing to interim relief in a matter of days, making it an indispensable tool for parties who cannot afford to wait for ordinary litigation to run its course.
This guide provides a step-by-step tactical playbook for bringing an emergency action before the Enterprise Chamber in 2026, covering who may apply, what evidence to prepare, realistic timelines, the full range of available remedies, and the costs involved. Industry observers note that recent increases in filings and notable decisions throughout 2025 and into 2026 have made the Chamber more active than at any point in the past decade, and directors and general counsel would be well advised to understand its procedures before a crisis arrives.
Yes, if you hold shares in a Dutch BV or NV (or are otherwise an eligible applicant), you can apply for emergency relief from the Ondernemingskamer when there are well-founded reasons to doubt the correctness of the company’s policy or course of affairs. The Chamber can act with remarkable speed, and interim measures can be granted before the opposing party has even been heard in the most urgent circumstances.
Before you instruct counsel, confirm three things:
If all three elements are present, contact experienced Ondernemingskamer counsel immediately. Delays erode urgency arguments and may prejudice the relief available.
The Ondernemingskamer is a specialised chamber within the Gerechtshof Amsterdam (Amsterdam Court of Appeal). It has exclusive jurisdiction over inquiry proceedings (enquêteprocedure) concerning Dutch legal entities, principally BVs and NVs. Its statutory basis lies in Title 8, Section 2 of Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek), specifically Articles 2:344–2:359. Unlike ordinary civil courts, the Enterprise Chamber combines investigative and remedial powers: it can order an inquiry into the company’s affairs, and, pending or following that inquiry, impose a wide range of interim and final measures to protect stakeholders and the company itself.
The Chamber is distinct from both ordinary courts and arbitral tribunals. Ordinary courts can grant injunctions and damages but lack the Enterprise Chamber’s bespoke corporate toolkit, such as the power to appoint independent directors or to transfer shares. Arbitration, meanwhile, is a matter of contract, and even where a shareholders’ agreement contains an arbitration clause, the Ondernemingskamer retains jurisdiction over the inquiry procedure. This makes it the forum of first resort for many corporate governance disputes in the Netherlands.
The Enterprise Chamber typically sits with three professional judges and two expert lay members (raden) drawn from the business community, accountants, former directors, corporate governance specialists. This composition ensures that the bench understands the commercial realities of the disputes before it, and it contributes to the Chamber’s reputation for pragmatic, solution-oriented decision-making. Cases are heard in Amsterdam, regardless of where the company has its registered office in the Netherlands.
Deciding whether to commence an Ondernemingskamer shareholder action in the Netherlands is a strategic choice. The procedure is powerful but public, and the Chamber expects applicants to demonstrate genuine and serious grounds. Use the following checklist to assess whether an emergency application is warranted:
If two or more of these red flags are present, the case for Ondernemingskamer proceedings is strong. If only one factor applies but it is severe (for example, active dissipation of assets), urgency alone may justify an emergency application.
The Enterprise Chamber is not always the right forum. Consider whether mediation could resolve the dispute faster and more discreetly, the Chamber itself increasingly encourages parties to explore settlement. Where a shareholders’ agreement provides for binding arbitration (for example, under NAI or ICC rules), contractual damages claims may need to be pursued there, although the inquiry procedure before the Ondernemingskamer remains available in parallel. For straightforward monetary claims without a governance dimension, an ordinary civil court (rechtbank) action may be more proportionate.
The Ondernemingskamer has an exceptionally broad remedial toolkit. Shareholder emergency measures can be ordered on an interim basis (pending the inquiry or pending a final decision) and can be tailored to the specific needs of the case. The table below summarises the most commonly sought orders:
| Remedy / Order | Threshold / When Used | Typical Time to Obtain (Urgent vs Standard) |
|---|---|---|
| Interim injunction (injunctive relief) | Imminent risk to assets or continuing unlawful conduct by directors or majority shareholder | Urgent: 1–3 days (expedited); Standard: 2–6 weeks |
| Appointment of independent supervisory director(s) or trustee (beheerder) | Serious governance failure, abuse of power, or need for independent interim oversight | Standard: 2–8 weeks (faster if urgency is demonstrated) |
| Suspension of a director or supervisory board member | Director misconduct, conflict of interest, or serious breach of duties that cannot await full inquiry | Urgent: days to 2 weeks; Standard: 4–8 weeks |
| Temporary deviation from articles of association or shareholders’ resolution | When the articles or a resolution are being used to obstruct legitimate governance or corporate action | Standard: 2–6 weeks |
| Temporary transfer of shares to a trustee | Deadlock or abuse by a shareholder; when exercise of voting rights is prejudicing the company | Standard: 4–12 weeks (complex valuation issues may extend timeline) |
| Order for buy-out of shares (exit remedy) | Permanent deadlock or oppression; when continued shareholding is untenable | Standard: 4–12 weeks (often longer if valuation is contested) |
When drafting the relief sought, precision matters. The Chamber prefers concrete, enforceable orders over vague requests. Specify the exact measures needed, the duration sought, and, where appointment of an independent director is requested, propose the profile of the appointee. Avoid requesting every conceivable remedy; a focused application strengthens credibility with the bench.
Practical tip: The Chamber can and does combine interim measures. It is common to see an order simultaneously suspending a director, appointing a temporary replacement, and enjoining specific transactions, all in a single decision. Tailor your request to match the actual threat profile.
Understanding the Ondernemingskamer procedure in detail is essential for any applicant. The process from first instruction of counsel to an interim order follows a broadly predictable pattern, although the Chamber retains considerable discretion to accelerate or adapt the timetable based on urgency.
Below is a sample timeline for a genuinely urgent application, the kind seen in cases of active asset dissipation or imminent irreversible transactions:
In less extreme cases, standard Ondernemingskamer proceedings from filing to first hearing typically take four to eight weeks, and a full inquiry (if ordered) can run for several months to over a year.
The Chamber applies a pragmatic urgency test. It will ask: What irreparable harm will occur if interim measures are not granted now? Applicants must demonstrate a concrete and imminent threat, not merely a general concern about future misconduct. Industry observers note that the Chamber has become increasingly willing to act swiftly where evidence of asset dissipation or self-dealing is clear, but it remains cautious about granting interim relief on the basis of speculative risk alone. The applicant’s own conduct also matters: unreasonable delay in bringing the application will undermine the urgency argument.
The quality of the evidence bundle often determines the outcome of an emergency application. The Enterprise Chamber decides on the papers and the oral hearing, there is no extended discovery phase. That means the applicant must present a compelling, well-organised evidentiary record from the outset.
The following Ondernemingskamer evidence checklist covers the documents and materials most commonly required:
The Chamber expects exhibits to be numbered sequentially, clearly labelled, and indexed. Use a tabbed bundle (physical or digital) with a master index at the front. Highlight or flag the critical passages in lengthy documents, the bench will not trawl through hundreds of pages of unguided material. Where documents are in a language other than Dutch, provide certified translations of the key passages.
Practical tip: Frontload the strongest evidence. Place the three or four most damaging documents at the top of the chronology and reference them prominently in the opening section of the request. The bench forms preliminary views early.
Understanding the costs of an Ondernemingskamer action is essential for budgeting and strategic decision-making. The principal cost categories are:
The Netherlands does not follow a strict “loser pays” rule in Ondernemingskamer proceedings. The Chamber has discretion to allocate the costs of the inquiry as it sees fit, and in practice the company typically bears the investigation costs. Each party generally bears its own legal costs, though the Chamber can deviate from this in cases of abuse of process or manifestly unreasonable conduct. Parties should also be aware of the possibility of security for costs, a respondent may request that the applicant provide security if there are concerns about the applicant’s ability to pay potential adverse cost orders.
Funding options include legal expenses insurance (common in the Netherlands, though coverage for Ondernemingskamer proceedings specifically should be confirmed with the insurer) and, increasingly, third-party litigation funding. Dutch law does not prohibit third-party funding, though parties should be aware that the Chamber may inquire about funding arrangements where relevant to standing or the assessment of the applicant’s interests.
A well-structured emergency application is essential for success before the Enterprise Chamber. The following skeleton provides a practical framework for drafting:
Practical tip: Keep the main body of the request under 20 pages. The Enterprise Chamber values concision. Save the detail for the exhibits and the oral argument. If you need to present complex financial information, use a summary table in the request and attach the underlying data as an exhibit.
Obtaining an interim order from the Ondernemingskamer is not the end of the process. Understanding the post-order landscape is critical for translating interim relief into a durable governance solution.
Interim measures take effect immediately upon pronouncement (unless the Chamber specifies otherwise). If the respondent refuses to comply, the applicant can enforce the order through the usual enforcement mechanisms, including penalty payments (dwangsommen). In practice, most parties comply promptly, given the Chamber’s authority and the reputational consequences of defiance.
Interim measures are, by definition, temporary. They remain in force until the Chamber lifts or modifies them, typically upon conclusion of the inquiry. If the inquiry reveals mismanagement (wanbeleid), the Chamber can impose final measures under Article 2:356 BW, including the annulment of resolutions, the dismissal of directors, the dissolution of the legal entity, or a compulsory share transfer. The applicant should plan from the outset for the possibility that the case will progress from interim relief through a full inquiry to final measures.
Appeals against Ondernemingskamer decisions lie to the Hoge Raad (Supreme Court of the Netherlands), but only on points of law, not on the facts. The Supreme Court applies a deferential standard to the Chamber’s factual and discretionary judgments, which means that well-supported interim orders are rarely overturned on appeal. Early indications from recent case law suggest that the Supreme Court continues to give significant latitude to the Enterprise Chamber’s assessment of urgency and proportionality of interim measures.
Drawing on extensive experience in Ondernemingskamer proceedings, the following tactical observations are offered for practitioners and parties approaching the Enterprise Chamber:
Bringing an Ondernemingskamer shareholder action in the Netherlands demands preparation, speed, and tactical precision. The Enterprise Chamber offers unmatched remedial power for resolving acute corporate governance disputes, but only to applicants who present clear evidence, act promptly, and request focused, proportionate relief. Whether you are a director confronting board deadlock, a minority shareholder facing majority abuse, or a general counsel preparing contingency plans, the key is to understand the procedure, assemble your evidence early, and engage specialist counsel before the crisis becomes irreversible. With increased filings and a busy 2026 docket, the Enterprise Chamber remains one of the most effective forums for urgent corporate relief in Europe.
Those seeking qualified counsel for Ondernemingskamer proceedings can find a corporate lawyer in the Netherlands 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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