Statutory Duties and Liability of Directors and Managers
The duties of care, authority and accountability govern the relationship between a company, its managers, directors and shareholders. Under Article 22 of the Commercial Companies Law, any person authorised to manage the company shall preserve its rights and exercise the care and diligence of a reasonable person, and shall act in accordance with the objects of the company and the authority granted to them.
Where the Memorandum of Association, appointment terms, or shareholders’ agreement creates contractual obligations, the Civil Transactions Law requires those obligations to be performed in accordance with their terms and in good faith. Its rules on misuse of rights may also be relevant where a person uses a corporate right or authority for an improper purpose. These supplement, but do not replace, the specific duties and liability provisions contained in the Commercial Companies Law.
The UAE law requires related party transactions to be disclosed and approved. Article 152 requires related parties, in the case of joint stock companies, to disclose their interest before the transaction is concluded. Transactions up to 5% of the company’s capital require prior approval of the Board, and transactions above that are subject to approval of the General Assembly after valuation according to the rules of the applicable Authority.
Failure to comply with disclosure and approval requirements may expose the relevant person to compensation claims where loss is caused. In joint-stock companies, Article 150 allows the company or a shareholder to seek invalidation of the transaction or recovery of profits where a director fails to disclose a conflict of interest. For LLCs, Article 84 makes a manager personally liable to the company, partners, and third parties for fraud, abuse of power, breach of law, breach of the memorandum of association or appointment terms, and gross management errors. Article 24 provides that any provision in a company’s Memorandum of Association or Articles of Association that seeks to release a current or former company officer from personal liability is void.
In a period of financial distress, directors and managers whose conduct has contributed to the company’s financial decline may also be subject to scrutiny under the Financial Restructuring and Bankruptcy Law. As regards LLCs, the Commercial Companies Law Article 308 provides that, upon losses equal to 50% of capital, managers shall refer the matter to the General Assembly; and partners holding at least 25% of capital may seek dissolution upon losses equal to 75%.
Under Articles 88 and 89 of the Commercial Companies Law, an LLC with more than 15 partners must appoint a Supervisory Board of at least three partners. The board may examine the company’s books and documents, request reports from the managers, and review the balance sheet, annual report, and profit distribution. It must submit its report to the General Assembly at least five days before the meeting.