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how do i remove a corporate director

How Do I Remove a Corporate Director in Spain (2026): Step-by-step, Votes, Article 223 LSC and Supreme Court Update

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to remove a corporate director is one of the most consequential governance decisions a Spanish company can face, and the process changed in a meaningful way in April 2026 when the Spanish Supreme Court clarified the circumstances under which shareholders may effect removal even without an explicit agenda item. Spain’s Ley de Sociedades de Capital (LSC), particularly Article 223, grants shareholders an almost unrestricted right to dismiss directors at any time, but the practical steps, from convening the general meeting to filing at the Registro Mercantil, demand precision.

This guide walks shareholders, board members and corporate counsel through every stage of the removal of a director in Spain, including voting thresholds, notice drafting, registry formalities and the post-removal liability risks that can catch companies off guard.

Executive Summary, Can Shareholders Remove a Director in Spain in 2026?

Yes. Under Article 223 of the LSC, the general meeting of shareholders may remove any director at any time, even if the matter is not included on the agenda, a principle the Spanish Supreme Court reaffirmed and refined in April 2026. Removal does not require cause; it is a discretionary shareholder prerogative. The following quick checklist summarises the end-to-end process before each step is explored in detail below.

  • Who decides. The junta general (general shareholders’ meeting), by ordinary resolution.
  • What vote is needed. Simple majority of the capital present or represented, unless the company’s articles impose a higher threshold.
  • Notice. Convene the meeting with the statutory notice period (minimum 15 days for an SL; specific publication rules for an SA).
  • Agenda. Best practice is to include the removal as a specific agenda item; however, Article 223 LSC allows removal to be resolved even when it is not listed.
  • Registry filing. Record the cessation at the Registro Mercantil and update public records.
  • Post-removal risk. Removal does not extinguish the outgoing director’s liability for acts performed while in office, nor the company’s exposure if procedural steps are defective.

Legal Basis, Article 223 LSC and Related Provisions

The starting point for any removal of a director in Spain is the Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2010, which approved the consolidated text of the Ley de Sociedades de Capital. Article 223 establishes the core rule: directors may be separated from their position at any time by the general meeting, even if separation is not on the agenda. This provision is mandatory, it cannot be overridden by the company’s articles of association to deny the general meeting this power, although the articles may regulate procedural aspects such as enhanced majorities.

Several companion provisions shape how the removal operates in practice. Article 160 reserves the appointment and removal of directors as an exclusive competence of the general meeting. Articles 193 to 201 govern the convening of the meeting itself, including notice periods, quorum requirements and voting majorities. Article 217 and following articles address directors’ remuneration, which becomes relevant when calculating any termination payments due upon dismissal.

When Company Articles Matter

Although the LSC sets the floor, the company’s own estatutos sociales may raise the voting threshold for director removal, require a specific quorum or mandate additional procedural steps such as a written report from the board. Any shareholder contemplating removal should review the articles before calling the meeting, failure to comply with a bespoke procedural requirement can expose the resolution to judicial challenge.

Distinction: SA vs SL

In a Sociedad Limitada (SL), ordinary resolutions require a simple majority of votes cast by attendees whose shares represent more than one-third of the total share capital. In a Sociedad Anónima (SA), quorum and majority rules are more layered: first-call quorum requires 25 % of subscribed capital, and resolutions pass by simple majority of those present. The company’s articles may deviate upward from these defaults for director removal. In either entity type, the general meeting retains the power under Article 223 LSC to resolve removal even if it was not placed on the published agenda.

LSC Article What It Controls Practical Effect on Removal
Art. 223 Separation of directors at any time Shareholders may remove a director even without agenda inclusion or cause
Art. 160 Exclusive competences of the general meeting Confirms removal is a shareholder, not board, prerogative
Arts. 193–201 Convening, notice and quorum for meetings Sets minimum notice periods (15 days for SL) and quorum thresholds
Arts. 198–199 Majority requirements (SL and SA respectively) Defines default voting thresholds unless the articles set higher bars
Art. 217 et seq. Directors’ remuneration and contracts Determines compensation and severance obligations on termination

Step-by-Step Process to Remove a Corporate Director in Spain

The following practical checklist covers how to remove a corporate director from initial review through to registry filing. Estimated timeframes are included for a standard case; complex or contested removals will take longer.

  1. Review the articles of association and any shareholders’ agreement (Day 1). Identify whether the articles impose a heightened voting threshold, require a prior board report, or contain deadlock provisions in the shareholders’ agreement that affect the removal process. Check whether the director was appointed under a proportional representation system, which may restrict removal rights.
  2. Determine the resolution type and quorum (Day 1–2). For both SL and SA entities, director removal ordinarily requires an ordinary resolution. Confirm the quorum percentages in the company’s articles. If a universal meeting (junta universal) can be convened, with 100 % of capital present and agreeing to the agenda, the statutory notice requirements can be bypassed entirely.
  3. Prepare the notice of meeting and draft the agenda (Day 2–5). Although Article 223 LSC permits removal without an express agenda item, best practice, especially after the April 2026 Supreme Court clarification, is to include the director’s removal as a separate agenda point. This reduces litigation risk and provides a clear procedural record. A sample agenda item appears below.
  4. Issue the convening notice (Day 5–7). For an SL, the notice must be sent at least 15 calendar days before the meeting, using the method specified in the articles (ordinarily registered post or electronic communication to each shareholder). For an SA, the notice must be published in the Boletín Oficial del Registro Mercantil (BORME) and in a widely circulated newspaper in the province of the registered office, also at least 15 days in advance.
  5. Hold the general meeting and vote (Meeting day). Present the resolution for debate. The chair should record the vote count, identify shareholders voting for, against and abstaining, and note the capital represented. If the resolution passes, the removal is effective immediately unless the resolution itself specifies a future date.
  6. Prepare and sign the minutes (Immediately after the meeting). The company secretary drafts the minutes. For an SA, minutes are typically elevated to a public deed (escritura pública) before a notary. For an SL, notarisation is not always required but is strongly recommended.
  7. File the cessation at the Registro Mercantil (Within 30 days). Present the notarised minutes or certified copy, together with the relevant registry forms, at the Registro Mercantil of the province where the company has its registered office. The registrar records the cessation and publishes it in the BORME.
  8. Complete post-removal notifications (Days following filing). Update bank mandates and signatory powers. Notify Social Security and payroll providers if the director received remuneration. Revoke any powers of attorney (poderes) granted to the outgoing director. Inform relevant regulatory bodies if the company operates in a regulated sector.

Sample Shareholder Resolution

“It is resolved to remove [full name] from the position of director of [company name], S.L./S.A., with immediate effect, in accordance with Article 223 of the Ley de Sociedades de Capital.”

Sample Notice Language and Agenda Item

The convening notice should include an agenda item substantially in this form:

“Item [X]: Proposal for the removal of [full name] as director of the company, and, if appropriate, appointment of a replacement director.”

Where the convening shareholders also wish to appoint a replacement, a separate agenda item should be added for the new appointment to keep the minutes clean and reduce the risk of procedural challenge.

Notice, Agenda and the April 2026 Supreme Court Clarification

One of the most debated aspects of director removal in Spain has always been whether the general meeting can validly remove a director when removal was not listed on the published agenda. Article 223 LSC states explicitly that removal may be resolved “even if it does not appear on the agenda” (aunque no conste en el orden del día). In practice, however, outgoing directors have frequently challenged such resolutions, arguing that the absence of an agenda item denied them the right to prepare a defence or that attending shareholders were ambushed.

The Spanish Supreme Court’s April 2026 clarification addressed this tension directly. The court confirmed that the Article 223 exception is not merely procedural, it reflects a substantive shareholder right that cannot be curtailed by the company’s internal rules. The decision also clarified that the removed director’s recourse lies in an action for damages (if the removal was accompanied by defamatory statements or was otherwise abusive) rather than in annulling the resolution on procedural grounds alone. Industry observers expect this ruling to reduce the number of successful challenges to removal resolutions, but it does not eliminate litigation risk entirely.

The practical effect is twofold. First, shareholders can act swiftly when circumstances demand it, for example, when a director’s misconduct is discovered between the date the notice is issued and the date of the meeting. Second, the ruling places a higher burden on the removed director to demonstrate actual prejudice rather than merely pointing to the absence of a prior agenda item.

Safe Drafting Practices for Notices

Despite the court’s position, the safest approach remains including director removal on the general meeting agenda from the outset. Where that is not possible, shareholders should document the reasons the item was raised during the meeting, ensure the director is given an opportunity to address the meeting before the vote, and record these steps in the minutes. Obtaining written waivers from all shareholders confirming their agreement to debate the item further insulates the resolution.

Tactical Options When Quick Removal Is Needed

If urgency is paramount, consider convening a junta universal, a meeting at which all shareholders are present and unanimously agree to debate the agenda. This bypasses notice requirements entirely. Alternatively, where a shareholders’ agreement grants drag-along or governance rights, those contractual mechanisms may provide additional leverage. In extreme cases, shareholders can seek interim judicial measures to suspend a director’s powers pending the general meeting, although Spanish courts are cautious about granting such relief absent clear evidence of harm.

Dismissal of Managing Directors vs Non-Executive Directors

The distinction between a managing or executive director (consejero delegado) and a non-executive director matters significantly in Spain. A non-executive director’s removal is purely a corporate act governed by the LSC, there is no employment relationship, so no labour law consequences arise.

A managing executive director, by contrast, often holds both a corporate appointment and a service contract (contrato de prestación de servicios) or, less commonly, an employment contract. Removing the director from the corporate role under Article 223 does not automatically terminate the service contract. If the service contract is not also terminated, the company may continue to owe remuneration. Conversely, if the contract is terminated without cause, the director may be entitled to compensation capped under Article 217.4 LSC (limited, for listed companies, to two years of annual remuneration). For unlisted companies, the cap depends on the terms agreed in the contract and the company’s articles.

Where a director also holds an ordinary employment position within the company (the so-called teoría del vínculo), Spanish case law generally absorbs the employment relationship into the directorship. Upon removal, the former director typically cannot claim unfair dismissal protection under Spanish labour law for the absorbed role, but the position remains fact-specific and legal advice is essential.

Registro Mercantil Filing and Notarial Formalities

Once the general meeting has passed the shareholders’ resolution to remove a director in Spain, the company must register the cessation at the Registro Mercantil. The filing makes the removal opposable to third parties, until the cessation is registered and published in the BORME, the outgoing director may still be treated as having authority to bind the company vis-à-vis good-faith third parties.

The filing package typically includes the notarised public deed (escritura pública) elevating the meeting minutes, a certified copy of the minutes themselves, and the registry’s own application form. The provincial Registro Mercantil where the company has its registered office handles the filing. Processing generally takes two to four weeks, though delays can occur during peak periods.

Common Filing Errors and How to Avoid Them

  • Missing notarisation. For an SA, minutes must almost always be elevated to a public deed. Submitting uncertified minutes will result in a qualification defect (calificación negativa).
  • Inconsistent data. The name and identification number of the removed director must match the registry’s existing records exactly.
  • Omitting the replacement appointment. If the removal leaves the board below the statutory or articles-mandated minimum, the registrar may refuse to record the cessation until a replacement is simultaneously registered.
  • Late filing. Although no strict statutory deadline penalises late filing, delays leave the company exposed because the former director remains on the public record.

Post-Removal: Director Liability, De Facto Directors and Creditor Actions

Removal does not draw a line under director liability after removal in Spain. The outgoing director remains personally liable for any wrongful act, breach of duty or negligent decision taken during their tenure. Creditors, the company itself, and, in the event of insolvency, the bankruptcy administrator (administrador concursal) may pursue claims against the former director under Articles 236 to 241 bis of the LSC.

The company should also be aware of the de facto director doctrine. If a removed director continues to exercise management functions, signing contracts, giving instructions to staff, or representing the company externally, they may be treated as a shadow or de facto director and held to the same standard of care and liability as a formally appointed one. The April 2026 Supreme Court clarification, while primarily about agenda requirements, reiterated the court’s willingness to look beyond formal appointments when assessing director conduct.

From a tax compliance standpoint, the outgoing director may also bear subsidiary liability for the company’s tax debts under certain circumstances, particularly where the Tax Agency (Agencia Tributaria) can demonstrate that the director failed to act diligently in ensuring the company met its fiscal obligations.

Director Liability Timeline and Statute of Limitations

  • Corporate liability action (Art. 236 LSC). Four-year limitation period from the date the company could have brought the claim.
  • Individual shareholder/creditor action (Art. 241 LSC). Four-year limitation period from the date the damage was known or could reasonably have been known.
  • Insolvency qualification proceedings. No fixed limitation, claims may be brought throughout the insolvency process for acts committed during the two years preceding the declaration of insolvency.

How to Document the Process to Reduce Liability

  • Retain original signed minutes, attendance lists and voting records.
  • File the cessation at the Registro Mercantil promptly and keep the registration receipt.
  • Obtain a formal certificate from the registrar confirming the director’s cessation once it is recorded.
  • Revoke all powers of attorney and ensure third parties (banks, customers, regulators) are notified in writing.
  • Archive board and committee minutes from the outgoing director’s period of office for the full four-year limitation period.

Practical Risk Checklist and Templates

The following consolidated checklist is designed for company secretaries, in-house counsel and shareholders managing the removal of a director in Spain. Use it alongside the sample templates provided earlier in this guide.

  • Review articles of association and any shareholders’ agreement for enhanced thresholds or procedural requirements.
  • Determine whether a junta universal is feasible; if not, draft and issue the convening notice with the correct statutory notice period.
  • Include director removal as a specific agenda item (recommended despite Article 223 LSC).
  • Prepare the draft shareholders’ resolution to remove the director and, if needed, a separate resolution to appoint a replacement.
  • Hold the meeting, record the vote and prepare minutes immediately.
  • Elevate minutes to a public deed before a notary (mandatory for SA; recommended for SL).
  • File the cessation at the Registro Mercantil within 30 days.
  • Revoke powers of attorney, update bank mandates and notify payroll, Social Security and any sector regulators.
  • Confirm no ongoing contractual or service-agreement obligations remain with the outgoing director.
  • Archive all documentation for a minimum of four years to cover the limitation period for director liability claims.

Comparison Table, Removal Procedure: SL vs SA

Entity Type Vote Thresholds and Quorum Filing Formalities and Notes
Sociedad Limitada (SL) Ordinary resolution: simple majority of votes cast by attendees representing more than one-third of total share capital. Check articles for higher thresholds. File certified minutes and updated director list at the Registro Mercantil. Notarisation is recommended but not always legally required unless the articles demand it.
Sociedad Anónima (SA) First-call quorum: 25 % of subscribed capital. Resolution by simple majority of capital present. Articles may impose stricter requirements. Minutes must generally be elevated to a public deed (escritura pública). File at the Registro Mercantil. Publication in the BORME follows automatically upon registration.
Special Cases (proportional representation or co-opted seats) Removal may be restricted where directors were appointed under the proportional representation system (Art. 243 LSC). Specialist legal advice is essential. Additional legal risks arise. Document the rationale carefully. The outgoing director may have standing to seek judicial annulment of the resolution.

Next Steps

Removing a corporate director in Spain requires careful coordination of corporate governance rules, statutory notice periods, notarial formalities and registry filings. The April 2026 Supreme Court clarification has made the legal framework clearer, but the practical execution remains detail-intensive, particularly where a managing director holds a service contract, or where the director also holds shares. Professional guidance from a qualified Spain corporate lawyer is strongly recommended to navigate the process efficiently, draft resolutions that withstand judicial scrutiny, and manage post-removal liability exposure. For shareholders managing cross-border governance issues, understanding how share transfers interact with board composition is equally important.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Oscar Folchi Riera at Unión Legal – Abogados y Economistas, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Welex, Spain Corporate Law Commentary
  2. Elías y Muñoz Abogados, Director Removal Blog
  3. CMS, Multi-Jurisdiction Director Removal Guide
  4. Gannons Solicitors, Removing a Director

FAQs

How do I remove a corporate director in Spain?
Check the company’s articles, convene a general meeting with the required notice, include a removal resolution on the agenda, pass the resolution by ordinary majority, record the decision in notarised minutes, and file the cessation at the Registro Mercantil. The legal basis is Article 223 of the Ley de Sociedades de Capital.
An ordinary shareholders’ resolution passed by simple majority of the voting capital present at the meeting is the default under the LSC. However, the company’s own articles of association may set a higher threshold. Always verify the specific quorum and majority rules in the estatutos sociales before convening the meeting.
Yes. Article 223 LSC expressly allows removal even when it is not on the published agenda. The Spanish Supreme Court’s April 2026 clarification confirmed this right and limited the grounds on which an outgoing director can challenge such a resolution. Best practice, however, remains including removal on the agenda to minimise the risk of litigation.
No. Removal does not extinguish director liability after removal in Spain. The outgoing director remains exposed to corporate liability actions (Art. 236 LSC), individual creditor or shareholder claims (Art. 241 LSC), and potential subsidiary tax liability. The limitation period is generally four years from when the claim could reasonably have been brought.
The company must file the notarised minutes (or certified copy) and the registry application at the Registro Mercantil. Once recorded, the cessation is published in the BORME. The company should also update bank mandates, revoke powers of attorney, and notify Social Security and any applicable sector regulators.
Not lawfully. However, until the cessation is registered and published, a removed director may still bind the company in dealings with good-faith third parties who relied on the public registry. Prompt filing is therefore critical. If the removed director continues to act after registration, they may be treated as a de facto director and held personally liable for those acts.

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How Do I Remove a Corporate Director in Spain (2026): Step-by-step, Votes, Article 223 LSC and Supreme Court Update

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