Our Expert in Serbia
No results available
Understanding how to enforce a shareholders’ agreement in Serbia is essential for any founder, minority investor, or general counsel facing a breach of contractual shareholder rights. A shareholders’ agreement (ugovor između članova društva) operates as a private contract between signatories, separate from the company’s constitutional documents, and its enforcement follows a distinct procedural path through Serbian courts or arbitration. This guide sets out the complete 2026 enforcement workflow, from initial evidence preservation through to post‑judgment execution, covering eligibility, required documents, realistic timelines, costs, and the key legislative changes that affect your options today.
Under Serbian law, a shareholders’ agreement is a contract governed primarily by the Law on Obligations (Zakon o obligacionim odnosima) rather than the Law on Companies (Zakon o privrednim društvima). The Law on Companies regulates the internal corporate governance of a company, articles of association, share registers, and the powers of company organs, while a shareholders’ agreement creates binding obligations between the parties who signed it. This distinction is critical: unlike the articles of association, a shareholders’ agreement generally does not bind the company itself unless the company is an express party to the instrument.
Shareholders’ agreements are legally enforceable in Serbia against each signatory shareholder, and against any successor who has assumed the contractual obligations (for example, through an assignment clause or a share transfer condition). They cannot, however, override mandatory provisions of the Law on Companies or public policy (javni poredak). A clause that purports to strip a company organ of a power conferred by statute will be unenforceable to that extent, even if the parties agreed to it in writing.
If you suspect a breach, or one has already occurred, your immediate triage should cover three actions: (1) preserve all documentary evidence, including the signed agreement itself and any communications evidencing the breach; (2) review the dispute resolution clause in the agreement to determine whether litigation or arbitration is the required forum; and (3) check any contractual notice or cure periods that must be observed before commencing formal proceedings. Failing to follow these pre‑action steps can undermine your enforcement position from the outset.
Any shareholder who is a party to the agreement may seek enforcement of its terms. There is no minimum shareholding threshold; a minority shareholder holding a single share is entitled to enforce the agreement on equal footing with a majority shareholder, provided the right being invoked runs in that shareholder’s favour. Assignees may also enforce if the agreement permits assignment and the assignment was validly executed. Third parties, including the company’s directors, employees, or creditors, generally have no standing to enforce a shareholders’ agreement to which they are not parties.
In some structures, the company itself is made a signatory to the shareholders’ agreement, particularly to bind it to specific undertakings (such as providing information, facilitating share transfers, or refraining from certain corporate actions). Where the company is a party, it can be named as a respondent in enforcement proceedings. Where it is not a party, enforcement is limited to claims between the individual shareholders, and any relief affecting the company (for example, an order to register a share transfer) must be directed to the relevant shareholder or executed through the Business Registers Agency (Agencija za privredne registre, APR) following a court order or arbitral award.
Most well‑drafted shareholders’ agreements include a formal notice of breach and a cure period (commonly 14 to 30 days) before a party may commence proceedings. Some agreements also require an attempt at amicable settlement or mediation. Complying with these contractual pre‑conditions is not optional: Serbian courts and arbitral tribunals will examine whether the claimant satisfied all procedural prerequisites before accepting jurisdiction or awarding relief. Failure to serve a proper notice, or to allow the cure period to expire, can result in a claim being dismissed or stayed.
The following enforcement steps set out the shareholder dispute procedure from the moment a breach is identified through to final execution. Each step identifies who performs it and the typical duration.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Evidence preservation & internal notice | Shareholder / in‑house counsel / external counsel | Immediate, 1–7 days |
| 2. Formal notice of breach + cure period | Claimant shareholder / counsel | 7–30 days (per SHA or typical practice) |
| 3. Forum decision & pre‑action negotiation or mediation | Claimant counsel; opposing counsel; mediator (if applicable) | 1–4 weeks |
| 4. Seek interim relief (court injunction / emergency arbitrator) | Claimant counsel / arbitral institution | 1–6 weeks |
| 5. Commence main proceedings (arbitration or litigation) | Claimant / counsel | Filing to first hearing: 2–6 months |
| 6. Merits decision or arbitral award | Tribunal / Court | 6–18 months (typical estimate) |
| 7. Recognition and enforcement of award or judgment | Claimant counsel / enforcement authority | 1–6 months (domestic enforcement) |
The first enforcement step is to secure the documentary record before any party has an opportunity to alter, destroy, or conceal evidence. Collect and secure the original signed shareholders’ agreement (all amendments and side letters), the company’s share register, board and general meeting minutes that record the disputed actions, and all correspondence, emails, messaging records, formal letters, that evidence the breach or the counterparty’s conduct.
If the company maintains its records electronically, request certified extracts and ensure backups are preserved. Where the claimant is a minority shareholder with limited access to company records, consider exercising the statutory right of inspection under the Law on Companies to obtain copies of minutes, financial statements, and registers before the opposing party becomes aware of the dispute. Engage Serbian corporate counsel at this stage to advise on evidence preservation obligations and to prepare a litigation hold notice if necessary.
Draft and deliver a written notice identifying the specific provisions of the shareholders’ agreement that have been breached, the factual basis for the claim, and the cure demanded. The notice should specify a deadline for compliance, typically the period set out in the agreement itself, or a reasonable period of 14 to 30 days where the agreement is silent.
Service method matters. Use registered post with return receipt, courier with proof of delivery, or any method expressly permitted by the agreement’s notice clause. Retain proof of service: it will be required when filing court or arbitration proceedings. Where the counterparty has a registered address abroad, ensure service complies with applicable international conventions or the terms of the agreement.
Before commencing proceedings, determine the correct forum. The shareholders’ agreement itself will usually contain either an arbitration clause or a jurisdiction clause directing disputes to a specified court. This choice governs the entire enforcement route and must be followed: a Serbian court will decline jurisdiction if a valid arbitration clause applies, and an arbitral tribunal will lack jurisdiction if the agreement requires court resolution.
The decision between arbitration vs litigation in Serbia involves several practical considerations:
Where the breach is ongoing or the opposing party may take irreversible action (for example, transferring shares to a third party, disposing of company assets, or altering corporate governance arrangements), seek interim relief without delay. In court proceedings, a Serbian commercial court may grant provisional measures (privremene mere) on an urgent basis, in some cases within days of the application. The claimant must demonstrate a prima facie case and a risk of irreparable harm or that the measure is necessary to prevent violence or avert serious and irreparable damage.
In arbitration, many institutional rules provide for emergency arbitrator procedures that can issue binding interim orders before the full tribunal is constituted. Even where the dispute is subject to arbitration, Serbian courts retain jurisdiction to grant interim measures in support of the arbitral proceedings under the Law on Arbitration. This parallel power is especially valuable when speed is critical, a court can act within one to two weeks, whereas an emergency arbitrator may take slightly longer depending on institutional timelines.
File the statement of claim (in court) or the request for arbitration (before the chosen institution) setting out the factual and legal basis of the claim. The filing should identify the specific provisions breached, the evidence relied upon, and the remedies sought. Typical remedies for breach of a shareholders’ agreement in Serbia include:
Attach all supporting documents to the initial filing. In arbitration, the procedural calendar will be set by the tribunal or the institution’s rules; in court, expect the first hearing to be scheduled within two to six months of filing depending on the court’s caseload.
Once a final court judgment or arbitral award is obtained, it must be executed. A domestic court judgment in Serbia is enforceable directly through the enforcement procedure under the Law on Enforcement and Security (Zakon o izvršenju i obezbeđenju). An arbitral award, whether domestic or foreign, must first be recognised by the competent Serbian court before enforcement can proceed. For foreign awards, recognition follows the procedures established under the New York Convention, to which Serbia acceded.
Where the remedy involves a share transfer or a change to the company’s registered data, the successful party files the court order or recognised award with the Business Registers Agency (APR) to effect the registration change. APR will update the company’s entry upon receipt of the final, enforceable judicial act and the prescribed registration application. Counsel should prepare the APR filing simultaneously with enforcement proceedings to avoid delay once the order becomes enforceable.
Assembling the correct documents needed at the outset is one of the most impactful steps in any enforcement proceeding. Missing or improperly authenticated documents cause delays, increase costs, and can result in dismissed filings. The table below sets out the full checklist.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Signed shareholders’ agreement (full executed copy) | Must be original or certified copy showing all signatures and version history. Identify each signatory and their capacity. |
| Share register / list of members | Issued by the company or extracted from APR records. Demonstrates party status and shareholding percentages. |
| Company articles of association / memorandum | Obtained from the Business Registers Agency. Shows formal company powers and governance structure. |
| Board minutes / general meeting minutes | Contemporaneous corporate records evidencing the disputed actions or decisions. |
| Correspondence evidencing breach | Emails, letters, messaging records. Preserve original metadata; produce certified copies. |
| Evidence of service / notices | Courier receipts, registered mail confirmations, email delivery receipts proving notice of breach was received. |
| Previous settlement or mediation correspondence | Relevant to demonstrating good faith and compliance with pre‑action requirements. |
| Power of attorney for counsel | Notarised; apostilled if counsel is foreign. Must comply with Serbian admissibility requirements. |
| Expert reports or valuation reports | Required for buy‑out disputes. Specify valuation method (DCF, comparable multiples, net asset value). |
| Financial records supporting damages claim | Audited accounts, bank statements, invoices. Present as certified copies. |
| Arbitral clause and choice of law extracts | Relevant provisions extracted for forum analysis. Identify seat, applicable law, and institutional rules. |
| Foreign documents requiring authentication | Apostille (Hague Convention states) or consular legalisation. Certified translation into Serbian required. |
Where documents originate outside Serbia, ensure they are apostilled under the Hague Apostille Convention (Serbia is a contracting state) or consularly legalised if originating from a non‑Convention country. All documents in a language other than Serbian must be accompanied by a certified translation produced by a sworn court interpreter (sudski tumač). Courts and arbitral tribunals will not accept untranslated evidence.
The overall timeline for enforcing a shareholders’ agreement in Serbia typically ranges from approximately 12 to 30 months from the first notice of breach to final execution, depending on the forum (arbitration is generally faster), the complexity of the dispute, and whether interim relief is contested. The following breakdown provides orientation for planning.
First 7 days. Secure and preserve all evidence. Engage Serbian corporate counsel. Review the dispute resolution clause and identify any contractual notice periods. Issue a litigation hold notice internally if applicable.
First 30 days. Serve the formal notice of breach and allow the cure period to expire. Conduct the forum analysis (arbitration vs court). If interim relief is needed, prepare the application and supporting affidavits.
First 3 months. File the statement of claim or request for arbitration. Apply for interim relief if not already obtained. The opposing party will file a response or statement of defence. In arbitration, expect the tribunal to be constituted within this period under most institutional rules. In court, the first preparatory hearing is typically scheduled within two to four months of filing.
Months 3–18. The main proceedings are conducted, document production, witness statements, hearings, and expert evidence if required. Arbitration proceedings typically conclude within 12 months of commencement. Court proceedings at first instance may take 12 to 18 months; appeals can add a further 6 to 12 months.
Statutory limitation periods. Under Serbian law, the general limitation period for contractual claims is 10 years from the date the obligation fell due (Law on Obligations). However, specific shorter periods may apply depending on the nature of the claim (for example, claims for periodic payments carry a 3‑year limitation). Missing a limitation deadline extinguishes the right to sue. This is a statutory bar, it cannot be extended by agreement.
The costs of enforcement vary significantly depending on forum, claim value, and complexity. The table below provides indicative ranges to assist planning. All figures are estimates and should be confirmed with current fee schedules before filing.
| Item | Typical Amount (Estimate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (commercial claim) | Percentage of claim value (RSD‑denominated schedule) | Calculated on a sliding scale. Lower‑value claims attract a flat minimum; higher‑value claims are capped. Verify current schedule with the commercial court. |
| Arbitration filing and administration fees | EUR 2,000 – 25,000+ depending on institution and claim value | Varies by institution (Belgrade Arbitration Center, ICC, VIAC). Check the applicable fee schedule for the chosen rules. |
| Legal counsel (Serbia) | EUR 120 – 400 per hour (or fixed retainer) | Varies by firm size, seniority of counsel, and case complexity. Request a detailed fee estimate at engagement. |
| Interim relief / emergency application | Court fees + counsel urgency fees | Additional court filing costs apply. Emergency arbitrator procedures carry separate institutional fees. |
| Expert valuation report | EUR 3,000 – 30,000 | Depends on company size, industry, and valuation methodology. |
| Translation and notarisation | EUR 50 – 300 per document | Certified translations by sworn court interpreters. Notarisation fees are statutory. |
| Enforcement / execution fee | Percentage of recovered amount or fixed cost | Depends on the enforcement office and asset type. Public enforcement officers charge regulated fees. |
| APR registration update | Nominal statutory fee | For registering share transfers or governance changes following a court order or award. |
Recoverability of costs. Serbian courts generally apply the principle that the unsuccessful party bears the costs of the proceedings, including reasonable legal fees. In arbitration, cost allocation follows the applicable institutional rules and tribunal discretion. It is common for tribunals to order partial cost recovery.
Tax considerations. Legal fees are subject to Serbian VAT at the standard rate. If a share transfer is ordered as a remedy, stamp duty or capital gains tax obligations may arise. Consult a Serbian tax adviser before structuring settlement terms or accepting share transfer orders to avoid unexpected fiscal exposure.
The 2025–2026 period has brought several developments relevant to the enforcement of shareholders’ agreements in Serbia. The Law on Companies (Zakon o privrednim društvima) has been subject to periodic amendment since its original enactment, with updates published in the Službeni glasnik Republike Srbije (Official Gazette). Practitioners should confirm the current consolidated text of the Law via the Ministry of Economy portal or the Official Gazette records, as amendments may refine shareholder rights, squeeze‑out procedures, and registration requirements at APR.
On the judicial side, Serbian commercial courts and the Supreme Court of Cassation (Vrhovni kasacioni sud) have continued to develop case law clarifying the boundary between contractual and corporate remedies for shareholders. Industry observers expect this jurisprudence to further solidify the principle that shareholders’ agreements create binding inter‑party obligations enforceable as contracts, while confirming that they cannot override mandatory provisions of the Law on Companies. Early indications suggest that courts are becoming more receptive to granting interim measures in shareholder disputes, reflecting a broader trend toward faster provisional relief in commercial litigation.
Serbia’s continued adherence to the New York Convention ensures that foreign arbitral awards remain enforceable domestically, and the Ministry of Justice has signalled ongoing commitment to judicial reform aimed at reducing case backlogs in commercial courts. The likely practical effect for shareholders will be modestly faster enforcement timelines at the court stage, although the extent of improvement remains to be seen in practice.
When to engage counsel. Retain qualified Serbian corporate and dispute resolution counsel at the evidence‑preservation stage, before the formal notice of breach is sent. Early legal advice ensures that the notice is properly drafted, the forum analysis is correct, and the enforcement strategy is optimised from the start. Attempting the initial enforcement steps without local counsel is a common source of procedural error that can compromise the entire claim.
Successfully enforcing a shareholders’ agreement in Serbia demands a structured, evidence‑led approach that begins well before any filing is made. The process outlined in this guide, from immediate evidence preservation through forum selection, interim relief, main proceedings, and final execution, reflects current Serbian law and practice as of 2026. Each stage carries specific document requirements, deadlines, and cost implications that reward early preparation and qualified local counsel.
Whether you are a minority shareholder seeking to protect drag‑along or tag‑along rights, a founder enforcing non‑compete or governance provisions, or an investor pursuing a contractual buy‑out, the procedural steps are substantially the same. The key variables are the forum (arbitration or court), the urgency of interim relief, and the complexity of the remedies sought. Understanding how to enforce a shareholders’ agreement in Serbia, and avoiding the common pitfalls that delay or defeat enforcement, is the foundation for protecting your investment and your contractual rights.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nemanja Curcic at NCR lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 13 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message