- Business of the Company – this is an overview of the company and the nature of the business that shareholders are required to promote and develop.
- Transfer of Shares – Limits may be placed on selling shares in the company. This may include: sales of shares only being allowed by way of a specified process, shares having to be offered to the existing shareholders (pre-emption rights), drag-along and tag-along provisions on the sale of shares which protect the majority shareholders and minority shareholders respectively. There should also be a mechanism for valuing shares prior to their sale.
- Issue of Further Shares – In order to prevent the potential dilution of shares held by the shareholders, there is usually a restriction to prevent the issue of further shares.
- Management Decisions – The SHA will normally confirm which business decisions have to be taken by all the shareholders (unanimous voting) and which can be decided by majority voting and what percentage that majority should be (e.g., usually 75%).
- Dividend Policy – Shareholders derive a return from their shares by way of dividends (income) or from their sale (capital). Unless there is a dividend policy stipulated in the SHA then declaring a dividend will be at the absolute discretion of the directors.
- Restrictions on the shareholders – To prevent a shareholder from setting up in competition with their own company there are usually restrictions imposed on the shareholders dealing with joining competitors, and poaching staff and customers/clients.
Articles of Association (“Articles”) are a statutory requirement for all companies. In summary, it is the company’s constitutional document and can take the form of Model Articles (as set out in the Companies Act 2006), amended Model Articles or can be bespoke. The Articles are a public document and must be registered at Companies House when the company is incorporated. The Articles are a contractual agreement between all the shareholders of the company and regulate the way in which the company is managed e.g., setting out formalities for director and shareholder meetings.
A shareholder agreement (“SHA”) is a private agreement between the shareholders and usually act as additional obligations, over and above the Articles to regulate the relationship between the shareholders. As this is a private agreement, there is no requirement to register this at Companies House. The SHA takes priority over the Articles.
Unlike the Articles of Association (“Articles”) which is a public agreement between the shareholders of a company, a shareholder’s agreement (“SHA”) is a private agreement between the shareholders and is not filed at Companies House. The SHA overrides the Articles.
Consequently, the main reasons for entering into a SHA are to keep the arrangement private and to allow the shareholders to decide what terms they want to govern their relationship.
- An innocent party can terminate or confirm the contract. You can recover damages from the innocent party in relation to any loss you suffer as a result of your injury.
- A court can order performance of a contract or breach clause. When an innocent party can seek an injunction to prevent imminent injury.
- The first way to terminate a shareholder agreement is by mutual consent. This is when all shareholders decide they don't want to honour the deal for various reasons. The reason could be the dissolution of the company, the sale of the company's shares or the company itself, or the decision to leave the company. A properly designed shareholder agreement should include these clauses.
- Secondly, the partnership agreement can be terminated automatically if one of the shareholders breaches the agreement. In such cases, the shareholder agreement will terminate unless the agreement contains a clause providing for some form of arbitration.
- Third, if one of the shareholders wishes to leave the company, the partnership agreement can be terminated. If so, there will be specific provisions in the shareholder agreement to specify what should happen in this scenario.










