Legal aid oyo journal of legal issues vol. 1, Issue 1, 2017


Macaura v. Northern Assurance Co. Ltd (Supra



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THE SALOMON PRINCIPLE OF WHAT RELEVANCE
Company Law Notbeook
Macaura v. Northern Assurance Co. Ltd (Supra, Wherethe House of Lords decided that insurers were not liable under a contract of insurance on property that was insured by the plaintiff but owned by a company in which the plaintiff held all the fully-paid shares. The House of Lords held that only the company as the separate legal owner of the property, and not the plaintiff, had the required insurable interest. The plaintiff, being a shareholder, did not have any legal or beneficial interest in that property merely because of his shareholding.
Industrial Equity v Blackburn) 52 ALJR 89,where the High Court refused to treat a subsidiary company as merely part of its holding company for the purposes of determining the profits of the holding company because of the separate legal entity concept. In this case the question arose "whether in ascertaining the amount of profits available for distribution by a holding company byway of dividend, it is correct to look at the profit of the holding company itself or to the group profit as disclosed by the consolidated accounts" The court held that it was correct to do this. See also NRMA v Parker (1986) 4 ACLC 609.


LEGAL AID OYO JOURNAL OF LEGAL ISSUES VOL. 1, ISSUE 1, 2017.
109 As much as the courts have tried to uphold the principle of corporate personality as laid down in Salomon‟s case, there has been a steady stream of common law decisions and legislative enactments which have eroded the immutability of the separate legal entity doctrine and have thus exposed officers to personal liability to a company's creditors. These decisions and enactments are conveniently seen as ways to `lift or pierce the corporate veil'
456
In the words of Lord Denning in Littlewoods Mail Order Stores Ltd. v. IRC (1969) 1 WLR
1241,
Incorporation does not fully cast a veil over the personality of a limited company through
which the courts cannot see. The courts can, and often do, pull off the mask. They look to see
what really lies behind A corporation will be looked upon as a legal entity as a general
rule but when the notion of legal entity is used to defeat public convenience, justify wrong,
protect fraud or defend crime the law will regard the corporation as an association of
persons.”

In the same vein, Lord Halsbury in Salomon's case acknowledged that the corporate veil will not protect a fraudulent person hiding behind the corporate structure.

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