When you become a company director you take on whole new set of responsibilities. Along with your fellow board members you will set out the strategy of your business. Here we outline the key duties that come with being a director.
The role of the board
The board of directors of a company is primarily responsible for:
- Determining the company’s strategic objectives and policies
- Monitoring progress towards achieving the objectives and policies
- Appointing senior management
- Accounting for the company’s activities to relevant parties, eg shareholders
Making the first appointment
The first directors of a company are appointed at the time of its registration. On registration, the persons named in form IN01 will be deemed to have been appointed as the first directors. Subsequent appointments (which are made on form AP01) are governed by the company’s articles of association but any shareholders agreement should also be checked. Typically the articles will provide for the board of directors to fill any casual vacancies or to appoint additional directors up to the maximum number specified by the articles.
On appointment, a new director will be asked to provide certain personal information (full name, address, date of birth, nationality, country of residence, former names and business occupation) to be included in the relevant form which the director is required to sign to signify consent to act as a director. It is possible for a director to file a service address at Companies House as well as his or her home address. It will be the service address (which can be the registered office of the company) that appears on the public record. The director will be reminded to acquire the share qualification (if any) specified in the articles.
Additionally, the director will give a general notice of any interests in contracts involving the company. Directors of quoted plcs are required to declare their interest in the company’s shares under the disclosure and transparency rules.
On a practical note, the new director should make sure that he/she receives: a copy of the company’s memorandum and articles of association; details of the business and affairs of the company, eg recent board minutes and management accounts; and the statutory reports and accounts for the past two years.
What powers do directors have?
The directors are generally responsible for the management of the company and they may exercise all the powers of the company. However, the extent of their authority may be constrained by the Companies Act 2006 and the articles of association. For example, articles of association often include provisions and restrictions on borrowing by the company.
Generally, the directors must act collectively as a board to bind the company. However, the articles usually entitle the board to delegate powers to individual directors as considered appropriate. In practice, individual directors will normally carry out many of the company’s activities.
What are the duties?
Statutory Duties
Directors need to be aware that they are personally subject to statutory duties in their capacity as directors of a company. In addition, the company as a separate legal entity is subject to statutory controls and the directors are responsible for ensuring that the company complies with such statutory controls.
The Companies Act 2006 codified certain common law and equitable duties of directors for the first time. The act sets out the general duties of directors, which are:
The statutory duties that replace the fiduciary or equitable duty are interpreted in accordance with the previous case law, which remains relevant. These statutory duties cannot be seen in isolation because in addition a director will be subject to a wide range of regulation and legislation including the Insolvency Act 1986, the Company Directors’ Disqualification Act 1986, the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007.
The company secretary as chief administrative officer will be responsible for the performance of many of the administrative duties imposed under the Companies Act 2006. A private company is not required to appoint a company secretary and where no company secretary is appointed the duties and responsibilities of the company secretary will fall on the directors.
Directors may be liable to penalties if the company fails to carry out its statutory duties. However, they may have a defence if they had reasonable grounds to believe that a competent person had been given the duty to see that the statutory provisions were complied with.
One of the main statutory responsibilities falling on directors is the preparation of the accounts and the report of the directors. It is the responsibility of the directors to ensure that the company maintains full and accurate accounting records. This includes the preparation of a balance sheet and a profit and loss account for each financial period of the company, and the presentation of these to shareholders and, subject to various exemptions, the filing of the accounts and report of the directors with the Registrar of Companies.
Liabilities
A company director can be held personally liable for losses incurred by a business which are proven to be the result of board decisions, or a failure act properly. For this reason Directors Liability Insurance is an essential protection for a company director. IoD members can obtain Directors Liability Insurance under the IoD Preferred Programme.
It is beyond the scope of this paper to list all the various matters for which directors can be held to be liable. However, directors should be aware of the effects of the Company Directors’ Disqualification Act 1986, which could lead to the disqualification from acting as a director of a company for a period of between two and 15 years, and the Insolvency Act 1986 which gives rise to the possibility of directors being made personally liable for the company’s debts, the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974, and the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007.
Company Directors’ Disqualification Act 1986
The circumstances in which an application may be made for the disqualification of a director are as follows:
Insolvency Act 1986
Wrongful Trading
If a company has gone into insolvent liquidation and before that liquidation took place a director knew, or ought to have known, that there was no reasonable prospect that the company could avoid the liquidation, then the court may declare that the director make a personal contribution to the company’s assets.
However, the director will not be made personally liable in circumstances where the director can show that every step was taken prior to the liquidation to minimise the potential loss to the company’s creditors.
Fraudulent Trading
Under this heading the court may also require a director to make a contribution to the company’s assets if, in the course of the winding up of a company, a director was knowingly a party to the carrying on of the company’s business with the intent to defraud the creditors.
Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974
Health and safety law places duties on organisations and employers, and directors can be personally liable when these duties are breached: members of the board have both collective and individual responsibility for health and safety. Larger public and private sector organisations need to have formal procedures for auditing and reporting health and safety performance.
If a health and safety offence is committed with the consent or connivance of, or is attributable to any neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the organisation, then that person (as well as the organisation) can be prosecuted under section 37 of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.
Those found guilty are liable for fines and, in some cases, imprisonment. In addition, the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986, section 2(1), empowers the court to disqualify an individual convicted of an offence in connection with the management of a company. This includes health and safety offences. This power is exercised at the discretion of the court; it requires no additional investigation or evidence.
Individual directors are also potentially liable for other related offences, such as the common law offence of gross negligence manslaughter. Under the common law, gross negligence manslaughter is proved when individual officers of a company (directors or business owners) by their own grossly negligent behaviour cause death. This offence is punishable by a maximum of life imprisonment.
Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007
Under this Act, an offence will be committed where failings by an organisation's senior management are a substantial element in any gross breach of the duty of care owed to the organisation's employees or members of the public, which results in death. The maximum penalty is an unlimited fine and the court can additionally make a publicity order requiring the organisation to publish details of its conviction and fine.
Recommendation
This paper is only a brief summary of the duties, responsibilities and liabilities an individual will assume on being appointed a director of a company. As a first appointment it is strongly recommended that more detailed information is obtained. In larger companies, however, the company secretary will be able to give appropriate guidance.
Lastly, as a general rule, it is up to the director:
- To act within powers in accordance with the company’s constitution and to use those powers only for the purposes for which they were conferred
- To promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members
- To exercise independent judgement
- To exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence
- To avoid conflicts of interest
- Not to accept benefits from third parties
- To declare an interest in a proposed transaction or arrangement
How the IoD supports and develops company directors
Director development
IoD Chartered Director
The IoD's flagship director development programme. Chartered Director status is conferred under the IoD's Royal Charter, and demonstrates a director's commitment to the highest standards of professional conduct and corporate governance. Joining the IoD Chartered Director programme is a unique statement of intent to go further than your peers.
IoD Professional Development
A company director has to possess specific knowledge and skills to ensure the lawful trading of a business for long term success. IoD Professional Development offers a comprehensive range of courses which develop and refine the qualities essential in an effective business leader.
IoD Digital Academy
The Digital Academy is the latest addition to the IoD's director development capability. The new learning environment uses app-based delivery to offer IoD training to directors wherever they may be.
Director support
IoD Directors Advisory Service
Consult with a lawyer, accountant, HR advisor and other professionals. Sessions held at 116 Pall Mall, by phone or Skype. Access to the DAS is an exclusive IoD membership benefit.
IoD Business Information Service
The Business Information Service has access to a number of subscription databases to provide you with market research, company profiles and contacts, legal templates and a wide range of content to support your success.
IoD Directors Law Express legal helpline
Receive confidential legal advice - especially when you need a rapid response.