PIERCING THE
CORPORATE VEIL
Read the
WARNING! first.

In Arizona, as in many other jurisdictions,
the limited liability afforded by a corporation may sometimes be removed
through a legal doctrine known as “piercing the corporate veil.”
Since limited liability is one of the primary reasons people incorporate,
to have the corporate veil pierced and liability attach to the officers,
directors or shareholders is a substantial detriment. People who own
or operate corporations should know how to avoid being the target of a
piercing the corporate veil claim.
Piercing the corporate veil is not easy,
but in some situations it is not difficult because the owners of the
corporation do such a bad job of forming or
maintaining the corporation. Just because you file
papers with the Arizona Corporation Commission to form a corporation does
not mean that you are in the clear. If your corporation was not
formed by a reputable lawyer, you are likely at some risk.
Accountants who incorporate corporations
are generally more familiar with tax issues than with arcane legal
concepts such as "piercing the corporate veil." Paralegals may know
how to fill out forms, but it is doubtful any paralegal is knowledgeable
about the intricacies of piercing the corporate veil doctrine.
Do-it-yourselfers lack the legal skill, training and experience that is
necessary to prevent a piercing the corporate veil claim from having
merit.
The Arizona law regarding a corporate
entity and piercing the corporate veil is more easily stated than it is
applied. As a general rule, a corporation will be treated as a
separate legal entity until sufficient reason appears to disregard the
corporate form. In Arizona, there are two (2) legal grounds for
disregarding the corporate form: 1) alter ego status
or 2) undercapitalization at inception.
Alter Ego
The corporate fiction will be disregarded
when the corporation is the alter ego or business
conduit of a person, and when to observe the corporate form would work an
injustice. The alter ego status is said to exist when there is such unity
of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the
corporation and owners cease to exist.
How do you know whether alter ego status
exists? That is not always an easy question to answer, but the more
wrong things the corporation and its principals do, the more likely it is
that alter ego status will be found to exist. Here are some of the
things to look for:
1.
Were
Bylaws properly prepared and adopted?
2.
Were stock
certificates actually issued to all of the stockholders?
3. Are minutes of
company meetings prepared and kept in the company record book?
4. Is there a
corporate record book containing the Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws,
Minutes of meetings and Stock Register?
5.
Are
personal debts paid from a corporate checking account?
6.
Are there
formal corporate resolutions for such things as land transactions, leases
and loans?
7.
Are loans
to insiders properly documented and adequately secured by collateral?
8.
Are
corporate funds and personal funds commingled?
9.
Are there
records showing that the corporation was properly capitalized?
10.
Is the
President of the corporation the same person as the Secretary of the
corporation?
In addition, would observing the corporate form sanction a fraud or
promote injustice in the particular circumstances? The more evidence
you have to show a fraud or injustice, the more likely it is that a court
will disregard the corporate form.
The doctrine of "piercing the corporate
veil" based on alter ego and fraud does not apply to claims asserted by
corporate shareholders. This doctrine is only available to third parties,
such as creditors, who deal with the corporation.
Undercapitalization
All Arizona corporations must be
established on an adequate financial basis. At the time of
formation, the corporation must be properly capitalized. This means
that the assets used to fund the corporation must bear a reasonable
relation to the anticipated liabilities of the corporation. For
example, a corporation formed to engage in a hazardous activity, such as
transporting corrosive chemicals, must have sufficient assets to respond
to claims arising out of the corporation’s business. A corporation
that was formed for the purpose of selling greeting cards is likely to
need less capital than a hazardous chemical transporter.
There is no bright line to establish how
much capital is enough and how much is not enough. The more capital
the corporation has, however, the merrier. Depending upon the nature
of the business, ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00) or even fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000.00) may not be enough.
The test of capitalization is at inception,
not some time later. Thus, a corporation that was properly
capitalized but later runs out of money and assets cannot have its veil
pierced on an undercapitalization basis. A corporation that was
undercapitalized at its inception is always subject
to attack, no matter how well it does financially later.
For a good
explanation of the undercapitalization theory, see
Norris Chemical Company v.
Ingram,
139 Ariz. 544, 679
P.2d 567 (App. 1984).
The
Moral of the Story
The moral of the story is that a
corporation will not shield you from personal liability unless you do
things right. The corporation must be properly formed. And,
the corporation must be properly maintained. A corporation that is
undercapitalized at inception or that is the alter ego of its principals
may be an easy target for a piercing the corporate veil claim. If
you need assistance with a corporation in Arizona,
contact us. |