Director duties under the BCBCA
The Business Corporations Act (s. 142) imposes two core duties on every director:
- Fiduciary duty — to act honestly and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the company. This means the company’s interests, not your own and not the majority shareholder’s.
- Duty of care — to exercise the care, diligence, and skill that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in comparable circumstances. You are expected to be informed before you vote.
The business judgment rule protects directors who make decisions in good faith, on an informed basis, and in the honest belief that the decision serves the company. It does not protect directors who are conflicted, uninformed, or acting dishonestly.
Conflicts of interest
Section 155 of the BCBCA requires a director who has a material interest in a proposed transaction or agreement with the company to disclose that interest to the board. In most cases, the conflicted director must also abstain from voting on the matter.
Common conflict situations include: a director who is also a supplier to the company; a director entering a lease with the company; a director who holds shares in a company that is the subject of an acquisition. Managing conflicts properly — disclosure, abstention, and documentation in minutes — protects both the director and the transaction.
Practical note If you are a director with an interest in a proposed transaction, get legal advice before the board votes — not after. An undisclosed conflict can void the transaction and expose you to personal liability.
Records and resolutions
BC companies are required to maintain a records book containing the notice of articles, articles, central securities register, register of allotments, register of directors, and certain other documents. These must be available at the company’s records office.
Directors may act without a formal meeting by passing resolutions in writing, provided all directors entitled to vote sign the resolution (s. 126 BCBCA). Annual general meetings are generally required unless waived by unanimous consent of the shareholders (s. 182).
Well-maintained corporate records are not just a legal requirement — they are essential when you want to sell the company, bring in investors, or respond to a regulatory inquiry. Gaps create problems at the worst possible times.
Personal liability of directors
Limited liability protects shareholders from a company’s ordinary debts. Directors receive less protection. Specific statutory provisions impose personal liability on directors for:
- Unpaid employee wages (up to two months) and vacation pay — Employment Standards Act
- Unremitted source deductions — Income Tax Act
- Unremitted GST/HST — Excise Tax Act
- Environmental remediation costs in certain circumstances
Resignation from the board does not automatically end liability for obligations that arose during your term. A due diligence defence is available for some of these obligations, but it requires that you actually took steps to prevent the default.
Shareholder remedies
Oppression remedy (s. 229 BCBCA) — A shareholder, director, or officer who believes that the company’s affairs are being conducted in a manner that is oppressive, unfairly prejudicial, or unfairly disregards their interests can apply to the BC Supreme Court for relief. The court has broad remedial discretion, including ordering a share buyout, damages, or changes to corporate governance.
Derivative action (s. 232 BCBCA) — A complainant can apply to court to bring or defend an action in the name of the company, where the company has suffered a wrong and those in control are unwilling or unable to pursue it. Leave of court is required.