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Liability in Russian Corporate Law
Author(s) -
В. В. Орлов
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
athens journal of law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2407-9685
DOI - 10.30958/ajl.7-1-1
Subject(s) - damages , limited liability partnership , legal liability , tort , corporation , business , civil code , law , liability , strict liability , delict , obligation , fiduciary , corporate law , limited liability , law and economics , political science , corporate governance , economics , duty , private law , public law , finance , black letter law
Liability issues related to corporate activities are primarily regulated by general and special rules of the Civil Law in Russia that are mainly dispositive. The general liability rules consist of tort and contract liability provisions of the Civil Code. Special corporate norms are, in turn, included in the Civil Code provisions on juristic persons and legislation regulating corporate forms, and they concern liability of founders, shareholders and corporation as well as executives of corporation. The main form of civil liability is compensation for damages, the award for which generally requires that the illegal action and the caused damages as well as their causal relationship and the fault for causing the damages is proved in accordance with the rules on presumptions and burden of proof provided by the procedural rules. Traditionally, Russian civil liability rules have relied on the concept of illegality of an action (or breach of an obligation) that is to cause liability, which reflects the dominant role of legal supervision in the Russian legal system. However, in the event of liability of corporate executives, a breach of fiduciary duties could be regarded sufficient as a ground to qualify their actions as illegal without particular reference to concrete legal norms. Keywords: Civil liability; Corporation; Corporate executives; Illegality

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