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Shareholder Agreements: Essential Clauses Every Entrepreneur and Lawyer Must Know
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Shareholder Agreements: Essential Clauses Every Entrepreneur and Lawyer Must Know

Complete guide to shareholder agreements in Spain: tag-along, drag-along, anti-dilution, pre-emption rights, lock-up, non-compete, distinction from bylaws, and Supreme Court case law.

shareholder agreementscommercial lawstartupscorporate clausesentrepreneurs

Shareholder Agreements: Protecting Your Business

A shareholder agreement (pacto de socios) is a private contract between company shareholders governing key aspects of their relationship: governance, share transfers, investor protection, retention commitments, and dispute resolution. While the Capital Companies Act (LSC) regulates corporate life, bylaws cannot cover every scenario. The shareholder agreement fills that gap.

In Spain's startup ecosystem, shareholder agreements have become indispensable: no professional investor (angel or VC) will invest without one. But they are not exclusive to startups -- any company with two or more shareholders should have one.


The shareholder agreement is a private contract governed by:

  • Art. 1255 Civil Code: Principle of contractual freedom
  • Art. 1091 Civil Code: Contractual obligations have the force of law between the parties

Difference Between Shareholder Agreement and Bylaws

AspectCorporate BylawsShareholder Agreement
NaturePublic document (filed with Commercial Registry)Private contract
EnforceabilityAgainst third parties (erga omnes)Only between signatories (inter partes)
PublicityAnyone can consult themConfidential
ModificationGeneral Meeting + deed + filingAgreement of signatory parties

Third-Party Enforceability

The shareholder agreement is not enforceable against third parties or the company itself (unless the company is a party):

  • STS 296/2016: Parasocial agreements cannot alter the registered statutory regime
  • STS 120/2017: However, breach generates contractual liability between signatories


Essential Clauses

1. Tag-Along (Co-Sale Right)

Protects: Minority shareholders

If a majority shareholder sells to a third party, minority shareholders have the right to sell on the same terms (price and conditions).

2. Drag-Along (Forced Sale Right)

Protects: Majority shareholders

If a majority shareholder agrees to sell 100% of the company, they can force minority shareholders to sell on the same terms.

Key limit: The price must be fair and conditions identical. Case law requires drag-along not to be abusive.

3. Pre-Emption Right

Protects: All shareholders

Before selling to a third party, the seller must offer their shares to existing shareholders at the same price.

4. Anti-Dilution Clause

Protects: Investors (especially in startups)

TypeMechanismCommon in
Full ratchetInvestor gets additional shares as if they invested at the new lower priceSeed/pre-seed rounds
Weighted averageAdjustment weighted by size of new issuance vs total capitalSeries A onward

5. Lock-Up (Retention Commitment)

Founding shareholders commit not to sell their shares for a set period (typically 2-4 years).

Common variant: Vesting -- shares are "earned" progressively (e.g., 25% per year over 4 years, with a 1-year cliff).

6. Non-Compete and Non-Solicitation

  • Non-compete: Founders commit not to compete during their involvement and for 12-24 months after departure
  • Non-solicitation: Prohibition on recruiting employees, clients, or suppliers

Legal limit: Non-compete clauses must be reasonable in scope, duration, and territory. Excessive clauses may be voided.

7. Governance Clauses

  • Reserved matters: Decisions requiring unanimity or supermajority
  • Board composition: Proportional director appointment rights
  • Enhanced information rights: Periodic reports, accounting access, audits

8. Exit Clauses

  • Call option: Right to buy another shareholder's shares at a predetermined price
  • Put option: Right to force another shareholder to buy your shares
  • Shotgun clause: One shareholder names a price; the other must buy at that price or sell at the same price

9. Share Valuation

  • Agreed methods: EBITDA multiple, discounted cash flow (DCF), adjusted book value
  • Independent expert: External auditor as valuation arbiter
  • Floor price: Guaranteed minimum price (common in VC investments)


Dispute Resolution

MechanismAdvantagesDisadvantages
MediationFast, affordable, preserves relationshipNon-binding
ArbitrationFast, confidential, bindingExpensive
Ordinary courtsLower initial costSlow (1-3 years), public

Recommendation: Escalation: first mediation (30 days), then institutional arbitration.


Breach Consequences

  1. Contractual liability (Art. 1101 Civil Code): Damages compensation
  2. Specific performance (Art. 1098 Civil Code): Court-ordered compliance
  3. Penalty clause (Art. 1152 Civil Code): Agreed economic penalty
  4. Contract termination (Art. 1124 Civil Code): Compliant party may terminate


Common Drafting Mistakes

  1. Not including the company as a party to the agreement
  2. Clauses contradicting the bylaws
  3. Not planning exit scenarios
  4. Excessive non-compete clauses
  5. Not updating after new funding rounds or shareholder additions


Conclusion

A shareholder agreement is not a startup luxury -- it is a conflict prevention tool that every multi-shareholder company needs. A well-drafted agreement saves years of litigation and millions in legal costs.

Lexiel lets you generate shareholder agreement drafts with market-standard clauses (tag-along, drag-along, anti-dilution, vesting), customized to your situation and verified against the LSC and Supreme Court case law.

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