When a Shareholder Agreement No Longer Reflects Reality

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When a Shareholder Agreement No Longer Reflects Reality

The Assumption of Control

A shareholder agreement is often treated as definitive.

In practice, it is a starting point.

Business Reality Evolves

Over time, operations diverge from what the agreement contemplates.

Roles evolve. Contributions change. Economic arrangements shift.

The agreement remains static. The business does not.

Two Structures Emerge

One version exists on paper. Another exists in operation. A detailed account of how these divergences develop into disputes is set out separately.

As long as alignment holds, the distinction is easy to ignore.

When alignment breaks, the distinction becomes central.

Interpretation Replaces Assumption

The question is no longer what the agreement says in isolation.

It is how the agreement interacts with actual conduct.

Documents are read alongside behavior.

Outcomes Become Contextual

Courts and advisors evaluate expectations and actions together.

This can produce results that differ from what the agreement suggests on its face.

The Risk Is Misplaced Confidence

The risk is not divergence itself.

It is the assumption that the written structure will control regardless of how the business has functioned.

That assumption is often tested late.

Continuity

A more complete view of how these situations form is set out in:
A Business Partnership Is Rarely “Tense.” It Is Usually Entering a Legally Meaningful Phase.


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