
Corporate deadlock: contractual mechanisms for resolving shareholder disputes
A corporate deadlock arises when shareholders or corporate bodies are unable to adopt or implement the resolutions required for the company to operate. Anticipating this
By ruling STS 4594/2023 of November 2, 2023, ECLI:ES:TS:2023:4594, the Litigation Chamber of the Supreme Court has developed how the deductibility of expenses in Corporate Income Tax should be interpreted for remuneration received by directors with executive positions, in accordance with Article 14.1.e), now Article 15.e) of Law 24/2014 on Corporate Income Tax, which regulates the non-deductibility of expenses for “donations and liberalities”.
The SC establishes as jurisprudence, in its tenth legal basis, that the remuneration in these cases cannot be considered as a liberality, since the remuneration is not received as a member of a board of directors but by the employment relationship of real and effective services.
Consequently, the remuneration, not being liberalities, will be deductible for IS, provided that it corresponds to the rendering of real, effective and undisputed services.
This is a ratification of the criterion previously set forth in the judgment of March 30, 2021 (RCA/3454/2019;ES:TS:2021:1233) and more recently in the judgment of June 27, 2023 (appeal 6442/2021, ECLI:ES:TS:2023:3071).

A corporate deadlock arises when shareholders or corporate bodies are unable to adopt or implement the resolutions required for the company to operate. Anticipating this

Changing tax residence outside Spain can have significant tax implications, particularly for taxpayers holding substantial corporate or financial interests. In certain cases, losing Spanish tax

If you are relocating to Spain to work — or if your company is considering bringing someone in from abroad — you have probably already
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