Incorporating a business is only the beginning. The corporate statutes — whether Ontario's Business Corporations Act, RSO 1990, c B.16 (OBCA) or the federal Canada Business Corporations Act, RSC 1985, c C-44 (CBCA) — provide a basic governance framework, but they leave most of the critical questions between shareholders unanswered. A shareholders agreement is the private contract that fills those gaps, governing the relationship between shareholders in a way that actually reflects their intentions and protects each party's investment. If you have two or more shareholders in your Ontario corporation, you need a shareholders agreement.
When You Need a Shareholders Agreement
The honest answer is: always, from the moment a second shareholder is added to the corporation. The most common reason small businesses avoid shareholders agreements is the mistaken belief that everything is fine between the founding partners and a formal agreement isn't necessary. The reality is that agreements are most useful precisely when things are still going well — once a dispute arises, negotiating a fair agreement becomes nearly impossible.
Specific situations where a shareholders agreement is essential:
- Multiple founders with different ownership percentages (e.g., 60/40 or 50/50 splits).
- One shareholder who is an active operator and one who is a passive investor.
- Family businesses where succession and family dynamics need to be managed.
- Any corporation seeking or planning to seek outside investment.
- Any corporation with shareholder-employees (most small businesses).
OBCA vs. CBCA Governance Considerations
Whether incorporated under the OBCA or CBCA, the basic default governance rules are similar — but there are differences that a shareholders agreement can address:
- Under both acts, a shareholder holding more than 50% of the voting shares can generally control all ordinary resolutions. A shareholder agreement can require higher thresholds (unanimous consent, or a supermajority) for specified decisions.
- The CBCA has stronger minority shareholder protections in certain areas (dissent and appraisal rights, derivative actions) — these are relevant when choosing between provincial and federal incorporation.
- A unanimous shareholders agreement (USA) under the OBCA or CBCA can transfer powers ordinarily belonging to the directors to the shareholders — creating tighter shareholder control of the business in smaller corporations.
Shotgun Clause: The Ultimate Deadlock Resolver
The shotgun clause (also called a buy-sell clause) is one of the most powerful and elegant mechanisms in a shareholders agreement. It works like this: either party can trigger the shotgun by offering to buy out the other party's shares at a stated price per share. Upon receiving the offer, the recipient must either accept the offer (and sell their shares at the stated price) or buy out the offeror at the same stated price.
The beauty of the shotgun is that it creates powerful incentives for fair pricing — the offeror must name a price they would be willing to pay, because the offeree can flip the transaction and require the offeror to sell at that same price. This mechanism is highly effective at resolving 50/50 deadlocks without litigation. However, shotgun clauses can be problematic where shareholders have very different access to capital — a wealthy shareholder can exploit a cash-strapped partner by naming a below-market price knowing they can outbid any counter-offer.
Right of First Refusal (ROFR)
A right of first refusal requires a shareholder who wishes to sell their shares to a third party to first offer those shares to the existing shareholders (or the corporation) at the same price and on the same terms as the proposed third-party sale. This prevents unexpected third parties from entering the company without the consent of the existing shareholders.
A well-drafted ROFR provision should specify:
- The notice period within which existing shareholders must exercise or waive the ROFR (typically 15–30 days).
- Whether the ROFR applies to all share transfers, including transfers to family members or holding companies.
- What happens if the existing shareholders choose not to exercise the ROFR — can the selling shareholder then proceed with the third-party sale?
Drag-Along and Tag-Along Rights
Drag-along rights allow a majority shareholder (or a defined threshold of shareholders) who have agreed to sell the corporation to a third-party buyer to "drag along" the minority shareholders — requiring them to sell their shares to the buyer on the same terms. Without drag-along rights, a single holdout minority shareholder can block a company sale that the majority supports. Drag-alongs are essential for making the company attractive to buyers who want to acquire 100% of the shares.
Tag-along rights protect minority shareholders in the opposite scenario. If a majority shareholder is selling their shares to a third party, tag-along rights allow the minority shareholders to "tag along" and sell their shares to the same buyer on the same terms. Without tag-along rights, a minority shareholder could find themselves stuck in a company with a new majority shareholder they didn't choose.
Vesting Schedules for Founders
For startup or early-stage companies, a vesting schedule ensures that founding shareholders "earn" their shares over time by staying in the business. A typical founder vesting schedule in an Ontario shareholders agreement includes:
- 1-year cliff: No shares vest for the first 12 months; 25% vest at the 12-month anniversary.
- Monthly vesting thereafter: The remaining 75% vest over the next 36 months (total vesting period of 4 years).
- Acceleration on certain events: Some percentage vests immediately on a sale of the company or involuntary termination without cause.
Vesting protects all shareholders from the risk of a co-founder leaving the business early while retaining a large block of shares. Without vesting, a departing founder who has done minimal work can hold a 40% stake in a company they no longer contribute to.
Buy-Sell Triggers: Death, Disability, and Insolvency
A shareholders agreement should address what happens to a shareholder's shares upon specified triggering events:
- Death: The deceased's shares typically pass to their estate. The agreement should provide a mechanism for the corporation or remaining shareholders to buy out the estate's shares at a fair valuation within a defined period. Key person life insurance is often used to fund these purchases.
- Disability: A defined period of disability (e.g., 6 or 12 consecutive months of inability to perform material duties) can trigger a buy-sell obligation. Disability insurance funding should be considered.
- Insolvency/Bankruptcy: If a shareholder becomes personally insolvent, their shares become available to creditors. The shareholders agreement should restrict transfers to creditors or trustees in bankruptcy without the consent of the other shareholders, or provide a first right to buy the shares at a defined price.
- Termination of employment: If a shareholder-employee is terminated (with or without cause), what happens to their shares? Most agreements provide a right for the corporation or other shareholders to repurchase shares at a defined formula price.
Dispute Resolution Clause
Given the intimate and high-stakes nature of shareholder relationships, the shareholders agreement should include a dispute resolution mechanism. Options include:
- Mediation first: Require the parties to attempt mediation before proceeding to arbitration or litigation.
- Binding arbitration: Provide for final and binding arbitration under the Arbitration Act, 1991 (Ontario) — faster and more confidential than court proceedings.
- Expert valuation for price disputes: For disputes about the value of shares (e.g., in a buy-sell trigger), require the parties to appoint an independent valuator whose determination is binding.