In Swiss corporations, it is common practice to delegate day-to-day management to an executive body or to a managing director. Such delegation may raise a governance issue: how far does the right to information extend for a director who is not involved in daily operations?
The Code of Obligations (CO) provides a clear answer in principle, but a more nuanced one in practice.
Article 715a para. 1 CO grants each member of the board of directors a general right to obtain information on all matters relating to the company, regardless of whether the director has executive responsibilities.
This right is linked to the board’s non-transferable and inalienable duties, in particular:
Swiss case law consistently emphasizes the personal nature of the director’s mandate. Each director must form an independent judgment, monitor management with a “critical eye,” and actively request the information required. A director may not rely on an alleged lack of information if no effort was made to obtain it.
The right to information operates on several levels.
a. During board meetings
Any director may request information on all company matters from:
b. Outside board meetings
Outside meetings, a director may:
This approval requirement is intended to prevent disorganized requests, but it must not be used as a means of obstruction.
c. Right to inspect books and records
Article 715a para. 4 CO further allows each director to request the production of documents insofar as this is necessary for the performance of their duties.
In practice, most tensions arise around this notion of “necessity,” which is occasionally subject to interpretation.
a. Directors with management powers
Where a director is also entrusted with management responsibilities (managing director or member of executive management):
b. Directors without management powers
A non-executive director:
Case law stresses that even non-executive directors must actively inform themselves and intervene in the event of irregularities.
The director’s right to information is broad, but not absolute.
a. Lack of necessity (Art. 715a para. 4 CO)
A refusal may be justified where the requested inspection:
In such cases, the request may approach an abuse of rights, particularly where its sole purpose is to paralyze the board’s mission.
Certain internal preparatory documents (working notes, unfinished drafts) may be excluded, but this limitation must be interpreted restrictively. Effective supervision often requires insight into decision-making processes.
b. Conflict of interests
Although not expressly provided for in Article 715a CO, access may be refused in cases of:
The company bears the burden of proof. Mere suspicion does not suffice.
c. Business secrecy and duty of loyalty
Directors are subject to a duty of loyalty and confidentiality toward the company (Art. 717 para. 2 CO).
Precisely for this reason, their right of access is broader than that of shareholders.
A refusal based on business secrecy remains exceptional and requires concrete indications of a potential breach of the duty of loyalty.
d. Mandatory collegial decision
Any initial refusal by the chairperson may be challenged before the board of directors (Art. 715a para. 5 CO). The board, acting as a collegial body, must make the final decision, balancing the director’s interest in obtaining the information against the company’s legitimate interest in protecting certain data.
a. For the director denied access
The affected director may:
Case law suggests requesting that both the request and the refusal be recorded in the minutes. A director may only be held liable for what he knew or should have known. Where information was deliberately and unjustifiably withheld, liability may be reduced or excluded.
Failing this, resignation may be considered to avoid personal liability.
b. For the company and its governing bodies
An unjustified refusal may constitute:
The director’s right to information – including for non-executive directors – is a cornerstone of sound corporate governance and a direct corollary of statutory duties.
Restrictions are permitted only in narrowly defined circumstances, notably in the manifest absence of necessity or in duly established cases of abuse of rights. Any limitation requires a balancing of interests and, in the event of disagreement, a collegial decision by the board.
From a governance perspective, effective information flow within the board should therefore not be viewed as a constraint, but as a fundamental legal and organizational requirement serving the company’s best interests.