Thought leadership
Directors cannot go it alone: what Saxon Woods v Costa means for the boardroom
17 July 2026
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The Supreme Court’s decision in Saxon Woods Investments Ltd v Costa [2026] UKSC 21 sends a clear message that directors cannot pursue their own preferred strategy behind the board’s back, even if they genuinely believe they are acting in the company’s best interests.
The case considered the standard expected of a director who genuinely disagrees with fellow directors about the best route for the company’s success. The Court held that a director’s duty to act in good faith under section 172 of the Companies Act 2006 is not just about a director’s internal thought process; it also requires good faith in the way the director acts, and this should be considered objectively.
This is an important judgment which gives clarity to directors’ decision-making and governance. In boardroom terms, this is a case about how decisions are made just as much as what decision is ultimately reached. It draws a clear line: genuine belief does not give a director carte blanche to mislead colleagues or sidestep collective governance and the strategy the board has chosen.
The facts
Francesco Costa, a director and former chairman of Spring Media Investments Limited, disagreed with the board-backed exit timetable reflected in a shareholders’ agreement, because he believed a later sale would achieve a better return. Trusted with leading on the exit, he then pursued that slower strategy covertly, keeping other directors and shareholders out of the process, rebuffing attempts to obtain information, misleading the board into thinking the company was complying with the agreed exit plan, and using delaying tactics. Costa genuinely believed that they would “thank me in the long run”, but the strategy backfired when Covid destroyed the prospect of a beneficial exit. Saxon Woods, a minority shareholder, complained that Costa had frustrated the exit rights under the shareholders’ agreement and caused them unfair prejudice.
Legal analysis
Section 172 requires a director to act in a way they consider, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members as a whole.
Costa argued that, so long as he genuinely believed his preferred course would promote the company’s success, the court could not find a breach of section 172 merely because he concealed what he was doing from fellow directors.
The Court considered the meaning of the duty of good faith under section 172. Does a director comply with section 172 merely because they subjectively believe that their own strategy is the best approach for promoting the company’s success, even if they act outside the normal collective board process to pursue it? The Court did not simply revisit a commercial disagreement about the timing of a sale; it examined the legal limits of unilateral director conduct in the face of fiduciary duties and board decision-making norms.
The Court rejected Costa’s argument in emphatic terms, focussing its reasoning on loyalty and governance:
The Court did not need to decide specifically whether the breach of the shareholders’ agreement in itself automatically amounted to a breach of the section 172 duty. Lord Briggs stated that this would not have been easy to determine, and no conclusive view was given, but he made some general observations. The mere fact that a company has contracted to pursue a certain route to success cannot altogether close off any analysis by its directors whether it would be better served by changing course, even if that were to involve a breach of contract. Whether such a change of course should be pursued would, however, be a matter for the business judgment of the board collectively.
Remedy
Saxon Wood had been unfairly prejudiced, and the Supreme Court upheld the Court of Appeal’s order requiring an immediate unconditional buy-out of Saxon Woods’ shares by Costa.
Practical messages
For directors, the practical messages are clear:
To discuss any of the issues raised by this judgment, please contact your usual contact in the Burges Salmon Corporate and M&A team or Nick Graves, Head of Corporate.
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