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Preliminary injunction in shareholder disputes

Stop asset outflows, accounts and management actions quickly through the court.

Why this focus matters now

In a shareholder dispute the preliminary injunction is often the first actually effective instrument. It stops asset transfers, incorrect register filings or unauthorised execution of resolutions before they become irreversible.

Critical clause and conflict points

The claim and its endangerment, the correct procedural type and appropriate evidence are critical. A too broad motion leads to dismissal and wastes precious time.

How to prepare

For the injunction you need a precisely formulated safeguard claim, evidence, an affidavit, drafts of responses and an execution plan.

Review checkpoints

Formulate the claim concretely and substantiate the endangerment.
Collect evidence early and organise it.
Calculate security and possible provisions.
Plan addressees of the injunction and execution steps in advance.

Frequently asked questions

How fast does a preliminary injunction take effect?

With good preparation the court decides quickly, sometimes within days; without prepared evidence, the procedure delays considerably.

Can the injunction run in parallel with the main action?

Yes, this is the normal case and secures the main proceedings.

This information is initial orientation and does not replace legal advice in an individual case. No deadline, success or cost guarantee.