What happened ?
The Amsterdam subdistrict court ruled on 13 March 2026 on a dispute between a landlord, BV, and a tenant, who rented a former school building for an art concept. The lease ran for five years from June 2022 at €250,000 per year.
The BV fell behind on rent, stopped paying after June 2023, and left the property in December 2023. The landlord claimed more than €616,000 in rent arrears and also tried to hold the director personally liable.
The court dissolved the lease, ordered the BV to pay €691,664.88, including accrued interest, plus €25,000 in contractual costs, but rejected the claim against the director personally.
The signal is clear: weak financing can destroy the company, without automatically breaching the corporate shield.
Analysis
This case matters because many small businesses overestimate what a BV actually protects.
A BV can limit personal exposure, but it cannot correct poor judgment, insufficient funding, or weak evidence.
Here, the director had clearly taken a major commercial risk by signing a long lease before the business model was proven.
Still, the landlord could not present sufficient concrete facts to meet the high legal threshold for proving personal misconduct. At the same time, the company itself remained deeply liable.
The real lesson is structural: optimism, investor hope, and informal assumptions are not governance. If you commit to fixed costs before funding, demand, and fallback options are real, the BV may survive legally longer than the business survives financially.
Governance
Leadership committed the company to a long, expensive lease on assumptions that were still forming. The court did not find personal misconduct, but the internal weakness is obvious: major obligations were accepted before financing discipline, downside planning, and evidence-based oversight were in place.
Risk
The exposure was immediate and cumulative: rent, interest, contractual costs, litigation, and business failure. A small company can avoid director liability yet still collapse under fixed obligations it should never have accepted at that stage.
Compliance
The court shows how much it turns on proof. The landlord could not substantiate sufficient facts to establish personal liability. The tenant director also weakened his position by producing almost no verifiable documentation on financing, timing, and financial condition. Poor records distort accountability.
Daily operational takeaway
Review every long-term fixed-cost contract signed on the basis of projected funding or hoped-for growth. For each one, document today who pays, from what cash source, and what happens if the revenue arrives six months late.
ECLI:NL:RBAMS:2026:2911 Rechtbank Amsterdam
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The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Paolo Maria Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by the author before publication. Any translated versions are AI-generated from the original English text.