This article deals with the new Polish regulation of the group of companies and the issue of internal liability between companies participating in such a group. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the regulation concerning not only the legal nature of binding instruction issued in the group of companies but also the liability in the case of damage caused by the execution or non-fulfilment of such an instruction. In the article pages that follow, references are made to the boundaries of the binding instruction, the premises for refusal to perform it and the issue of the parent company’s liability for damage caused by the execution of a binding instruction and the subsidiary company’s liability for failure to carry out the instruction.
The forestry and timber industry had strategic importance in Slovak – German economic relations in the period 1939–1945. After 1938 German capital undertook considerable capital expansion into the Slovak forestry and timber industry. The main instrument of expansion was the German – Slovak corporation United Timber and Industrial Company, which built a factory for wooden buildings at Turany and a network of operations for extracting timber. However, activities in Slovakia were also developed by other German firms. They built up small and middle-sized timber operations in various regions.
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.