No doubt you have heard of the Enterprise Chamber. The Enterprise Chamber is a special chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal and is located at the IJdok. You can go to the Enterprise Chamber for various procedures.
The Enterprise Chamber, however, is best known as the adjudicator of disputes within companies. Think of the situation where: i) there is an impasse within the general meeting or the management board which prevents important decisions from being made, ii) there is a conflict of interest, iii) a minority shareholder is compromised, iv) there is disagreement between shareholders, directors and/or supervisory directors, v) directors or shareholders are subjecting the company to unlawful competition, or vi) the management board is 'robbing' the company. Simply put, in all cases in which the shareholders and directors can no longer get along and the continuity of the company is in danger or relations are so disrupted that continuing is no longer an option.
You can start a so-called inquiry procedure if - in short - you own at least 10% of the shares (or depositary receipts thereof) in the company or your shares (or depositary receipts thereof) represent a nominal value of at least € 225,000. The management board and supervisory board are also authorized to file a request for an inquiry on behalf of the legal entity. There are other parties that may be authorized to file a request for an inquiry, but for the purposes of this article we will limit ourselves to the aforementioned parties. The foregoing applies to companies with an issued share capital of less than €22.5 million. For companies with an issued share capital exceeding this amount, other rules apply. In all cases there must be well-founded reasons to doubt a correct policy or proper course of affairs.
Please note that this is not the case.
You should file a petition through a lawyer. Prior to this, you should have made your objections to the policy known and given the company time to remove the objections.