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Piercing the Corporate Veil & Multi‑entity Litigation in Italy, Practical Guide for Companies, Banks and Creditors

posted 3 hours ago

Last reviewed: 16 June 2026

When a debtor hides behind a web of related companies, creditors and banks operating in Italy face a critical question: can they reach the assets, and the directors, standing behind the corporate shield? Piercing the corporate veil in Italy has never followed a single statutory test, but the combination of Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 (published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale on 9 January 2026 and in force since 24 January 2026) and the ongoing 2026 civil‑justice reform cycle has materially expanded the tactical options available to claimants pursuing multi‑entity litigation. At the same time, corporate groups and their directors face new exposure that demands an equally structured defence.

This guide delivers a practical, step‑by‑step playbook, for both sides of the dispute, covering the legal tests, the 2025–26 legislative changes, precautionary remedies, evidence strategy and enforcement against corporate groups, with actionable checklists built for in‑house counsel, bank recovery teams, insolvency practitioners and company general counsel across Italy.

TL;DR, Three key takeaways:

  • When to pierce or join: Italian courts will look through the corporate form where there is abuse of legal personality, commingling of assets, or use of a subsidiary as a mere instrument of the parent, but the evidentiary threshold remains high and fact‑specific.
  • Top remedies for claimants: Precautionary attachment (sequestro conservativo), urgent joinder of related entities, and aggregated damages claims across the group.
  • Fastest defence pivots: Document corporate formalities early, instruct forensic accountants before litigation hits, and challenge unlawful joinder at the earliest procedural opportunity.

Legal Framework and Tests for Piercing the Corporate Veil in Italy

Italy does not have a single statute labelled “veil piercing.” Instead, lifting the veil in Italy relies on a mosaic of Civil Code provisions, general principles of abuse of rights, and evolving case law from the Corte di Cassazione. The practical effect is the same as in common‑law jurisdictions, a court disregards the separate legal personality of an entity and holds its controllers, parent or sister companies personally liable, but the doctrinal path is distinctively Italian.

Statutory Anchors: Article 2086 of the Civil Code and Beyond

The reformed Article 2086 of the Italian Civil Code, as amended by the 2019 Business Crisis and Insolvency Code reforms, imposes on the entrepreneur (including the sole director of a limited company) a duty to establish adequate organisational, administrative and accounting structures. Failure to do so can trigger personal liability when the company’s creditors suffer harm. Alongside Article 2086, courts draw on:

  • Article 2497 CC (direzione e coordinamento): The parent exercising direction and coordination over subsidiaries is directly liable to the subsidiaries’ creditors and minority shareholders when it acts in its own interest in violation of sound management principles.
  • Article 2394 CC: Directors are liable to creditors when they fail to preserve the company’s assets.
  • General tort principles (Article 2043 CC): Courts may impose liability on any party, including a controlling shareholder, that intentionally causes damage through abuse of legal personality.

Key Cassazione Guidance, Cass. ord. 22 June 2022, n. 20181

The leading Cassazione decision on the limits of piercing the corporate veil in Italy is Cass. ord. 22 June 2022, n. 20181, which addressed both “forward” and “reverse” piercing. The court confirmed that Italian law recognises the abuse of legal personality (abuso della personalità giuridica) as a ground for looking through the corporate form, but it imposed strict evidentiary requirements. Critically, the court held that reverse piercing, where a creditor of the shareholder seeks to reach the subsidiary’s assets, remains extremely limited in Italy and requires proof of deliberate interposition designed specifically to evade creditors’ rights.

Test / Rule When It Applies Evidence Typically Required
Abuse of personality / interposition Where corporate personality is used to conceal unfair conduct or fraud against creditors Commingled funds, lack of corporate formalities, director control documents, related‑party invoices without arm’s‑length terms
Direction and coordination liability (Art. 2497 CC) Parent exercises management control over a subsidiary in breach of sound management principles Board minutes evidencing parent directives, intercompany cash‑pooling records, correspondence showing operational control
Reverse piercing (creditor → subsidiary) per Cass. 20181/2022 Very limited application; claims must overcome strict tests set by the Cassazione Evidence of deliberate interposition intended to evade creditors’ rights; court rulings on specific facts
Director tort liability (Art. 2043 / 2394 CC) Directors cause harm to creditors through fraud, commingling, or breach of duties to preserve assets Forensic accounting reports, bank transfer records, personal benefit documentation

What Changed in 2025–26: D.Lgs. 211/2025 and the Civil‑Justice Reforms

Two streams of legislative change have reshaped the landscape for multi‑entity litigation and piercing the corporate veil in Italy during 2025 and 2026. Understanding these changes is essential for both claimants crafting joinder strategies and defendants assessing exposure.

D.Lgs. 211/2025, Immediate Compliance and 231 Effects

Legislative Decree No. 211/2025, published in G. U. n. 6 on 9 January 2026 and in force since 24 January 2026, transposes Directive (EU) 2024/1226 into Italian law. Its primary effect is to introduce new criminal offences for the violation of EU restrictive measures (sanctions), and, critically for group litigation, to add these offences to the catalogue of predicate crimes under Legislative Decree No. 231/2001 (the Italian corporate criminal liability regime). The practical consequence is that entities within a group now face direct administrative liability under D. Lgs. 231/2001 for sanctions violations committed by their employees, directors or agents, unless an adequate compliance model (Modello 231) was in place and effectively implemented.

For banks and financial institutions, this creates both a compliance obligation and a litigation tool: a 231 finding against one group entity can serve as powerful evidence supporting piercing arguments against the broader group.

2026 Civil‑Justice Measures, Effects on Joinder and Precautionary Attachments

The ongoing 2026 civil‑justice reform cycle, building on the structural reforms introduced by D.Lgs. 149/2022 (the Cartabia Reform), has continued to streamline procedural tools relevant to group litigation in Italy. Industry observers expect the practical effects to include faster scheduling of precautionary hearings, expanded scope for joinder of related parties where claims arise from the same factual matrix, and more robust discovery mechanisms for intercompany documents. The Tribunale di Milano has already applied these reforms in several recent ordinances granting precautionary attachments against multiple group entities simultaneously.

Date Measure Tactical Effect
9 Jan 2026 (G.U. publication) D.Lgs. 211/2025, new sanctions offences + 231 predicate crimes Group entities face direct 231 exposure; creates evidentiary lever for piercing arguments
24 Jan 2026 (entry into force) D.Lgs. 211/2025 operative Compliance models must be updated immediately; failure is evidence of organisational inadequacy
2026 (ongoing reform cycle) Civil‑justice procedural reforms (building on D.Lgs. 149/2022) Faster precautionary hearings; broader joinder grounds for related entities; enhanced intercompany document production

Tactical Checklist: When to Sue Multiple Related Entities (Claimant Playbook)

A successful group litigation strategy, whether pursued by a bank, a trade creditor, or an insolvency practitioner, depends on thorough preparation before any writ is filed. The following six‑step claimant playbook is designed for multi‑entity litigation in Italy.

Step‑by‑Step Claimant Playbook

  1. Map the corporate group. Obtain current visure camerali (Chamber of Commerce extracts) for every entity in the group. Identify beneficial ownership chains, shared directors, shared registered offices and intercompany contracts.
  2. Establish the factual predicate for joinder. Document the specific acts of abuse, commingling or direction‑and‑coordination that justify treating multiple entities as a single economic unit. Under Italian procedural rules, joinder requires that claims arise from the same factual matrix or that the defendants are jointly and severally liable.
  3. Draft pleadings strategy. Name all target entities in the initial atto di citazione. For each, plead the specific legal basis, abuse of personality, direction and coordination (Art. 2497 CC), tort liability (Art. 2043 CC), and the supporting evidence.
  4. Preserve evidence urgently. Before filing, send formal preservation notices to group entities. Where destruction is feared, seek an urgent accertamento tecnico preventivo (pre‑trial technical inspection) under Article 696 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
  5. Seek precautionary remedies. File for sequestro conservativo (precautionary attachment) against assets of all target entities simultaneously. This freezes assets while the merits are litigated.
  6. Aggregate damages. Quantify total losses across the group, distinguishing between direct losses, consequential damages and interest, and allocate them to each defendant based on the degree of control or participation.

Can You Sue a Parent Company for the Debts of Its Subsidiary in Italy?

Yes, but only where specific conditions are met. Italian courts will allow a claim against a parent company for a subsidiary’s obligations where the claimant can demonstrate: (1) the parent exercised direction and coordination in breach of sound management principles (Art. 2497 CC); (2) the corporate form was used as a screen to commit fraud or evade obligations (abuse of personality); or (3) the parent’s conduct constitutes a direct tort causing harm to the subsidiary’s creditors (Art. 2043 CC). Evidence of commingled bank accounts, shared management, and intercompany transfers without commercial justification is critical in every case.

Tactical Checklist: How to Defend Parent Entities and Directors

Defendants facing claims for parent company liability in Italy must respond early and with a structured forensic strategy. The following six‑step defence playbook is designed for general counsel and external advisors representing corporate groups and their directors in multi‑entity litigation.

Step‑by‑Step Defence Playbook

  1. Conduct early internal disclosure review. Identify all intercompany agreements, board minutes, management reports and cash‑pooling arrangements. Assess whether they evidence arm’s‑length dealings and genuine corporate autonomy.
  2. Instruct forensic accountants immediately. Commission an independent forensic review of intercompany flows, transfer pricing and asset segregation before the claimant’s experts do. Key questions for the forensic accountant include: Were intercompany transactions at market value? Were separate bank accounts maintained? Was there a pattern of cash extraction without commercial justification?
  3. Demonstrate corporate formalities. Compile a “formalities file” showing: separate board meetings, distinct management teams, independent strategic decision‑making, and compliance with Articles 2086 and 2381 CC.
  4. Challenge unlawful joinder at the earliest opportunity. If the claimant has improperly joined entities without a genuine factual nexus, raise a jurisdictional or procedural challenge (eccezione di incompetenza or difetto di legittimazione passiva) in the first responsive pleading.
  5. Trace and ring‑fence assets. Map the group’s asset base and ensure that enforcement cannot reach assets legitimately belonging to non‑liable entities. Consider voluntary segregation measures where appropriate.
  6. Review indemnity and insurance coverage. Directors should verify D&O insurance limits, exclusions and notification requirements. Parent companies should check intercompany indemnification agreements for enforceability.

When Are Directors Personally Liable?

Directors face personal exposure in corporate litigation where there is evidence of: fraud or intentional misrepresentation; commingling of personal and corporate funds; trading while insolvent without taking appropriate protective measures; breach of the duty to maintain adequate organisational structures (Art. 2086 CC); or causing specific harm to identifiable creditors through tortious conduct. The strongest defence remains proof that the director acted within the bounds of the business judgment rule, with adequate information and in the company’s interest.

Precautionary Measures and Timing Matrix for Piercing the Corporate Veil in Italy

Speed is everything when pursuing multi‑entity claims. Italian precautionary measures allow claimants to freeze group assets before, or at the same time as, merits proceedings. Used correctly, sequestro conservativo and urgent interlocutory orders can neutralise the risk of asset dissipation across complex corporate groups.

Attachments Against Group Assets: Jurisdictional and Procedural Traps

Claimants must file for precautionary attachment before the court that has jurisdiction over the merits (giudice competente per il merito) or, in urgent cases, before the court of the place where the attachment must be enforced. When targeting multiple entities in different jurisdictions within Italy, coordinate filings to avoid conflicting orders. The applicant must demonstrate both fumus boni iuris (a prima facie case on the merits) and periculum in mora (a real risk that the debtor will dissipate assets if attachment is not granted).

Precautionary Timeline: Days 0–90

Trigger / Milestone Action Required Deadline / Timeframe
Day 0, Evidence of dissipation risk identified Instruct counsel; prepare ricorso for sequestro conservativo with supporting documentation Immediate, aim to file within 48–72 hours
Day 1–5, Filing of precautionary application File ricorso at competent court; request inaudita altera parte order if urgency demands (without notice to defendant) Within 5 days of instruction
Day 5–15, Court hearing / inaudita altera parte order Attend hearing or receive ex parte order; serve on target entities and banks holding group accounts Court schedules hearing within 15 days of filing (often faster in Milan)
Day 15–30, Confirmation hearing (if ex parte order granted) Attend confirmation hearing (udienza di conferma); present full evidence including forensic accounting Within 15 days of ex parte order
Day 30–60, Filing of merits proceedings File substantive claim (atto di citazione) within the term set by the court (usually 60 days from precautionary order) Deadline set in precautionary order, typically 60 days
Day 60–90, First merits hearing Prepare for first hearing; file evidence lists and witness lists per procedural calendar Per court scheduling; in Milan, typically within 90 days of filing

Evidence and Forensics: Practical Checklists and Templates

Building a piercing the corporate veil case in Italy, or defending one, ultimately depends on the quality of documentary and forensic evidence. The following checklists are designed for banks, creditors and their advisors undertaking group litigation.

Core evidence checklist for claimants:

  • Chamber of Commerce extracts (visure camerali) for all group entities showing ownership, directors, and registered offices
  • Intercompany agreements, management service contracts, and licence agreements
  • Cash‑pooling and treasury management agreements
  • Board minutes evidencing parent directives or instructions to subsidiaries
  • Bank statements showing intercompany transfers, commingled accounts, or transfers without commercial justification
  • Related‑party invoices and transfer pricing documentation
  • Email correspondence and internal memoranda showing operational control by the parent
  • Financial statements and auditor reports highlighting related‑party transactions
  • D.Lgs. 231/2001 compliance models (or evidence of their absence)

Model questions for forensic accountants:

  • Were intercompany transactions conducted at arm’s length and consistent with market terms?
  • Were separate bank accounts maintained for each entity, or were funds commingled?
  • Is there evidence of cash extraction or asset stripping from the subsidiary to the parent without adequate consideration?
  • Were corporate formalities observed, including separate board meetings, independent financial reporting, and distinct audit trails?
  • Can the flow of funds across the group be reconstructed to identify the ultimate beneficiaries of specific transactions?

Model preservation letter (key elements):

  • Addressee: each group entity, by name and registered office, to the attention of the board of directors and the company secretary
  • Subject line: formal request for preservation of documents and electronic data relevant to [describe claims]
  • Body: identify categories of documents (board minutes, intercompany contracts, bank records, emails); state the legal obligation to preserve under Italian procedural and data‑retention rules; warn that destruction or alteration may constitute obstruction and may give rise to adverse inferences
  • Timeframe: demand immediate compliance and confirmation of preservation within 7 business days
  • Signature: authorised representative of the claimant or their legal counsel

Enforcement and Cross‑Border Options Against Corporate Groups

Obtaining a judgment or precautionary order is only valuable if it can be enforced against the group’s assets, which are frequently spread across multiple jurisdictions. Creditor remedies in Italy for enforcement against corporate groups include both domestic and EU instruments.

Practical Step‑by‑Step Enforcement Flow

  1. Identify and locate assets. Instruct asset‑tracing agents and use publicly available registers (land registry, vehicle registry, intellectual property databases) to map the group’s asset base in Italy and abroad.
  2. Domestic enforcement. Execute against Italian assets using the standard enforcement procedures under Book III of the Code of Civil Procedure, including attachment of bank accounts, real property, movable assets and receivables owed to the debtor by third parties (pignoramento presso terzi).
  3. EU cross‑border enforcement. For assets within the EU, rely on Regulation (EU) 1215/2012 (Brussels Ia) for recognition and enforcement of Italian judgments. Consider the European Account Preservation Order (Regulation (EU) 655/2014) for freezing bank accounts in other Member States before or during proceedings.
  4. Third‑country enforcement. Where group assets sit outside the EU, assess bilateral treaties and local enforcement procedures. Obtain exequatur or recognition orders in the relevant jurisdiction.
  5. Monitor and repeat. Enforcement against corporate groups is iterative. As assets move or new assets are identified, additional enforcement steps may be required. Maintain regular asset‑tracing updates throughout the litigation cycle.

Case Studies and Milan Court Practice Snapshots

The Tribunale di Milano, Italy’s busiest commercial court, has produced a body of recent practice directly relevant to piercing the corporate veil in Italy and multi‑entity joinder. The following anonymised snapshots illustrate key tactical lessons.

Case A, Precautionary attachment across a group (Milan, 2025): A bank obtained sequestro conservativo against both a borrower entity and its parent company. The court accepted that the parent’s systematic extraction of cash from the borrower via intercompany loans without commercial justification constituted a periculum in mora sufficient to justify attachment of the parent’s own assets. Tactical lesson: document the flow of funds forensically before applying for precautionary relief.

Case B, Joinder of sister companies (Milan, 2026): In a trade creditor dispute, the court permitted the joinder of two sister companies that shared the same registered office, the same sole director, and overlapping commercial activities. The claimant demonstrated that invoices were issued interchangeably by the two entities for the same services. Tactical lesson: shared premises, shared management and confused invoicing patterns create strong grounds for joinder and lifting the veil.

Case C, Defence successfully resisting piercing (Milan, 2025): A parent company successfully resisted a veil‑piercing claim by demonstrating a comprehensive “formalities file”, including separate board meetings, independent management, distinct financial reporting, and arm’s‑length intercompany contracts reviewed annually by external auditors. Tactical lesson: maintaining and documenting corporate autonomy is the most effective shield against piercing claims.

Conclusion, Practitioner Next Steps for Multi‑Entity Litigation in Italy

The 2025–26 legislative reforms have raised both the stakes and the opportunities in piercing the corporate veil in Italy. Whether you are a bank pursuing recovery against a group structure, a creditor seeking to hold a parent liable, or a general counsel defending against joinder claims, three immediate actions will position you for success:

  1. Audit your group structure now. Map intercompany flows, review corporate formalities, and update 231 compliance models in light of D.Lgs. 211/2025.
  2. Prepare your evidence strategy before litigation starts. Instruct forensic accountants, issue preservation notices, and build the documentary record that will determine the outcome.
  3. Move fast on precautionary measures. In multi‑entity disputes, the party that secures early precautionary orders often controls the trajectory of the entire case. The procedural tools available in 2026 favour the prepared claimant, and the defence that responds promptly.

For specialised guidance on enforcement against corporate groups in Italy, explore our corporate litigation practice area.

Appendix: Model Checklists and Templates

Checklist 1, Claimant Pre‑Filing Readiness (Multi‑Entity Litigation)

  • ☐ Obtain visure camerali for all target entities
  • ☐ Map beneficial ownership chains and shared directorships
  • ☐ Compile intercompany transaction records (bank transfers, invoices, management contracts)
  • ☐ Instruct forensic accountants to analyse intercompany flows
  • ☐ Send preservation letters to all group entities
  • ☐ Prepare ricorso for sequestro conservativo with supporting documentation
  • ☐ Draft atto di citazione naming all target defendants with specific legal bases
  • ☐ Confirm jurisdiction and competent court for each target entity
  • ☐ Coordinate with asset‑tracing specialists for cross‑border assets
  • ☐ Brief litigation‑funding or insurance partners (where applicable)

Checklist 2, Defendant Readiness (Resisting Piercing / Joinder)

  • ☐ Assemble “formalities file” (separate board minutes, distinct management, independent reporting)
  • ☐ Review and document arm’s‑length intercompany arrangements
  • ☐ Instruct forensic accountants for independent analysis before claimant experts report
  • ☐ Assess D.Lgs. 231/2001 compliance model adequacy in light of D.Lgs. 211/2025
  • ☐ Prepare jurisdictional and standing challenges for first responsive pleading
  • ☐ Verify D&O insurance coverage, notification requirements and exclusions
  • ☐ Review intercompany indemnification agreements for enforceability
  • ☐ Identify and ring‑fence assets belonging to non‑liable entities

Template, Urgent Motion Skeleton (Sequestro Conservativo Application)

  • Heading: Ricorso per sequestro conservativo, before the Tribunale di [City], Section [X]
  • Applicant: [Name, registered office, legal representative]
  • Respondents: [List all target entities and directors, with registered offices]
  • Claim summary: Brief statement of the underlying claim (e.g., liability under Art. 2497 CC for direction and coordination; abuse of legal personality; tortious conduct under Art. 2043 CC)
  • Fumus boni iuris: Summary of prima facie case with reference to attached documentary evidence (numbered exhibits)
  • Periculum in mora: Description of specific acts of dissipation, asset stripping, or transfer of funds that demonstrate a real and imminent risk to the claimant’s ability to enforce a future judgment
  • Relief sought: Precautionary attachment of specified assets (bank accounts, real property, receivables) of each named respondent, up to a stated value of €[amount]
  • Request for inaudita altera parte order: [If applicable, explain why notice to the respondent would defeat the purpose of the measure]
  • List of exhibits: Numbered list of supporting documents

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Debora Monaci at SZA Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Airant.org, D.Lgs. 211/2025 Publication Notice (Gazzetta Ufficiale, 9 January 2026)
  2. Diritto Bancario, D.Lgs. 211/2025 Commentary and 231 Implications
  3. Sapienza Università di Roma (IRIS), Note on Cass. ord. 22 June 2022, n. 20181
  4. Lexced, Tribunale di Milano Practice on Protective Measures
  5. Il Sole 24 Ore (NT+ Diritto), Piercing of Corporate Veil and Abuse of Legal Personality
  6. KPMG Italy, Trade and Sanctions Compliance Note (February 2026)

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