How to Sue for Minority Oppression in Malaysia
Section 346 Companies Act 2016


Outcome
Outcome Summary Led by founding partner Khoo Ai Theng (Maxine Khoo) recognised as ALB Malaysia Rising Stars 2022 and a Leading Firm by The Legal 500 Asia Pacific 2024 NZSK Legal handles complex shareholder disputes from offices in Puchong (Selangor) and Mont Kiara (Kuala Lumpur). NZSK Legal regularly acts for minority shareholders bringing oppression petitions under section 346 of the Companies Act 2016. Lawyer Khoo's commercial litigation team has handled landmark minority oppression OS proceedings, including matters before the KL High Court Commercial Division.
Case Background & Strategy
Meta Description: Minority shareholder being oppressed in Malaysia? NZSK Legal’s Khoo Ai Theng explains section 346 CA 2016 oppression remedies, buy-out orders, and winding-up applications.
Target Keywords: minority oppression Malaysia, section 346 Companies Act 2016, shareholder dispute lawyer Selangor, NZSK Legal Khoo Ai Theng
Main Content
If you are a minority shareholder in a Malaysian company being squeezed out, denied dividends, or excluded from decision-making, here is how NZSK Legal’s commercial litigation team β led by Khoo Ai Theng β protects your interests.
What Counts as Minority Oppression Under Section 346 CA 2016
- Dilution of minority shareholdings through unfair rights issues
- Exclusion from key management decisions where you have legitimate expectation to participate
- Withholding of dividends despite company profitability
- Misappropriation or diversion of company assets
- Excessive director remuneration enriching majority at minority’s expense
- Self-dealing transactions favouring majority shareholders
- Breach of shareholders’ agreement provisions affecting company affairs
5-Step Oppression Petition Strategy
Step 1: Characterisation Analysis
Following ISM Sendirian Berhad v Queensway Nominees [2025] FCA β the Federal Court’s recent landmark decision β Lawyer Khoo Ai Theng first determines whether your dispute concerns the company’s affairs (oppression viable) or merely a private shareholder agreement matter (must proceed contractually). This characterisation is decisive.
Step 2: Quasi-Partnership Assessment
Where the company operates on quasi-partnership principles β typically family or close-knit private companies β equitable considerations beyond strict legal rights apply. NZSK Legal builds the quasi-partnership case using the Ebrahimi v Westbourne Galleries framework adopted in Malaysia.
Step 3: Evidence Compilation
Documentary evidence of oppressive conduct: board minutes, financial statements, audit reports, dividend history, transactional records. NZSK Legal coordinates with forensic accountants where asset diversion is alleged.
Step 4: Originating Summons Filing
Section 346 OS filed in the KL High Court Commercial Division (or Shah Alam High Court for Selangor companies). Lawyer Khoo’s team navigates affidavit evidence, opposing conversion to Writ applications, and interlocutory injunctive relief where assets are at risk.
Step 5: Remedy Selection
Section 346(2) gives the court wide powers β share buy-out at fair valuation, injunctive relief, directive orders restructuring management, winding-up. NZSK Legal selects the optimal remedy for your commercial outcome, not just legal vindication.
Why NZSK Legal for Minority Oppression in KL & Selangor
Founded in 2014 by Khoo Ai Theng, NZSK Legal is recognised as a Leading Firm by The Legal 500 Asia Pacific 2024. Lawyer Khoo herself was named ALB Malaysia Rising Stars 2022 and is described by Asialaw as ‘a strict lawyer’ who ‘performs well as a cross-examination lawyer in court, drilling the opponent.’ Our commercial litigation team handles minority oppression matters from Puchong and Mont Kiara, serving clients across Selangor, KL, and beyond.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is minority oppression under Malaysian law?
A: Minority oppression occurs when majority shareholders or directors conduct the company’s affairs in a manner that is oppressive, unfairly discriminatory, or prejudicial to minority shareholders. Section 346 of the Companies Act 2016 provides statutory remedies including share buy-out and winding-up.
Q: How long does a minority oppression case take in Malaysia?
A: Uncontested matters 6-9 months. Contested oppression OS proceedings in the KL High Court Commercial Division typically 12-18 months at first instance. Court of Appeal adds 12-18 months.
Q: Can I claim oppression if my shareholders’ agreement was breached?
A: Following ISM Sendirian Berhad v Queensway Nominees [2025] FCA, breach of a shareholders’ agreement only supports oppression where it relates to the company’s affairs, not purely private matters. Characterisation is decisive β NZSK Legal advises on the right cause of action.
Q: What remedies can the court order for minority oppression?
A: Under section 346(2) CA 2016: share buy-out at fair valuation, injunctive relief, directive orders restructuring management, sale of company to third party, or winding-up. The court has wide discretion to fashion remedies.
Q: How much does a minority oppression case cost in Malaysia?
A: Contested oppression OS proceedings typically range RM 50,000 to RM 200,000+ in professional fees plus disbursements and forensic accountant costs. NZSK Legal provides written fee proposals before engagement.
Contact Block
π Call Lawyer Khoo Ai Theng / NZSK Legal: +60 3 8604 6580
π¬ WhatsApp: +6016-557 4789
π§ Email: [email protected]
π Puchong (Selangor) | Mont Kiara (Kuala Lumpur)
Khoo Ai Theng
NZSK Legal β Messrs. Ng, Zainurul, Seke & KhooSpeak to Khoo Ai Theng directly about your matter:
π Puchong (Selangor) | Mont Kiara (Kuala Lumpur)
π Monday β Friday, 9:00 AM β 6:00 PM
