2025 Session Last amended: 2025 session

§ 302A.471 — Rights of Dissenting Shareholders

Plain-Language Summary

This law gives shareholders the right to disagree with certain major corporate decisions and get paid the fair value of their shares. These decisions include mergers, major asset sales, and changes to the articles of incorporation that hurt the shareholders' rights.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a Minnesota corporation takes a major action — such as a merger, sale of substantially all assets, plan of exchange or conversion, or amendment to the articles — that materially and adversely affects shareholders’ rights. Who this affects: Shareholders of Minnesota corporations who disagree with certain corporate actions approved by the board or other shareholders. Key points: Dissenting shareholders can demand payment of the fair value of their shares. This right applies to mergers, major asset sales requiring shareholder approval, plans of exchange or conversion, and article amendments that alter or abolish preferential rights, redemption rights, preemptive rights, or voting rights. Shares listed on a national securities exchange generally do not qualify for dissenter rights (with exceptions). A dissenting shareholder must assert rights as to all shares they own, not just some. Dissenter rights are the exclusive remedy — shareholders cannot block the corporate action in court unless it is fraudulent.