The mere fact that the holding company appoints the director(s) of the subsidiary does not itself present grounds for liability of the holding company for actions of such directors. As a general rule, responsibility lies primarily with the company and the director.
The holding company can be liable for actions of its subsidiary company in the event of de facto (factual) concern (that is when a parent company and one or more subsidiaries are affiliated under the single management of the parent company; in German language: faktischer Konzern) or contractual concern (that is in case of companies affiliated under a control agreement; in German language: Vertragskonzern) or a flat concern (that is in case of legally independent companies affiliated under a single management without the companies being mutually dependent). According to Slovenian laws it shall be presumed that a subsidiary and a parent company together constitute a concern of companies (i.e. group of companies; in German: Konzern; Konzernunternehmen) and the companies that are included in a concern of companies and are affiliated under a single management shall be deemed to be concern companies. Special liability rules for the holding company and management bodies apply in case of concern companies.
The shareholder(s) of the company shall also assume liability for the obligations of the subsidiary if the conditions for lifting the corporate veil are satisfied (e.g. if they have abused the company as a legal person in order to attain an objective that is forbidden to them as individuals, if they have abused the company as a legal person, thereby causing damage to their creditors or creditors of the company,..).
Also, third parties (including the holding company when there is no factual or contractual concern) may be liable for actions of directors of the company under certain conditions. Namely, the persons who use their influence over a company to intentionally induce the members of the management or supervisory bodies, the procuration holder or the authorised person to act to the detriment of the company or its shareholders, shall compensate the company for the resulting damage. Shareholders shall be compensated for the damage they suffered irrespective of the damage they incurred through the damage caused to the company. In addition to the members of the management or supervisory body, anyone who derives benefits from a damaging action, if such action is committed intentionally, shall also assume joint and several liability. A company's compensation claim may also be pursued by the company's creditors if the company is unable to repay them. The above described shall not apply if a member of the management or supervisory body, the procuration holder or the authorised person was obliged to perform the damaging action in exercising: (i) a voting right at the general meeting; (ii) entitlement to conduct business based on a controlling contract; or (iii) entitlement to conduct the business of the principal company into which the company is incorporated.