Quevedo & Ponce - Legal News
IESS and Enforcement Actions: The Constitutional Court Shields Shareholders and Bans Administrative Travel Restrictions
- October 21st, 2025
- Quevedo & Ponce
Ruling 3364-21-EP/25 by Ecuador’s Constitutional Court sets clear limits on the IESS’s coercive powers. The Court examined the involvement of shareholders in enforcement proceedings and the legality of administrative travel bans imposed by IESS officials.
The decision reinforces the separation between administrative authority and fundamental rights, providing greater predictability for corporate structures, investors, and business groups.
Rights Violated According to the Constitutional Court
The Court established two central rules:
Legal Certainty and Binding Precedent (22-13-IN/20):
- Rule: Shareholders’ assets cannot be affected without a judicial lifting of the corporate veil.
- Basis: Disregarding precedent 22-13-IN/20 violates legal certainty.
- Consequence: Administrative attempts to extend shareholder liability are invalid without prior judicial ruling.
Freedom of Movement and Judicial Competence:
- Rule: Travel bans can only be imposed by a competent judge.
- Basis: IESS officials lack jurisdiction to restrict fundamental rights.
- Consequence: Any administrative travel restriction is unconstitutional and void.
In summary: no judge, no travel ban; no corporate veil lifting, no personal liability.
Key Holdings of the Court
Lifting the Corporate Veil: Limits and Asset Protection
The Court clarified that liability for corporate debts cannot be transferred to shareholders unless a competent judge, in a judicial process, orders the lifting of the corporate veil. Mere invocation of the Social Security Law or the Civil Procedure Code does not fulfill this requirement.
Practical Implication: Shareholders’ personal assets are safeguarded from compromise without due process, reinforcing investor protection and the stability of corporate structures.
Travel Bans and Freedom of Movement
The Court ruled that the travel ban imposed against a shareholder by an IESS enforcement officer violated constitutional rights, as it was issued by an authority without judicial competence.
- Only a competent judge can order restrictions on freedom of movement.
- Any similar measure issued by an administrative body is invalid.
Practical Implication: Companies and their executives can challenge travel bans not backed by judicial orders, preserving operational continuity and international mobility.
Practical Relevance for the Corporate Sector
- Protection of Shareholders’ and Partners’ Assets:
The ruling strengthens the principle of limited liability, preventing public creditors from automatically extending responsibility to shareholders without prior judicial proceedings. - Strengthening Legal Certainty:
It requires that any impact on assets respect due process guarantees, providing greater predictability for corporate operations and investor confidence. - Executive Mobility and Managerial Freedom:
The decision removes the risk of administrative travel restrictions, protecting the mobility of legal representatives, managers, and shareholders.
Importance of Binding Precedent 22-13-IN/20
Ruling 3364-21-EP/25 reaffirms three essential principles of Ecuadorian corporate law:
- Shareholder liability cannot be extended without a judicial procedure lifting the corporate veil.
- Freedom of movement can only be restricted by judicial decision.
- Constitutional Court precedents are binding, and their disregard entails state liability.
This decision consolidates the legal certainty of corporate structures in Ecuador and protects corporate actors from arbitrary administrative actions in enforcement proceedings.
Más Artículos
What are allocations in inheritance law?
Allocations consist of the distribution of all transferable assets, rights, and obligations that make up the heritage of the deceased. They are classified into universal allocations, which may arise through a will or by operation of law, and singular allocations, which arise only through a will.
¿Qué son las asignaciones dentro del derecho sucesorio?
Las asignaciones sucesorias consisten en la distribución de todos los bienes, derechos y obligaciones transmisibles, que conforman la herencia del causante. Se clasifican en asignaciones universales, aquellas que se pueden dar por testamento y por mandato de ley, y asignaciones a título singular, que sólo se dan a través de un testamento.
SENADI Resolution Strengthens the Control of Geographical Indications and Denominations of Origin in Ecuador
The National Service of Intellectual Rights (SENADI) issued Resolution No. SENADI-DG-2026-0009-RE on March 25, 2026, published in Official Registry Year II, First Supplement No. 251. This resolution establishes a new technical regulation for the creation and operation of regulatory offices for Geographical Indications (GIs) and Denominations of Origin (DOs) in the country.
Resolución SENADI fortalece el control de Indicaciones Geográficas y Denominaciones de Origen en Ecuador
El Servicio Nacional de Derechos Intelectuales (SENADI) emitió la Resolución Nro. SENADI-DG-2026-0009-RE el 25 de marzo de 2026, publicada en el Registro Oficial Año II, Primer Suplemento No. 251, mediante la cual se establece una nueva normativa técnica para la creación y funcionamiento de las oficinas reguladoras de Indicaciones Geográficas (IG) y Denominaciones de Origen (DO) en el país.
Can property lent under a commodatum agreement be acquired by prescription?
A commodatum is a contract through which a person lends property free of charge for another person to use, with the obligation to return it. Under the Ecuadorian legal system, the borrower does not acquire possession but only mere holding of the property, which means it cannot be acquired through acquisitive prescription unless a proven interversion of title occurs.


