Centros Ltd, a
wine import and export business, was registered in the United Kingdom and applied in Denmark, where it traded, to register there. The Danish authority,
Erhvervs- og Selskabsstyrelsen, refused on the basis that the company was attempting to circumvent the Danish requirement for companies to pay up a minimum of share capital. In Denmark this was 200,000
Danish kroner, while in the UK the minimum capital requirement was £1. The Danish registry justified its enforcement of the rule as a way to protect creditors and prevent fraudulent insolvency. Centros Ltd argued that it had the right to be recognised in Denmark under the provisions of freedom of establishment in the
EC Treaty, articles 52, 56 and 58. The Danish court referred the matter to the
European Court of Justice (ECJ). ==Judgment==