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Chapter III- Prospectus and Allotment of Securities
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- The Bill governs the issue of all types of
securities, as opposed to only shares and debentures in the Companies
Act, 1956.
- The Bill clearly provides the manner in which
securities can be issued by both public and private company .
- A public company can issue securities through a
public offer or a private placement or by way of bonus or rights
issue.
- A private company may issue securities on rights
basis or by way of bonus issue or by way of private placement in
accordance with part II of this Chapter related to Private Placement.
- The power of SEBI to administer the sections of the
Companies Act related to a listed company and a company intending to
get itself listed, extended to include the provisions related to share
capital, which is not provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- The prospectus has to be more detailed.
- A Company shall not vary the terms of contract
referred to in Prospectus or objects for which it is issued without
the approval of shareholders by way of special resolution and
providing exit opportunity to the dissenting shareholders. Moreover it
shall not use the amount raised by way of issue of Prospectus for buying,
trading or otherwise dealing in Equity shares of any other listed
Company. ; The said requirement is not there under the Companies Act
1956.
- Terms and conditions for offer sale by existing
shareholders prescribed.
- SEBI to prescribe class/classes of companies that
can file shelf prospectus with the Registrar. The Companies Act, 1956
allows only public financial institutions, public sector banks and
scheduled banks to issue shelf prospectus.
- Any person (including group or association)
affected by any misleading statement or inclusion or omission of any
matter in the prospectus can file any suit or take any action under
clause 34 (Criminal liability for misstatement in prospectus), clause
35 (Civil liability for misstatement in prospectus) and clause 36
(Punishment for fraudulently inducing persons to invest money).
- Action to be taken against any person making or
abetting making of applications under fictitious names, different
names or in different combinations of names and surnames for acquiring
or subscribing to the securities of the company.
- In addition to shares, return of allotment is
required to be filed for all type of securities.
- Companies may now issue Global Depository Receipts
by passing a Special Resolution and subject to such conditions as may
be prescribed.
- The number of persons to which a company may make
an offer or invitation of securities to a section of the public
otherwise than through issue of a prospectus, by way of private
placement basis is 50 or such higher number as may be prescribed.
Under the Companies Act, 1956 the maximum number of persons prescribed
is 50.
- Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIB) not be counted
for the purpose of calculating number of persons offered underprivate
placement
- If a Company, listed or unlisted, makes an offer to
allot or invites subscription, or allots, or enters into an agreement
to allot, securities to 50 or such higher number as may be prescribed,
whether the payment for the securities has been received or not or
whether the Company intends to list its securities or not on any
recognized stock exchange in or outside India, the same shall be
deemed to be an offer to the public and shall accordingly be governed
by the provisions provided in this regard by the Securities And
Exchange Board of India(SEBI).
- Companies making private placement have to allot
the securities within 60 days of receipt of the application money.
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Chapter IV- Share Capital and Debentures
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- Voting rights of preference shareholders on
resolutions placed at a shareholders meeting modified. Now where
dividend are in arrears for 2 years or more, preference shareholders
can vote on all resolutions of the company.
- Shares, other than sweat equity, cannot be issued
at a discount.. No provision has been provided for issue of share at
discount after approval as compared to the Companies Act 1956.
- Preference shares have to be redeemed within 20
years of issue. However, for companies to be allowed to issue
preference shares redeemable after 20 years for prescribed
infrastructure projects,, provided a certain percentage of shares are
redeemed annually at the option of the shareholder. Infrastructure
projects is defined in Schedule VI.
- The scope of section related to transfer and
transmission of securities widened to deal with all types of
securities.
- The provisions of clause related to further issue
of capital will now be applicable to all type of companies.
- Apart from existing shareholders, if the Company
having share capital at any time proposes to increase its subscribed
capital by issue of further shares, such shares may also be offered to
employees by way of ESOP, subject to the approval of shareholders by
way of Special Resolution.
- The provisions relating to further issue of shares
shall now be applicable to Companies whenever it plan to increase the
subscribed paid up capital. The requirement of application of such
provision only after 2 years from the date of allotment or 1 year from
the allotment of shares for first time under the Companies Act 1956
has been discontinued.
- The Companies Act, 1956 provides for issue of bonus
shares but the Bill provides more detailed provisions to deal with
bonus issue.
- No reduction of capital to be allowed if a company
is in arrears for payment of deposits, accepted either before or after
this Bill is enacted. No such condition under the Companies Act, 1956.
- Buyback provisions eased. Companies can buy back
its shares even if it has defaulted in repayment of deposit or
interest payable thereon, redemption of debentures or preference
shares or payment of dividend to any shareholder or repayment of any
term loan or interest payable thereon to any financial institution or
bank, provided that such default has been remedied and three years
have lapsed after such default ceased to subsist. This was not the
case in the Companies Act, 1956.
- Debenture trustee to be appointed only when a
company issues prospectus or makes an offer or invitation to the
public or to its members exceeding five hundred for subscription to
its debentures.
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Chapter V- Acceptance of Deposit by Companies
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- NBFCs not to be covered by the provisions relating
to acceptance of deposits. They will be governed by the Reserve Bank
of India rules on acceptance of deposits.
- Companies cannot accept deposit from public. It can
do so only from its members after seeking permission of its
shareholders at a general meeting. No such approval was required under
the Companies Act, 1956. Such deposit can only be accepted subject to
complying with necessary conditions.
- Certain public companies, as prescribed, can accept
deposits from persons other than its members, subject to conditions
such as credit rating.
- No provision for suo-moto action by the Tribunal to
issue directions for repayment of the deposits or interest thereon in
case of default in such repayments, though such provision exists under
the Companies Act, 1956.
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Chapter VI- Registration of Charges
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- All types of charges would be required to be
registered. Companies Act, 1956 provided a specific list of cases in
which it is necessary to register the charge.
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Chapter VII- Management and Administration
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- Companies required to disclose additional
information in its Annual Return. These include particulars of its
holding, subsidiary and associate companies; certification of
compliances, remuneration of directors and key managerial personnel
etc.
- Certification of Annual Return by practicing
company secretary mandatory in case of companies with prescribed paid
up capital and turnover.
- Annual Return to provide information up to the date
of closure of financial year and not up to the Annual General Meeting
as required under the Companies Act, 1956.
- Listed companies required to file a Return in the
prescribed form with the Registrar regarding change in the number of
shares held by promoters and top ten shareholders of the company,
within 15 days of such change.
- First annual general meeting of a company shall be
held within nine months from the closure of its first financial year
instead of 18 months from the date of the incorporation, as provided
in the Companies Act, 1956.
- Quorum of general meeting for a public company will
now depend upon the number of members of the Company. For companies
with more than 5,000 members, at least 30 should be present
personally. The Companies Act, 1956 prescribes a fixed quorum of 5
persons.
- The Central Government may prescribe the class or
classes of companies and the manner in which a member may exercise his
right to vote electronically.
- Eligibility for demand of poll by the members in
the general meeting changed from what provided in the Companies Act,
1956.
- Provisions of the postal ballot shall be applicable
to all the Companies, whether listed or unlisted.
- Eligibility for making requisition for circulation
of resolution modified.
- Special notice to move a resolution can be moved by
such number of members holding not less than 1% of total voting power
or holding shares on which such aggregate sum of not less than Rs 5
lakh has been paid-up. This is not required under the Companies Act,
1956.
- Every company has to follow the Secretarial
Standards while preparing the minutes of board and general meeting.
- Listed public companies to prepare a report, in the
manner as may be prescribed, on each annual general meeting including
the confirmation that meeting was convened, held and conducted as per
the Act and the Rules made thereunder.
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Chapter VIII- Declaration and Payment of Dividend
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- The Board of Directors may declare interim dividend
during any financial year out of the surplus in the Profit and Loss
Account and out of profits of the financial year in which such interim
dividend is sought to be declared.
- A company cannot declare interim dividend at a rate
higher than the average dividends declared by it during the
immediately preceding three financial years, if it has incurred loss
during the current financial year up to the end of the quarter
immediately preceding the date of declaration of interim dividend. No
such requirement is there under the Companies Act, 1956.
- Instead of transferring a fixed percentage of
profits to reserve before declaring dividend every year as required
under the Companies Act, 1956, a company can transfer such percentage
of profit to the reserve before declaring dividend as it deems
necessary. Such transfer is also not mandatory.
- Alongwith unpaid or unclaimed dividend, companies
wil also have to transfer all the shares on which dividend has
remained unpaid or unclaimed to the Investor Education and Protection
Fund (IEPF) along with a statement containing such details as may be
prescribed.
- Funds in IEPF can be utilised for distribution of
any disgorged amount among eligible and identifiable applicants for
shares or debentures, shareholders, debenture-holders or depositors
who suffered losses due to wrong actions by any person, in accordance
with the orders made by the Court which had ordered disgorgement.
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Chapter IX- Accounts of Companies
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- The books of accounts may be kept in electronic
form.
- The Balance Sheet, the Profit & Loss Account
and the cash flow statement have been collectively defined as the
financial statements.
- Along with the financial statement, consolidated
financial statements of all subsidiaries and the company are to be
prepared and laid before the annual general meeting. Subsidiary for
the purpose of this requirement shall include associate company and joint
venture.
- The Bill does not state whether a financial year
can be extended.
- The requirement of attaching the Balance Sheet, the
Profit & Loss account, the Directors’ Report, the Auditors’
Report, a statement of the holding company’s interest in the subsidiary
and other reports as required by section 212 of the Companies Act,
1956 has been dispensed with.
- The Bill provides for provisions relating to
re-opening or re-casting of the books of accounts of a Company
pursuant to order of Court or Tribunal.
- The National Advisory Committee on Accounting
Standards renamed as The National Financial Reporting Authority.
- The authority to advise on Auditing Standards in
addition to Accounting Standards.
- The Central Government may prescribe standards of
accounting or any addendum thereto, as recommended by the Institute of
Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) in consultation with and after
examination of the recommendations made by the National Financial
Reporting Authority.
- The Director's Report for every company except for
one person company, shall provide additional information such as
number of meetings of the board, company's policy on directors'
appointment and remuneration; explanations or comments by the board on
every qualification, reservation or adverse remark or disclaimer made
by the company secretary in his secretarial audit report, particulars
of loans, guarantees or investments etc.
- The Directors Responsibility Statement shall
include additional statement on compliance with all applicable laws
and, in case of listed companies, it shall also include statement that
adequate internal finance control were in place.
- The Bill provides provisions related to Corporate
Social Responsibility (CSR).
- Every Company with net worth of Rs 500 crore or
more, or turnover of Rs 1,000 crore or more or a net profit of Rs 5
crore or more during any financial year to constitute a Corporate
Social Responsibility Committee of the board consisting of three or
more Directors, including at least one independent director. The committee
shall recommend the policy for CSR to the board.
- The board of every company to ensure that the
company spends, in every financial year, at least 2% of the average
net profits it made during the three immediately preceding financial
years, in pursuance of its Corporate Social Responsibility Policy. The
board in its report to explain reasons for faiure to spend such
amount..
- Companies to give preference to local area of
operation for CSR spendings.
- Private Companies will not be allowed to file their
Balance Sheet & Profit and Loss account separately.
- The Bill provides for conduct of internal audit of
prescribed class or classes of companies.
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Chapter X- Audit and Auditors
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- Every Company shall, at the first annual general
meeting (AGM), appoint an individual or a firm as an auditor who shall
hold office from the conclusion of that meeting till the conclusion of
its sixth AGM and thereafter till the conclusion of every sixth meeting.
However the Company shall place the matter relating to such
appointment for ratification by members at every AGM.
- The Bill provides provision for compulsory rotation
of individual Auditors in every 5 years and of audit firm in every 10
years in listed Companies & certain other classes of Companies, as
may be prescribed.
- A transition period of three years from the
commencement of the Act has been prescribed for existing companies to
comply with the provision of the rotation of auditors.
- A company can resolve for the annual rotation of
auditing partners and his team within the audit firm appointed by it.
- The Bill provides for certain new disqualifications
for the Auditors.
- An Auditor shall also comply with auditing
standards. The Central Government will prescribe the standards of
auditing or any addendum thereto, as recommended by the ICAI, in
consultation with and after examination of the recommendations made by
the National Financial Reporting Authority.
- Auditors, during the course of performance of its
duties, are required to immediately report to the Central Government,
any offence involving fraud that is being or has been committed
against the company by its officers or employees..
- The duties, which have been cast on an Auditor
under clause 143, shall apply mutatis mutandis to both Cost
Accountants for Cost Audit and Company Secretary in Practice for
Secretarial Audit.
- The Auditor of the Company shall not provide
directly or indirectly certain specified services to the company, its
holding and subsidiary company
- An auditor contravening the provisions related to
his appointment (including powers & duties, services that he
cannot render and signing and reading of Auditor's Report at the
general meeting), then in addition to punishment provided in the Act,
has to refund the remuneration received from the company and also be
liable to pay damages to the company or to any person for the loss
arising out of misleading or incorrect information.
- A partner or partners of the audit firm and the
firm also to be jointly and severally responsible for the liability,
whether civil or criminal as provided in the Bill or in any other law
for the time being in force. If proved that the partner or partners of
the audit firm has or have acted in a fraudulent manner or abetted or
colluded in any fraud by, or in relation to, the company or its
directors or officers, then such partner or partners of the firm shall
also be punishable in the manner provided in clause 447.
- Now, instead of Company pertaining to any class of
Companies engaged in production, processing, manufacturing or mining
activities which are required to have cost audit under the Companies
Act 1956, under the Bill the Central Government can only direct Cost
Audit to be conducted in such class of Companies engaged in the
production of such goods or providing such services, which have the
prescribed networth or turnover and has been directed to include the
particulars relating to the utilization of material or labour or to
other items of cost as may be prescribed in their books of account .
- No approval is required of the Central Government
for the appointment of a cost auditor to conduct the cost audit.
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Chapter XI- Appointment and Qualification of Directors
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- Prescribed class or classes of companies to have
atleast one woman director.
- Atleast one director on the board to be a person
who has stayed in India for not less than 182 days in the previous
calendar year.
- At least one-third of the board of every listed
public company to consist of independent directors. Existing companies
to be provided a transition period of one year from the date of
commencement of the Act to comply.
- The Central Government to prescribe the number of
Independent Directors for certain class or classes of Public Company.
- The Bill provides provision for limiting the
liability of Independent Director and Non Executive Director not being
promoter or key Managerial Personnel.
- Independent Directors not entitled to any stock
option. They may receive remuneration by way of fees and profit
related commission as approved by the members.
- The Schedule to the Bill provides the following in
respect of an Independent Director
- Professional Conduct
- Role & Functions
- Duties
- Manner of Appointment
- Removal & Resignation
etc
- Companies can have maximum of 15 directors, up from
12 allowed in the Companies Act, 1956. More can be appointed after
passing a special resolution..
- Certain new disqualification for the directors
given in the Bill.
- A person cannot become Director in more than 20
Companies instead of 15 as provided under the Companies Act, 1956 and
out of this 20, he cannot be the Director of more than 10 public
Companies. The limit of 20 companies includes private Company whereas
under the Companies Act 1956 , there is no limit on the number of
private companies in which a person can become a Director.
- Persons acting as directors to be allowed a
transition period of one year from the commencement of the Act to
comply with the provisions on maximum number of directorships. Each
company where the person intends to continue as a director as well as
the Registrar needs to be informed of the choice.
- Duties of the directors towards a company
prescribed.Not provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- For the purpose of the calculation of the directors
retiring by rotation, the independent directors shall be out of the
ambit.
- Directors are also required to mandatorily forward
their resignation along with detailed reasons for resignation to the
Registrar within 30 days of resignation in prescribed manner. There is
no such requirement under the Companies Act, 1956.
- The notice for removal of Director can only be
given by prescribed number of members or members holding prescribed
number of shares or voting power.
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Chapter XII- Meeting of Board and its Powers
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- A director can participate in a board meeting
through video conferencing or other audio visual mode as may be
prescribed.
- A notice of not less than 7 days in writing is
required to call a board meeting. The notice of meeting to be given to
all directors, whether he is in India or outside India by hand
delivery post or electronic means.
- At least four meetings to be held every year, and
not more than 120 days to elapse between two consecutive meetings. No
requirement to hold the meeting every quarter as provided under the
Companies Act, 1956.
- Every listed company and such other company as may
be prescribed to have an audit committee.
- Audit committees to have a minimum of three
directors, with majority of the independent directors and majority of
members of committee should have the ability to read and understand
the financial statements.
- A vigil mechanism in the prescribed manner to be
established by every listed company or such class or classes of
companies, as may be prescribed.
- Every listed company and prescribed class or
classes of companies shall constitute a nomination and remuneration
committee consisting of three or more non-executive directors, of
which not less than one half shall be independent directors.
- Every company with more than 1,000 shareholders,
debenture-holders, deposit-holders and any other security holders at
any time during a financial year shall constitute a Stakeholders
Relationship Committee consisting of a chairperson who is a
non-executive director and such other members as may be decided by the
board.
- The Bill provides certain new matters that are
required to be transacted by the board of directors at their meeting
only.
- Certain powers which earlier can be exercised by
the Board with the approval of general meeting by way of ordinary
resolution under section 293 of the Companies Act 1956,, shall now to
be passed by special resolution.
- The limits for political contribution by a company
changed. Now instead of 5% that was allowed under the Companies Act,
1956, contribution cannot exceed 7.5% of the average net profits of
the company during the three immediately preceding financial years.
- In a private company, an interested director cannot
vote or take part in the discussion relating to any matter in which he
is interested, whereas under the Companies Act, 1956, he can.
- The Companies Act, 1956 requirement of seeking
permission of the central government for giving loan to director has
been dispensed with.
- The provisions related to inter-corporate loans and
investments (section 372A of Companies Act, 1956) has been extended to
include loans and investments to any person.
- While considering the limits for making
investments, providing loan, providing guarantee or security , the
amount for which the investment has been made or the loan, guarantee
or security already provided, will not be considered, as opposed to
what is provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- No stock broker, sub-broker, share transfer agent,
banker to issue, registrar to an issue, merchant banker, underwriter,
portfolio manager, investment advisor or any intermediary associated
with capital market shall take inter-corporate loans and deposits
exceeding the limits that will be prescribed.
- A company, unless otherwise prescribed, cannot make
investment through more than two layers of investment companies
subject to certain exemptions.
- Apart from the existing transactions, certain new
related party transactions are also provided for which approval of
board will be required.
- No approval of the central government required for
entering into any related party transactions. Under the Companies Act,
1956 approval is required under section 297.
- No approval of the central government required for
appointment of any director or any other person to any office or place
of profit in the company or its subsidiary. Under the Companies Act,
1956 approval is required under section 297.
- A company shall not enter into any arrangement by
which a director of the company or of its holding company or any
person connected with him can acquire assets for the consideration
other than cash from the company & vice versa without the approval
of company in general meeting.
- The Bill prohibits forward dealings in securities
of company by any director or key managerial personnel. Under the
Companies Act, 1956 there is no such provision.
- The Bill prohibits insider trading in the company.
Under the Companies Act, 1956 there is no such provision.
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Chapter XIII- Appointment and Remuneration of Managerial
Personnel
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- Provisions relating to the appointment of managing
director/whole time director/manger to apply to a private company.
- The appointment of managing director/whole time
director /manager to be approved by general meeting by special
resolution and if the appointment is not in accordance with schedule V
(Schedule XIII in the Companies Act, 1956), then the approval of
central government is also required.
- Where a company is required to re-state its
financial statements due to fraud or non-compliance with any requirement
under this Act and the rules made thereunder, the company shall
recover from any past or present managing director or whole-time
director or manager who, during the period for which the financial
statements are required to be re-stated, the remuneration received
(including stock option) arisen due to such statement or
non-compliance in excess of what would have been paid to the managing
director, whole-time director or manager under such re-stated
financial statements.
- Every company belonging to such class or
description of companies as may be prescribed, to have managing
director, or chief executive officer or manager and in their absence,
a whole-time director, company secretary and chief financial officer.
- The Bill provides for provision related to
secretarial audit in certain prescribed class or classes of companies.
- The Bill prescribes the functions of a company
secretary.
- The Schedule to the Bill provides the conditions
under which a company can pay remuneration to its managerial personnel
in excess of the limits prescribed therein, without the government
approval.
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Chapter XIV- Inspection, Inquiry and Investigation
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- In case of inspection or inquiry,, now the
Registrar shall possess powers as are vested in a Civil Court under
the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, while trying a suit in respect of
certain specified matters.
- The search and seizure powers of the Registrar /Inspector
extended to cover places where documents pertaining to key managerial
personnel, auditors and company secretary in practice are kept.
- For search or seizure of documents, the Registrar
need to take permission from the special court instead of Magistrate
of first class or Presidency Magistrate.
- The Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) to
investigate frauds relating to a company to be set up through a
notification. Till it is established, the SFIO set up by central
government through an administrative resolution to be used for the
purpose of this clause.
- The central government may,under the prescribed
situation, refer any matter for investigation to the SFIO.
- No provision for inspection or investigation by
SEBI.
- The affairs of related company may also be
investigated while the inspector is making an investigation as to the
ownership of a company. This is not provided under the Companies Act,
1956.
- As per the Bill, the Tribunal may by order, direct
that a transfer, removal or disposal of funds, assets or properties of
a company shall not take place during such period not exceeding three
years as may be specified in the order or may take place subject to
such conditions and restrictions as the Tribunal may deem fit, where
it appears to it, on a reference made to it by the Central Government
or in connection with any inquiry or investigation into the affairs of
a company under this Chapter or on any complaint made by such number
of members as specified under sub-clause(1) of Clause 244 or a creditor
having an amount of Rs 1 lakh outstanding against the company or any
other person having a reasonable ground to believe that the removal,
transfer or disposal of funds, assets, properties of the company is
likely to take place in a manner that is prejudicial to the interests
of the company or its shareholders or creditors or in public
interestWhere pursuant to transfer of shares under the Companies Act
1956, the Tribunal is of the opinion that such change is prejudicial
to the public interest, then its power to put restrictions on exercise
of voting rights in respect of such shares or to prevent the
resolution for change in composition of board of directors from being
put into effect has been dispensed with
- If the inspector reports of a fraud has taken place
in a company and as a result undue advantage is derived by any
director, key managerial personnel or an officer or other person, in
the form of any asset, property or cash or in any other manner, the central
government can file an application to the Tribunal for appropriate
orders of disgorgement of such assets, property or cash and for
holding of such director, key managerial personnel, officer or other
person liable personally without any limitation of liability.
- An investigation under this chapter may
nevertheless be initiated and shall neither be stopped nor be
suspended even where winding up is approved by the shareholders or any
proceeding for winding up is pending before the Tribunal.
- Provisions for inspection and investigations of a
foreign company is provided in this chapter. In the Companies Act,
1956, these provisions are in the chapter related to foreign company.
- During the process of the investigation, inquiry or
inspection if any person:
- destroys, mutilates or falsifies or conceals or
tampers or unauthorizedly removes or is a party to destruction,
mutilation or falsification or concealment or tampering or
unauthorized removal of any document relating to the property, assets
or affairs of the company or body corporate, or
- makes or is a party to the making of any false
entry in the document concerning the company or body corporate, or
- provides any false information which he knows to
be false,
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Chapter XV- Compromise, Arrangement and Amalgamations
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- Only persons holding not less than 10% of the
shareholding or having outstanding debt amounting to not less than 5%
of the total outstanding debt, as per the latest audited financial
statements, are eligible to raise any opposition to an arrangement or
compromise.
- The Tribunal may dispense with calling of a meeting
of creditors or class of creditors where such creditors or class of
creditors, having at least 90% value, agree and confirm, by way of
affidavit, to the scheme of compromise or arrangement.
- Any provision of buyback in any compromise or
arrangement shall be in compliance with the provisions of the buyback.
- Any takeover offer of listed company under
compromise or arrangement shall comply with SEBI guidelines.
- In case of a merger of a listed company with an
unlisted company, the Tribunal can order that the unlisted company
i.e., transferee company continue to be unlisted.
- No compromise or arrangement shall be sanctioned by
the Tribunal unless a certificate by the company’s auditor has been
filed with the Tribunal stating that the accounting treatment, if any,
proposed in the scheme of compromise or arrangement is in conformity
with the accounting standards prescribed under Clause 133.
- The Bill prohibits creation of treasury stock/trust
shares.
- Separate provisions have been provided for the
merger or amalgamation between two small companies or between a
holding company and a wholly-owned subsidiary company.
- The Bill makes provision for cross border
amalgamations between Indian companies and companies incorporated in
the jurisdictions of such countries as may be notified from time to
time by the central government
- The Bill provides for purchase of minority shares
in case an acquirer or person acting in concert with the acquirer
becomes holder of 90% or more of the issued capital of the company,
either directly or by virtue of any amalgamation, share exchange,
conversion of securities or any other reason.
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Chapter XVI- Prevention of Oppression and Mismanagement
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- Application against oppression or mismanagement to
be filed before the National Company Law Tribunal instead of the
Company Law Board.
- Provisions for relief from oppression and
mismanagement combined under one provision, as opposed to Companies
Act, 1956.
- The Bill provides for class action suit by
specified number of members or depositors against the company except
the banking companies, which is prevalent in developed countries. No
such provision in the Companies Act, 1956.
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Chapter XVII- Registered Valuer
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- Where any valuation is required to be made of any
property, stocks, shares, debentures, securities or goodwill or any
other assets (herein referred to as the assets) or net worth of a
company or its liabilities under the provision of this Act , it shall be
valued by a person having such qualifications and experience and
registered as a Valuer in such manner, on such terms and conditions as
may be prescribed and appointed by the audit committee or in its
absence by the board of directors of that company.
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Chapter XVIII- Removal of Name of Companies from Register of
Companies
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- The conditions under which the Registrar can remove
the name of a company from his record have been changed.
- The Registrar of Companies has been empowered to
file an application with the Tribunal for restoration of the name of a
company where the company was struck off inadvertently or on the basis
of the incorrect information.
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Chapter XIX- Revival and Rehabilitation of Sick Companies
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- The manner of declaring a company sick and process
of its revival and rehabilitation has been completely rationalized.
- Any company, and not just industrial company as
provided under the Companies Act, 1956, can be declared as sick
company.
- Secured creditors representing 50% or more of the
debt of a company and whose debt the company has failed to pay within
30 days of service notice, can apply to the Tribunal for declaring the
company as sick. A company that fails to repay the debt of secured
creditors representing 50% or more of its debt may also apply to the
Tribunal to be declared sick.
- Erosion of 50% of the networth no longer the
criteria for declaring the company as sick.
- Where the financial assets of a sick company have
been acquired by any securitization company or reconstruction company
under sub-section (1) of section 5 of the Securitization and
Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security
Interest Act, 2002, any application for revival or rehabilitation
shall not be made without the consent of securitization company or
reconstruction company, which has acquired such assets.
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Chapter XXIV- Registration Offices and Fees
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- Any document or returns required to be filed under
this Bill, if not filed within prescribed time, have to be filed
within a period of 270 days on payment of such additional fees as may
be prescribed.
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Chapter XXVI- Nidhi Companies
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- New definition of Nidhi Company prescribed.
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Chapter XXVII- National Company Law Tribunal and Appellate
Tribunal
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- The person to be appointed as President of the
Tribunal shall be the judge of the High Court for atleast 5 years, as
opposed to the Companies Act 1956, where no term has been prescribed
for High Court Judge to be appointed as President; the only condition
was that the person should be qualified for being a judge of high
court.
- Eligibility critieria for appointment of a judicial
member or technical member has also changed.
- The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal shall
now consist of combination of technical and judicial members not
exceeding 11, instead of 2 as provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- A serving judge of the Supreme Court or a chief
justice of a High Court can be appointed as the Chairman of the
National Company Law Appellate Tribunal. The Companies Act, 1956
provided that only past judges of the Supreme Court or chief justice
of high courts can be appointed.
- The President of the Tribunal and the Chairperson
and the Judicial Members of the Appellate Tribunal to be appointed
after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, instead of the
selection committee as provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- Every proceeding before the Tribunal to be dealt
with and disposed of as expeditiously as possible. The Tribunal has
toendeavour to dispose the proceedings within 3 months from the date
of commencement of the proceeding before it.
- On such date as may be notified by the central
government:
- All matters, proceedings
or cases pending before the Board of Company Law Administration
(hereinafter in this section referred to as the Company Law Board)
constituted under sub-section (1) of section 10E of the Companies
Act, 1956, immediately before such date shall stand transferred to
the Tribunal and the Tribunal shall dispose of such matters,
proceedings or cases in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
- All proceedings under the
Companies Act, 1956, including proceedings relating to arbitration,
compromise, arrangements and reconstruction and winding up of
companies, pending immediately before such date before any district
court or high court, shall stand transferred to the Tribunal and the
Tribunal may proceed to deal with such proceedings either de novo or
from the stage before their transfer:
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Chapter XXVIII- Special Courts
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- The central government may, for the purpose of
providing speedy trial of offences under this Bill, by notification,
establish as many Special Courts as may be necessary.
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Chapter XXIX- Miscellaneous
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- Only offences punishable with fines are compoundable
under the Bill. Any offence punishable with fine or imprisonment or
with both will be compoundable with the permission of Special Court.
- The Bill makes provision for establishment of
Mediation and Conciliation panel by central government. Under the
Companies Act, 1956 there is no such provision.
- The Bill provides for specific provisions related
to any act of fraud. Under the Companies Act, 1956 there is no such
provision.
- “Fraud” in relation to affairs of a company or any
body corporate includes any act, omission, concealment of any fact or
abuse of position committed by any person or any other person with the
connivance in any manner, with intent to deceive, to gain undue
advantage from, or to injure the interests of, the company or its
shareholders or its creditors or any other person, whether or not
there is any wrongful gain or wrongful loss.
- Where a company is formed and registered under this
Bill for a future project or to hold an asset or intellectual property
and has no significant accounting transaction, such a company or an
inactive company may make an application to the Registrar in such
manner as may be prescribed for obtaining the status of a dormant
company.
- A dormant company will have such minimum number of
directors and have to file such documents and pay such fees, as may be
prescribed, to retain its dormant company status.
- The maximum number of persons who can carry on
businesses for profitable purpose through an association or
partnership will be prescribed by rules, but the number will not
exceed 100, instead of 12 as provided in the Companies Act, 1956.
- The government by Rules will prescribe Sections
that will not be applicable to private companies & one person
companies..
- The Bill provides that producer companies shall
continue to be governed by Chapter IXA of the Companies Act, 1956
until the enactment of Special Act for Producer Companies.
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