Registration of charges (Ss. 123/124)

 

The Companies (Amendment) Act, 1988, has added a new proviso to sub-section (1) of section 125 of the Act whereby the Registrar has been empowered to allow the particulars and instrument or a copy thereof to be filed within thirty days next following the expiry of the said period of thirty days on payment of such additional fee not exceeding ten times the amount of fee as the Registrar may determine if the company satisfied the Registrar that it had sufficient cause for not filing the particulars and instrument or copy within that period. Any extension of this period must be sought by making an application to the Company Law Board under section 141 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

Registration of charges (S. 125)

 

By the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1988, section 125 requiring registration of charges with the Registrar of Companies has been amended to empower the Registrar of Companies to condone delay up to a maximum period of 30 days (as against seven days at present) for sufficient causes on payment of additional fees. Further the register of charges required to be kept under section 130 has been simplified. The amendment of section 130 has been intended to dispense with the time consuming procedure of entering by hand the particulars of charges. The amendment also provides the signing or initialling of each page of the register by the Registrar of Companies.

 

 

Issue of debentures secured by floating charge

 

S. 123-Issue of debentures secured by floating charge-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that in order to finance the company's expansion project, the company do raise money (or borrow money) by the issue of 30,000 debentures of Rs. 1,000 each bearing interest at the rate of eleven per cent per annum payable half-yearly as on 30th September and 31st March every year secured by way of a floating charge on the company's undertaking, redeemable at par after a period of ten years from the date of issue hereof, so however, that the company will have power to redeem such debentures in lots of 1,000 debentures every year to be selected by the trustees for the debenture-holders in the presence of the Auditors of the company and that such redemption at par be made by giving six months' previous notice to such holders selected by lots.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the said debentures be and are hereby issued subject to the terms and conditions incorporated in the draft rules submitted to this meeting an that 30,000 ten per cent debentures of Rs. 1,000/- each be offered to the General Insurance Corporation of India, Life Insurance Corporation of India, the Unit Trust of India and other public financial institutions or nationalised banks for subscription at par, Rs. 500/- per debenture being payable on application and Rs. 500/- per debenture being payable on allotment thereof and that such offer be made by a prospectus as per the draft submitted to this meeting.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that M/s. PSG Private Limited Company, be and is hereby appointed as the Manager to the issue and be given a copy of the scheme of advertisement and scheme of circulation of the prospectus.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that    Bank, the bankers to the said issue of debentures, be requested to receive the subscriptions from the applicants at par at all its branches in India and send the company a pro forma of the receipt of money payable on application with the relevant application forms."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Creation of floating charge.-Creation of charges is covered by Part V of the Companies Act, 1956. Borrowing through debentures may be done by creating floating

charge on the undertaking of the company. When the charge is floating the company may, in the ordinary course of business, deal with the property in any manner until the charge gets fixed. Floating charge is an equitable charge which does not crystallise on any specific property but covers the whole of the company's property whether it is subject to a fixed charge or not. Upon the happening of any of the events set out in the documents in connection with the issue of debentures, it crystallises or becomes fixed and thereafter the assets are to be treated as having a specific charge.

 

2. Filing of charge with Registrar.-Particulars of such a charge must be filed with the Registrar of Companies for registration in Form No. 8 and Form No. 13 within thirty days after the date of its creation with the requisite filing as per Schedule X of the Act.

 

3. Payment of late fee.-Filing of Forms 8 and 13 should be filed along with fees and mere submission of these forms without filing fee though within time does not amount to a proper compliance of the requirements of registration within the meaning of section 125. State Batik of Mysore v. City Hospital and Diagonistic Centre (P.) Ltd., (2001) 3 Comp LJ 241 (CLB).

 

4. Power of Registrar to extend time.-The Registrar empowered to allow the particulars and instrument or a copy thereof to be filed within thirty days next following the expiry of the said period of thirty days on payment of such additional fee not exceeding ten times the amount of fee as the Registrar may determine if the company satisfies the Registrar that it has sufficient cause for not filing the particulars and instrument or copy within that period.

 

5. Petition to Company Law Board for extension of time.-The petition for extension of time can be made to the Company Law Board as per Company Law Board Regulations, 1991. The petition to accompany the following documents:

 

(1) Certified true copy of the agreement creating, modifying the charge, as the case may be.

(2) Certified true copy of the resolution envisaged by section 292(l)(b) or (c) and section 293(l)(a), as may be applicable.

(3) Affidavit verifying the petition.

(4) Bank Draft evidencing payment of application fee.

(5) Memorandum of appearance with copy of Board Resolution or the executed Vakalatnama, as the case may be.

 

The fee payable on the petition is Rs. 200/-.

 

6. Penalty for default.-If default is made in filing with the Registrar of Companies (ROC) for registration the particulars of any charge created by the company requiring registration with the ROC then unless the registration has been effected on the application of some other person, the company and every officer of the company or other person who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 5,0001- for every day during which the default continues. [Section 142(l)]

 

Creation of charge (S. 125)

 

Unless there is an express power given in the memorandum or articles, there cannot be a mortgage or charge of unpaid capital. Batik of Sough Australia v. Abrahams, (1875) LIZ 6 PC 265. Capital uncalled is in no sense property of the company. It is more in the nature of a power than property and for such a power to be charged, there must be express authority. Re: Johnson v. Russian Spratts Patent Ltd., (1898) 2 Ch 149. A charge on book debts and other debts even if called a first specific charge does not cover the balance in a bank account as this in commercial practice is not a book debt. Re: Brightlife Ltd., 1986 BCLC 418. An assignment of a book debt also comes within the section if it is intended to be security for a debt. Ladenburg & Co. v. Goodwin, (1912) 3 KB 275. A charge on the entire assets of a company does not include the books, registers and papers which are required by the statute to be kept at company's registered office and pertain to company's management as distinct from the title deeds which relate to the ownership of assets. Re: Clyne Tin Plate Co., (1882) 47 LT 439.

 

The thirty days have to be calculated from the date when the instruction of charge is executed though it may be stipulated to take effect on a later date on the happening of a later event. Dublin City Distillery v. Oberty, 1914 AC 823. Where for any reason any debentures which have been issued are omitted to be registered, the company may cancel them and issue a new series and register the latter within thirty days. Re: Renshaw & Co., 1908 WN 210,

 

 

Borrowing by creating charge in favour of bank

 

S. 125-Borrowing by creating charge in favour of bank-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the company do borrow from time to time as may be required, from ____________ Bank by way of cash credit, loan, overdraft, discounting of bills, operating of letters of credit, for standing guaran­tee or counter-guarantee and enter any other type of credit line or fa­cility up to an amount of Rs. 5,00,00,000 in the aggregate.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Mr ____________________ and Mr ____________________ the Directors of the company, be and are hereby authorised to sign, get registered and deliver on behalf of the company all documents and forms relating to the above credit lines and facilities to be secured by hypothecation of present and future raw materials belonging to the company and lying in any godown, factory or anywhere in India, stock of stores, work-in-progress and finished goods and book debts, and that the company do create an equitable mortgage on the fixed assets of the company in favour of the bank by depositing with such bank the title deeds in relation thereto, as collateral security for the credit facil­ity made available to the company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Filing of charge with Registrar for registration.-Sections 124 and 145 of the Companies Act, 1956, deal with creation of 'charge' (including mortgage) on the assets of the company. Pursuant to section 125, any charge created on or after the 1st day of April, 1914 by the company on its property or undertaking shall be considered as void against the liquidator and any creditor of the company, unless the particulars of charge, together with the instrument, if any, by which the charge is created are filed with the Registrar for registration within thirty days after the date of its creation.

 

2. Power of Registrar to extend time.-The Registrar empowered to allow the particulars and instrument or a copy thereof to be filed within thirty days next following the expiry of the said period of thirty days on payment of such additional fee not exceeding ten times the amount of fee as the Registrar may determine if the company satisfies the Registrar that it had sufficient cause for not filing the particulars and instrument or copy within that period. Any extension of this period must be sought by making an application to the Company Law Board under section 141 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

3. Petition to Company Law Board for extension of time.-The petition for extension of time can be made to the Company Law Board as per Company Law Board Regulations, 1991. The petition to accompany the following documents:-

 

(1) Certified true copy of the agreement creating, modifying the charge, as the case may be.

(2) Certified true copy of the resolution envisaged by section 292(l)(b) or (c) and section 293(l)(a), as may be applicable.

(3) Affidavit verifying the petition.

(4) Bank Draft evidencing payment of application fee.

(5) Memorandum of appearance with copy of or the executed Vakala,nama, as the case may be.

 

The fee payable on the petition is Rs. 200/-.

 

4. Filing.-A certified copy of the order passed by the CLB extending the time shall be filed by the company with Registrar of Companies concerned as an annexure to Form No. 21  of the Companies (Central Government's) General Rules and Forms, 1956.

 

5. Duty cast on company to rile with Registrar particulars of charge.-There is no legal obligation on the part of the company to register the charge. Consequently, in the interest of the creditors, very often the charge is registered either by the creditors themselves or by their solicitors. Under section 134, however, it is the duty of the company to file with the Registrar the particulars of every charge created by the company.

 

6. Power to borrow/mortgage assets depends on Memorandum.-In the case of a company, the power to borrow and mortgage or charge its property or asset depends on the Memorandum of Association, but such a power whether expressly provided in the Memorandum of Association or not, is implicitly present in the case of a trading company, where borrowing is incidental to the carrying on of its business.

 

7. Registration when necessary.-An equitable mortgage or charge created by deposit of title deeds, also requires registration under the section. A charge on the company's properties which was unregistered, was void ipso facto upon the company being ordered to be wound up. Such a charge had no effect upon the company's properties once the order if winding up was made. ICICI v. Official Liquidator, Usha Automobiles and Engineering Company Ltd. (in liquidation) & Other, (2000) 100 Com. Cases 150 (CLB-ER).

 

8. Debenture-holders not to have an interest in property charged.-Debenture holders entitled to a charge on immovable property are not deemed to be an interest in immovable property.

 

 

Borrowing by pledge of shares etc.

 

S. 125- Borrowing by pledge of shares etc.-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the company do borrow from time to time, as may be required, from ____________________ Bank by way of cash credit, loan, overdraft, for standing guarantee or counter-guarantee and under any other credit line or facility up to an amount of Rs. 50,00,000 to be secured by the pledge of company's marketable shares and debentures and that it is hereby agreed that such shares and securities shall be transferred in the name of the aforesaid bank while reserving the beneficial interest therein with the company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Pledge explained.-A pledge constitutes actual or constructive delivery or possession of the assets. If the person entitled to the security is in possession of the property or assets forming security, it is a pledge carrying with it a power of sale on default of payment of loan in due time or any interest accrued on such loan within due date or within such specified date as may be fixed therefor by notice.

 

2. Pledge of movables excluded from the section.-A pledge on movable assets of the company is not a charge within the meaning of section 125. It is doubtful if pledge on movable assets not being charged should be entered in the register of charges to be maintained by a company pursuant to section 143. According to the Department of Company Affairs, a charge created by pledge on movable property should come under the purview of this section, and should be recorded in the register of charges and should also be registered with the Registrar in Form No. 8 and Form No. 13.

 

3. Registration permitted by Registrar at instance of other party.-The registration

is not required under the statute but may be permitted by the Registrar at the instance of

the other party. The company should also intimate to the Registrar any subsequent modi­fication or satisfaction of such charge. (Circular No. 8/6(125) 60-PR, dated 7-7-1960).

 

 

Delay in registration of charge within next 30 days

 

S. 125(l), Proviso- Delay in registration of charge-filing charge within next 30 days-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company had mortgaged its immoveable properties by creating a charge in favour of Asian Developers Ltd.;

 

AND WHEREAS the said charge could not be registered with the Register of Companies, West Bengal, within 30 days of the creation of the said charge by reason of the fact that the Secretary of the Company had resigned and left the job;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the particulars of the said charge including the documents creating the charge be filed with the Registrar and Mr. X, a Director of the Company be authorised to file the necessary documents and sign the necessary papers;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that an application be made to the Registrar for taking a lenient view in the matter and charge not more than double the amount of the fee for registration of the charge, the delay in filing the charge being only for seven days after the expiry of the 30 days mentioned in sub-section (1)."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Additional fees.-Proviso to section 125(l) of the Act allows filing of charges with the concerned Registrar of Companies within thirty days next following the expiry of the thirty days as required under sub-section (1) on payment of such additional fees not exceeding ten times the amount of fee specified in Schedule X to the Act. The amount of additional fee to be paid on late filing of document is now standardised by Press Note No. 2/95/14/3/87-CL-V, dated 21st March, 1995 and is one time of normal fee as per Schedule X.

 

2. Sufficient cause.-The Registrar of companies should be satisfied properly on the ground that there was sufficient cause for not filing the particulars of instrument of charge or copy thereof within the said period of thirty days.

 

3. Void charge.-Any charge will become void against the liquidator or any creditor of the company unless the prescribed particulars of the charge together with the instrument by which the charge is created or evidenced or a copy thereof verified in the prescribed manner, is filed within thirty days after the date of its creation.

 

4. Register of charges.-Company should keep at its registered office a Register of Charges and enter therein all charges specifically affecting properties of the company giving in each case a short description of the property charge, the amount of the charge and the names of the persons entitled to the charge. This register should be open to inspection by any person on payment Rs. 10/- on each inspection.

 

5. Procedure.-The prescribed particulars together with a copy of the instrument creating the charge should be filed in Form No. 8 and 13 in triplicate with the Registrar of Companies. Both these two forms should be signed on behalf of the company and the charge-holder. The Registrar, will affix on all the three copies of the Forms and accompanying instruments with the words "Certified that the charge above is registered" by way of a rubber stamp under his signature with date and a copy will be given back to the company and the charge-holder.

 

6. Penalty.-If any officer of the company knowingly omits or willfully authorises or permits any entry required to be made in the Register of Charges, he shall be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five thousand. In default of filing the prescribed details of the charge with the concerned Registrar of Companies within prescribed time, the company and every officer of the company or any other person who is in default will be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five hundred for every day during which the default continues. [Section 143(2)]

 

7. Compounding of offence.-For compounding of offence committed for not making required entries in the Register of Charges, the application will lie before the concerned Regional Director under section 621A(l)(b). In case of default committed for not filing within the time the particulars of charge with the concerned Registrar of Companies, the application will lie before the concerned Regional Director if the fine does not exceed rupees five thousand under section 621A(l)(b). The application for compounding of offence will lie before the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board if the fine exceeds rupees fifty thousand under section 621A(l)(a).

 

 

Execution of inter se pari passu agreement

 

S. 125(4)(a)-Execution of inter se pari passu agreement-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Company do execute an inter se pari passu agreement along with four counterparts thereof with the Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI), Industrial Finance Corporation of, India (IFCI), Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) and State Bank of India (SBI) as the Debenture Trustees (the Trustees) providing, inter alia, that the charges created/to be created by the Company in favour of IDBI, IFCL IOB and the Trustees shall rank pari passu without any preference or priority of one over the other or others and for all purpose and to all intents and to provide for certain other matters incidental thereto.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the draft of the inter se pari passu agreement received along with letter No. IDBI/LD No. 1046/02, dated 26th July, 2002 from Industrial Development Bank of India, as duly approved by all the institutions, copies whereof duly authenticated by the Chairman for the purpose of identification have been circulated to the Board, be and the same is hereby approved.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri SKM, Managing Director and Shri AKM, Director be and are hereby authorised severally to accept on behalf of the Company such amendments, modifications and/or alterations thereto as may be suggested by any of the institutions.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Common Seal of the company be affixed to the fair stamped engrossment of the inter se pari passu agreement and its counterparts (with such modifications as may be acceptable and agreed to by the Company and the financial institutions) in the presence of Shri SKM, Managing Director and Shri AKM, Director and Shri OPM, Secretary of the Company who shall sign the same in token thereof.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the requisite particulars modifying respective charges in favour of the institutions (consequent on execution of the said inter se pari passu agreement) may be filed by the Company with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed and that the said inter se pari passu agreement and the counterparts thereof be duly registered with the Registrar of Assurances in such manner and at such place as may be mutually agreed to and accepted by the Company and the institutions."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Board Resolution.-Pass a Board resolution authorising the Directors and Secretary, to execute the agreement. In case the financial institutions insist on a resolution under Section 293(l)(a), then get the resolution passed by the shareholders in the general meeting.

 

2. Registration when necessary.-An equitable mortgage or charge by deposit of title deeds require registration. When the Board executes trust deed then only the charge is created.

 

3. Filing of forms.-File Forms 8 and 13 with the Registrar of Companies within thirty days of creating charge on payment of requisite filing fee as per Schedule X of the Act.

 

4. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs.2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies men­tioning therein inter alia that the company has filed all forms as stated in Annexure B to the said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time pre­scribed under the Act and the Rules made thereunder as per paragraph 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 

Endorsement of certificate of registration on debenture

 

S.133-  Endorsement of certificate of registration on debenture-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the certificate of registration of charge in respect of the debentures issued by the Company received from the Registrar of Companies under section 132 of the Act be and is hereby endorsed on every debenture issued by the Company payment of which is secured by charge so registered."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Debenture certificate.-Once the charge on the property is created securing the payment of debentures and such charge is registered with the concerned Registrar of Companies and the said Registrar gives the registration certificate for the charge so created, it becomes obligatory on the part of the company to permit/endorse that registration certificate on the back side of each and every debenture certificate issued to the debenture holder as required under section 133(l).

 

2. Penalty.-Non compliance of provision of section 133(l) is punishable with fine which may extend to rupees tent thousand, under section 133(2).

 

3. Compounding of offence.-The fine of rupees tent thousand for contravention of provisions of section 133(l) is compoundable by the Regional Director as per section 621A.

 

 

Registration of charge by charge

 

S. 134- Registration of charge by charge-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS it was the duty of the Company, M/s. ABC Ltd. to file the charge with the Registrar for registration;

 

AND WHEREAS the said company had failed to register the charge;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the company, being the charge, shall file the charge for registration with the Registrar and pay the necessary filing fees.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that a notice be served on M/s. ABC Ltd. for reimbursement of the fees paid by the company for registration of the charge."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Safeguarding interest.-A I though it is the duty of the concerned company who is charger to file the necessary particulars of the charge with the concerned Registrar of Companies, but for the purposes of safeguarding the interest of charge, the charge on his own can apply for registration of Charge to the concerned Registrar of Companies after filing of the necessary documents with the said Registrar along with requisite fees as per Schedule X of the Act.

 

2. Recovery of fee.-The charge is entitled to reimbursement of the filing fee so paid to the concerned Registrar of Companies for filing and registration of the Charge.

 

3. Registration of Charge.-Section 125 deals with consequences of non-registration of charges, and it does not deal with registration of charge. The duty of registration of charge is enjoined by section 134 according to which it is the duty of a company to file with the Registrar of Companies for registration particulars of every charge created by the company. Section 134 read with section 142 clearly shows that a company has the primary responsibility to file the particulars of every charge created on its property in favour of any creditor. Saradha Finance v. Alsa Investments Private Ltd., (2002) 110 Com Cases 713 (CLB).

 

 

Filing of Modification of charge

 

S. 135- Filing of modification of charge-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company had created a charge in favour of XYZ Ltd. on ______________ which had advanced a sum of Rs. 30 lacs @ 22% inter­est per annum. against mortgage of plant and machinery of the Com­pany lying at its factory at ____________________;

 

AND WHEREAS the said charge was modified on __________________ by way of enhancement of the sum so advanced from Rs. 30 lacs to Rs. 50 lacs @ 23% interest per annum against mortgage of plant and machinery of the company lying at its factory at      and also at its factory at ________________ ;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that intimation be given to the Registrar of Companies, West Bengal of the payment and modification of the earlier charge."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Change in terms and conditions.-As per section 135, whenever there is a change in the terms and conditions or in the extent or operation of any charge registered with any Registrar of Companies, it is the duty of the company to send to the concerned Registrar of Companies, the particulars of such modification in Form No. 10 and within thirty days from the date of making of such modification along with Form No. 13.

 

2. Procedure.-The prescribed particulars together with a copy of the instrument modifying the charge should be filed in Form No. 10 and 13 in triplicate with the concerned Registrar of Companies. Both these two Forms should be signed on behalf of the company and the charge holder. The Registrar, will affix on all the three copies of the Forms and accompanying instruments with the words "Certified that the charge above is registered" by way of a rubber stamp under his signature and date and a copy will be given back to the company and the charge holder.

 

3. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning inter alia that the company has duly filed the forms as stated in Annexure B to said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed under the Act and the Rules made thereunder as per paragraphs 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 

Filing of satisfaction of charge

 

S. 138- Filing of satisfaction of charge-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company had created a charge in favour of ABC Ltd. which had advanced a sum of Rs. 50 lacs with interest @ 11% p.a. against mortgage of plant and machinery of the Company;

 

AND WHEREAS the said sum of Rs. 50 lacs with interest due thereon have been fully paid;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that intimation be given to the Registrar of the payment and satisfaction of the charge."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Full payment.-Intimation should be given to the concerned Registrar of Companies only when payment or satisfaction of the charge is made in full. Such intimation should be made in Form No. 17 within thirty days from the date of such payment or satisfaction along with Form No. 13.

 

2. Notice of Registrar.-On receipt of intimation from the charger the Registrar of Companies will issue a notice to the charge calling upon him to show cause within a time not exceeding fourteen days specified in such notice as to why payment or satisfaction should not be recorded as intimated to the Registrar by the charger. The Registrar of Companies will issue such notice ususally within a week after receipt of the intimation from the charger. (Circular Letter No. 2/4/ 60-PR, dated 15-2-1960).

 

3. Entry in the Register of Charge.-The Registrar of Companies will order for recording of satisfaction of charge in the Register of Charges if no cause is shown to him by the charge within fourteen days. The Registrar of Companies can on his own make an entry of satisfaction of charge in the Register of Charges otherwise than on receipt of an intimation from the charger if sufficient evidence is given to his satisfaction with respect to any Charge that the debt for which the charge was given has been paid or satisfied or that part of the property or undertaking charged has been released from the charge or has ceased to be part of the charger's property or undertaking.

 

4. Procedure.-The prescribed particulars together with a copy of the instrument satisfying the charge should be filed in Form No. 17 and 13 in triplicate with the Registrar of Companies. Both these two forms should be signed on behalf of the company and the charge holder. The Registrar, will affix on all the three copies of the form accompanying instruments with the words "Certified that the charge above is registered" under his signature with date and the copy will be given back to the company and also to the charge holder.

 

5. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning inter alia that the company has duly filed the forms as stated in Annexure B to said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed under the Act and the Rules made thereunder as per paragraphs 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 

Satisfaction of charge to be taken on record

 

S. 140- Satisfaction of charge to be taken on record-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company had filed with the Registrar necessary intimation for satisfaction of charge;

 

AND WHEREAS the Registrar has now furnished the Company with a copy of the memorandum of satisfaction;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the said memorandum of satisfaction furnished by the Registrar be taken on record."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Memorandum of satisfaction of charge.-When the charger has given an intimation to the Registrar of Companies of the full payment or satisfaction of the charge under section 138 of the Act and the said Registrar has entered in the Register of Charge a memorandum of satisfaction of charge, the charger, being the company, is entitled to have a copy of such memorandum of satisfaction of charge and the said Registrar must furnish a copy to the company.

 

2. Company's Register of Charge.-On receipt of the copy of the memorandum of satisfaction of charge from the Registrar of Companies, the company should make necessary entries in the Register of Charges kept by it at its registered office under section 143 of the Act.

 

 

Rectification of the register of charges

 

S. 141-Application to Company Law Board for rectification of the register of charges-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company had created a charge in favour of ABC Ltd. by mortgage of plant and machinery for borrowing a sum of Rs. 90 lacs with interest of 12% p.a.;

 

AND WHEREAS the said charge had not been filed with the Registrar within 60 days as laid down in section 125;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made to the Company Law Board for condo nation of delay;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Mr. H. Chakraborti, an Advocate be engaged for making the application to the Company Law Board and for necessary appearance before the Company Law Board for condonation of delay in filing the charge."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Delayed beyond sixty days.-Concerned Regional Bench of Company Law Board should be approached only when the delay in filing the particulars of charge is beyond sixty days from the date of creation of the charge.

 

2. Grounds of delay.-Delay in filing particulars of charge should be shown to be either accidental or due to inadvertence or to some other sufficient cause or is of a nature to prejudice the position of the creditor or shareholders of the company or on any other ground which is just an equitable to grant relief.

 

3. Procedure.-Application should be made to the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board by way of a petition in Form No. 1 with a fee of rupees two hundred.

 

4. Right acquired is not prejudiced.-In case the Company Law Board orders the extension of time for the registration of the charge such order will not prejudice any rights acquired in respect of the property concerned before the charge is actually registered.

 

 

Authority for filing petitions before CLB

 

S. 141-Authorisation for filing of petitions before Company Law Board/Bench-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that Shri OPM and Shri SKP, Directors of the Company be and are hereby jointly and severally authorised to file a petition as required under section 141 of the Companies Act, 1956 before the Northern Region Bench of the Company Law Board under the provisions of the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 for seeking extension of time and/or condonation of delay in filing the particulars of charges with the Registrar of Companies, NCT of Delhi and Haryana created on the assets of the Company by way of second charge in favour of Punjab National Bank for Rs. 2002,050/- towards interest free loan obtained by the Company vide agreement, dated 20-7-2002.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri OPM and Shri SKP, Directors of the Company be and are hereby jointly and severally authorised to sign necessary documents, affirm execute and file affidavits, applications or any other documents or paper in connection therewith and to do all such acts, deeds, or things as may be considered necessary for the purposes of filing of the aforesaid petition and disposal thereof, including make corrections and alterations in the petition and application."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Memorandum of Appearance.-Once the board resolution is passed a Memorandum of Appearance in Form No. 5 of the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 should be filed with the Bench Office, along with a certified true copy of the Board Resolution.

 

2. Jurisdiction of the Company Law Board.-The application for rectification of register of charges should be made to the concerned regional bench of the Company Law Board, depending on the situation of the registered office of the company. There are four regional benches at Calcutta, Mumbai, Chennai and New Delhi.

 

3. Extension not granted.-Extension of time for filing particulars of charge not to be granted when winding up of the company was imminent. If the delay was condoned it would defeat the interests of other creditors. Ravi Constructions v. ROC & Another, (2000) 100 Com Cases 509 (CLB-SR).

 

 

Extension of time for filing particulars of charge with ROC

 

S. 141-Application to the Company Law Board for extension of time for fil­ing particulars of charge with the Registrar of Companies-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the charge created by the company in favour of _________________ its Bankers having not been registered by the Reg­istrar of Companies __________________ on account of delay in filing the particulars of charge, the Board hereby accords its approval to the making of an application to the Company Law Board for grant of ex­tension for filing the said charge.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri ____________________ Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to present, sign and verify the application in terms of Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 and to appoint an Advocate for representing the Company before the Com­pany Law Board and to do all such acts and things as may be consid­ered necessary or expedient in this regard."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Remedies available under section 141.-The application under section 141 of the Act can be made in respect of omission to register, to give intimation and omission or mis-statement of any particulars and not for validity of any charge and the Company Law Board is not empowered to go into the validity of a charge in section 141 proceedings. Times Bank Ltd. v. Shri Sharda Parlneshwari Textiles Ltd., [2000] 101 Com. Cases 412 (CLB).

 

2. Delay contemplated by section is delay due to omission to rile particulars of charge in time.-The delay contemplated by the section is delay due to the omission to file the particulars of the charge in time and not the delay on the part of Registrar in registering the charge. (Siva Sankara Panicker (CX) v. Kerala Financial Corpn., (1980), 50 Com Cases 817 (Ker)).

 

3. Application to Company Law Board.-The application under section 141(1)/(3) of the Act is to be filed before the Company Law Board as in Form No. 1 of Annexure II to the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 along with a fee of Rs. 200/-and accompanied by the following documents.

 

(1) Certified true copy of the agreement creating, modifying the charge as the case may be.

(2) Certified true copy of the resolution envisaged by section 292(l)(b) or (c) and section 293(l)(d), as may be applicable.

(3) Affidavit verifying the petition.

(4) Bank draft evidencing payment of application fee.

(5) Memorandum of appearance with copy of Board Resolution or the executed Vakalatnama as the case may be.

 

 

Inspection of copies of instruments creating charges and

Company's register of charges

 

S. 144-Inspection of copies of instruments creating charges and Company's register of charges-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the Company is a creditor of M/s. ABC Ltd., and a sum of Rs. 30 lacs is due from the said Company;

 

AND WHEREAS it is reportedly understood that the said Company had created a charge in favour of XYZ Ltd. by mortgaging its plant and machinery to the tune of Rs. 40 lacs.;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that Mr. A, Secretary of the Company be directed to make inspection of the copies of the instruments creating charge as also the register of charges kept by the Company during business hours within the reasonable restrictions as the said Company may impose, at the registered office of the Company;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that an application be made to the Company Law Board compelling immediate inspection of the copies of the instruments as also the register of charges in case the Company does not co-operate in making available the same to the Secretary of the Company deputed for inspection."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Inspection fee.-No inspection fee can be charged by any company if the application is made by creditor or by member of the company. But if the inspection is done by any person other than a creditor or a member of the company, then inspection fee of rupees ten per inspection will be charged.

 

2. Time of inspection.-Inspection should be allowed by the company during business hours, but subject to such reasonable restriction as the company in general meeting may impose, so that not less than two hours in each day are allowed for inspection.

 

3. Procedure.-Application should be made to the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board to compel an immediate inspection. This application should be made by way of a petition in writing and should be in Form No. 1 of the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 along with a fee of rupees two hundred.

 

4. Penalty.-If inspection is refused by any company, then every officer of the company who is in default will be liable to be punished with fine which may extend to rupees fifty and with a further fine which may extend to rupees two hundred for every day during which the refusal continues. [Section 144(3)]

 

5. Compounding of offence.-The fine of rupees fifty for contravention of provisions of section 144(3) is compoundable by the Regional Director concerned as per section 621A(l)(b). If the fine for continuing offence exceeds beyond rupees five thousand then application for compounding of offence will lie before the concerned Regional Bench of Company Law Board under section 621A(l)(a).

 

Registered office of the company (S. 146)

 

The situation of registered office of a company determines its domicile for all purposes. Dalmer Co. v. Continental Tyre etc. Co., (1916) 2 AC 307. The expression 'local limits' in section 146 of the Companies Act, 1956, shall be taken to mean both the local body limits and the postal limits and where two do not coincide, the wider of the two. Department's Circular No. 19/72, dated 26th June, 1972.

 

 

Registered office of the company

 

S. 146-Situation of Registered office of the company to be notified-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the registered office of the company be situated at Dhantoli, Nagpur-440 012, and that the Secretary of the Company be instructed to sign and file in Form No. 18 notice of situation of registered office with the Registrar of Companies, Maharashtra, pursuant to section 146 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that a name plate or board be affixed at the registered office and that the company's name and address of the registered office be used or mentioned in legible character in all business letters, in all its bill heads and letter paper and in all its notices and other official publications, etc. pursuant to section 147 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Publication of name without the word "Limited" and non-indication of address an offence.-Under S. 147, it is an offence to hold out to the public the name of the company without mentioning the word "Limited" or without indicating the registered office.

 

2. Section 631 provides penalty for improper use of word "Limited".-Under S. 631, it is an offence to represent any trade or business as "Limited" while in fact, it is not so.

 

3. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with the requirements of section 146, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of upto Rs. 500/- for every day during which the default continues.

 

 

Registered office of the company

(Another format)

 

S.146-  Situation of Registered office of the company and fixation of name plate thereof-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that w.e.f. 31st July, 2002, the registered office of the company be situated at No. 20, Industrial Area, Kirti Nagar, New Delhi- 110015.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to file necessary return in Form No. 18 with the Registrar of Companies, Delhi and Haryana pursuant to section 146 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the sign/name board be affixed at the registered office with the name of the company and address in letters easily legible both in English and Hindi and that the address of the registered office be mentioned in all letter heads, notices, and other official publications, as also all other documents pursuant to the provisions contained in section 147 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Passing of Board Resolution.-Ensure to pass the above resolutions at the first meeting of the Board of Directors.

 

2. Affixation of Board showing name and address of registered office.-The Board showing the name of the company with the address of the registered office of the company has to be affixed at all the places wherever the company carries on business.

 

3. Personal liability of officers in default.-The provisions contained in section 147 of the Act are to be strictly complied with. In case of default in complying with the provisions of this section, the officer in default shall be punishable with fine which may extend to Rs. 5,000/- and shall also be personally liable to the holders of bills of exchange, hundis, promissory notes etc. unless it is duly paid by the company.

 

4. Filing of Form No. 18 with Registrar.-Ensure to file return in Form No. 18 with the Registrar of Companies concerned within thirty days.

 

5. Domicile.-The situation of registered office of a company determines its domicile for all purposes. Dalmer Co. v. Continental Tyre etc. Co., (1916) 2 AC 307.

 

6. Expression "Local Limits"-Meaning.-The expression "local limits" in section 146 of the Companies Act, 1956, shall be taken to mean both the local body limits and the postal limits and where two do not coincide, the wider of the two. Department's Circular No. 19/72, dated 26th June, 1972.

 

 

Change of registered office

 

S. 146-Change of registered office-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the registered office of the company be shifted from ________ to ________ and that the days and hours during which the registered office is accessible to the public shall be 10.30 a.m. to 3.30 p.m. except Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays, and that the Secretary be instructed to file a notice of the change of the registered office with the Registrar of Companies within thirty days."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Removal of registered office from one place to another within same city and filing of return with Registrar.-Removal of the registered office from one place to another in the same city, town or village does not require consent of the members of the company at a General Meeting. A notice of such change, after the Board Resolution should be filed with the Registrar of Companies within thirty days of the change.

 

No company shall change the place of its registered office from one place to another within a state unless it is confirmed by the Regional Director. (Section 17A)

 

2. Change of registered office outside local limits & filing of return with Registrar.-A company, if it desires to change the registered office outside the local limits of any city, town or village, where the office is situated, can do so on the authority of a Special Resolution. Notice of change in the situation of the registered office should be given in Form No. 18.

 

3. Expression "Local Limits"-Meaning.-The expression 'local limits' used in section 146(2)(a) must be understood to mean both the local body limits and the postal limits and where they differ from one another, the wider of the two limits will be taken. (Department’s Circular- No. 19/72, dated 26th June, 1972).

 

4. Expression "Language in general use"-Meaning.-The expression 'languages in general use' appearing in section 147(l)(a) means the local language of that particular State where the registered office is situated and not English language.

 

5. Words "Official publication" not applicable to issue of share certificates.-The words 'official publication' used in section 147(l)(c) do not apply to the issue of share certificates. (Circular No. 3/73 (8/ 10(147) 72-CL-V), dated 3-2-1973).

 

 

Change of situation of registered office

 

S. 146(2)- Change of situation of registered office-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the registered office of the company be shifted from No. 20, Industrial Area, Kirti Nagar, New Delhi- 110 015 to No. 506, Parliament street, New Delhi, effective from 22nd July, 2002.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to file the necessary return with the Registrar of Companies, Delhi and Haryana in Form No. 18 pursuant to Section 146(2) of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that change in the place of registered office be made in the name plates or board affixed at the registered office as also in the letter heads, official publications, documents etc. pursuant to the provisions contained in section 147 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Shifting of registered office in same city.-Where the registered office is shifted from one place to another in the same city, town or village, only Board Resolution is required and approval of the shareholders in the General Meeting is not necessary. But new section 17A inserted by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000, provides that no company shall change the place of its registered office from one place to another within a state which also changes the jurisdiction of one Registrar of Companies to another Registrar of Companies unless it is confirmed by the Regional Director.

 

2. Removal of registered office from one State to another and confirmation of Company Law Board.-When the registered office is removed from one State to an­ other, approval of the shareholders and the confirmation of the same by the Company Law Board is required in terms of section 17 of the Act.

 

3. Filing of returns with Registrar.-Ensure that return in Form No. 18 is filed with the Registrar of Companies concerned within thirty days of the date of shifting of the registered office.

 

4. Change to be carried out by ROC.-1t is not sufficient just to send a notice of change in Form No. 18 to the Registrar of Companies (ROC) but the said ROC should also carry out the change in the register maintained by him under sub-section (2) of section 146. It is not a mechanical act on the part of the ROC to effect the change in the reg­ister but he must be satisfied that the legal requirements have been complied with. Mukund Kaniyalal Patel v. Swarup Shree Yaru (P.) Ltd., (2002) 109 Com Cases 413 (Bom).

 

5. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning inter alia that the company has duly filed the forms as stated in Annexure B to said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed under the Act and the Rules made thereunder as per paragraphs 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 

Publication of name by company

 

S. 147-Publication of name by Company-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the name of the Company including the address of its Registered Office at 14, Princes Street, Calcutta-700001 be affixed after being painted outside the Registered Office as also outside the Sales Office of the Company and the Factory of the Company and kept in a conspicuous position, in letters easily legible both in Bengali language and in English language.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the name of the Company be engraved in legible character on Company's seal.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the name of the Company and its Registered Office be mentioned in legible characters in all business letters, bill heads and letter paper and in all notices and other official publications including bills of exchange, hundies, promissory notes, endorsements, cheques and orders for money or goods purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the company and in all bills of parcels, invoices, receipts and letters of credit of the Company.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby entrusted with the duty of carrying out the aforesaid instructions of the Board."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Three requirements.-A company is required to paint or affix its name and address of its registered office on the outside of every office or place in which its business is carried on, in a conspicuous position, in letters easily legible and in case the language is not one of the languages in general use in that locality then it should also be in one of the languages in general use of that locality. The company should have its name engraven in legible character on its common seal. The company should also have its name and also its registered office mentioned in legible characters in all its business letters, bill heads, letter paper and in all its notices and other official publications and should also have its name so mentioned in all bills of exchange, hundies, promissory notes, endorsements, cheques and orders for money or goods purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the company and in all bills and parcels, invoices, receipts and letters of credit of the company.

 

2. Form of common seal.-The common seal of the company should only be in the metallic form and should not be a rubber stamp. (Letter No. 8/70(147)/64-PR dated 8-121969).

 

3. Penalty.-Non-compliance of the provisions of section 147(l)(a) is punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five hundred for every day during which its name and the address of the registered office is not so kept painted or affixed. Non-compliance of the provisions of section 147(l)(b) and (c) is punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five thousand. If any officer of the company or any person on behalf of the company uses or authorises the use of any seal to be a common seal of the company whereon its name is not properly engraven or issues or authorises the issue of any business letter paper, notice or other official publication of the company wherein name and address of the registered office of the company are not mentioned or signs or authorises to be signed on behalf of the company any bill of exchange, hundi promissory note, endorsement, cheque, etc. wherein the name of the company is not mentioned properly or issues or authorises to issue any bills or parcels, invoices, receipts or letter of credit of the company wherein the name of the company is not mentioned, then such officer or such person will be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five thousand" and such officer or such person shall be further personally liable to the holder of the bill of exchange, hundi, promissory note, cheque or order for money or goods for the amount mentioned therein unless it is duly paid by the company.

 

4. Compounding of offence.-The fine up to rupees fifty thousand for contravention of provisions of section 147(2)(3)(4) is compoundable by the Regional Director concerned as per section 621A(l)(b).

 

 

Publication of subscribed and paid-up capital alongwith

authorised capital

 

S. 148-Publication of subscribed and paid-up capital along with authorised capital-Board Resolution,

 

"RESOLVED that whenever the authorised capital of the company is mentioned in any notice, advertisement or other official publication, or any business letter, bill head or letter paper, such notice, advertisement or other official publication, or such letter, bill head or letter paper shall also contain a statement in an equally prominent position and in equally conspicuous characters, of the amount of the capital which has been subscribed and the amount paid-up."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Subscribed and paid-up share capital.-The company should mention prominently the amount of the share capital which has been subscribed and also the amount of the share capital which is paid-up wherever it mentions the amount of the authorised share capital.

 

2. Authorised share capital.-Section 148 of the Act does not require a copy to satisfy its authorised share capital on its share certificates (Circular No. 8/35 (147)/ 66-CLV dated 13-1-1967).

 

3. Penalty.-For non-compliance of the requirement of section 148(l), the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees ten thousand.

 

4. Compounding of offence.-The fine of rupees ten thousand" for contravention of provisions of section 148(2) is compoundable by the Regional Director as per section 62 1 A(l)(b).

 

 Certificate of commencement of business

 

S. 149-Certificate for commencement of business-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the company had filed with the Registrar a duly verified declaration in the prescribed manner and in the prescribed form provided under Schedule III to the Companies Act, 1956, stating that every Director of the company had paid to the company, on each of the shares taken or contracted to be taken by him in cash;

 

AND WHEREAS the Registrar of Companies, Maharashtra, issued a certificate of commencement of business to the company under reference No ___________ dated the ___________.

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the same be taken on record."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Obtaining of Certificate of commencement of Business.-A public company cannot pursue its object and assume borrowing power without obtaining certificate of commencement of business.

 

2. Private company exempted.-This requirement is not applicable to private companies whether they are subsidiaries of public companies or not. But under section 3(iv)(c) a private company which is a subsidiary of a public company will be treated as a public company.

 

3. Commencement of business significance.-Commencement of any business encompasses not merely the business for which the company is formed but also any transaction including sale, purchase, etc. Kishangarh Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1960 Raj 49. But such acts as filing of prospectus or a statement in lieu of prospectus, making provisional contracts or allotment of shares to the Directors, promoters, etc., immediately after the formation of the company, are outside the scope of section 149.

 

4. Registration with SEBI.-Certificate of commencement of business issued to a public limited company by the Registrar of Companies does not obviate the requirement

of registration under section 12(113) of SEBI Act, 1992 because the purpose of issue of certificate of commencement of business under the Companies Act, 1956 and the object of the requirement of registration under the SEBI Act, 1992 are not same and one of the aforesaid requirements cannot be considered to be a substitute for the other. Phenomenal Plantations Ltd. i,. SEBI, (2002) 48 CLA 250 (SAT).

 

 Certificate of commencement of Business

(Another format)

 

S. 149- Certificate of commencement of Business-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the company having filed with the Registrar of Companies-the Statement in lieu of prospectus, Shri ____________________ Director and Shri ____________________ Secretary of the company be and are hereby jointly authorised to file with the Registrar of Companies a duly verified declaration in the prescribed form stating that every Di­rector of the company had paid to the company on each of the shares taken or contracted to be taken by him and to request the Registrar of Companies to issue the Certificate of commencement of business to the company.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Restriction on commencement of business.-It has to be noted that the language of the section is that the company shall not commence any business. This will imply that the company shall not be bound by any transaction whatever in the nature of business.

 

2. "Commence any business"-Meaning.-"Commence any business" does not mean merely the business for which the company was started, but any transaction including, sale, purchase, etc. [Kishangarh Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. United State of Rajasthan, AIR 1960 Raj 491.

 

3. Writ cannot be issued to cancel commencement certiricate.-A writ cannot be issued to cancel the commencement certificate of a company under the Companies Act [Maluk Mohamed v. Capital Stock Exchange Kerala Ltd., (1991) 72 Com Cases 333 (Ker)].

 

4. Penalty.-If a company commences any business in contravention of sub-section (2A) every person who is responsible for the contravention is without prejudice to any other liability, punishable with fine which may extend to five thousand" rupees for every day during which the contravention continues. The offence is compoundable under section 621A.

 

Register of Members

 

S. 150(l) proviso- Register of members-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the company has converted 30,000 preference of Rs.100/- each into _________ units of stock on _________ 2002.

 

AND WHEREAS the company has also given notice of such conversion of shares into stock to Registrar of Companies, West Bengal;

 

AND WHEREAS pursuant to proviso to sub-section (1) of section 150, the Register of Members of the company should show the amount of stock held by each of the members concerned instead of the shares so converted which were previously held by them;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the Register of Members of the company in respect of the following members be and is hereby show the amount of stock now held by each one of them in place of the preference shares previously held by them in the company.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Prescribed form of Register of Members.-There is no prescribed form of Register of Members but it should contain the details given in section 150(l). Where shares are converted into stock the details of units of stock and the date on which the shares were converted into stock should be given apart from other things.

 

2. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning therein inter alia that the company has kept and maintained the registers as stated in Annexure A to the said Compliance Certificate as per the provisions of the Act and the rules made thereunder and all entries therein have been duly recorded as per paragraph 1 of the Form of Companies Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

3. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with sub-section (1) of section 150, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 500/- for every day during which the default continues.

 

Index of members

 

S. 151-Index of members-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the number of members of the company are more than fifty and in fact, at this moment, run to not less than fifty thousand members;

 

AND WHEREAS it is difficult to identify immediately a particular member in day to day correspondence;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an index of members in the form of card index be kept of the members of the Company and the Secretary of the Company be directed to make necessary alterations in the index as soon as any alteration is made in the register of members;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the index of members be so kept that it is easy to identify the entries relating to a particular member, the index containing sufficient indication to enable the entries pertaining to that member being readily found;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the index be kept in the custody of the Secretary of the Company who is responsible for the custody of the register of members."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Index of register of members.-An index of the names of members of the company should be prepared and entered in the register of members within fourteen days after the date on which any alteration is required to be made in the register of members. Such index is to be prepared only in case the company is having number of members more than fifty. Such index is also required unless the register of members itself is not in such a form as in itself to constitute an index.

 

2. Sufficient indication.-The index as mentioned aforesaid should be prepared and maintained in such a form so that it contains sufficient indication in respect of each member to enable the entries relating to that member in the register of members to be readily found. This index should be kept with the register of members in the registered office of the company or in case the register of members is kept at some place other than the registered office of the company the index should also be kept along with it.

 

3. Penalty.-Non-compliance of the provisions of keeping and maintaining index of register of members of companies having more than fifty members will make the company and every officer of the company who is in default punishable with fine which may extend to rupees five hundred.

 

4. Compoundable offence.-The fine of up to rupees fifty thousand" for contravention of provisions of section 151(4) is compoundable by the Regional Director concerned as per section 621A(l)(b).

 

Index of debenture-holders

 

S. 152(2)-Index of debenture-holders-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the number of debenture-holders of the company are more than fifty thousand;

 

AND WHEREAS it is difficult to locate the particulars of each debenture-holder without the help of an index maintained in this behalf;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an index of debenture holders be maintained in the form of card index and that necessary alterations in the index be made as soon as any alteration is made in the register of debenture-holders;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the index of debenture-holders be maintained by the Secretary of the Company who is responsible for the maintenance of the register of debenture-holders."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Index of register of debenture-holders.-An index of the name of the debenture holders of the company should be prepared and entered in the register of debenture holders within fourteen days after the date on which any alteration is required to be made in the register of debenture-holders. Such index is to be prepared only in case the company is having number of debenture-holders more than fifty. Such index is also required unless the register of debenture- holders itself is in such a form as it in itself constitutes an index.

 

2. Sufficient indication.-The index as mentioned aforesaid should be prepared and maintained in such a form that it contains sufficient indication in respect of each debenture-holder, to enable the entries relating to that debenture- holder in the register of debenture-holders to be readily found. This index should be kept with the register of debenture-holders in the registered office of the company. The index should also be kept along with it.

 

3. Non-applicability.-Provisions of keeping register of debenture-holders and making prescribed entries therein and of keeping index of the names of the debenture-holders where their number is above fifty and the punishment of fine in case of non-compliance of these provisions are not applicable to debenture-holders whose money is payable to the bearers thereof.

 

4. Penalty.-Non-compliance of tile provisions of keeping and maintaining index of register of debenture-holders of companies having more than five hundred debenture holders will make the company and every officer of the company who is in default punishable with fine which may extend to rupees fifty.

 

5. Compounding of offence.-The fine of rupees five hundred for contravention of provisions of section 152(3) is compoundable by the Regional Director concerned as per section 621A(l)(b).

 

Register and Index of beneficial owners maintained by depository

 

S. 152A-Register and Index of beneficial owners maintained by depository-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the shares of the company have dematerialised by order of the Securities and Exchange Board of India dated        ___________ 2002;

 

AND WHEREAS National Securities Depository Ltd. has been appointed as the depository of the company to hold the shares in the dematerialised form with effect from ___________ 2002;

 

NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS RESOLVED that the register and index of beneficial owners maintained by the aforesaid depository under section 11 of the Depositories Act, 1996, be and is hereby deemed to be an index of members for the purposes of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Depositories Act, 1996-This section was inserted by the Depositories Act, 1996 with effect from 20-9-1995 (being the date of promulgation of the Ordinance) providing that the register and index of beneficial owners maintained by a depository under section 11 of the Depositories Act, 1996 shall be deemed to be a register of members or debenture holders, as the case may be, for the purposes of this Act. The amendment was considered necessary as securities held in a depository mode are fungible. Section 11 of the Depositories Act, 1996 provides that every depository shall maintain a register and an index of beneficial owners in the manner provided in sections 150, 151 and 152 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

 

Trust not entered in Register of Members

 

S. 153- Trusts not to be entered in the Register of Members-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the Board of Directors has received a request from Mr. A to enter his name in the register of members of the company;

 

AND WHEREAS the said Mr. A has sent the instrument of transfer with the share certificate to the company for registration;

 

AND WHEREAS the shares in question are subject matter of a perpetual trust authored by the deceased member;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that the shares of the deceased member be and are hereby transmitted in the name of Mr. A.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. No notice of trust.-Section 153 provides that no notice any trust, express or implied or constructive shall be entered on the register of members or debenture holders.

 

2. Concern of the company.-A company should not be concerned as to whether a person holds the shares as a beneficiary himself or for the benefit of someone else and is also not concerned with the terms of the trust and if the trustee had violated the provisons of the trust, it was for the beneficiaries to challenge the same. Jose Paulikken v. Damien Subsidies & Kuries Ltd., (2002) 109 Com Cases 699 (CLB).

 

Closing of Register of Members for bonus shares

 

S. 154-Closing of Register of Members for issue of bonus shares-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Register of Members of the Company be closed from __________ 2002 __________ to __________ 2002 __________ (both days inclu­sive) and that the proposed bonus shares be allotted in the ratio of __________ Equity Shares for every __________ Equity Shares held in the Company in accordance with the resolution adopted by mem­bers at their meeting held on __________ to the members whose names appear in it as on __________, 2002 __________.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby authorised to give notice by advertisement in newspapers in the manner provided in section 154 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Closure of Register of Members.-(a) A company may, after giving not less than seven days' previous notice by advertisement in any newspaper circulating in the district, close the Register of Members or the register of debenture- holders for a total period of forty-five days in each year but not exceeding thirty days at any one time.

(b) Notice should also advise the members to inform the company about change of their address before the record date.

(c) The notice should also indicate that valid transfer deeds should be lodged with the company before the record date to determine entitlement of the bonus/rights issue, dividend, etc.

 

2. Purpose of closure of Register of Members.-For the purpose of ascertaining as to who are members on a particular date, entitled say, to the allotment of bonus shares, rights shares, dividend, etc., it is necessary to keep the share or debenture registers closed for some time so that, a buyer of the shares or debenture has the opportunity to present his share or debenture along with the transfer forms, to the company, for getting his name registered in the Register of Members or debenture ­holders before the notified closing date.

 

3. Closure of Register of Members for declaration of dividend notified along with notice of Annual General Meeting.-Usually, closing of the Register of Members, for the purpose of declaration of dividend, is notified along with the notice of the Annual General Meeting of the company. If the Stock Exchange on which the shares of the company are listed stipulates the dates of closure of Register of Members as also the purposes for which it can be so closed, then those stipulations are to be adhered to.

 

4. Notice of closure must refer to Register of Members or Debenture-holders whether same or different from transfer books/share transfer books.-Section 154 refers specifically to closure of 'Register of Members or Debenture- holders' and not to 'transfer books' or 'share transfer books'. Thus, the notice issued by a company under this section must have reference to the said registers only, whether they are the same or different from 'transfer books' or 'share transfer books'. (Circular No. 8/57(154)/64-PR, dated 30-3-1965).

 

5. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning therein inter alia that the company has closed its register of members from a particular date to a particular date and necessary compliance of section 154 of the Act has been made as per paragraph 5 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

Closing of Register of Members/debenture-holders

 

S. 154-Closing of register of members/debenture-holders-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Register of Members/Debenture-holders of the Company be closed effective from 17th June, 2002 to 30th June, 2002 (both days inclusive) and that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby directed to take necessary action in this connection."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Convening of Board Meeting.-Convene a meeting of the Board of Directors and pass a resolution for the closure of Register of Members/ Debenture- holders.

 

2. Duration for closure of Register of Members.-The register can be closed for a period not exceeding 45 days in each year and thirty days at any one time.

 

3. Advertisement in newspapers.-Ensure to give notice to this effect by advertisement in the newspapers circulating in the district in which the registered office of the company is situated.

 

4. Penalty for default.-In case notice as provided by sub-section (2) of section 154 is not given, the company and every officer of the company who is in default shall be punishable with fine which may extend to Rs. 5,000/- for every day during which the default continues.

 

5. Listed company to intimate Stock Exchange concerned.-Intimate the Stock Exchange in case the company's shares are enlisted on the recognised Stock Exchange and instructions, if any, given by them may also be complied with.

 

6. Period of Notice.-Seven clear days' previous notice" is required to be given for closure of Register of Members and in case the company's shares are registered on the recognised Stock Exchange, at least 21 days' notice is required. Mumbai Stock Exchange requires a notice of 30 days.

 

Keeping of Register of Members outside India

 

S. 157-Keeping of Register of Members outside India-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to section 157 of the Companies Act, 1956, and as authorised by article __________ of the Articles of Associa­tion of the Company, a foreign Register of Members be kept in Lon­don for the members (debenture-holders) resident in United Kingdom and that the Secretary be authorised to file with the Registrar of Com­panies, Maharashtra, a notice of the situation of the office where the register is to be kept."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Filing of notice with Registrar about situation of office where the register is kept.-Opening of foreign register, notifying the situation of the office where such register is kept, any change in the situation of such office or of its discontinuance should within thirty days of the relevant dates, be filed with the Registrar of Companies.

 

2. Penalty for non-filing-If default is made in complying with the aforesaid filing of notice the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 500/- for every day during which the default continues.

 

3. Foreign register part of company's principal Register.-A foreign register is deemed to be part of the company's principal register of members or of debenture-holders, as the case may be.

 

4. Foreign register to be kept open to inspection.-A foreign register has to be kept, be open to inspection, be closed and extracts and copies taken there from in the same way and manner as the 'principal register' of members or debenture-holders [Section 158(2)].

 

5. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning inter alia that the company has duly filed the forms as stated in Annexure B to said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed under the Act and the Rules made there under as per paragraphs 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

Keeping of Register of Members/Debenture-holders outside

India (Another format)

 

Ss. 157-158-Foreign register of members/debenture-holders-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to the provisions contained in section 157 of the Companies Act, 1956, the Board of Directors of the Company be and is hereby authorised to keep a foreign register of members and debenture holders at its Branch Office in USA with effect from 1st July, 2002.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby directed to notify the situation of foreign register of Members/Debenture-holders to the Registrar of Companies, NCT of Delhi and Haryana and keep duplicate copy thereof at the registered office of the company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Articles to empower company for keeping foreign register.-Ensure that power is given in the Articles of Association of the company for keeping a foreign register of Members[Debenture- holders. If not, amend the Articles of Association to take the power.

 

2. Foreign register part of principal register.-Foreign register of Members/Debenture-holders shall be deemed to be a part of the principal register of the company and every duplicate of foreign register required to be kept at the registered office of the company in India shall for all purposes of the Companies Act, 1956 also be deemed to be part of the principal register. [Section 158(l) & (5)]

 

3. Approval of Reserve Bank/Stock Exchange, if required, be obtained.-In case approval of the Reserve Bank of India/Stock Exchange or under the local laws of the foreign country where the register is kept is to be obtained, the same should be taken before the register is kept there.

 

4. Filing of return with Registrar about situation of foreign register.-Ensure to file return about the situation of foreign register with the Registrar of Companies or the discontinuance thereof within thirty days of such a change.

 

5. Provisions relating to principal register apply to foreign register.-The provisions relating to the company's principal Register of Members shall apply mutatis mutandis to the foreign register also.

 

6. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with sub-section (4) of section 158, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 500/-.

 

Certification of Annual Return

 

S.161(l)-Appointment of Secretary in whole-time practice for certifying an­nual return-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that Shri XY, Secretary in whole time practice be and is     hereby appointed at an annual retainer of Rs __________ to sign the an­nual returns of the company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Signing of Annual Return.-The Companies Amendment Act, 1988, inserted a proviso to section 161(l) making the signing of a copy of the annual return of a listed company by a Secretary in whole-time practice mandatory.

 

2. Significance of such requirement.-Such signing by a Company Secretary in practice is called for to ensure verification of the condition of the company stated in annual return.

 

3. Mandatory ceiling on Certification of Annual Return.-It has been notified by the Institute of Company Secretaries of India that such signing of Annual Return should be limited to thirty companies per company secretary in practice.

 

4. Penalty for default.-If a company fails to comply with any of the provisions contained in 161, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 500/- for every day during which the default continues.

 

Destruction of books, documents and other records

 

S. 163(1A)- Destruction of records-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Company do destroy the books, documents and other records of the Company which are __________ years old.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be directed to get a list prepared of the books, documents and other records of the Company before they are destroyed and keep the said list under his safe custody."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Board Meeting.-Hold a Board Meeting and take a decision about the destruction of the books, documents and other records not required for reference by the company.

 

2. Provisions of section 209(A-4) of the Act to be kept in view.-Section 209(4-A) provides that the books of account of every company relating to a period of not less than eight years immediately preceding the current year together with the vouchers relevant to any entry in such books of account shall be preserved in good order.

 

3. Provisions of Income-tax Act to be kept in view.-The provisions of section 149 of the Income-tax Act shall be kept in view before taking a decision for destruction of documents, records etc.

 

4. Check the Companies (Preservation and Disposal of Records) Rules, 1966.-The Companies (Preservation and Disposal of Records) Rules, 1966 should also be checked up before taking a decision for destruction of records of the company.

 

Destruction of records

(Another format)

 

S. 163(1A)- Destruction of records-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the following records of the Company be and are hereby destroyed in accordance with the Companies (Preservation and Disposal of Records) Rules, 1966.

 

SI. NO.                                        Destruction of Records

                        1. _____________________________________________________

                        2. _____________________________________________________

            3. _____________________________________________________

           

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri ______________________ Secretary of the Company be authorised to take necessary steps to implement the destruction of the aforesaid records and make the necessary entries in the Register of Records destroyed."

 

PRACTICE NOTES -

 

1. Prescribed Provisions.-The Companies (Preservation and Disposal of Records) Rules, 1966 provide for the destruction of the records of the company. A register of records destroyed should also be maintained in the form prescribed.

 

2. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning inter alia that the company has duly filed the forms as stated in Annexure B to said Compliance Certificate with the Registrar of Companies within the time prescribed under the Act and the Rules made thereunder as per paragraphs 2 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 Inspection of Register of Members/Debenture-holders (S. 163(2))

 

The right of inspection is a statutory right given by the Act and cannot be objected to on the ground of any mala fide motive on the part of the members seeking inspection.

 

A debenture- holder is not entitled to a detailed inspection of the records, registers and books of account of the company. Narotamdas T Toprani v. Mumbai Dyeing & Mfg. Company Limited, (1986) 3 Comp LJ 179 at 189 (Bom).

 

 inspection of Register of Members/Debenture Holders

 

S. 163(2)-Inspection of Register of Members and Debenture Holders Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Register of Members and the Register of Debenture-Holders and their indices, copies of all annual returns and copies of the certificates and documents annexed to those returns be kept open for inspection at (Here give the address at which these are kept), by the persons entitled thereto and in the manner provided under section 163(2) of the Companies Act, 1956, between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. on any working day unless they are closed under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956, or the Articles of Association of the Company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Place of keeping and inspection of registers and returns.-Under section 163, Register of Members and debenture- holders and copies of all annual returns with their enclosures must be kept at the registered office of the company and must also be accessible to members and debenture- holders without fee and to any other person with a fee of one rupee, for every inspection. They are also allowed to take extracts or copies from those registers and returns. If these are to be kept at any place other than the registered office of the company, then the place must be approved by a Special Resolution of the company and a copy thereof filed with the concerned Registrar of Companies.

 

2. Penalty for default.-If any inspection or the making of any extract required under section 163 is refused or if any copy required under it is not sent within a period of 10 days exclusive of non-working days commencing on the day next after the day on which the requirement is received by the company, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable in respect of each offence with fine of up to Rs. 500/- for every day during which the refusal or default continues.

 

Inspection of Register of Members/Debenture-holders

(Another format)

 

S. 163(2)-Inspection of Register of Members/Debenture-holders-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Managing Director of the Company be and is hereby empowered to keep open for inspection the Register of Members/Debenture- holders, copies of annual returns as also the copies of certificates and documents annexed to the returns by members or debenture-holders entitled to inspect in pursuance of section 163(2) of the Companies Act, 1956, on all working days between 2. p.m. to 5 p.m. effective from lst January, 2002.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Managing Director of the Company be and is hereby also empowered to allow such members to make extracts from any register, index etc. without charging any fee and if copies of any such document is required by them furnish the same on payment of the prescribed sum for every hundred words or fractional part thereof."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Members' and debenture- holder's right of inspection.-The members and debenture-holders are entitled to inspect the registers etc. or take extract there from free of charge.

 

2. Power of Board to put restrictions on inspection.-The Board has the power to put reasonable restriction on the right of inspection by members/debenture- holders.

 

3. Any person allowed to inspect documents on payment of fee.-Any other person can also be allowed to inspect the documents on payment of fee to be decided by the Board.

 

4. Right of inspection a statutory right.-The right of inspection is a statutory right given by the Act and cannot be objected to on the ground of any mala fide motive on the part of the members seeking inspection.

 

5. Debenture-holder not entitled to detailed inspection of records.-A debenture holder is not entitled to a detailed inspection of the records, registers and books of account of the company. Narotamdas T Toprani v. Mumbai Dyeing & Mfg. Company Limited, (1986) 3 Comp LJ 179 at 189 (Bom).

 

Compelling immediate inspection by Company Law Board

 

S. 163(6)-Application to Company Law Board for an order of inspection-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the company is a member of ABC Co. Ltd. hold­ing __________ equity shares of Rs. 10/- each in the share capital of that company;

 

AND WHEREAS a duly authorised official of the company went to that company's registered office on __________ 2002 to inspect its register of members, indexes, returns and copies of certificates and documents required to be annexed to its annual and to make extracts from them and also asked for a copy of some of them on payment of the pre­scribed fee;

 

AND WHEREAS that company refused such inspection, and making of extracts and the copy asked for has not been send within the required time provided in sub-section (4) of section 163;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made to the Company Law Board, Eastern Region Bench, Calcutta for an order compelling an immediate inspection of the document and for a direction that the extract required shall forthwith be allowed to be taken by an authorised person of the company and also that copies required shall forthwith be sent to the company.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to make file of the said application and to take all steps and actions that may be necessary in connection therewith or ancillary or incidental thereto.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Application to CLB.-The application to the Company Law Board, should be made by way of a petition in Form 1 given in Annexure II to the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991. The said application should be accompanied by documentary evidence if any showing the refusal of the other company along with affidavit verifying the petition.

 

2. Application Fee.-Application fee of Rs. 100/- should be paid by way of Bank Draft drawn in favour of Pay and Accounts officer, Department of Company Affairs, New Delhi/Mumbai/Calcutta/Chennai as the case may be depending on the region at which the petition is filed as per Company Law Board (Fees on Applications of Petitions) Rules, 1991.

 

Registers to be Evidence (S. 164)

 

Section 164 provides that the Register of Members, the Register of Debenture Holders and the Annual Returns, Certificates and Statements referred to in sections 159, 160 and 161 shall be prima facie evidence of any matters directed or authorised to be inserted therein by the Act. A company registering share certificates in favour of the transfer trying to undo such registration for non-cancellation of stamps subsequently was estopped by the Company Law Board from questioning the validity of the transfer on the ground of non-cancellation of stamps. Kshovnish Chowdhury v. Kero Rajendra Monolithics Ltd., (2002) 1 Comp LJ 552 (CLB).

 

 Statutory report (S. 165)

 

The statutory meeting must be held after one month or before the expiry of six months from the date on which the company is entitled to commence business.

 

The notice calling the meeting must specify the meeting as the 'Statutory Meeting. Gardner v. Iredale, (1912) 1 Ch 700. The provisions of section 165 do not apply to a private company. However, the exemption in sub-section (10) of section 165 of the Act does not extend to any private company which is a banking company. See section 49 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949. This section does not apply to a Government company. Notification GSR 578(E), dated 16th July, 1985.

 

Statutory Report and Statutory Meeting

 

S. 165- Statutory report and statutory meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to section 165 of the Companies Act, 1956, the draft statutory report produced at this meeting under the signature of the Chairman thereof, be and is hereby approved and that the statutory meeting of the Company be convened at __________ the regis­tered office of the Company, on __________ the __________, 2002 __________ at __________ a.m/p.m., and that the Secretary be instructed to circulate copies of such report to all the members of the company, and deliver a certified copy of the statutory report to the Registrar of Companies forthwith after sending copies thereof to the members for registration.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be directed to prepare a list of members showing therein the names, addresses and occupation of the members of the Company and number of shares held by them respectively and produce such list before the members at the statutory meeting, as convened, for the perusal of any member during the continuance of such meeting pursuant to section 165(6) of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Time of Holding Statutory Meeting.-Every public company limited by shares and every public company limited by guarantee and having share capital must, within a period of not less than one month nor more than six months from the date at which the company is entitled to commence business, hold a General Meeting of the members of the company, called the statutory meeting.

 

2. Statutory Report.-Pursuant to section 165(2), the Board should send the statutory report to the members at least twenty-one days before the meeting.

 

3. Contents of Statutory Report.-Statutory report must contain the information referred to in sub-section (3) of that section.

 

4. Certification of Statutory Report.-The statutory report must be certified as correct by not less than two Directors of the company, one of whom must be the Managing Director, where there is one and be filed with the Registrar in Form No. 22.

 

5. Requirements with Listed Companies.-Three copies of the notice for holding the statutory meeting where the company is listed on a recognised Stock Exchange, must be sent to the Stock Exchange.

 

6. Duty of Listed Companies.-If the company is listed on a recognised Stock Exchange, six copies of the statutory report should be sent to the Stock Exchange concerned and a copy each of the report must also be sent to all the recognised Stock Exchanges in India as soon as it is issued.

 

7. Business to be transacted at Statutory Meeting.-The statutory meeting should be held on the appointed date to transact the following business:

 

(a) Producing a list showing the names, addresses and occupations of the members and the number of shares held by each of them and keeping the list open and accessible to members during the meeting (Section 165(6)).

(b) Discussing the resolution for which any of the members has given notice. If no notice was given, the members would still be at liberty to discuss any matter relating to the formation of the company or arising out of the statutory report, but without passing any resolution (Section 165(7)).

(c) Approving and adopting the statutory report.

 

8. Adjournment.-The statutory meeting can also be adjourned under Section 165(8) and the adjourned meeting will have the same powers of an original meeting.

 

9. Penalty.-If any default is made in complying with the provisions of section 165, every director or other officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 5,000/-.

 

Statutory Report and Statutory Meeting

(Another format)

 

S. 165-Statutory report and statutory meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that subject to the approval of the shareholders pursuant to the provisions of section 165 of the Companies Act, 1956, the draft of the statutory report placed before the Board and duly initialled by the Chairman for the purposes of identification, be and is hereby approved.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the statutory report be certified as correct on behalf of the Board by Shri XYZ, Managing Director and Shri ABC, Director of the Company for submission to the company's Auditors for their report thereon.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Statutory Meeting of the shareholders of the Company be convened on Wednesday, the 10th July, 2002 at 11. 30 hours at the registered office of the company.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby authorised to issue notice calling the Statutory Meeting of the shareholders of the Company and circulate the statutory report along with the notice of the meeting to all the shareholders of the Company and deliver a certified copy of the statutory report to the Registrar of Companies, NCT of Delhi and Haryana, forthwith after sending copies thereof to the shareholders of the company, for registration."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Statutory Report.-The statutory report shall be as per Form No. 22 prescribed under the Act.

 

2. Statutory Meeting.-The statutory meeting should be held after one month or before the expiry of six months from the date on which the company is entitled to commence business.

 

3. Notice of Statutory Meeting.-Give 21 days clear notice for convening the Statutory Meeting of the company to all the shareholders of the company including the company's Auditors. The meeting can be convened on shorter notice when agreed to by all members entitled to attend and vote.

 

4. Must specify Statutory Meeting.-The notice calling the meeting must specify the meeting as the 'Statutory Meeting'. Gardner v. Iredale, (1912) 1 Ch 700. Ensure that the proxy form is sent to every member along with the notice of the meeting.

 

5. List of Members.-Draw a list of members showing their names, addresses and occupations and the number of shares held by them respectively for perusal of the members during the continuance of the meeting.

 

6. Matters discussed at the meeting.-The members of the company present at the meeting shall be at liberty to discuss any matter relating to the formation of the company or arising out of the statutory report, whether previous notice of the same has been given or not. However, they cannot pass any resolution of which notice has not been given in accordance with the Act.

 

7. Default in giving Statutory Report.-If default is made in delivering the statutory report to the Registrar of Companies or in holding the Statutory Meeting within the stipulated period, the company can be wound up compulsorily (Section 433(b)).

 

8. Requirements of Listed Companies.-Where the shares of the company are enlisted on any recognised Stock Exchange, six copies of the notice for holding the Statutory Meeting along with the statutory report be sent to the Stock Exchange concerned. The copies of the statutory report should also be sent to all the recognised Stock Exchanges in India.

 

9. Adjournment of Statutory Meeting.-The Statutory Meeting can be adjourned and at any adjourned meeting any resolution of which notice has been given in accordance with the provisions of the Act can be passed and the adjourned meeting shall have the same power as the original meeting.

 

10. Exemptions.-The provisions of section 165 do not apply to a private company. This section does not apply to a Government company. Notification GSR 587(E), dated 16th July, 1956. The exemption in sub-section (10) of section 165 of the Act does not extend to any private company which is a banking company. See section 49 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949.

 

11. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with the provisions of section 165 every director or other officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 5,000/-.

 

Annual General Meeting (S. 166)

 

On 30th June and 31st December of each year banks do not transact business as these two days are utilised for half yearly closing of accounts. These days will not be treated as public holidays for the purposes of section 166 and an Annual General Meeting may validly be held on either of these days. Department's letter No. 8/166/80-CL. V, dated 2nd March, 1981. The dates for closing of accounts have now been shifted to 31st March and 30th September.

 

There is a clear statutory duty on the Directors to call the meeting whether or not the accounts, the consideration of which is only one of the matters to be dealt with at an Annual General Meeting are ready or not. Re, El Sombrero Ltd. (1958) 3 All ER 1 (Ch D) at 6. The fact that the company did not function is also no excuse. Madan Gopal Dey v. State of West Bengal, (1968) 2 Comp LJ 22. For the purposes of computing time limit specified in Explanation to section 159, the time within which the Annual General Meeting, is required to be held is governed solely by section 166 and section 210 is not relevant in such cases. Department's Circular No. 2/79 (F. No. 8/35(159)/(166) 78-CL.V) 24/38/79 CL. II, dated 15th September, 1979. Each section 166 and 210 imposes independent obligations on the company and the time fixed in section 210 cannot override the time limit fixed in section 166 as is evident from the provisions of section 210 itslef. Ador-samia Ltd. & Others, v. Indocan Engineering Systems Ltd. & Others, (2000) 100 Com Cases 370 (CLB-PB). The adjourned Annual General Meeting must, however, be held within the maximum time-limit allowed by this section. Subai Dutta & Sons Pvt. Ltd. v. Asstt. Registrar of Companies, W.B., (1986) 3 Comp LJ 73. The fact of not holding the Annual General Meeting cannot be pleaded in defence to a prosecution , for failure to file the balance-sheet etc. under section 220. Each of them is an independent requirement and default to comply with either constitutes a separate offence punishable separately. Registrar of Companies v. R.P. Nanda, 1977 Tax LR 1610 (Orissa-DB). The delay in the completion of the audit of the annual accounts of a company should not ordinarily constitute a special reason justifying the grant of extension of time for holding its Annual General Meeting. (Press Note, dated 29th January, 1959). If the Board of Directors fix another date for the adjourned General Meeting, a notice is to be given to the members in accordance with the provisions of the Act governing notices of General Meeting. (File No. 8/16(1)/61-PR).

 

 

Convening of Annual General Meeting

 

S. 166-Convening of Annual General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Seventh Annual General Meeting of the members of the Company be held on Monday, the 4th July 2002, at 11.00 hours at the registered office of the company at 46, Parliament Street, New Delhi- 110 001.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the notice of calling the Annual General Meeting along with Explanatory Statements pursuant to section 173(l) in respect of Special Business to be transacted there at as placed before the meeting be and is hereby approved and the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to send the same to the members of the Company as also to all others entitled to receive the notice."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Holding of Annual General Meeting each year in addition to other General Meeting.-Every company must hold each year in addition to any other General Meeting, an Annual General Meeting and specify as such in the notice calling the meeting.

 

2. Period within which first Annual General Meeting to be held.-The company may convene its first Annual General Meeting within eighteen months from the date of its incorporation. However, there should not be a gap of more than fifteen months between one Annual General Meeting and the next and one meeting should be held in each calendar year. Where the first AGM of a company was postponed beyond the prescribed period of 18 months under the mistaken notion that the meeting if held, would be against the spirit of a judgement in some other case, and such failure was held to be a continuing default as there was no justification for the postponement of a statutory requirement. T V. Mathew v. Nadukkara Agro Processing Co. (P.) Ltd., (2002) 108 Corn Cases 130 (Ker).

 

3. Power of Registrar to allow extension of time.-The Registrar of Companies has power to allow extension of time up to three months for holding the Annual General Meeting,. In case of Government companies, the power to allow extension of time is vested in the Central Government, the Department of Company Affairs. There is no prescribed form for this application".

 

4. Meeting to be held on working day and not on public holiday.-The meeting must be held on working days during business hours. The meeting cannot be held on public holidays declared under the Negotiable Instruments Act. The meeting held during business hours can continue beyond business hours. In other words, the meeting has to be convened during the business hours only.

 

5. 1st April and 30th September not public holidays.-On 30th June and 31st December of each year (now 31st March and 30th September) banks do not transact business as these two days are utilised for half yearly closing of accounts. These days will not be treated as public holidays for the purpose of section 166 and an Annual General Meeting may validly be held on either of these days. (Department's letter No. 8/166/80CL. V, dated 2nd March, 1981).

 

6. Statutory duty of director to call Annual General Meeting whether Annual Accounts ready or not.-There is a clear statutory duty on the Directors to call the meeting whether or not the accounts, the consideration of which is only one of the matter to be dealt with at an Annual General Meeting are ready or not. Re, El Sombrero Ltd., (1958) 3 All ER 1 (Ch D) at 6.

 

7. Company functioned or not is no excuse.-The fact that the company did not function is also not excuse. Madan Gopal Dey v. State of West Bengal, (1968) 2 Comp LJ 22.

 

8. Time within which Annual General Meeting to be held governed by section 166.-For the purposes of computing time limit specified in Explanation to section 159, the time within which the Annual General Meeting is required to be held is governed solely by section 166 and section 210 is not relevant in such cases. (Department's Circular No. 2/79 (F. No. 8/35(159)/(166) 78-CL.V) 24/38/78 CL. 11, dated 15th September, 1979).

 

9. Holding of adjourned Annual General Meeting on holiday.-The adjourned Annual General Meeting must, however, be held within the maximum time-limit allowed by this section. Subai Dutta & Sons Pvt. Ltd. v. Asstt. Registrar of Companies, W.B., (1986) 3 Comp LJ 73.

 

10. Default in holding Annual General Meeting and filing accounts separate offences.-The fact of not holding the Annual General Meeting cannot be pleaded in defence to a prosecution for failure to file the balance-sheet etc. under section 220. Each of them is an independent requirement and default to comply with either constitutes a separate offence punishable separately. Registrar of Companies v. R.P. Nanda, 1977 Tax LR 1610 (Orissa-DB).

 

11. Delay in completion of audit not a justification for grant of extension of time.-The delay in the completion of the audit of the annual accounts of a company should not ordinarily constitute a special reason justifying the grant of extension of time for holding its Annual General Meeting. (Press Note, dated 29th January, 1959).

 

12. Holding adjourned meeting on holiday.-There is no contravention of section 166(2) if the adjourned meeting comes to be accidentally held on a holiday.

 

13. Notice of adjourned General Meeting.-If the Board of Directors fix another date for the adjourned General Meeting, a notice is to be given to the members in accordance with the provisions of the Act governing notices of General Meeting. (File No. 8/16(1)/61 -PR).

 

14. Penalty for default.-If default is made in holding a meeting of the company in accordance with section 166, the company, and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 50,000/- and in case of continuing default with a further fine of up to Rs. 2,500/- for every day after the first during which such default continues. (Section 168).

 

Notice of Annual General Meeting and fixation of its date

 

S. 166-Approval of notice of Annual General Meeting and fixation of date thereof-Board Meeting

 

"RESOLVED that draft notice for convening the Annual General Meeting of the Company for the year 2001-2002 be and is hereby approved.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri SKM, Managing Director of the Company, be and is hereby authorised to fix the date, time and place of the meeting."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Notice of Meeting.-The notice calling the meeting must specify the meeting as the Annual General Meeting.

 

2. Convening of Annual General Meeting.-The General Meeting of the company can be called only on the authority of a resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

3. Cancelling or postponing of convened meeting.-Once a notice of the meeting is given it cannot be adjourned by a subsequent notice. The Board of Directors does not have this power. The proper course will be to hold a meeting and resolve the adjournment of it to any future convenient date.

 

4. Voting Rights at AGM.-The right to vote at the Annual General Meeting should be reckoned as on the last day for holding the meeting and persons who become members thereafter by virtue of a Government order were not entitled to vote at the postponed meeting. C. M. Varkeychan v. TV Mathew, (2002) 108 Com Cases 159 (Ker-DB).

 

5. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning therein inter alia that the annual general meeting for the financial year was held on a specified date after giving due notice to the members of the company and the resolutions passed thereat were duly recorded in the minutes book maintained for the purpose as per paragraph 6 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

 Convening of Annual General Meeting and approving draft

notice thereof

 

S. 166-Convening of Annual General Meeting and approval to draft notice thereof-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Annual General Meeting of the company be convened to take place at the registered office of the company on _________ the _________ 2002 _________ at _________ a.m./p.m. and that the draft notice in respect thereof placed at this meeting be approved and that the Secretary be and is hereby authorised to issue the notice of the Annual General Meeting, as per the draft placed below, to the mem­bers of the company as also others entitled to receive the notice."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Holding of Annual General Meeting in addition to other general meeting.-Pursuant to section 166 every company is required each year, to hold, in addition to any other General Meeting, an Annual General Meeting and specify the meeting as such in the notice convening such meeting. Although the first Annual General Meeting of the company may be held within eighteen months from the date of incorporation, normally, there should not be a gap of more than fifteen months between one Annual General Meeting and the next and it should be held in each year.

 

2. Power of Registrar to extend time.-The Registrar may allow extension of time for three months on an application made to him by the company. This extension can be given only for subsequent Annual General Meetings. There is no prescribed form for this application".

 

3. Meeting to be held during business hours not on public holiday.-Pursuant to section 166(2), an Annual General Meeting is required to be held during the usual business hours of the company other than on a public holiday (or Saturday where according to the standing instruction of the company, Saturday has been declared as a non-working day for usual business purposes), at the registered office of the company or any other place within the city, town or village in which the registered office is situated.

 

4. Fixing of date and time of Annual General Meeting.-Although there is a provision in this section for the companies for fixing the time of Annual General Meeting by their Articles of Association, the companies as a matter of practice, fix the date and time of the Annual General Meeting by Board resolutions is as per the specimen resolution given above. Members, if thus so desire, can fix the date and time for subsequent Annual General Meetings by passing a resolution in the Annual General Meeting.

 

5. Power of Board to cancel or postpone holding of Annual General Meeting.-On the question whether or not the Board of Directors who usually and normally convene Annual General Meeting can cancel or postpone the holding of such meeting once fixed, there is a decision of the Allahabad High Court in Rajpal Singh v. State of U.P., (1968) 1 Comp LJ 22, wherein it has been held that the Board has power for such an action though it cannot be exercised except for bona fide and proper reasons. The more appropriate course would be for the Board not to insist on or assume such power, but to hold the convened meeting and then have the meeting adjourned, if necessary. In this connection see also Chandrakant Khaire v. Dr. Shantaram Kale and others, (1989) 65 Com Cases 121: (1989) 1 CL A (SC) 142.

 

6. Non-completion of audit no justification for grant of extension of time.-Non-completion of audit of annual accounts of a company is not a 'special reason' for granting extension of time for convening an Annual General Meeting of a company, especially in view of the provisions of section 220.

 

7. Registrar's power to grant extension of time limited to three months.-The Registrar can grant extension of time for holding Annual General Meeting only for three months and not more than that and such extension should be given on account of special reasons, and such extension may be allowed even if it comes to the holding of the Annual General Meeting beyond the calendar year. (Letter No. 34/11/69-CL. III, dated 13-1-1972).

 

8. Section 166 govern time for holding Annual General Meeting.-The time of holding Annual General Meeting must be governed solely by section 166 and section 210 is not relevant. (Circular No. 2/79 (F. No. 8/35(159/ 166)/78-CL.V 24/38/78-CL.II), dated 15-9-1979).

 

9. Notice of adjourned Annual General Meeting.-Notice of the adjourned General Meeting is not required to be given to the members of the company unless that date is fixed otherwise than at the original General Meeting.

 

10. Holding of adjourned Annual General Meeting on holiday.-If the day of the adjourned meeting becomes a holiday and it is held on that day, it would not amount to contravention of section 166(2) for the prohibition is against calling and not against con­tinuing the meeting on a holiday.

 

11. Notice of adjourned Annual General Meeting when given.-If the Board fixes another date for holding the adjourned General Meeting, notice of that meeting must be given to all and in the manner required under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956. (Letter No. 8/16(1) 61 -PR, dated 19-5-1961).

 

12. Annual General Meeting can be held within postal limits.-Although postal limits are wider than municipal limits, the Annual General meeting can be held at a place which is within the postal limits of the city of the registered office of the company. (Circular No. 1/1/ 80-CL.V, dated 16-2-1981).

 

13. Word "time"-Meaning.-The word 'time' appearing in second proviso to section 166(2) means the hour and the date of the commencement of the Annual General Meeting (Letter No. 8/16(1)61 -PR, dated 9-5-196 1).

 

Convening of Annual General Meeting and its cancellation

 

S. 166-Holding of Annual General Meeting and cancellation thereof­- Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Managing Director be and is hereby authorised to have the notice finalised, to fix time, date and venue for holding twenty-first Annual General Meeting".

 

"RESOLVED FURTHER that the Managing Director be and is hereby authorised to cancel the Meeting and fix another date for holding the same, if so, considered necessary."

 

"RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby authorised to issue notice and to complete all other formalities required under the Companies Act, 1956, for calling the Annual General Meeting of the shareholders of the Company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Holding of Annual General Meeting a statutory requirement.-Every company is required to hold in addition to any other meeting a general meeting as its Annual General Meeting and shall specify the meeting as such in the notice calling it.

 

2. Convening of Annual or other General Meeting.-Subject to the provisions in the articles, any general meeting of the company can be called only on the authority of a resolution of the Board of Directors, and if the Managing Director, Manager, Secretary or other officer calls a meeting without such authority, it will not be effectual unless the Board ratifies the effect before the meeting is held.

 

3. Time within which Annual General Meeting is to be held.-It will be noted that the first annual general meeting is required to be held within eighteen months of a company's incorporation, and there is no provision for granting an extension of time in this case, as in the case of subsequent annual general meetings. Thereafter not more than fifteen months shall elapse between the date of one Annual General Meeting of a company and that of the next.

 

4. Power of Registrar to extend time.-The Registrar of Companies is empowered to grant extension of time for any special reason for a period not exceeding three months and as per the Citizen's Charter of the Department of Company Affairs, this application for extension of time for holding annual general meeting should be processed within 10 days. [File No. 5/25/99-CL-V; Press Note No. 9/99, dated 9-8-1999].

 

5. Meeting on public holiday.-No annual general meeting of any company shall be held on a public holiday. The prohibition is, however, not extended to extraordinary general meetings.

 

6. Place and time of holding Annual General Meeting.-An annual general meeting can be held only in the city, town or village where the registered office of the company is situated, and not elsewhere or out of business hours.

 

7. Holding of AGM by Private Company.-In the case of a private company, which is not subsidiary of a public company, both the time and place of the meeting may be fixed either by the articles or by a preceding annual general meeting or by resolution agreed to by all the members.

 

8. Effect of adjournment on riling accounts.-A company is required to file the balance sheet etc. with the Registrar even if the Annual General Meeting is held in time and is adjourned for any reason without adoption thereof.

 

 Convening adjourned Annual General Meeting

 

S. 166/Reg. 53-Convening adjourned Annual General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the draft notice convening the adjourned Annual General Meeting of the Company proposed to be held on _________ the _________ 2002 _________ at _________ a.m./p.m., be and is hereby approved and the Secretary of the Company be directed to issue/circulate the same to the members."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

Procedure for adjourning Annual General Meeting.-The Companies Act, 1956, and the Articles of Association of the company provide the manner in which and the circumstances under which an Annual General Meeting or any other General Meeting may be adjourned. The procedure is substantially laid down in Regulation 53 of Table 'A', which is as follows:

 

1. Chairman's powers to adjourn meeting from time to time, place to place.-The Chairman may, with the consent of any meeting at which quorum is present, and shall, if so directed by the meeting, adjourn the meeting from time to time and from place to place.

 

2. Only unfinished business to be transacted at adjourned meeting.-No business shall be transacted at any adjourned meeting other than the business left unfinished at the meeting from which the adjournment took place.

 

3. Notice to be given when meeting adjourned for thirty days or more.-When a meeting is adjourned sine-die or for thirty days or more, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given as in the case of an original meeting. [Paragraph 14.2 of Secretarial Standard 2].

 

4. Notice of adjourned meeting when not necessary.-Save as aforesaid, it shall not be necessary to give any notice of an adjournment or of the business to be transacted at an adjourned meeting.

 

 Application to CLB for calling Annual General Meeting

 

S. 167-Application to Company Law Board for calling Annual General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company is a major shareholder of M/s. ABC Pvt. Ltd.;

 

AND WHEREAS there are only two other members who are reported to have expired;

 

AND WHEREAS no application has been made to the Company for mutation of the name of the legal representative of such deceased members;

 

AND WHEREAS the Annual General Meeting of M/s. ABC Pvt. Ltd. was due to be held latest by 31st March, 2002 which meeting could not be held;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made to the Company Law Board for calling or directing the calling of a general meeting of the Company and for giving such ancillary or consequential directions as the Company Law Board may think expedient in relation to the calling, holding and conducting of the meeting;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that in the said application to the Company Law Board a prayer be made for calling and conducting the meeting at the instance of a representative of this Company;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of this Company be directed to prepare the application giving all material particulars and paying the necessary fees and complying with the procedure laid down in the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Annual General Meeting called by Company Law Board.-In case a company. is unable to hold an Annual General Meeting in accordance with the provisions of section 166 of the Act any member of the company can make an application to the Company Law Board for calling or directing the calling of an Annual General Meeting of the company. A company cannot invoke the provisions of section 167 because a company cannot seek directions against itself. Cannanore Whole Body CT Scan and Research Centre (P.) Ltd. v. Saibunnisa S. V., (1998) 93 Com Cases 99 (CLB-SR).

 

2. Directions of Company Law Board.-The Company Law Board, while calling or directing the calling of an Annual General Meeting of the company on the application of any member of the company, may give such ancillary or consequential directions as the Company Law Board may think expedient in relation to the calling, holding and conducting of the said meeting. Such directions may also include a direction that a single member of a company present in person or by proxy will be deemed to constitute the Annual General Meeting. In normal case the quorum for Annual General Meeting is five members personally present in the case of public company and two members personally present in the case of any other company.

 

3. Deemed Annual General Meeting.-The Annual General Meeting called or directed to be called by the Company Law Board on the application of any member of the company will be deemed to be an Annual General Meeting of the company, of course, subject to any directions that may be given by the Company Law Board while calling such a meeting.

 

4. Impartibility of holding.-The power under this cannot be used to enable persons responsible for the omission to escape the consequences of their default. The petition filed with the Company Law Board pleading administrative difficulties and other factors which were beyond control was rejected as the circumstances pleaded did not make it impracticable for the company to a call a meeting without the intervention of the Company Law Board. National Dairy Development Board v. Indian Immunologicals Ltd., (2002) 108 Com Cases 909 (CLB).

 

5. Directions to conduct meeting.-The Company Law Board has power to give directions in respect of the conduct of a meeting only when the meeting has been convened under its directions but not where a meeting has been called by the company itself. Shankar Sundaram v. Amalgamations (P.) Ltd., (2002) 108 Com Cases 885 (CLB).

 

6. Procedure.-An application by way of a petition should be made before the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board in Form No. 1 with a fee of Rs. 500/-.

 

7. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with any directions of the Company Law under sub-section (1) of section 167, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 50,000/- and in case of continuing default with a further fine of up to Rs. 2,500/- for every day after the first during which such default continues.

 

Calling of Extraordinary General Meeting

 

S. 169- Calling of Extraordinary General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that an Extraordinary General Meeting of the Company be called and held at the registered office of the Company on _________  the _________ 2002 _________ at _________ a.m./p.m. to consider the resolution stated underneath and that the Secretary be authorised to give notice of the meeting accordingly."

 

or

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to the requisition lodged at the registered office of the Company an Extraordinary General Meeting of the Company be held at the registered office of the Company on _________ the _________ 2002 _________ at _________ a.m./p.m. and that the Secretary be authorised to issue notice to the members of the company with regard to the holding of the said meeting."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Calling of Extraordinary General Meeting on requisition.-Under sub-section (6) of section 169, the Board has to take action for calling an Extraordinary General Meeting, on requisition, within twenty-one days from the date of the deposit of a valid requisition with regard to any matters for which requisition has been made and must hold the meeting on a day not later than forty-five days from the date of the deposit of the requisition.

 

2. Articles generally empower calling of Extraordinary General Meeting.-A provision usually appears in the Articles of Association of a company for calling an Extraordinary General Meeting. Regulation 48 of Table 'A' lays down the following procedure:

 

"48. (1) The Board may, whenever it thinks fit, call an Extraordinary General Meeting.

 

(2) If at any time there are not, within India, Directors capable of acting who are sufficient in number to form a quorum, any Director or any two members of the company may call an Extraordinary General Meeting in the same manner, as nearly as possible, as that in which such a meeting may be called by the Board."

 

3. Checking of names of requisitionists.-The requisition as well as the names of the members placing the requisition should be carefully checked. The word 'member' signifies that the name of the person concerned should appear in the Register of Members. A requisitionist who has lodged to the company his shares for transfer does not fulfil the definition of a member.

 

4. Requisition duly signed setting out matters for consideration to be deposited at registered office.-The requisition should set out the matter(s) for consideration for which the meeting is called and shall be signed by the requisitionists and deposited at the registered office of the company together with supporting documents signed in like manner.

 

5. Directors cannot postpone Extraordinary Meeting of their own will.-The Extraordinary General Meeting, to be held on a certain date, cannot be postponed by the Directors at their own will and pleasure.

 

6. Notice of meeting to contain statement that member entitled to appoint any person as his proxy.-In every notice calling a meeting of a company which has a share capital, or whose articles provide for voting by proxy at the meeting, there should appear with reasonable prominence a statement that a member is entitled to appoint a proxy to attend such meeting and vote instead of himself and that such a proxy need not be a member.

 

Convening of an Extraordinary General Meeting

 

S. 169/Regn. 47148-Convening of an Extraordinary General Meeting Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that an Extraordinary General Meeting of the members of the company be convened on Monday, the 26th July, 2002, at I 100 hours at No. 16, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi, the Registered Office of the company to consider the resolutions given in the notice as per draft placed before the meeting and initialled by the Chairman by way of identification.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to issue notice of the meeting and to comply with all requirements of the Companies Act, 1956, in this regard."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Power of Board to call Extraordinary General Meeting.-The Board may, whenever, it thinks fit, call an Extraordinary General Meeting. An Extraordinary General Meeting can also be called on the requisition of the members (S. 169).

 

2. Directors have no power to postpone meeting after it is convened.-After convening a meeting for a date, the Directors cannot postpone it at their own will and pleasure. Smith v. Paringa Mines Ltd., (1906) 2 Ch 193.

 

3. Strong ground exists for restraining shareholders' Meeting.-As regards restraining, a meeting of shareholders, there must be a strong case which will justify the Court to do so Isle of Wight Rail Co. v. Tahourdin, (1883) 25 Ch D 320. (now Company Law Board)

 

4. Board only has power to convene Extraordinary General Meeting.-The right to convene an Extraordinary General Meeting is given only to a Board of Directors which is properly constituted or by a circular resolution where it is allowed. Re Haycraft Gold Reduction & Mining Co., (1900) 2 Ch 230.

 

5. Shareholders' right to requisition Extraordinary General Meeting.-Every shareholder of the company has the right, subject to compliance with the provisions of the Act, to requisition an Extraordinary General Meeting (Section 169).

 

6. Compliance Certificate.-A company whose paid-up share capital is less than Rs. 2 crores but is equal to or more than Rs. 10 lakhs must obtain a Compliance Certificate from a secretary in whole-time practice to be filed with the Registrar of Companies mentioning therein inter alia that Extraordinary General Meetings were held during the financial year after giving due notice to the members of the company and the resolutions passed thereat were duly recorded in the minutes book maintained for the purpose as per paragraph 7 of the Form of Compliance Certificate appended to the Companies (Compliance Certificate) Rules, 2001 prescribed under section 383-A(l) proviso.

 

7. Secretarial Standard 2.-Paragraph 2.3 of the said Secretarial Standard provides that items of business of an urgent nature which need to be transacted before the next Annual General Meeting should be considered at an Extraordinary General Meeting.

 

 Adjournment of a General Meeting

 

S. 169/Regn. 53-Adjournment of a General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that with the consent of all the members the Extraordinary General Meeting of the company be and is hereby adjourned to Thursday, the 25th July, 2002, at 10.00 A.M to be held at the registered office of the company, 35, Chitrajan Park, New Delhi."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Power of Chairman to adjourn General Meeting.-The Chairman may with the consent of any meeting at which a quorum is present and shall if so directed by the meeting adjourn the meeting from time to time and from place to place.

 

2. Chairman to adjourn meeting when resolution in terms of Articles passed.-The Chairman must adjourn the meeting, on passing of a resolution in terms of the provisions contained in the Articles of the company.

 

3. No power of Chairman to adjourn meeting of its own.-The Chairman cannot adjourn the meeting of his own mere motion. Parsuram v. Tata Industrial Bank, ILR 47 Bom 915: AIR 1928 PC 180.

 

4. Notice of adjourned Meeting.-The requirement of notice when a meeting is adjourned for thirty days or more is mandatory and must be strictly complied with. Robert Batcheller & Sons v. Batcheller, (1945) 1 All ER 522.

 

5. Adjourned Meeting is continuance or original meeting.-An adjourned meeting is a mere continuance of the original meeting and so the proxies appointed for the original meeting are available for the adjourned meeting also. W.S. Subramania Iyer v. United India Life Insurance Co., (1928) 55 MLJ 385: AIR 1928 Mad 1215.

 

6. No power of Chairman to adjourn meeting.-The Chairman has no power to adjourn a meeting except as indicated in clause (1) of Regn. 53. Adjournment for any other reason would be arbitrary. The members present at the meeting are not bound by the arbitrary decision of the chairman. Those still present, even if a minority, can continue the meeting after electing a new chairman and conduct the business left unfinished by the former chairman. Seth Sobhag Mal Lodha v. Edward Mills Co. Ltd., Beawar, 1971 Tax LR 178: (1972) 42 Com Cases 1 (Raj) (DB).

 

7. Right to adjourn meeting.-The right to adjourn is inherent in a meeting, whether or not there is a Chairman of the meeting (M.R.S. Rathna Velu Sand Chettiar v. M.R.S. Manickavelu Chettiar, AIR 1951 Mad 542: (1951) 21 Com Cases 93.

 

 Requisitioning Extraordinary General Meeting by members

 

S. 169-Requisitioning Extraordinary General Meeting by members-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS this requisitionist, being the shareholder of M/s. ABC Ltd., holding more than 10% of the share capital is desirous of appointing Mr. X, as Director of M/ s. ABC Ltd.;

 

AND WHEREAS the said M/s. ABC Ltd. failed to appoint Mr. X, as Director of the Company at the last Annual General Meeting despite a notice in this behalf given under section 257 of the Companies Act, 1956;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED to require M/s. ABC Ltd. forthwith to proceed to convene an Extraordinary General Meeting of the Company for the purpose of passing a resolution for appointing Mr. X, as Director of the Company and to pass the following resolution.

 

"RESOLUTION: RESOLVED that Mr. X be and is hereby appointed a Director of the Company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Extraordinary General Meeting called by requisitionists.-The board of directors of a company should call an Extraordinary General Meeting of the company on the requisition of prescribed number of members of the company. Such prescribed number of members will be, in the case of a company having a share capital, such number of them as hold on the date of the deposit of the requisition, not less than one-tenth of such of the paid up capital of the company which should carry the right of voting in regard to the matter for which the requisition is sent. Such prescribed number of members will be, in the case of a company not having share capital, such number of them as have at the date of deposit of the requisition not less than one-tenth of the total voting power of all the members having on the date of giving the requisition a right to vote in regard to the matter for which the requisition is sent.

 

2. Contents of the requisition.-The requisitions given by the prescribed number of members should set out the matters which are to be considered in the proposed meeting and should be signed by all the requisitionists and should also be deposited at the regis­tered office of the company. The 'requisition as aforesaid may consist of several documents which should be signed by one or more requisitionists.

 

3. Duty of the board.-The board of directors of the concerned company must, within twenty-one days from the date of the deposit of a valid requisition, call a meeting on a day not later than forty-five days from the date of deposit of the requisition.

 

4. Meeting called by the requisitionists themselves.-The Extraordinary General Meeting will be called by the requisitionists themselves in case the board of directors of the company fail to call a meeting within forty-five days from the date of the deposit of the requisition. Such a meeting should be called by them in the same manner as nearly as possible as that in which meetings are called by the board of directors of the company and should be held before the expiration of three months from the date of the deposit of the requisition.

 

5. Expenses of calling the meeting by the requisitionists.-Expenses incurred by the requisitionists for calling the meeting as a result of failure on the part of the board of directors to call a meeting should be paid back to the requisitionists by the company.

 

6. Failure to convene meeting.-Failure to convene meeting under the section cannot ordinarily be construed as an offence. Huantha R. Hegde v. Capt. T.S. Gopala Krishna, (1996) 23 CLA 142 (Kar).

 

Calling an Annual General Meeting at shorter notice

 

S. 171-Calling an Annual General Meeting at shorter notice-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the company has four shareholders who are also Directors of the Company;

 

AND WHEREAS the Annual General Meeting of the company was scheduled to be held on or before 31st March, 2002;

 

AND WHEREAS an application was made to the Registrar of Companies for extending the time for holding the Annual General Meeting by three months;

 

AND WHEREAS the Registrar had finally agreed to extend the time to 30th June, 2002;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED, with the consent of all the shareholders of the company who are also the Directors of the Company, to call the Annual General Meeting on 28th June, 2002;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company shall issue notice of the Annual General Meeting forthwith."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Twenty-one days' notice.-A company can call a general meeting by not giving less than twenty-one days' notice in writing. A general meeting can also be called by giving a notice shorter than twenty-one days. Business conducted in annual general meeting will not be vitiated if members receive less than 21 days notice. Shailesh Harilal Shah v. Matushree Textiles Ltd., (1994) 14 CLA 177 (Bom). The requirement of section 171 is not mandatory if the conditions mentioned under section 171(2) are fulfilled and in absence of any prejudice being made out notwithstanding the fact whether section 171 is mandatory or not merely on the technical ground that there was no clear notice of 21 days from the date of service of the notice and the meeting, neither the meeting nor the proceedings of the meeting could be invalidated. Somalingappa Shiva Putrappa Mugabasar v. Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd., (2002) 110 Com Cases 371 (Kant).

 

2. Consent required.-For giving shorter notice for calling a general meeting consent should be obtained from all the members entitled to vote at the meeting if the said general meeting is an Annual General Meeting. If the general meeting to be called is a meeting other than the Annual General Meeting then consent should be obtained from members holding ninety-five per cent of the shares of that company if the company has a share capital and in case the company is not having share capital, the consent should be obtained from members holding not less than ninety-five per cent of the total voting power exercisable at the proposed meeting.

 

3. Inclusion of members.-Where any members of a company are entitled to vote only on some resolutions to be moved at the general meeting and not on other resolutions to be moved thereat, those members shall be counted for obtaining a consent in respect of the resolutions on which they can vote and not in respect of those resolutions on which they cannot vote.

 

Adjournment of general Meeting for want of quorum

 

S. 174-Adjournment of General Meeting for want of quorum-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Extraordinary General Meeting called for being held on _________  which could not transact any business for want of quorum and stood adjourned pursuant to Article _________ of the Arti­cles of Association, be held on __________________ (day) the __________________ (date) at __________________ (time) at __________________ (place) to transact the business as contained in original notice dated ________________.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be and is hereby authorised to send the notice of the holding of adjourned meeting to all the members of the Company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Adjournment of General Meeting for want of quorum.-If a General Meeting called by the Board could not transact any business for want of quorum then the meeting shall stand adjourned to the same day in the next week at the same time and place and a notice to this effect be published in the newspaper.

 

2. Individual notices to member when General Meeting adjourned to any other day.-Where the articles authorise the Board to hold the adjourned General Meeting on any other day then individual notices are to be given to the Members or have a general notice published in the newspaper.

 

3. When provision as to automatic adjournment of General Meeting takes force court has no power to interfere.-Where the directors do not exercise their discretion and the provision as to automatic adjournment to the next week takes force, the court cannot interefere in the matter even in the exercise of its inherent powers. Ashok Mathew Zacharia (Dr.) v. Magestic Kuries & Loans (P) Ltd., (1987) 62 Com Cases 865.

 

4. When quorum not present at reassembled meeting members actually present constitute quorum.-If at the reassembled meeting- also the quorum is not present, then according to this sub-section as many members as are actually present shall constitute the quorum. It is sufficient if at the adjourned meeting one member is present in person and one by proxy. It would appear, as a matter of construction, that under such a provision two members present by proxy would constitute a meeting, and that even one member may be sufficient for this purpose, since, the plural members includes the singular member. Jarvis Motors (Harrow) Ltd. v. Carabott, (1964) 3 All ER 89; Daimler & Co. Ltd. v. Continental Tyre and Rubber Co. (Great Britain), (1916) 2 AC 307.

 

5. Adjourned meeting continuation of original meeting.-An adjourned meeting under sub-section (4) is merely a continuation of the original meeting. Scadding v. Lorant, (1851) 3 HLC 418; Mclaren v. Thomson, (1917) 2 Ch 261. Therefore no notice is necessary. But if the Board of Directors fix another date for the adjourned general meeting. A notice is to be given to the members in accordance with the provisions of the Act governing notices of general meetings.

 

6. Secretarial Standard.-As per paragraph 3 of Secretarial Standard 2 quorum should be present through out the meeting.

 

 Chairman of a General Meeting

 

S. 175/Regn. 52-Chairman of a General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to the provisions of article 99 of the Articles of Association, of the company Shri DRM be and is hereby elected as a Chairman of this meeting."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Provisions of Articles to be complied with.-Ensure to comply with the provisions of the Articles of Association of the company.

 

2. When a director unwilling to act as Chairman or no director present member to elect one of its members as Chairman.-If at any meeting, no Director is willing to act as Chairman or if no Director is present within fifteen minutes after the time appointed for holding the meeting, the members present shall choose one of their members to be Chairman of the meeting.

 

3. Members present to elect one of themselves as Chairman unless articles provide otherwise.-Un less the articles otherwise provide the members personally present at the meeting shall elect one of themselves to be the Chairman of the meeting.

 

4. No power of Chairman to stop meeting.-The Chairman has no power to stop a meeting on his own will and pleasure. If he does so, the meeting can by itself resolve to proceed with the business for which it has been convened and elect another Chairman. Cates by v. Burnett, (1916) 2 Ch 325.

 

5. When meeting convened by Court any motion/amendment/ resolution outside purview of order may be rejected.-When a meeting is convened and held under orders of Court, any motion, amendment or resolution not coming within the terms of the Court's order may be rejected by the Chairman. Re, Bello v. Co-operative Navigation Etc. Co., AIR 1925 Bom 105.

 

6. No power of Chairman to adjourn meeting even on demand of majority.-In the absence of a special provision, when once a meeting has been convened the Chairman is not bound to adjourn it, though the majority may wish him to do so, even as he cannot adjourn it of his own mere motion. Parsuram v. Tata Industrial Batik, ILR 47 Bom 915: AIR 1928 PC 180.

 

7. Removal of Chairman.-Board of directors has right to remove a chairman of a meeting if he has lost its confidence. Kashinath Tapuriah v. Incab Industries Ltd., (1996) 20 CLA 19 (Cal).

 

8. Secretarial Standard.-Paragraphs 5.1.1, 5.1.2, 5.2, 5.3 and 5.4 of Secretarial Standard 2 should be adhered to in connection with the appointment of a chairman.

 

 Application to CLB for ordering an Extraordinary General

Meeting to be called

 

S.186-  Application to Company Law Board for ordering for Extraordinary General Meeting to be called-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the registered office of the Company situated at 1, Harrington Street, Calcutta seems to have been surrendered by the Managing Director who is untraceable;

 

AND WHEREAS the books and papers of the Company are no longer available in the registered office and have apparently been taken away by the said Managing Director;

 

NOW THEREFORE, in this meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company, IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made under the signature of Mr. X, a Director of the Company, also present and voting at this meeting, to the Company Law Board for calling an Extraordinary General Meeting of the Company to consider the business of tracing the books and papers of the company and the funds of the Company apparently misappropriated by the said Managing Director and also to initiate police action for tracing the Managing Director and booking him for the offences committed by him."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Impracticability prevailing.-For ordering a general meeting by the Company Law Board impracticability to convene a meeting is a condition precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction under section 186 of the Act. Edward Ganj Public Welfare Association Ltd., Re, (1977) 47 Com Case 283 (P&H). Demise of promoters/directors of a company made the company without directors and was not in a position to transact its normal business. Widow of one of the directors applied for relief under section 186 and it was ordered to hold an extraordinary general meeting to transact the company's normal business. Smt. Kaushalaya Atmarani Manghiranietini v. Hotel Hirmani (P) Ltd., [2001] S&CL Vol. XXIX 109 (CLB).

 

2. Single member quorum.-Two general meeting ordered by the Company Law Board on the application of director or member of the company may be directed to be held with one member of the company present in person or by proxy and will be deemed to constitute that meeting. Such direction is an exception to the rule provided under Section 174 of the Act where it says that unless the articles of the company provide for a larger number, five members personally present in the case of a public company and two members personally present in the case of any other company shall be the quorum for a meeting of the company.

 

3. Who can apply.-The power under section 186 of the Act can be exercised by the Company Law Board on its own motion or on the application of any director of the company or of any Such member of the company who would be entitled to vote at that meeting and it is not necessary that the said director or a member should apply in the name or on behalf of the company. Smt. Jain v. Delhi Flour Mills Co. Ltd., (1974) 44 Com Cas 228 (Delh).

 

4. Procedure.-The application should be made to the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board by way of a petition in Form No. 1 of the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 along with affidavit verifying the said petition and a fee of Rs. 500/-.

 

5. Two member, two director company.-In the case of a company in which there are only two members both of them are also the only directors of the company and they were at daggers drawn and it was impossible for them to be able to sit together at a board meeting to draw an agenda for the extraordinary general meeting that the Company Law Board directed the calling of the meeting (1999) 95 Com Cases 566 (CLB-SR).

 

 

Representation of the company as member in many companies

 

S. 187-Representation of the company as member of more than one company-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to section 187 of the Companies Act, 1956, and in supersession of all previous resolutions in that behalf or in connection therewith, Mr __________________ or failing him Mr __________________ or failing him Mr __________________ or failing him Mr __________________ be and is hereby authorised to act as the representative of this Company at any meeting of the mem­bers or at any meeting of any class of members/debenture-holders of the companies, named hereunder, of which the company is presently a member or debenture -holder and that a certified copy of this resolution signed by the Chairman be lodged with each of the following compa­nies of which this company is a member/debenture-holder:

 

1. M/s. NK Cotton Mills Co. Ltd.

2. M/s. GB Transport Co. Ltd.

3. M/s. Bharat Trading Co. Ltd.

4. M/s. SB Petrochemical Co. Ltd."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Section applicable to body corporate as defined in section 2(7).-The provisions of section 187 apply to a 'body corporate' whether a company within the meaning of the Companies Act or not. Section 2(7), however, excludes from the definition of the 'body corporate', any corporation sole, co-operative societies, and other corporate bodies which the Central Government may, by notification, specifically exclude, but corporate bodies as Municipal Corporation, Financial and Investment Corporation, Life Insurance Corporation, etc., should be covered by this section.

 

2. Power of appointment vested in Board.-The provisions of section 187 require that the appointment of the representative of the company must be made by a resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

3. Certified copy of resolution to be lodged with concerned company.-It is important that a certified copy of the resolution of the Board of Directors is lodged with the concerned company well in time.

 

4. Time-limit prescribed for lodging of proxy not applicable.-The time limit of forty eight hours as applicable to proxy is not to be applied for purpose of lodging the certified copy of resolution of the appointment of the representative which may be done any time before the meeting of the members or of the debenture- holders.

 

5. Authorisation be given by name or description.-Authority of the Board of Directors may be given to any person by name or description and no one else claiming to represent the body corporate is entitled to attend or otherwise take part in the meeting.

 

6. Resolution valid until superseded.-A resolution under this section should remain valid until the previous one is superseded by another resolution, and it is, therefore, convenient to make provisions for authority to act as representative in favour of more than one person who may act in the absence of the person(s) named earlier.

 

7. Resolution to specify company and the meeting.-The resolution must specify the company and if the intention of the Board is to authorise the representative to act as such only at a specified meeting, then the resolution must also specify the meeting at which such representative would act.

 

8. Position of representative.-A person authorised to act as a representative can exercise the same rights and powers including the right to vote by proxy on behalf of the body corporate which he represents as if he is an individual member of that company.

 

9. Donee of General Power of attorney.-The donee of a general power of attorney does not have the same status as that of the representative appointed under section 187 but he can be appointed as a proxy by the member concerned. He cannot be counted for the purposes of quorum. Otherwise he can exercise all the rights of a member at a meeting.

 

10. Power of appointing representative not to be delegated.-The power of appointing a representative being discretionary power of the Board, cannot be delegated to the Managing Director, Manager or any other person.

 

Representation of the company as a member in a company

 

S. 187-Representation of the company as a member in a company-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to -the provisions of section 187 of the Companies Act, 1956, Shri ABC or failing him Shri XYZ or failing him Shri YRS be and is hereby authorised to act as its representative at any meeting of the members or at any meeting of any class of members or debenture- holders of Bharat Overseas Limited, Calcutta of which the company is a member/debenture-holder.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Shri ABC or failing him Shri XYZ or failing him Shri YRS be and is hereby authorised to give his consent pursuant to section 171 of the Companies Act, 1956.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that a copy of the resolution duly certified by the Chairman of the meeting be sent to Bharat Overseas Limited, Calcutta."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Power of appointment vested in Board.-The appointment of representative by the company to act as its representative at any meeting of the company of which the company is a member must be made by a resolution passed at the Board Meeting.

 

2. Position of representative.-The person appointed as the representative of the company is entitled to exercise the same rights and powers on behalf of the company which he represents as that company could exercise if it were an individual member.

 

3. Representative has right to speak and vote.-The person appointed as a representative of the company has the right to speak and vote at the meeting and his presence can be counted for the purpose of quorum of the meeting.

 

Investigation of beneficial ownership of shares

 

S. 187-D-Investigation of beneficial ownership of shares-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS Mrs. D. Kejriwal, is known to be a person of no substantial means;

 

AND WHEREAS the said Mrs. D. Kejriwal has acquired Two Hundred Thousand shares of the Company when the market price of each share of the Company is Rs. 500/-per share;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made to the Central Government for investigation into the beneficial ownership of the shares in the Company;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that a mention be made of this application to the Central Government in the Company's petition before the Company Law Board under section 250 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Appointment of inspectors.-Inspectors may be appointed by the Central Government to investigate and report whether prescribed declaration has been made by the person not holding beneficial interest in any share of a company if there are good reasons to do so.

 

2. Applicability of section 247.-Provisions of section 247 of the Act will apply to the investigation made by the inspectors appointed by the Central Government as if such an investigation is ordered under that section itself. There is no prescribed form of this application.

 

Circulation of members' resolutions

 

S. 188-Circulation of members' resolutions-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED by the undersigned holding 25% of the paid-up share capital of XYZ Ltd., in accordance with the provisions of section 188 of Companies Act, 1956, that notice be given of the following resolution which is intended to be moved at the next Annual General Meeting of the Company:

 

RESOLUTION TO BE CIRCULATED

 

RESOLVED that the negotiations under way for mortgaging Company's properties for obtaining a loan of Rs. 50 lacs from Asian Developers Ltd. be not proceeded with any further.

 

Signature of requisitionist.”

 

STATEMENT TO BE CIRCULATED ALONGWITH AFORESAID RESOLUTION

 

Asian Developers Ltd. is understood to be charging 29% interest for the loan of Rs. 50 lacs proposed to be given to the Company. Considering the present financial position of the Company, obtaining loan at this high rate of interest will be prejudicial to the interest of the Company. It is apprehended that Asian Developers Ltd. will ultimately take over the Company. The aforesaid resolution is proposed in order to prevent the Company from embarking on such a venture for raising money.

 

Signature of requitionist."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Requisition of members.-At the requisition of specified number of members a company should issue notice of any resolution which is proposed to be moved at the next general meeting and also circulate to the members of the company any statement of not more than one thousand words with respect to the matter referred to in any proposed resolution given by the requisitionists or any business to be dealt with at the next general meeting.

 

2. Requisite number of members".-The requisite number of members necessary for giving the requisition is such number of members as represent not less than one-twentieth of the total voting power of all the members having at the date of submission of the requisition right to vote on the resolution or business to which the requisition relates or not less than one hundred members holding shares in the company on which there has been paid up an aggregate sum of not less than rupees one lakh.

 

3. Circulation of notice of resolution/ statement.-Notice of resolution and statement which the requisitionists have sent to the company should be circulated to all the members of the company entitled to have notice of the meeting by serving a copy on each member.

 

4. No notice required.-A company need not give any notice of the resolution or circulate any statement unless a copy of the requisition including such resolution or statement is signed by the requisitionists and is deposited at the registered office of the company not less than six weeks before the meeting in case such requisition requires a notice of the resolution and not less than two weeks before the meeting in any case. It is also necessary for the requisitionists to deposit a sum reasonably sufficient to meet the company's expenses in sending the notice of the resolution and also in circulating the statement deposited by the requisitionists.

 

5. No circulation of statement required.-An application should be made to the Company Law Board either by the company or by any other person who claims to be aggrieved if any statement deposited by the requisitionists is circulated on the ground that such circulation will amount to abuse of rights conferred by section 188 of the Act to secure needless publicity for defamatory matter. The Company Law Board can give an order to the requisitionists to pay the costs of the company in whole or in part in making the application.

 

6. Banking company.-In the case of a banking company, it may refrain from circulating any statement if in the opinion of the Board of Directors of the banking company the circulation of the statement will injure the interests of the banking company.

 

7. Accidental omission.-In case there is accidental omission in giving notice to the members of any resolution deposited by the requisitionists the business of the meeting will not be affected and it will be deemed that such notice has been given.

 

8. Penalty.-For non-compliance of the requirements of section 188 of the Act, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees fifty thousand.

 

9. Compounding of offence.-The fine of rupees fifty thousand for contravention of provisions of section 188(8) is compoundable by the Regional Director as per section 621-A(l)(a).

 

Application to Company Law Board against circulation of

members' resolution

 

S. 188(5)-Application to Company Law Board against circulation of members' resolution-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company has received a requisition for circulating a resolution opposing the proposal for obtaining financial assistance from Asian Developers Ltd.;

 

AND WHEREAS the statement proposed to be circulated with the proposed resolution is defamatory in so far as the Company's financial standing is concerned;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be made to the Company Law Board for an order preventing the circulation of the proposed resolution and for payment of costs of this application from the requisitionist;

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that Secretary of the Company will prepare an application to be made to the Company Law Board under subsection (5) of section 188, explaining in the said application in detail the Company's financial position with turn over of more than Rs. five crores and explaining how the aforesaid financial assistance will be repaid by the Company without any unnecessary cost or burden. Secretary is further directed to put in detail the progress made by the Company in obtaining foreign currency loan through ICICI and EXIM Bank."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Company Law Board's power.-The Company Law Board has the power by an order to stop the company from circulating any statement which will amount to giving needless publicity of any defamatory matter on the application of either the company or any other person who claims to be aggrieved.

 

2. Procedure.-An application by way of a petition should be made to the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board in Form No. 1 of the Company Law Board Regulation, 1991 alongwith a fee of rupees fifty.

 

Furnishing copy of the resolution to member

 

S. 192(3)-Furnishing copy of the resolution to member-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS the Company has adopted Table A of Schedule I of the Companies Act, 1956 as its articles;

 

AND WHEREAS an entry to the following effect will be made as a proviso to Regulation 64 of Table A, namely- "provided that 2/3rd of the Directors of the Board shall be appointed by XYZ' Ltd.;

 

AND WHEREAS Mr. X a member of the Company has asked for a copy of the aforesaid resolution;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that a copy of the aforesaid resolution be furnished to Mr. X, who has asked for the same.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Members' entitlement.-A member of a company is entitled to obtain a printed copy of every resolution or agreement which has been passed under sub-section (1) of section 192 of the Act on payment of rupee one to the company in case the articles of that company have not been registered.

 

2. Penalty.-For non-compliance of the requirements of section 192 of the Act, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine which may extend to rupees one hundred for each copy.

 

3. Compounding of offence.-If the fine is not more than rupees five thousand for contravention of the provisions of section 192(6), the application for compounding of offence will lie before the concerned Regional Director under section 621-A(l)(b) and if the fine is more than rupees five thousand, then the application will lie before the concerned Regional Bench of the Company Law Board under section 621-A(l)(a).

 

 Passing of Resolution by postal ballot (S- 192A)

 

New section 192A has been inserted by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000 to provide for voting through postal ballot to in case of only important items which are to be notified by the Central Government to ensure good corporate governance. This facility of postal ballot is to be available to listed public company. Notice of any resolution to be passed by postal ballot should be sent to all the shareholders along with a draft resolution explaining the reasons therefore and requesting them to send their assent or dissent in writing on a postal ballot within a period 30 days from the date of posting of the letter. If the majority of shareholders assent by means of postal ballot, the resolution will be deemed to have been passed. If default is made in complying with sub-section (1) of (4) of section 192A, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of Rs. 50,000/- in respect of each such default. Central Government has framed the Companies (Passing of Resolution by Postal Ballot) Rules, 2001 which was enforced from 10th May, 2001.

 

POST BALLOT SYSTEM

 

Rationale

 

Voting at the general meetings of companies is the most valuable and fundamental mechanism by which the shareholders accept or reject the proposals of the board of directors as regards the structure, the strategy, the ownership and the management of the corporation. Voting is the only mechanism available with the shareholders for exercising an external check on the board and the management.

 

Under the present framework of the Companies Act, 1956, a company is required to obtain the approval of its shareholders for various important decisions such as increase in its authorised capital, shifting of registered office, change in the name, amalgamation and reconstitution, buy-back of shares, further issue of shares, etc. Since the shareholders of any large public listed company are scattered throughout the length and breadth of the country, they are unable to physically attend the general meetings of the company to exercise their right to vote on matters of vital importance. The system of voting by proxy has also not proved very effective.

 

With a view to strengthening shareholder democracy, it is felt that all the shareholders of a company should be given the right to vote on certain critical matters through a postal ballot system, which has also been envisaged in the Companies Bill, 1997.

 

Items requiring voting by postal ballot

 

Some of the critical matters which should be decided by this system are­-

 

1. Matters relating to alteration in the memorandum of association of the company like changes in name, objects, address of registered office etc.;

2. Sale of whole or substantially the whole of the undertaking;

3. Sale of investments in the companies, where the shareholding or the voting rights of the company exceeds 25%;

4. Making a further issue of shares through preferential allotment or private placement basis;

5. Corporate restructuring;

6. Entering a new business area not germane to the existing business of the company.

7. Variation in the rights attached to class of securities.

 

Procedure for the postal ballot

 

Where a resolution is to be passed in relation to any of the aforesaid items through postal ballot.

 

1. The board of directors shall appoint a Designated-Person to conduct, supervise and control the exercise of postal ballot. This person may be the Company Secretary, a retired judge or any person of repute who, in the opinion of the board, can conduct the voting process in a fair & transparent manner.

2. All communications in this regard shall be made by and addressed directly to the said Designated-Person.

3. A notice containing a draft of the resolutions and the necessary explanatory statement shall be sent to all members entitled to vote requesting them to send their assent or dissent within a period of thirty days from the date of posting of the letter.

4. The notice shall be sent under certificate of posting and shall include with the notice, a pre-paid postage envelope for facilitating the communication of the assent or the dissent of the shareholders to the resolutions within the said period.

5. The envelope by post will be received directly by the Post Office through Box No. which will be obtained by the Designated-Person in advance and will be indicated on each pre-paid envelope to be used by the members for sending the resolution.

6. The Designated-Person shall ascertain the will of the shareholders based on the response received and the resolution shall be deemed to have been duly passed if approved by members not less in number, than as prescribed by law.

7. The Designated-Person shall thereafter give a report to the Chairman and on the basis of such report the Chairman shall declare the results of the poll.

 

[Annexure 3 of the Report of the Kumar Mangalam Birla Committee on Corporate Governance]

 

Passing of Resolution by postal ballot

 

S. 192A-Passing of Resolution by postal ballot-Board Resolution

 

RESOLVED that the following resolution as per the draft notice placed before the meeting and initialled by the Chairman for the purpose of identification be and is hereby passed by postal ballot-

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to section 20 read with section 192A the name of the company be and is hereby changed from ABC Co. Ltd. to XYZ Co. Ltd."

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary be directed to issue the notice to all the shareholders of the company by registered post acknowledgement due along with a postage pre-paid envelop and to do everything that is necessary in connection therewith.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Deemed to be duly passed.-If a resolution is assented by a majority of the shareholders by means of postal ballot, it shall be deemed to have been duly passed at a general meeting convened in that behalf.

 

2. Penalty for fraudulently defacing or destroying ballot paper.-If a shareholder sends his assent or dissent in writing on a postal ballot and thereafter any person fraudulently defaced or destroys the ballot paper or declaration of identity of the shareholder, such person shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to 6 months or with fine or with both.

 

3. Listed Public Companies.-Provisions of passing resolutions by postal ballot are applicable to only listed public companies.

 

Minutes of the General Meeting

 

S. 193(1A)- Minutes of the General Meeting-No resolution is required

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Section applicable to both public and private companies.-This section applies equally to all the public as well as private limited companies.

 

2. Keeping minutes in loose leaf form.-The minutes can be maintained in a loose leaf form and in no case pasting in the minutes book is allowed. (Extract from Fifth Annual Report on the Working and Administration of the Companies Act, 1956 for the year ended 31st March, 1961).

 

3. Preparation of Minutes of General Meeting.-The minutes of the General Meeting are to be prepared within thirty days of the conclusion of every meeting. Each page of the minutes is to be initialled or signed and the last page of the minutes is to be dated and signed by the Chairman of the meeting, however, in case of death or inability of the Chairman to sign the minutes within thirty days of the conclusion of the meeting the same can be got signed from a Director duly authorised by a resolution of the Board of Directors in that behalf.

 

4. Minutes to be fair and correct summary of proceedings.-The minutes should be fair and correct summary of the proceedings of the meeting.

 

5. Minutes not to be altered without a fresh resolution.-Where there is a practice of placing the minutes before the Board for confirmation the placing of minutes which have already been signed will mean that these cannot be altered without a fresh resolution. (Letter No. 8/2 (Misc.)/75-CL. V, dated 5th May, 1975).

 

6. Penalty for default.-If default is made in complying with the provisions of section 193 in respect of any meeting, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of Rs. 500/-.

 

Minutes of the Board Meeting (S. 193(l))

 

The Department of Company Affairs has permitted maintenance of loose leaf minute books provided the company takes appropriate safeguards against interpolation of the leaves in the books such as serial numbering of pages, authentication of each page of the book, safe custody of the key, if any, to the loose leaf register. The loose leaf minutes to be bounded into books at regular internals of say six months. (Department's letter No. 16047/TA/VII, dated 16th December, 1972).

 

Where there is a practice of placing the minutes before the Board for confirmation the placing of minutes which have already been signed will mean that these cannot be altered without a fresh resolution. (Department's letter No. 8/2(Misc)/ 75 CL.V., dated 5th May, 1975.)

 

 Signing of the minutes of the General Meeting by a Director

(S. 193(1A))

 

The minutes must be got signed by the Chairman of the meeting and in case of his inability to sign the same, it should be got signed by the duly authorised Director within thirty days of the conclusion of the General Meeting.

 

In order that any change in such minutes may be effected, the only way open is to adopt fresh resolutions in modification on the footing that the minutes as recorded on the approval of the Chairman stand. (Letter No. 8/2(Misc)/75-CL.V., dated 5th May, 1975).

 

Confirmation of Minutes of the Board Meeting

 

S. 193(1A)-Confirmation o the Minutes of Fifth Meeting of the Board of Director-A noting

 

The Minutes of the Fifth Meeting of the Board of Directors held on 7th January, 2001, were circulated to the Directors on 15th January, 2001. No comments have been received on the Minutes from any of the Directors.

 

The said minutes as are enclosed for Directors' consideration are therefore confirmed.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Section applicable to both public and private companies.-This section is applicable to all the public as well as private limited companies.

 

2. Keeping minutes in loose leaf form.-The Minutes can be maintained in a loose leaf form but pasting of the minutes in the Minute Book is not allowed. (Fifth Annual Report on the Working and Administration of the Companies Act, 1956, for the year ended 3 1 st March, 196 1).

 

3. Confirming minutes of proceedings of prior Board Meeting.-It is a practice to have the minutes of the previous Board Meeting confirmed at the next meeting though it is not provided by law.

 

4. Preparation of Minutes of Board Meeting.-The minutes of the Board Meeting are to be prepared within thirty days of conclusion of the every meeting. Each page of the minute book is to be initialled or signed and the last page of the minutes is to be dated and signed by the Chairman of the meeting or the Chairman of the next succeeding meeting.

 

5. Minutes to be fair and correct summary of proceedings.-The minutes of the meeting should contain a fair and correct summary of the proceedings thereof.

 

6. Minutes to contain names of Directors present.-The minutes of the Board Meeting or a Committee of the Board should contain the names of the Directors present at the meeting.

 

7. Fresh resolution required for any change in minutes.-Fresh resolution is required in case of any change in the minutes of previous Board meeting.

 

8. Loose leaf minutes to be bounded at regular intervals.-The Department of Company Affairs has permitted maintenance of loose leaf minute books provided the company takes appropriate safeguards against interpolation of the leaves in the books such as serial numbering of pages, authentication of each page of the book, safe custody of the key, if any, to the loose leaf register. The loose leaf minutes to be bounded into books at regular intervals of six months. (Department's letter No. 16047/ TA/VII, dated 16th December, 1972).

 

9. Minutes not to be altered without a fresh resolution.-Where there is a practice of placing the minutes before the Board for confirmation, the placing of minutes which have already been signed will mean that these cannot be altered without a fresh resolution. (Department's letter No. 8/2 (Misc)/75-CL. V., dated 5th May, 1975).

 

 Signing of minutes of Extraordinary General Meeting

by Director

 

S. 193(lA)-Signing of minutes of Extraordinary General Meeting by a Director-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that Mr __________________, a Director of the company be and is hereby authorised to sign the minutes of the Extraordinary General Meeting held on _________, _________, the _________ , 2002 _________, in place of Mr __________________ , the Chairman of that meeting who died on _________, 2002 _________”

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Board authorised by a Director for signing the minutes.-Section 193(1A)(b) provides for the contingency arising out of death or inability of the Chairman of the meeting which prevents the minutes from being signed by the same Chairman within thirty days under an authority given by means of a Board resolution Director may sign the minutes in such a case.

 

 Signing of minutes of the Annual General Meeting by Director

 

S. 193(1A)-Signing of the minutes of the Annual General Meeting by a Director-Board Resolution

 

 "RESOLVED that Shri XYZ, Director of the Company be and is hereby authorised to sign the minutes of the 5th Annual General Meeting of the company held on 5th July, 2002, in place of Shri ABC, Chairman of the meeting who has since expired."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Director only be authorised for signing minutes.-A Director of the company can only be authorised to sign the minutes. Only in the case of death or inability of the Chairman of the meeting, the minutes of the General Meeting can be signed by a Director duly authorised by a Board's resolution.

 

2. Signing of Minutes.-All the pages of the minutes book are to be initialled or signed and the last page of the minutes is to be signed and dated by the Chairman.

 

3. Minutes to be signed by Chairman.-The minutes must be got signed by the Chairman of the meeting and in case of his inability to sign the same, it should be got signed by the duly authorised Director within thirty days of the conclusion of the General Meeting.

 

4. Fresh resolution required for change in minutes.-In order that any change in such minutes may be effected, the only way open is to adopt fresh resolutions in modification on the footing that the minutes as recorded on the approval of the Chairman stand. (Letter No. 8/2(Misc.)/75-CL.V., dated 5th May, 1975).

 

Chairman of the Board to sign Minutes

 

S. 193/Reg. 76-Election of Chairman of the Board to sign Board Minutes Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that Mr. __________________, a Director of the Company, be and is hereby elected Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Company for a period of two years from this date or until otherwise decided by the Directors at a Board Meeting whichever is earlier."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Election of Chairman and determination of his period of office.-The Board may elect a Chairman of its meeting and determine the period for which he is to hold office.

 

2. Meeting to be presided by Chairman.-Appointment of a Chairman of the Board is necessitated by section 193 which requires minutes to be signed by the Chairman. Besides, there is the common law requirement that every meeting must have a presiding officer who is called the Chairman of the meeting. Board must have a Chairman for the Board can transact business only through meetings. Section 193 casts an obligation on the Chairman of the Board of Directors to authenticate the minutes of the meeting of the Board. Nazir Hoosein & Another v. Darayus Bhattena and Others, (2000) 37 CLA 414 (SC).

 

3. Director present to choose Chairman when Chairman not present.-If no Chairman is elected or if at any meeting the Chairman is not present within certain time after the time appointed for holding the meeting, the Directors present may choose one of their number to be the Chairman of the meeting. The time is usually prescribed by articles.

 

4. Chairman of Board usually Chairman of general meeting.-Usually the Chairman of the Board of Directors also takes the chair in any general meeting of the company.

 

Election of a Chairman

 

S. 193 Regn. 76- Election of a Chairman-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that Shri XYZ, a Director of the company be and is hereby elected as the Chairman of this meeting/meetings of the Board of Directors for a term not exceeding three years effective from 1st June, 2002."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Provisions of articles to be checked up.-To check up the provisions of Articles of Association in this regard.

 

2. Director presiding over Meeting to have status of Chairman if articles provide otherwise.-In the absence of any provision to the contrary, a Director who presides over the meeting has the status of the Chairman.

 

3. Chairman can be elected for a Meeting or for specified period.-The Chairman can be elected at the meeting or for any specified period.

 

4. Where article contains no provision for appointment of Chairman Director presiding will not have status of Chairman.-Where the articles of a company make no provision for the appointment of a Chairman, no Director presiding over any meeting of the Directors has the legal status of a Chairman. Foster v. Foster, (1916) 1 Ch 532.

 

 Election of Chairman under Articles of Association

 

S. 193/Regn. 76-Election of Chairman under Articles of Association Board Meeting

 

RESOLVED that pursuant to Article 110 of the Articles of Association of the Company, in the absence of the Chairman, Shri AKM, Director of the Company, be and is hereby elected to take the Chair.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Election of Chairman and determination of period of his office.-The Board may elect a Chairman at every meeting for the Meeting and determine the period for which he is to hold office.

 

2. Where Articles contain no provision for appointment of Chairman, no director presiding has legal status of Chairman.-Where the Articles of Association of a Company make no provision for the appointment of a Chairman, no director presiding over any meeting of the directors has the legal status of a Chairman (Foster v. Foster, 1 Ch. 532).

 

 Inspection of minute books

 

S. 196(l)-Inspection of minute books of General Meeting-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the minutes books of all the General Meetings of the Company be kept at the registered office of the Company and be opened for inspection by any member between 10-30 hrs. and 12-30 hrs. on every working day."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Reasonable Restriction on Inspection.-The minutes book of the general meeting of a company should be open for inspection to any member without charge and to nonmembers with charge subject to such restrictions as the company may by its articles of association or in general meeting may impose so that not less than two hours in each day are allowed.

 

2. Copy of minutes.-A copy of any such minutes should be furnished to any member within seven days of his request on payment of rupee one for every hundred words or fractional part thereof required to be copied.

 

3. Penalty for default.-If any inspection is refused under sub-section (1) of section 196 or if any copy required under sub-section (2) of section 196 is not furnished within the time specified therein, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable with fine of up to Rs. 5,000/- in respect of each offence.

 

Application to the Company Law Board compelling immediate

inspection of the Minutes Books

 

S. 196(4)-Application to the Company Law Board for an order-Board Resolution

 

WHEREAS the company is a member of ABC Co. Ltd. holding _________ equity shares of Rs. _________ each in the paid-up share capital of that company;

 

AND WHEREAS the company as a member was refused inspection of minutes books of general meetings of that company and a copy of particular minutes were also not furnished to the company by that company within seven days of making the request in that behalf to that company on payment of the prescribed sum;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that an application be and is hereby made to the Company Law Board, Northern Region Bench, New Delhi by way of a petition for an order directing immediate inspection of minutes books of general meetings of that company and also directing a copy thereof to be sent forthwith to the company.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the company be authorised to prepare, sign and file the said petition with the Company Law Board and to do everything that is necessary in connection therewith or ancillary or incidental thereto.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Format of the petition.-The petition to the Company Law Board should be prepared in Form No. 1 of Annexure II of the Company Law Board Regulations, 1991 along with fee of Rs. 50/- to be paid by way of demand draft.

 

2. Jurisdiction of the Company Law Board.-The petition should be filed with that regional bench of the Company Law Board where the registered office of the Company is situated. The said petition will be heard by a single member of the Bench.

 

 Publication of reports of proceedings of General Meetings

 

S. 197-Publication of reports of proceedings of the General Meeting Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Chairman's speech to be given in the 45th An­nual General Meeting of the Company to be held on _________ 2002 at _________ at _________ A.M. be and is hereby circulated and adver­tised at the expense of the company in a daily English Newspaper having wide circulation all over the country and also in the regional language newspaper in the district in which the registered office of the company is situated with a footnote that it does not purport to be are­ port of the proceedings of the said annual general meeting.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Prohibition of publication and advertisement.-Where any reports of general meetings are published at the expense of the company, all matters required by section 193 relating to minutes should be included in the publication and without that no document purporting to be a report of the proceedings of any general meeting should be circulated or advertised at the expense of the company. The penalty provided in section 197 will only be attracted when such circulation or advertisement purports to be proceedings of any general meeting and otherwise. That is the reason why when a Chairman's speech is circulated or advertised the note as aforesaid is always added that it does not purport to be so as a matter of abundant caution.

 

2. Penalty for default.-If any report is circulated or advertised in contravention of sub-section (1) of section 197, the company and every officer of the company who is in default will be punishable in respect of each offence with fine of up to Rs. 5,000/-.

 

 

Commission payable to Chief Executive

 

S. 199- Commission payable to the Chief Executive-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that in addition to the monthly salary and perquisites as per terms of the letter of appointment, Mr. __________________ the Chief Execu­tive of the Company, shall be entitled to half a per cent of the yearly net profits of the Company as commission, and that such profit shall be calculated in the manner set out in section 349, section 350 and section 351 of the Companies Act, 1956."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Manner of calculation of profits for payment of commission.-Where any commission or other remuneration payable to any officer or employee of a company, not being a Director or a Manager, is fixed on percentage basis or otherwise based on the net profits of the company, such profits must be calculated in the manner as set out in sections 349, 350 and 351. (Section 199(l)).

 

2. Section when not applicable.-This section applies only where the remuneration or commission is payable to an employee with reference to 'net profit' of the company and, therefore, in cases where such commission is payable with reference to the volume of sale, purchase or turn-over, etc., this section would not apply.

 

3. Chief Executive not to exercise substantial power of management.-The Chief Executive should not exercise substantial power of management for otherwise, the entire remuneration including commission would be treated as managerial remuneration.

 

Tax-free remuneration

 

S. 200-Tax-free remuneration-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that subject to the approval of the Reserve Bank of In­dia and other appropriate authorities, if any Mr. __________________, a technician having US nationality, being recommended by foreign collaborators of the Company in this behalf be and is hereby appointed as the technical consultant to the Company for a period of two years from     in connection with the commissioning of plant and equipment at the Company's works and that such foreign technician be paid a consoli­dated remuneration of Rs. 1,20,000/- per month free of tax."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Prohibition on tax free remuneration.-According to section 200 of the Act a company cannot pay to any officer or employee, remuneration, free of tax if such remuneration attracts tax. Notwithstanding anything contained in this section, it is provided by section 10(6)(vii)(a)(ii) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, that in the case of a foreign technician of the class specified therein and employed by a company, the tax on his income chargeable under the head "Salaries" may be paid by the company for a period of twenty four months following the expiry of a tax-free period of thirty-six months from the date of his arrival in India.

 

Frivolous case against officers and auditors of the Company

 

S. 201(l) Proviso-Frivolous case against officers and auditors of the Com­pany-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS Mr. A, a shareholder of the Company had filed a case against the officers of the Company as well as the auditors alleging negligence, default, misfeasance and breach of duty;

 

AND WHEREAS the court had acquitted these officers and auditors, holding that these charges are frivolous;

 

NOW THEREFORE, IT IS RESOLVED, pursuant to the provisions made in Regulation 45 of Companies Articles of Association, to file a suit against Mr. A for recovery of damages of Rs. 1 lac spent by these officers and the auditors of the Company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Exemption/indemnification from liability void.-Any provisions in the article of association of the company or in any agreement with a company or in any other instrument which exempts any officer of the company or any person employed by the company as auditor from any liability which would otherwise be attached to him in respect of any negligence, default, breach of duty, misfeasance or breach of trust of which he may be guilty in relation to the company will be void. Any provision as aforesaid which indemnifies any of the persons mentioned above against any liability in respect of the said negligence, default, breach of duty, misfeasance or breach of trust will also be void.

 

2. When allowed.-A company may indemnify any officer of the company or the auditor against any liability incurred by him for defending any proceedings either civil or criminal in which judgment is given in his favour or in which such officer or auditor is acquitted or discharged or in case an application is made before the High Court under section 633 of the Act and relief is granted to him by that court.

 

Un discharged insolvent not to manage companies

 

S. 202-Undischarged insolvent prohibited to manage a company-Board Resolution

 

"WHEREAS Mr. PQR became an undischarged insolvent with effect from _________ 2002;

 

AND WHEREAS he was prohibited from being a director of the company and to attend Board Meetings;

 

AND WHEREAS the said Mr. PQR was discharged by _________ court on _________

 

AND WHEREAS the said Mr. PQR is again qualified to hold the office of the director of the company;

 

NOW THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED that Mr. PQR be and is hereby inducted in the Board as a director of the company again.

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Meaning of company.-In section 202 a company includes an unregistered company and also a body corporate incorporated outside India which has an established place of business within India.

 

2. Extent of prohibition.-The prohibition of an undischarged insolvent is from discharging any of the functions of a director or from acting or discharging any of the functions of the manager of any company. Such prohibition is also from directly or indirectly taking part or being concerned in the promotion, formation or management of any company.

 

3. Penalty for default.-If any person being an undischarged insolvent discharges any functions of a director or manager in any company or takes part in the promotion, formation or management in any company he will be punishable with imprisonment of 2 years or with fine of upto Rs. 50,000/- or with both.

 

Appointment of body corporate to office or place of profit (S. 204)

 

The appointment cannot be made for a period exceeding five years at a time. However, there is no prohibition for the re-appointment after the term of five years expires.

 

Where the original appointment itself makes provisions for re-appointment after five years, it contravenes the provisions of sub-section (4) of section 204. Shalagrain Jhajharia i,. National Co. Ltd., (1965) 1 Comp LJ 112.

 

Consultant is an expression apparently meaning that the person consulted is to give to the company the benefit of his knowledge and experience. Pocock v. A.D.A.C. Ltd., (1952) 1 All ER 294 (KBD).

 

Appointment of Technical Adviser

 

S. 204(l)- Appointment of Technical Adviser-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that M/s. ABC Limited, be and is hereby appointed as the Technical Adviser of the Company pursuant to the terms and conditions, responsibilities, remuneration, etc., as embodied in the draft agreement, as tabled and initialled by the Chairman hereof, for a period of five years beginning from _________, 2002 _________ and ending on _________, 2007 _________”

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Company not to appoint or employ any firm or body corporate.-As provided in section 204 of the Companies Act, 1956, no company can appoint or employ any firm or body corporate to or in any office or place of profit under the company other than the office of trustee for the holders of debentures of the company for a term exceeding five years at a time, but its initial appointment may be made for a term not exceeding ten years with the approval of the Central Government.

 

Appointment of body corporate to an office or place of profit

 

S. 204(l)-Appointment of body corporate to an office or place of profit­ Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that consent of the Board of Directors be and is hereby given to the appointment of M/s. A.C.B. Private Ltd., as Corporate Advisers to the Company for a period of five years commencing from 1st July, 2002, and ending on 30th June, 2007 at an annual fee of Rs. 3,00,000/- on the terms and conditions contained in the draft agreement tabled before the Board, duly initialled by the Chairman for purpose of identification.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Managing Director of the Company be and is hereby authorised to execute the said agreement with M/s. ACB Private Ltd., and to affix the common seal of the company thereon."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Appointment not to exceed five years.-The appointment cannot be made for a period exceeding five years at a time. However, there is no prohibition for the reappointment after the term of five years expires.

 

2. Approval of Central Government.-The appointment can also be made for a term exceeding five years but not exceeding ten years with the approval of the Central Government. There is no prescribed form of application" to be made to the Central Government.

 

3. Appointment not to contain provision for reappointment.-Where the original appointment itself makes provision for re-appointment after five years, it contravenes the provisions of sub-section (4) of section 204. Shalagram Jhajharia v. National Co. Ltd., (1965) 1 Comp U 112.

 

4. Expression "consultant"-Meaning.-Con s u I tan t is an expression apparently meaning that the person consulted is to give to the company the benefit of his knowledge and experience. Pocock v. A.D.A.C. Ltd., (1952) 1 All ER 294 (KBD).

 

Appointment of Technical Advisor with Government Approval

 

S. 204(l) Proviso-Initial Appointment of Technical Advisor with Govern­ment Approval-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that, subject to the approval of the Central Government, M/s. ABC Ltd., be and is hereby appointed as the Technical Advisor of the Company pursuant to the terms and conditions, responsibility, remuneration etc. as embodied in the draft agreement, as tabled and initialled by the Chairman hereof, for a period of 10 years beginning from _________, 2002 _________, and ending _________, 2012 _________”

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Appointment for five years.-A company cannot appoint or employ any firm or body-corporate to or in any office or place of profit in that company other than office of trustee for the holders of the debentures of the company for more than five years at a time. But in the case of first such appointment or employment with the approval of the Central Government, a company can do so for a term of not more than ten years.

 

2. Appointment of technician/consultant.-For appointment or employment of a firm or body-corporate as a technician or a consultant of the company, for the first time no such requirement of five years is needed if the Central Government approval is obtained and then the appointment can be made for ten years. There is no prescribed form of this application".

 

3. Vacation of office.-Any firm or body-corporate which is appointed in violation of the aforesaid provision should vacate office immediately on the expiry of five years from the date of appointment unless its term of office expires earlier.

 

4. Extension of term.-The term of appointment or employment can be extended by not more than five years on each occasion. Such extension of term should not be sanctioned earlier than two years from the date on which it is to come into force. Such extension includes re-appointment and re-employment.

 

5. Meaning of office or place of profit.-An office or place of profit under a company will mean any office or place which a person holding it obtains from the company anything by way remuneration whether as salary, fees, commission, perquisites, the right to occupy free of rent any premises as a place of residence, or otherwise.

 

6. Exemption.-Private companies which are not subsidiaries of public companies are exempted from the provisions of section 204 of the Act.

 

Payment of interim dividend (S. 205)

 

A reserve fund resulting from revaluation of unrealised fixed assets, made in good faith and unlikely to be liable to short term fluctuation can be legally capitalised or may be distributed as dividend where the regulations of the company so provide. Dimbula Valley (Ceylon) Tea Co. Ltd v. Laurie, (1961) 1 All ER 769 (Ch D).

 

Dividend may be paid out of divisible profits which might not be profits in the business sense. Palmer's Company Law, 23rd Edition Para 76.03 at p. 991. Right to claim dividend will only arise after a dividend is declared by the company in General Meeting. Until and unless it is so declared, no shareholder has any claim against the company in respect of it. Mathai Chandy v. Hill Land Motor Union Ltd., ILR (1955) Trav. Co. 73.

 

A dividend when declared becomes a debt and a shareholder is entitled to sue at law for recovery of the same after expiry of the period prescribed by section 207. In re Severn and Wye & Severn Bridge Ry Co., (1896) 1 Ch 559.

 

The approval of dividend is the privilege of the General Meeting and the Board can pay interim dividend if so authorised by the Articles of Association subject to the regularisation of the interim dividend by the company in General Meeting. (Department's letter No. 8/13/(205)/79-CL.V., dated 19th July 198 1). Where a company had declared a dividend at a General Meeting neither the company nor its Directors can declare a further dividend for the same year. (Department's circular No. 22/7/9/74-CL.II, dated 25th September, 1975).

 

Shareholders do not get any vested right under a directors' resolution for payment of interim dividend an therefore such resolution is revocable. A vested right to dividend arises on declaration of dividend under a general meeting of shareholders. CIT v. Express Newspapers Ltd., (1998) 3 Comp LJ 23 (SC).

 

If authorised by the Articles of Association, the Board may declare an interim dividend. A mere resolution declaring an interim dividend does not create any liability and may be rescinded at any time before actual payment. Lagunas Nitrate Co. Ltd. v. Schroeder & Co. and Schmidt, (1901) 85 LT 22. The distinction between interim and final dividend is that unlike interim dividend, a final dividend once declared by the company in General Meeting is a debt and creates an enforceable obligation. Punjab National Bank v. Union of India, (1986) 59 Comp Cases 35 (Del) (DB).

 

Declaration of a further dividend for the second time out of the past year's profits has been held to be illegal and ultra vires of the Articles of Association and the Companies Act, 1956. (Extract from Fourth Annual Report on the Working and Administration of the Companies Act, 1956 for the year ended 31st March, 1960).

 

Declaration of dividends by companies should be unconditional and that they should not declare dividends subject to any conditions such as prior approval of Financial Institution or Bank. Such conditional declaration of dividends has led to companies not making payment of dividends within the statutory period. [General Circular No. 2/98, dated 13-4-1998 of the Department of Company Affairs].

 

Where the shares of a company held by its earlier managing director had been sold by his family to a third party after his death, the amounts payable as dividends in respect of those shares could not be legally appropriated by the company against any amounts that might be due from him to the company. Ferrom Electronics (P.) Ltd. v. Vijaya Leasing Ltd., (2000) 36 CLA 327 (Kar).

 

Non-declaration of dividend

 

S. 205/Regn. 85-Non -declaration of dividend-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that as the company is in urgent need of funds for erection of company's plant at Ghaziabad, no dividend, be recommended for the financial year for payment to the equity shareholders of the company and that the surplus funds be utilised for erection of company's plant at Ghaziabad."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Information to Stock Exchange for non-declaration of dividend.-Inform the Stock Exchange concerned in case the company's shares are enlisted on any recognised Stock Exchange.

 

2. Dividend cannot be declared by General Meeting unless recommended by Board.-The General Meeting cannot declare a dividend unless it is recommended by the Board of Directors.

 

3. Companies (Transfer of Profits to Reserves) Rules, 1975 not to be contravened.-Ensure that the Companies (Transfer of Profits to Reserves) Rules, 1975, are not contravened.

 

4. Court cannot compel Directors to declare dividend.-No court can compel Directors to declare a dividend.

 

5. Shareholders cannot compel Board to declare dividend.-The share-holders cannot compel the Board of Directors for payment of dividend even though there are profits.

 

 

Payment of Interim dividend

 

S. 205-Payment of interim dividend-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that approval of the Board of Directors be and is hereby given to the Company to the payment of interim dividend @ _________ % out of the profits of the Company for the half year ended on _________ on equity shares subject, however, to the deduction of income-tax at source, to all the equity shareholders whose names appear in the Register of Members of the Company on _________

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Register of Members Share Transfer Books be and are hereby closed effective from _________ to _________ both days inclusive."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. No provision in the Act -The Act does not provide for payment of interim dividend. However, if authorised by the articles of association, the Board may declare an interim dividend. A mere resolution declaring an interim dividend does not create any liability and may be rescinded at any time before actual payment. This is so even if the cash to cover the proposed dividend has been placed into a separate account.

 

2. Regularisation of interim dividend by AGM-The Department is of the view that approval of dividend is the privilege of the general meeting and the board can pay interim dividend if so authorised by the articles of association subject to the regularisation of the interim dividend by the company in general meeting. (Letter No. 8/13/(205A)/79CL-V, dated 18-7-1981).

 

3. Payment is essential-In the case of Punjab National Bank's case ROHTAGI J, said "that the proposition that a declaration by the directors of an intended dividend to be paid at some future date may be rescinded by a resolution of the directors before that date arrives is now firmly established. The decisive act is the payment and not the declaration. A mere declaration without payment has no value. The essential thing is payment. If the directors declare but do not pay, there is no liability. A declaration is a mere intention. The declaration can be reviewed. It can be varied. It can be rescinded. Before declaring an interim dividend, the directors must satisfy themselves that the financial position of the company warrants the payment of such dividend out of profits available for distribution.

 

4. Dividend includes interim dividend.-The companies (Amendment) Act, 2000, w.e.f. 13-12-2000 has inserted a new clause (14A) after clause (14) in section 2 to provide that dividend includes interim dividend. This provision is significant in the light of period of time distribution of interim dividend which has to be done within the statutory period fixed for final dividend by the Companies Act, 1956 and that is 30 days.

 

Recommendation of dividend

 

S. 205-Dividend Recommended-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Board of Directors of the company hereby recommend that a dividend at the rate of Rs. _________ per share on the equity capital of the company be paid for the year ended on _________

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the consent of the shareholders of the company at their Annual General Meeting be obtained to the payment of the aforesaid dividend to the equity shareholders of the company."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Members cannot increase the rate of dividend-It is the right of the members at the annual general meeting to approve the recommended rate of dividend or lower the same, but in no case they can increase the amount. Though it is usual to declare the dividend at the annual general meeting there is nothing in the Act prohibiting the declaration of the dividend at a subsequent general meeting, if, for any reason, it could not be declared at the annual general meeting.

 

2. Increase of rate of dividend-Regulation 85 of Table A of Schedule I says that dividends may be declared at general meetings and not necessarily, annual general meetings. Where the shareholders of a company desire to increase the rate of dividend, the proper course of action would be to adjourn the annual general meeting, hold a Board meeting for increasing the rate of dividend and adoption of revised accounts and then hold the adjourned annual general meeting for declaration of dividend.

 

 Dividend to preference shareholders

 

S. 205/Regn. 85-Dividend on preference shares-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that a dividend at the rate of _________ per cent per prefer­ence share to the preference shareholders of the company be and is hereby declared for the year ended on _________ subject, however, to the deduction of Income-tax at source.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that dividend warrants be posted to all the preference shareholders whose names appear on the Register of Members as on _________”

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Article to empower company.-Interim dividend can be declared if so authorised by the Articles of Association of the company.

 

2. Dividend to be declared out of profits.-No dividend shall be declared or paid except out of profits of the company.

 

3. No dividend to be declared when company fails to comply with section 80A.-A company which fails to comply with the provisions of section 80A shall not declare any dividend on its equity shares so long as the default continues.

 

4. Dividend not to be declared unless recommended by Directors.-Even though profits are available for payment of dividend, no dividend can be declared by the shareholders unless and until it is recommended by the Directors.

 

5. Revocation of declared dividend.-A dividend once declared cannot be revoked except with the consent of the shareholders as declaration of dividend creates a debt in favour of the shareholders.

 

6. Reserve fund resulting from revaluation of unrealised fixed assets can be capitalised or distributed as dividend.-A reserve fund resulting from revaluation of unrealised fixed assets, made in good faith and unlikely to be liable to short term fluctuation can be legally capitalised or may be distributed as dividend where the regulations of the company so provide. Dimbula Valley (Ceylon) Tea Co. Ltd. v. Laurie, (1961) 1 All ER 769 (Ch D).

 

7. Dividend be paid out of divisible profits.-Dividend may be paid out of divisible profits though there might not be profits in the business sense. Plamer's Company Law 23rd Edition Para 76.03 at p. 991.

 

8. Right to dividend accrues when declared by company in General Meeting. - Right to claim dividend will only arise after a dividend is declared by the company in General Meeting. Until and unless it is so declared, no shareholder has any claim against the company in respect of it. Mathai Chandy v. Hill Land Motor Union Ltd., ILR (1955) Trav. Co. 73.

 

9. Dividend when declared becomes debt.-A dividend when declared becomes a debt and a shareholder is entitled to sue at law for recovery of the same after expiry of the period prescribed by section 207. In re Severn and Wye & Severn Bridge Ry Co., (1896) 1 Ch 559. Dividend including an interim dividend should be paid within 30 days from the date of declaration. [Section 205A(l)]

 

10. Approval of dividend privilege of general meeting.-The approval of dividend is the privilege of the General Meeting and the Board can pay interim dividend if so authorised by the Articles of Association subject to the regularisation of the interim dividend by the company in General Meeting. (Department's letter No. 8/13/(205)/79-CL.V., dated 19th July 1981).

 

11. Declaration of further dividend.-Where a company had declared a dividend at a General Meeting neither the company nor its Directors can declare a further dividend for the same year. (Department's circular No. 22/7/9/74-CL. II, dated 25th September, 1975).

 

12. Board if authorised by Articles can declare interim dividend.-If authorised by the Articles of Association, the Board may declare an interim dividend. A mere resolution declaring an interim dividend does not create any liability and may be rescinded at any time before actual payment. Lagunas Nitrate Co. Ltd v. Schroeder & Co. and Schmidt, (1901) 85 LT 22.

 

13. Distinction between interim and final dividend.-The distinction between interim and final dividend is that unlike interim dividend, a final dividend once declared by the company in General Meeting is a debt and creates an enforceable obligation. Punjab National Bank v. Union of India, (1986) 59 Comp Cases 35 (Del) (DB). This view is changed after the Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000 with the insertion of new clause (14A) in section 2 whereby dividend includes interim dividend.

 

14. Declaration of further dividend out of past year's profit illegal.-Declaration of a further dividend for the second time out of the past year's profit has been held to be illegal and ultra vires of the Articles of Association and the Companies Act, 1956. (Extract from Fourth Annual Report on the Working and Administration of the Companies Act, 1956 for the year ended 31st March, 1960).

 

Payment of Interim dividend

(Another format)

 

S. 205-Payment of Interim dividend-Board Resolution

 

" RESOLVED that an interim dividend of ten per cent on the paid-up equity capital of the Company be declared and paid out of six months' profits as disclosed by the pro forma accounts, as submitted to this meeting, subject to deduction of income-tax under section 192 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, and that such dividend be paid to those members whose names appear in the Register of Members as on _________ 2002 _________

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Register of Members be closed from _________ 2002 _________ to _________ 2002 _________ both days in­clusive.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Secretary of the Company be and is hereby authorised to circulate the notice of payment of interim dividend as well as closing of the Register of Members by suitable advertisement in newspaper and to the _________ Stock Exchange Associa­tion

           

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Power of Board to declare interim dividend.-An interim dividend is a dividend declared by the Directors at any time between two Annual General Meetings, Usually the Articles of Association of a company provide authority to the Board of Directors to pay interim dividend subject to availability of profit of the company on the basis of interim accounts prepared (not necessarily audited). Regulation 86 of Table 'A' states that the Board may from time to time pay to the members such interim dividends as appear to it to be justified by the profits of the company after provision being made for taxation. But such authorisation of Articles of Association of a company to pay interim dividend by the Board is subject to the regularisation by the company in General Meeting. This General Meeting must be Annual General Meeting only as the profit of the company would not otherwise be known. (Letter No. 8/13(205A) 79-CL.V., dt. 18-7-1981). Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000 w.e.f. 13-12-2000 has inserted new sub-section (1A) to section 205 by which the Board of Directors is required to deposit the amount of dividend including interim dividend in a separate bank account within 5 days from the date of declaration of such dividend.

 

2. Resolution declaring interim dividend be rescinded by Board.-A resolution passed at a Board Meeting may subsequently be rescinded by the Board especially when the Board is in doubt about the adequacy of the profit justifying interim dividend.

 

3. Interim dividend does not create debt.-A mere resolution of the Directors resolving to pay a certain amount as interim dividend, does not create a debt enforceable against the company, for it is always open to the Directors to rescind the resolution before payment of dividend. Dalmia v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1964) 2 Comp LJ 69 : (1964) 34 Comp Cases 668.

 

Payment of interim dividend

(Another format)

 

S. 205-Payment of interim dividend-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the approval of the Board of Directors be and is hereby accorded to the Company for payment of interim dividend @ _________  % out of the profits of the Company for the year ended __________________ subject to deduction of tax at source.

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that _________ be fixed as the record date for payment of dividend and that the said dividend be paid to those shareholders whose names appear on the register of members on the record date fixed as aforesaid."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Payment of interim dividend prohibited.-A Company which has failed to redeem preference shares as per the provisions of section 80A of the Act is prohibited to make payment of dividend.

 

2. Final dividend a must.-Once interim dividend is paid, final dividend must be declared at the immediately next annual general meeting.

 

 

Declaration of interim dividend for half year

 

S. 205/Regn. 86-Declaration of interim dividend for half year-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the approval of the Board of Directors of the company be and is hereby accorded to the company to the payment of interim dividend @ _________ for half year ended 30th June, 2002, on equity shares and that the dividend so declared to be paid to those members whose names appear in the Register of Members as on 15th June, 2002.

 

"RESOLVED FURTHER that the Register of Members and the Share Transfer be closed effective from _________ to _________ (both days inclusive).

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Intimation by a listed company to Stock Exchange.-In case the company's shares are enlisted on any recognised Stock Exchange, intimation has to be given to the Stock Exchange concerned two days before the meeting as also passing of the resolution.

 

2. Mere declaration by directors to pay interim dividend does not create enforceable debt.-A mere resolution of the Directors resolving to pay a certain amount as interim dividend does not create a debt enforceable against the company as it is always open to Directors to rescind the resolution before payment of the dividend. J. Dalmia v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1964) 2 Comp LJ 69 : (1964) 34 Comp Cases 668.

 

3. Articles must authorise directors to declare interim dividend.-The Board of Directors must be authorised by the Articles of Association for declaration of interim dividend.

 

4. Half-yearly results to be considered before declaring interim dividend.-Half year results has to be considered by the Board before any interim dividend is declared by them.

 

5. Payment of interim dividend.-An interim dividend is a dividend paid by the Directors at any time between two Annual General Meetings. Re, Jowitt, (1922) 2 Ch. 442.

 

6. Interim dividends do not create a debt as Board can rescind resolution.-An interim dividend announced by the Board of Directors will not unlike a final dividend declared by the company at the Annual General Meeting, create a debt as the Board may subsequently rescind the resolution and cancel the announcement. Jhimi Bajoria v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1970) 40 Comp Cases 750; Punjab National Bank Ltd. v. Union of India, (1986) 59 Comp Cases 35 (Del-DB).

 

Recommendation of final dividend

 

S. 205- Recommendation of final dividend-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Directors do hereby recommend a final dividend of five per cent on equity shares out of the net available balance of Rs. _________ after provision for taxation of Rs. _________ absorbing Rs. _________ and that such dividend be paid subject to the members' approval in Annual General Meeting after deduction of tax at source to those equity shareholders whose names appear in the Register of Members as on _________ 2002 _________

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the Directors do hereby recommend a final dividend of five per cent on equity shares out of the reserves standing in the books of the Company as on _________ 2002 _________ and absorbing Rs _________ and that such dividend be paid subject to the members' approval in Annual General Meeting after deduction of tax at source to those equity shareholders whose names appear in the Register of Members as on _________ 2002 _________”

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. When no dividend declared by Board, shareholders in general meeting cannot themselves declare.-The Articles of Association of companies invariably provide for the payment of dividend within, of course, the limit laid down by section 205 of the Companies Act, 1956. Regulation 85 of Table 'A' states that the company in General Meeting may declare dividends but no dividend shall exceed the amount recommended by the Board. It follows that although the members of the company in the General Meeting are empowered to declare dividend, such power is limited to the maximum percentage or amount recommended by the Directors. Thus, even though the profit as per section 205 is available, the Directors, for any reason whatsoever may consider that no dividend should be declared, and may not recommend any dividend, and in that event, the shareholders in general meeting cannot themselves declare it.

 

2. Percentage of profits to be transferred to reserves.-(a) Rule 2 of the Companies (Transfer of Profits to Reserves) Rules, 1975, provides for certain percentage of profits to be transferred to the reserves of the company and for arriving at such profits arrears of depreciation mentioned in section 205(l) must also be provided.

 

(b) The term 'current profits' used in the said rule means profits after tax and after making statutory transfer to the development rebate reserve.

 

(c) The reference to dividend in the Rules is only to equity dividend and to that portion of dividend relating to participating preference shares which is payable over and above the fixed rate paid to preference shareholders.

 

(d) Transfer to reserves, in the said Rules, does not mean transfer to development rebate reserve or capital reserve or special reserve but transfer to free reserves.

 

3. Voluntary transfer of higher percentage.-A company can transfer to reserve a higher percentage of profits than prescribed under Rule 2 to the said Rules. (Circular No.8/76(1/1/76-CL. V), dated 18-5-1976, read with 12/76 (1/l/76-CL. V), dated 10-6-1976 and 21/76 (8/30(205A)/75-CL.V), dated 19-7-1976).

 

4. Declaration of further dividend.-After a final dividend has been declared by the shareholders in Annual General Meeting in respect of a particular year, there is no power available to the members of the company or its Directors to reconsider and pay further dividend for the same year. Biswanath Prasad Khaitan v. New Central Jute Mills Co. Ltd., (1961) 31 Comp. Cas 125.

 

5. Declaration of further dividend out of past years' profits of company for second time illegal.-It has been further held by the Calcutta High Court in the case cited above that declaration of further dividend out of the past years' profits of a company for the second time is illegal and ultra vires the Articles of Association (in the particular case) and the Companies Act. Declaration of dividend out of the excess amount resulting from recomputation of depreciation does not amount to sound company practice and it should not be shown in the books and in the balance sheet, as is ordinarily done, as 'reserve not available for distribution'. (Company News & Notes, July, 1963).

 

6. Profits of the year to be transferred to reserves.-Profits to be transferred to reserves must be profits of the year in question and not profits of past years. (Letter No. 8/2 (Misc)/75-CL.V, dated 6-6-1975).

 

7. Newly incorporated company prohibited from transferring more than ten per cent of profit to reserves.-In the case of newly incorporated companies where no dividend could be declared over the three years immediately preceding the financial year in question, the Department's view is that Rule 3 will not apply, and the case will be governed by the provisions of Rule 2. That is to say, the company is prohibited from transferring more than 10% of its profits to the reserves. (Circular No.20/76(5/10/76-CL-XIV and 1/l/76-CL-V), dated 26-7-1976). Newly incorporated companies cannot transfer more than ten per cent of its profits to its reserves as Rule 3 of the Companies (Transfer of Profits to Reserves) Rules, 1975 cannot be applied to them. (Circular No.20/76(5/10/76-CL.XIV and I/l/76-CL.V), dated 26-7-1976).

 

Recommendation of final dividend

(Another format)

 

S. 205-Recommendation of final dividend-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that the Board of Directors hereby recommend a dividend at the rate of _________ per share on the equity capital of the Company for the year ended _________ and that the said dividend be paid subject to the approval of the shareholders to those shareholders whose names appear on the register of members on _________

 

RESOLVED FURTHER that the dividend warrants be posted to the respective shareholders within 30 days of such approval to the shareholders whose names appear on the register of members on _________

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Provision in the Articles of Association.-For payment of final dividend provisions given in the articles of association should be followed if any. If the company is a public company and there are no provision in the articles then regulation 85 to 94 should be followed of Table A of Schedule I to the Act.

 

2. Depreciation should be provided.-No dividend can be declared or paid by a company for any financial years unless and until appropriate provision for depreciation has been made as per Schedule XIV to the Act.

 

Transfer of profits to General Reserves

 

S. 205(2A)- Transfer of profits to General Reserves-Board Resolution

 

"RESOLVED that pursuant to the provisions contained in sub-section (2A) of section 205 of the Companies Act, 1956 read with Companies (Transfer of Profits to Reserves) Rules, 1975, a sum of Rs. 5,50,000/- representing 10% of the current profits of the year be and is hereby transferred to General Reserves."

 

PRACTICE NOTES

 

1. Meaning of Reserves.-The expression 'reserves' used in sub-section (2) means 'free reserves'. (Deptt. Circular No. 21 of 1976, dated 19-7-1976). The expression 'free reserves' denotes that the reserves are not created or set apart or intended for any special purpose or purposes.

 

2. Transfer of profits to Reserves.-Section 205(2A) requires a company before distributing dividend exceeding 10% of distributable profit of the company to transfer a specified percentage of the distributable income to reserves.

 

3. Distribution of minimum amount of dividend.-In the case of companies in which public are not substantially interested within the meaning of section 2(18) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, a certain minimum amount of dividend has to be distributed to avoid the levy of the additional tax on undistributed profits under section 104 of the Income-tax Act.

 

4. Investment Company and Dividend.-In the case of an investment company, this compulsory distribution of dividend is 90% of the distributable income. This means that such investment company must distribute 90% dividend and carry into reserve 10% of its distributable profits. An investment company must distribute 90% of its distributable in allowed deduction for purposes of income-tax. This results in great hardship being caused to investment companies.

 

5. Transfer to Reserve.-The current profits mean profits after statutory transfer to the Development Rebate Reserve. Transfer to Development Rebate Reserve, Capital Reserve or Special Reserve will not meet the requirement of transfer to Reserves under the rules. No amount is required to be transferred to reserves in case the proposed dividend is less than 10%.

 

6. New Companies and Dividend.-In the case of newly incorporated companies where no dividend could be declared over the three years immediately preceding the financial year in question, the Department's view is that Rule 3 will not apply, and the case will be governed by the provisions of Rule 2. That is to say, the' company is prohibited from transferring more than 10% of its profits to the reserves. (Circular No.20/76(5)/10/76-CL-XIV and 1/l/76-CL-V, dated 26-7-1976).

 

7. Profits of current year only.-The amount to be transferred to the General Reserves would be worked out in respect of the profits of the year in question and without bringing in the profits of the past years. (Letter No. 8/ 2(Misc.) 75-CL. V, dated 6th June, 1975.)

 

Dividend deposited in bank [Section 205(1A) (1B) & (1C)]

 

Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000 has w.e.f. 13-12-2000 inserted three new sub-sections (1A) (1B) and (1C) in section 205. Sub-section (1A) provides for the Board of Directors to deposit the dividend amount in a separate bank account within 5 days of declaration subsection (IB) requires the said amount so deposited to be used only for payment of dividend.

 

 Unpaid and unclaimed dividend. (S. 205A)

 

Section 205A has been amended by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1988, to provide that all dividends remaining unpaid/unclaimed whether dividend warrants have been posted or not must be deposited in the Unpaid Dividend Account. It is now made clear that any dividend warrant which has not been encashed within 30 days from the date of declaration of dividend or has not been paid or remained unclaimed within the aforesaid period, for whatever reasons, has to be transferred to the special account in any scheduled bank.

 

Transfer of unpaid/unclaimed dividend to Investor Education &

Protection Fund. (205A)

 

The Companies (Amendment) Act 1999 with retrospective effect from 31st October, 1998 has made amendments in sub-section (5) and sub-section (6) of section 205A. From now on any money transferred to the unpaid dividend account of a company after the expiry of seven days from the period of 30 days from the date of declaration of final dividend which remains unpaid or unclaimed for a period of 7 years from the date of such transfer should be transferred by the company to the Investor Education and Protection Fund instead of General Revenue Account of the Central Government. Sub-section (7) of section 205A has also been changed by the said Amendment Act to the effect that the company will be entitled to a receipt from the authority or committee appointed by the Central Government to administer the aforesaid Fund instead of from the Reserve Bank of India and such receipt will be an effectual discharge of the company in respect of the said transfer to the said Fund".

 

Transfer of Unpaid Dividend to Investor Education and Protection Fund (S. 205C)

 

General Circular No. 22/2002, dated 23-9-2002.-Department of Company Affairs has clarified the correct legal position of the provisions of section 205C inserted into the Companies Act, 1956 on 31-10-1998.

 

Prior to the amendment of Section 205A and the enactment of Section 205C by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999 with effect from 31st October, 1998, companies were required to transfer to the general revenue account of the Central Government any moneys transferred to the 'unpaid dividend account' which remained unpaid or unclaimed for a period of three years from the date of such transfer.

 

Therefore, all amounts transferred to the 'unpaid dividend account' of a company on or before 30th October, 1995 and which had remained unpaid or unclaimed on 30th October, 1998 should have been transferred to the general revenue account of the Central Government.

 

With the amendment of Section 205A and the enactment of Section 205C by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999, it is now provided with effect from 31st October, 1998 that any moneys transferred to the 'unpaid dividend account' of the company and remaining unpaid or unclaimed for a period of seven years from the date of such transfer shall be transferred to the Investor Education and Protection Fund.

 

Therefore, all amounts transferred to the 'unpaid dividend account' of a company on or after 30th October, 1995 or which have remained unpaid or unclaimed for a period of seven years from the date of such transfer should be transferred to the Investor Education and Protection Fund together with interest accrued thereon, unless they have already been transferred to the general revenue account of the Central Government prior to the enactment of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999.

 

With regard to other unclaimed amounts, section 205C enacted by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999 with effect from 31st October, 1998 also requires the following amounts to be credited to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (the Fund):

 

(a) The application moneys received by companies for allotment of any securities and due for refund;

(b) Matured deposits with companies;

(c) Matured debentures with companies;

(d) The interest accrued on the amounts referred to in clauses (a) to (c).

 

The above amounts have to be transferred to the Fund when they have remained unclaimed or unpaid for a period of seven years from the date they became due for payment.

 

Accordingly, all amounts which had remained unclaimed or unpaid as on 30th October, 1991 (irrespective of the number of years they had remained unclaimed or unpaid as on that date) and which remained unclaimed or unpaid as on 31st October, 1998 should be transferred to the Fund unless such amounts have been paid to the parties before the enactment of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999.

 

In respect of such amounts, which have become due for payment after 30th October, 199 1, the amounts should be transferred to the Fund if they remain unclaimed and unpaid for a period of seven years from the dates they first became due for payment.

 

With regard to operationalisation of the said Fund it has been clarified that since the Fund became operational only on 1st October, 2001 all amounts due for transfer between 1st November, 1998 and 30th September, 2001 should have been transferred within the grace period of 30 days, i.e., by 31st October, 2001.