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Introduction to Company Law - Dinesh Lahori

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Introduction to Company Law - Dinesh Lahori

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Term - Company under Company Law and its features.
Different types of Companies with practical examples

Term - Company under Company Law and its features.
Different types of Companies with practical examples

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Introduction to Company Law - Dinesh Lahori

  1. 1. CORE COURSE – V ELEMENTS OF COMPANY LAW Code: SY B.COM - 235 Total Credits: 03 1 Mr Dinesh Lahori M. Com, MPM, MLL & LW, Eq. Masters in German, M. Phil, GDCA, Phd Scholar.
  2. 2. COMPANY LAW ??????? 2 COMPANY
  3. 3. 1. Background and Features of company the Companies Act, 2013 2. Company: Meaning, Nature and Characteristics of Company. 3. Types of Companies: On the basis of mode of formation, Number of members, liability and Control, Public and Private Companies: Distinction, Advantages, Disadvantages, Privileges and their Conversion into each other. Other kinds of Companies: One Person Company, Charitable Companies, Dormant Company, Sick Company, Small Company, Listed Company, Foreign Company and its business in India etc Syllabus – Chapter 01 – Company Act – Introduction and Concept. 3
  4. 4. 4 • Easy to start and wind up. • Prompt decision • Flexibility in operations • Limited capital • Limited expertise • Limited life • Unlimited liability • No legal status.
  5. 5. Merits of Sole Proprietorship • Single Owner • Easy to set up • No profit sharing • High privacy • Advantage of Tax • Less capital required • Direct interaction with customers • Provides employment opportunities • Easy in dissolution Demerits • Limited funds • Unlimited liability • Continuity is uncertain • Lack of management • Size is limited • Loss in absence • Doubtful secrecy • Limited business area 5
  6. 6. 6
  7. 7. 7
  8. 8. Transition from Sole trader to Company 8
  9. 9. In a practical way, a company means a company of certain persons registered under the Companies Act….????? Two or more persons who are desirous of carrying on joint business enterprises, - have the choice of either forming a company or a partnership. “Partnership is suitable device for a small scale businesses, which can be financed and managed by a small group of partners, who take personal interest and there is mutual trust and confidence among them. But where the enterprise requires a rather greater mobilization of capital which the resources of few persons cannot provide, the formation of the company is the only choice. 9
  10. 10. Com – with or together, panis – bread (latin term) Earlier,…… Word ‘Company’ has no strictly technical or legal meaning. In terms of Company act, a Company means a company formed and registered under the Companies Act. 10
  11. 11. A company is a voluntary incorporated body which is an artificial legal person, having a separate legal entity with separation of ownership and management, created by law with limited liability having a common seal and perpetual succession. “A company is a voluntary association for profit with capital divisible into transferable shares with limited liability, having corporate entity and a common seal with perpetual succession” Summarized Definition 11
  12. 12. In Company Law, a Company is a “Artificial Legal person” or “Legal entity” separate from and capable of surviving beyond the lives of its members. Like any juristic person, a company is legally an entity apart from its members, capable of rights and duties of its own and endowed (gifted) with the potential of perpetual succession 12
  13. 13. Nature of Corporate Form and its Merits (Contd) Limited Liability: The company, being a separate person, is the owner of its assets and bound by its liabilities. Members, even as a whole, are neither the owners of the company’s undertaking, nor liable for its debts. The liabilities of the members is limited to the nominal value of shares possessed or the amount guaranteed by them. But on the other hand, in the case of Partnership - the liability of the partners ……………… The whole fortune of the partners is at stake because the creditors of the Partnership firm may even charge the private property of partners. 13
  14. 14. Perpetual succession: An incorporated company never dies. In spite of the total change in membership, “the company will be the same entity, with the same privileges and immunities, estates, and possessions” Thus, Perpetual succession means membership of a company may keep on changing, but that does not affects its continuity. (As river Thames & Ganga – its existence is continuous, despite its contents) The guarantors of a company’s loan could not claim to be relieved, since its management has changed. Illustration: A, B & C are the only members of the company, holding all its shares – these shares were totally transferred to X, Y & Z. 14
  15. 15. Professional Management: Young managers willingly join companies because they will be functioning individually and are assured of the fact that there is no human employer and shareholders exercise only a formative role. Such an atmosphere of independence and strong financial backing gives them an opportunity to develop extraordinary managerial capabilities. Finances The company is the only channel of organizing business which is given the privilege of raising capital by public subscriptions either by way of shares and debentures. 15
  16. 16. Separate Property – Separation of Ownership and Management A Company, being a legal person, is capable of owning, enjoying and sell out its property in its own name. The company becomes the owner of its capital and assets. The shareholders are not the several or joint owners of the company’s property. Illustration: A person who was the holder of nearly all the shares, except one in the Timber Company and was also a substantial creditor. He insured the company’s timber in his own name. The timber have been destroyed by fire, the Insurance company ……….. The property, however much, the shareholders may come and go, remains vested in the company, and the company may convey, assign, mortgage, or otherwise deal with it irrespective of these mutations. While in the partnership firm, the distinction is often not 16
  17. 17. Transferable shares: Should Company entertain applications of transfer of shares? Should Company entertain applications of transmission of shares? 17
  18. 18. Transferable shares: Due to incorporation of the Joint stock company, a member is able to sell his shares in the open market and to get back his investment without having to withdraw the money from the company. This provides liquidity to the investor and stability to the company. On the other hand, In a partnership – a partner cannot transfer his share in the capital of the firm, without the unanimous consent of other partners. 18
  19. 19. Capacity to sue and be sued: A company has the right to protect its fair name. it can sue for such insulting remarks against it as are likely to damage its business or property etc. Criminal complaint can be filed by a company but it must be represented by a natural person. The compliant by a company is liable to be dismissed because of the absence of representative as in case of Individual compliant dismissed for absence of Complainant. In absence of the above right, the company would be disadvantaged as against individuals under a law, which is designed to encourage and achieve proper standards of conduct in public life or society. 19
  20. 20. Independent Corporate Existence – Separate Legal Entity No one can say he is the owner of the Company and the business now belongs to an institution A partnership has no existence apart from its members, it is nothing but a collection of partners. On other hand, a company in law is a person – it is a distinct legal persona existing independent of its members. By incorporation under the act, the Company is vested with a corporate personality (an entity) which is separate from the members who compose it. It says that upon issue of COI, the subscribers of MOA and other persons, who may from time to time be the members of Company, shall be body corporate of exercising and functioning with perpetual succession and common seal. 20
  21. 21. a) Registration: Exist only when registered. b) Voluntary association: Formed by the choice and consent of the members c) Legal Personality: By law it is a single person. d) Contractual capacity: A share holder of a company, in its individual capacity, can not bind the company in any way. e) Management: Board of directors, MD and managers, but not shareholders. Main features or characteristics of a company 21
  22. 22. f) Permanent existence: Perpetual existence g) Registered office h) Common seal i) Limited liability: The creditors of a company are not creditors of individual shareholders, but a right against the assets of the company j) Transferability: k) Statutory obligations: Filing balance sheets, maintaining proper accounts books and registers. 22
  23. 23. l) Artificial personality: but not a natural person m) Residence: a company has a residence for taxation and other purpose n) Separate name: specific name to be registered and affixed at the premises o) Number of members: Private: Minimum 2, Max 200 Public: Minimum 7 and max no limit p) Share holders are actual owners and thus they participate directly and indirectly. 23
  24. 24. q) Raising of capital on the large scale r) Capacity to sue s) Rigidity of objects t) Statutory requirements and its business u) Separate legal entity v) An artificial person but not a citizen z) Lifting the Corporate veil. Determination of the character Where company is a mere cloak or sham Where the company is acting as an agent of the shareholders Protection of revenue, like tax evasion 24
  25. 25. Evolution: Corporations are not novelities. They are institutions of very ancient date. A body corporate during seventeenth & eighteenth Centuries could be brought into existence either by Royal charter or by special act of Parliament & which were expensive and dilatory (slow paced). Consequently to meet growing needs, large unincorporated partnerships came into existence, trading however in corporate form. The membership of each such concern being very large, the management of business was left to a few trustees…..???? Many spurious companies were created which would appear only to disappear resulting in losses to the investing public. 25
  26. 26. The English parliament, therefore, passed an act, known as the “Bubbles Act of 1720” which was an attempt to prevent smaller non-charter companies from forming or the South Sea Company itself wanting to prevent other bubbles from forming that might have decreased the intensity of South Sea Bubble. This proved to be a great setback to the expanding trade and commerce. Yet the act remained on the statute book for over a century and was repealed in 1825. The history of Indian Co Law began with the Joint Stock Co act of 1850. Since then cumulative process of amendment and consolidation has brought us to the most comprehensive legislation Company act 1956. 26
  27. 27. Corporate Veil ??????? Independent Corporate Existence – Separate Legal Entity – Company is different from its members. Separation of Ownership and Management – Money of somebody else is handled by somebody else. Limited Liability – If company incurs liability, the private property of the members is not at stake. 27
  28. 28. 28 Saloman Vs Saloman and Co Ltd. Aron Saloman Shoe Business Proprietor Firm Incorporated New Company Saloman and Co Ltd What Business it will do ??? Acquired the Sole proprietorship of Saloman worth 39000 Pounds.
  29. 29. After one year – Liquidation Process – Assets Vs Liabilities Assets – 6k Pounds, Liabilities – 16k Pounds including 10k debentures of Aron Saloman - ?????? 29 Saloman & Co Ltd Members Aron Saloman 20k shares Wife, Daughter and 4 sons with one share each Directors Aron Saloman and his son Creditors Aron Saloman 10k Pounds as Debentures
  30. 30. Lifting the Corporate Veil https://youtu.be/XkI7Wq03ewA 1. Determination of the character Daimler Co Ltd Vs Continental Tyre & Rubber Co Ltd (Great Britain) https://youtu.be/XSwDENfG4NM 2. Where company is a mere cloak or sham, Protection of Fraud. – Jones Vs Lipman 3. Protection of revenue, like tax evasion – Dinshaw Maneckjee Petit Case. 30
  31. 31. TYPES OF COMPANIES 31
  32. 32. On the basis of Incorporation / Formation Chartered Company Statutory Company Registered Company On the basis of Ownership / Number Private Company Public Company One Person Company On the basis of Liability Company limited by Shares Company limited by Guarantee Company with unlimited liability On the basis of Place / Domicile Foreign Company Indian Company On the basis of Control Government Company Holding & Subsidiary Company Associate Company Miscellaneous Charitable Company / Non profit Company Sick Company Dormant Co. Small Company Listed Company 32
  33. 33. https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx? id=- bbi5YTAmECFB51fbNIY7LNglFReU7RHrEkN_FwjO4 RUN1VQVVBGR1JXRjVORlJPWTlCQ1BBNjZGQS4u 33
  34. 34. A) On the basis of Incorporation: i) Chartered companies: these are companies also known as Royal Charters. Such companies are incorporated under the special charter of the king or the queen. The East India co., Bank of England are few examples, but post independence do not exist. ii) Statutory company: the companies which are formed under special acts of legislature and they enjoy the rights and liabilities as designed by the act. For example: LIC, SBI and Reserve Bank of India. iii) Registered company under the Companies Act 1956 or 2013 or earlier. Important types of Companies 34
  35. 35. 35
  36. 36. 36
  37. 37. B) Classification of Companies based on Ownership or number. i) Private company ii) Public company iii) One man company: X and Y register their company as a private company with a share capital of Rs 7 lakhs, divided into 70000 shares of Rs 10 each. Y holds 69999 share while X holds only 1 share. This is a one man company. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/company/truffle- house-(opc)-private-limited-/U15100DL2017OPC322340 https://www.tradeindia.com/Seller-27955029-Akhan-Dairy- Opc-Pvt-Ltd-/ https://sainaassociates.com/opc-registration-in-pune 37
  38. 38. C) On the basis of Liability: i. Companies limited by Shares ii.Companies limited by Guarantee This is a company where the liability of its members is limited to such amounts as they may respectively undertake as fixed by the MOA to contribute to the assets of the company in the event of winding up. iii) Unlimited company 38
  39. 39. D) On the basis of Place / Domicile: 1. Foreign Company – Any Company or body corporate incorporated outside India, which – a) Has a place of business in India by itself or through agent, physically or electronic means. b) Conducts business activity in India Examples – American Cos in India – Amway, Cognizant, Cummins, Ford, Intel etc. 2. Indian company (Inland company) – Incorporated in India – Maruti, Tata etc. 39
  40. 40. E) On the basis of Control: According to section 2 (27), control shall include the right to appoint majority of the directors or to control the management or policy decisions exercisable by a person or persons acting individually or in concert, directly or indirectly, including by virtue of their shareholding or management rights or shareholders agreements or voting agreements or in any other manner. 1. Government Company: Any company in which more than 51% of paid share capital is held by Central / State or partly. (Subsidiary of Govt Co will be Govt Co) Illustrations: HA, SAIL, BHEL 40
  41. 41. E) On the basis of Control: (Contd) 2. Holding and Subsidiary Company: Essentially, if one company holds more than 50% of the shares of another or appoints a majority of the other company’s directors, the second company is a subsidiary of the first. The first company is called the holding company.https://www.google.com/search?q=vivanta&oq=vivanta&aqs=chrome ..69i57j46l7.5612j0j15&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Subsidiary company not to hold shares in its holding company One of the best-known holding companies is Berkshire Hathaway. Warren Buffett's company owns GEICO, Dairy Queen and Fruit of the Loom among other businesses. Another well-known holding company is Alphabet, which owns Google, YouTube, Nest and other companies. Alphabet is the parent company of Google. It encompasses companies like Fiber, XLabs, Calico, Nest, etc. Google now only exists with the core business of search and Android. https://www.investopedia.com/investing/companies-owned-by-google/ 41
  42. 42. Associate company As per Section 2(6), “Associate company”, in relation to another company, means a company in which that other company has a significant influence, but which is not a subsidiary company of the company having such influence and includes a joint venture company. Explanation to section 2(6) provides that “significant influence” means control of at least twenty per cent of total share capital, or of business decisions under an agreement. To add more governance and transparency in the working of the company, the concept of associate company has been introduced. It will provide a more rational and objective framework of associate relationship between the companies. 42
  43. 43. 43
  44. 44. Miscellaneous 44 Listed companies are those which are included and traded on a particular stock exchange. The stock exchanges have various prerequisites that a company must fulfil and continue to fulfil in order to be and stay listed Why??? . The reason companies like to go public is so that they can reduce their debt and have means of financing themselves apart from bank loans An unlisted public company is one which is not listed on any stock exchange but can have an unlimited number of shareholders to raise capital for any commercial venture.
  45. 45. Small Company is a new form of private company under Companies Act, 2013 – BUT WHY ???? Why small companies should suffer the effects of regulation, which are designed to ensure balancing of interests of stakeholders of large widely held corporates. To enable simplified decision making procedures and relieving small cos to select statutory internal administrative procedures. To enable and achieve transparency at low cost. 45
  46. 46. Association not for Profit / Charitable Company However, Section 8(1) permits the registration, under a licence granted by the Central Government, of associations not for profit with limited liability without being required to use the word “Limited’ or the words ‘Private Limited” after their names. This is of great value to companies not engaged in business like bodies pursuing charitable, educational or other purposes of great utility. The Central Government may grant such a licence if: (i) it is intended to form a company for promoting commerce, art, science, sports, education, research, social welfare, religion, charity protection of environment or any such other object; and (ii) the company prohibits payment of any dividend to its members but intends to apply its profits or other income in promotion of its objects. 46
  47. 47. Sick Company Sick Industrial Company means an Industrial company, which has at the end of any financial year: a) Accumulated losses exceeding 50% of average net worth during 4 years; or b) Has failed to repay debts to its creditor (s) in 3 consecutive quarters on demand made in writing for such repayment. However, the companies bill does not define a sick company as such and provides that any company would be ‘sick company’ where the NCLT through an order in writing decide its ability to repay the debts and declares it as a sick company. 47
  48. 48. DORMANT COMPANIES The Companies Act, 2013 has recognized a new set of companies called as dormant companies, where a company is formed and registered under this Act for a future project or to hold an asset or intellectual property and has no significant accounting transaction, such a company or an inactive company may make an application to the Registrar in such manner as may be prescribed for obtaining the status of a dormant company. (i) “inactive company” means a company which has not been carrying on any business or operation, or has not made any significant accounting transaction during the last two financial years, or has not filed financial statements and annual returns during the last two financial years; (ii) “significant accounting transaction” means any transaction other than— (a) payment of fees by a company to the Registrar; (b) payments made by it to fulfil the requirements of this Act or any other law; (c) allotment of shares to fulfil the requirements of this Act; and (d) payments for maintenance of its office and records. 48
  49. 49. 49 As per section 455(2), the Registrar on consideration of the application shall allow the status of a dormant company to the applicant and issue a certificate in such form as may be prescribed to that effect. According to section 455(4), in case of a company which has not filed financial statements or annual returns for two financial years consecutively, the Registrar shall issue a notice to that company and enter the name of such company in the register maintained for dormant companies. Further a dormant company shall have such minimum number of directors, file such documents and pay such annual fee as may be prescribed to the Registrar to retain its dormant status in the register and may become an active company on an application made in this behalf accompanied by such documents
  50. 50. On the basis of Incorporation / Formation Chartered Company Statutory Company Registered Company On the basis of Ownership / Number Private Company Public Company One Person Company On the basis of Liability Company limited by Shares Company limited by Guarantee Company with unlimited liability On the basis of Place / Domicile Foreign Company Indian Company On the basis of Control Government Company Holding & Subsidiary Company Associate Company Miscellaneous Charitable Company / Non profit Company Sick Company Dormant Co. Small Company Listed Company 50
  51. 51. 1) Minimum number of members 2) Maximum number of members 3) Commencement of business 4) Invitation of public 5) Transferability of share. 6) Number of directors: [atleast 3 in Public and 2 in private] 7) Statutory Meeting 8) Managerial remuneration (max 11% of NP) 9) Restrictions on appointment of directors 10)Managerial remuneration Difference between Private AND Public company 51
  52. 52. Basis Public Company Private Company Members Minimum – 07 Maximum - unlimited Minimum – 02 Maximum – 200 Number of Directors Minimum - 03 Minimum – 02 Index of Members Compulsory Not compulsory Transfer of shares Permissible Not permissible Invitation from Public Can invite Public for subscription of shares Cannot 52
  53. 53. Privileges of a Private Limited Company over a public company 67(2) Financial assistance can be given to its employees for purchase of or subscribing to its own shares or shares in its holding company 121(1) Need not prepare a report on the Annual General Meeting. 134(3)(p) Need not prepare a statement indicating the manner in which formal annual evaluation has been made by the Board of its own performance and that of its committees and individual directors. 53
  54. 54. 149(1) Private company need not have more than two directors. 149(4) Need not appoint Independent directors on its Board. 152(6) A proportion of directors need not retire every year. 164(3) Additional grounds for disqualification for appointment as a director may be specified by the company in its articles. 165(1) Restrictive provisions regarding total number of directorships which a person may hold in a public compnay do not include directorships held in a private company which is neither a holding or subsidiary company of a public company. 54
  55. 55. 167(4) Additional grounds for vacation of office of a director may be provided in the Articles. 190(4) The provisions relating to contract of employment with managing or whole-time directors does not apply to a private company 197(1) Total managerial remuneration payable by a private company, to its directors, including managing director and whole-time director, and its manager in respect of any financial year may exceed eleven per cent. of the net profits 55
  56. 56. Any Q’s……. Ample Thanks…..!!!!! 56
  57. 57. 1. Background and Features of company the Companies Act, 2013 2. Company: Meaning, Nature and Characteristics of Company. 3. Types of Companies: On the basis of mode of formation, Number of members, liability and Control, Public and Private Companies: Distinction, Advantages, Disadvantages, Privileges and their Conversion into each other. Other kinds of Companies: One Person Company, Charitable Companies, Dormant Company, Sick Company, Small Company, Listed Company, Foreign Company and its business in India etc Syllabus – Chapter 01 – Company Act – Introduction and Concept. 57

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