Research Questions:
- Is the current corporate governance framework in India, particularly in
relation to companies approaching insolvency, provides the right combination
of high standards and low burdens?
- In respect of Companies Act 1956, Companies Act 2013 and Insolvency and
Bankruptcy Code 2016, what were the various issues arising in winding up
procedures and how it would have been tackled so far?
Rationale
The procedure for winding up is not simple, and it is a long and time-consuming
process. It encompasses a wide range of complications and technicalities. Using
modifications, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs has simplified the process of
forming a company simple and quick through its online platform. The same
ministry will make reforms and introduce new winding-up formats to make it
easier for businesses to wind up. Previously, just the Companies Act covered
this, but with the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code of 2016, it has become more
difficult to apply these laws and provisions while deciding on a priority.
The Companies Act of 1956 was the first to bring the provisions of winding up
into the legal system, and the Companies Act of 2013 kept them. Winding up by
Court or Compulsory Winding Up, Voluntary Winding Up, and Winding Up Subject to
Court Supervision were all options under the Companies Act of 1956. The third
provision i.e. Winding Up subject to the supervision of the Court was eliminated
by the Companies (Second Amendment) Act of 2002, and the word 'Court' was
replaced by 'Tribunal.'
The Companies Act, 1956 was modified, and the Companies Act, 2013 (Act) was
enacted, however the winding up provisions remained unchanged until the
legislature introduced the new Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. Also, due
to large number of cases being filed there is unnecessary delay in winding up of
business and hence this paper recognizes the corporate governance issues
regarding the winding-up of the business entity and give suggestion for
effective insolvency resolution.
Introduction
Every capitalist system must have bankruptcy rules. They serve as the foundation
for the orderly dissolution or restructuring of a variety of company structures,
including sole proprietorships, partnerships, and limited liability companies.
As a result, bankruptcy laws make it easier to re-allocate capital that has been
locked up in a failed enterprise. There are apparent distributional effects in
any bankruptcy procedure since bankruptcy laws must balance the competing
interests of various stakeholders, including banks, suppliers, employees,
operational creditors, bondholders, and the government. As a result, bankruptcy
rules are subject to political and economic pressures.
The procedures for insolvency and bankruptcy were deeply rooted in common law
traditions by the time the British withdrew in 1947. The argument over the role
of the private sector in a system of socially regulated industry affected
advances in bankruptcy and insolvency legislation after Independence. Because
the state owned all main means of production and distribution under socialism,
the concept of bankruptcy was largely ignored. Insolvency would not be regarded
a legal issue because the planned economy eliminates most trading risks. As a
result, personal bankruptcy laws remained substantially untouched.
As evidenced
by recommendations of the Bhabha Committee in 1952, the bankruptcy/winding-up
provisions of business legislation were not influenced by economic compulsions
of socialism and followed the same route during the colonial period. The aim of
legislative wisdom, however, was to experiment with debt recovery laws rather
than bankruptcy laws in practise.
In the immediate aftermath of Independence,
India's legal framework for dealing with corporate insolvency and bankruptcy
consisted of only two significant laws: the Industrial Development and
Regulation Act, 1951, and the Companies Act, 1956. Insolvency and bankruptcy
cases were allocated to the high courts under both statutes. Many flaws
afflicted the procedures under these regulations, including a lack of a time
frame for completing proceedings or prescribing an insolvency fee, a lack of
expertise in the official liquidator, and little information about the organisation or its business and technology.
Creditors' access to an insolvent
company's liquidation was almost non-existent. There are two methods of winding
up under Companies Act, 2013 and they are: Winding up by Tribunal and Voluntary
winding up. Let us look into Winding up by Tribunal, to initiate the winding up
of a company process a petition has to be filed in NCLT. NCLT is the only place
where a company can file the application for winding up of the company.
The
company must give accurate and reasonable reasons for winding up of the company
for believing, it would be the last best solution. The petition would be
cancelled if the judicial body finds out that the reasons given by the company
aren't adequate and reasonable and the winding up process would not start.
There are few grounds on which the company can be wound up by the Tribunal. If
the company can't pay the debts made by it, if the special resolution is passed
and the company is resolved then the company will be wound up by the Tribunal,
if the company has worked against the interest of sovereignty, integrity,
security of India, friendly relations with foreign countries, decency, public
order and morality.
If the Tribunal has ordered under the Chapter XIX for
winding up of the company, if the company is found to be fraudulent, if the
company has failed to file financial statement of immediately preceding last
financial year with the registrar and if Tribunal feels that the company should
wound up on just and equitable grounds. These grounds are given under section
271 of a Companies Act, 2013.
Under section 272 of the Companies Act, 2013 the petition for winding up of the
company can be filed by: The Company, any creditors, any contributory, the
registrar, any person authorized by central government in this behalf and by the
central government or state government in case the company act against interest
of sovereignty, integrity, security of India, friendly relations with foreign
countries, decency, public order and morality.
Winding Up of the Company Before Amendment Companies Act, 2013
There are two methods of winding up under Companies Act, 2013 and they are:
Winding up by Tribunal and Voluntary winding up. Let us look into Winding up by
Tribunal, to initiate the winding up of a company process a petition has to be
filed in NCLT. NCLT is the only place where a company can file the application
for winding up of the company. The company must give accurate and reasonable
reasons for winding up of the company for believing, it would be the last best
solution. The petition would be cancelled if the judicial body finds out that
the reasons given by the company aren't adequate and reasonable and the winding
up process would not start.
There are few grounds on which the company can be wound up by the Tribunal. If
the company can't pay the debts made by it, if the special resolution is passed
and the company is resolved then the company will be wound up by the Tribunal,
if the company has worked against the interest of sovereignty, integrity,
security of India, friendly relations with foreign countries, decency, public
order and morality, if the Tribunal has ordered under the Chapter XIX for
winding up of the company.
If the company is found to be fraudulent, if the
company has failed to file financial statement of immediately preceding last
financial year with the registrar and if Tribunal feels that the company should
wound up on just and equitable grounds. These grounds are given under section
271 of a Companies Act, 2013.
Under section 272 of the Companies Act, 2013 the petition for winding up of the
company can be filed by: The Company, any creditors, any contributory, the
registrar, any person authorized by central government in this behalf and by the
central government or state government in case the company act against interest
of sovereignty, integrity, security of India, friendly relations with foreign
countries, decency, public order and morality.
Voluntary Winding Up:
The company doesn't have to go to the court for the winding up of the company;
the matter is decided and solved between the company and the security holders
(shareholders) in a general meeting. The company appoints the official
liquidator to manage the affairs. Under section 304, the voluntary winding up
process of the company takes place from the day of passing the resolution in the
General Meeting.
Changes in winding up after the Insolvency and Bankruptcy code, 2016
In companies act 2013 the definition of the word winding up was given and in the
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 the definition of the word changed to
liquidation. As discussed above in the paper, the modes of winding up under
which are section 270 of companies act is now substituted by the Tribunal of
law. Grounds for winding up of a company were described under the section 271 of
the companies act, 2013, now it is substituted by Tribunal and it states that:
If a petition is filed under 272, a company may wound up by the Tribunal.
If the
special resolution is passed and the company is resolved then the company will
be wound up by the Tribunal; there are six elements and if the company acts
against one of them, the company will be wound up by the Tribunal, the six
elements are:
sovereignty, integrity, security of India, friendly relations with
foreign countries, decency, public order and morality; if the company is found
to be fraudulent or the company's aim was fraudulent or unlawful or if the
people concerned with the company are found to be guilty of fraud, misconduct
and etc, the company would be wound up by the Tribunal; if the company has
failed to file financial statement of immediately preceding last financial year
with the registrar and if Tribunal feels that the company should wound up on
just and equitable grounds, it can do that. These were the grounds on which the
company can be wound up by the Tribunal.
The Procedure For Winding Up Under New Law:
The company has to submit a declaration to the registrar of the companies saying
that the company is not fraud and it will pay all the debts and dues. The
company after getting approval for voluntary liquidation, it has to pass a
special resolution within four weeks and a liquidator has to be appointed,
within 5 days public announcement has to be made in newspapers by the company.
The company has to intimate Registrar of companies within seven days and the
company should give all its assets and liabilities estimation to corporate
person within forty-five days, after this process the uncalled amount will be
released and the company has to give it to shareholders within six months. The
company has to submit a final report to corporate person, registrar of
companies, the board, and application to NCLT and once the company receives the
receipt, the order of the resolution has to be submitted at least within
fourteen days.
Analysis of Companies Act, 1956:
Winding up by the court, often known as compulsory winding up, begins with a
petition to the proper court for a winding up order. The power of the court to
hear a winding-up petition is governed by Section 10 of the Companies Act of
1956.
The High Court has jurisdiction over the location of the company's registered
office, or the location of the company's headquarters. The District Court over
which the Act or a Central Government notice has conferred authority.
In
GTC Industries Ltd v. Parasrampuria Trading, it was held that only the High
Court where the registered office is located has jurisdiction in winding up
proceedings, even if the parties have reached an agreement, which will be
resolved before the High Court where the registered office is not located.
Who May File Petition For Winding Up?
The people who can submit a petition for the winding up of a business are
defined under Section 439 of the Companies Act of 1956.
The board of directors can file a petition in the company's name with the
approval of the general meeting through a special resolution.
If the corporation is unable to pay its debts, creditors might file a petition.
A debt assignee, a decree holder, a secure creditor, a debenture holder, or a
trustee of debenture holders are among the creditors.
If the number of members of a public company falls below 7 and falls below 2 in
a private business, a contributory can file a winding up petition.
After receiving prior approval from the central government, the Registrar of
Companies can file a petition for corporate winding up.
Analysis of Companies Act, 2013:
The Companies Act of 2013 establishes two methods for winding up a company-
Winding up by Tribunal:
An application for a winding up order can be filed with the National Company Law
Tribunal. It should only be used after all other options for repairing an ill
firm have failed. The Act provides remedies for issues relating to the company's
management and operations. Under the Companies Act of 2013, the NCLT has primary
authority over the winding up of businesses. As it is a last option, there must
be compelling reasons to order winding up.
Grounds on which a Company may be wound up by the Tribunal
Under Section 271(1), a company may be wound up by the tribunal if:
- The business is unable to pay its debts;
- If the company has decided to be wound up by the Tribunal by a special resolution;
- If the corporation has behaved against India's sovereignty and integrity, as well as the state's security, good ties with other countries, and public order;
- If the Tribunal has ordered the company to be wound up under Chapter XIX;
- If the Tribunal finds, on an application made by the Registrar or any other person authorised by the Central Government by notification under this Act.
That the company's affairs have been conducted in a fraudulent manner, that the
company was formed for a fraudulent or unlawful purpose, or that the persons
involved in the formation misfeasance or misconduct in connection therewith.
Powers & Functions of the Tribunal:
If the tribunal is satisfied, it may instruct the company to file objections
along with a statement of affairs within 30 days, which may be extended by
another 30 days in unusual circumstances, according to Section 274 of the
Companies Act, 2013.
According to Section 275 of the Companies Act, 2013, when a winding up order is
issued, the Tribunal must appoint an official liquidator or a liquidator from a
panel. The Central Government maintains a panel of CS/CS/Advocates and other
notified professionals having at least 10 years' experience in business
problems.
According to Section 281 of the Companies Act, 2013, the Liquidator must provide
a report to the Tribunal within 60 days, comprising information such as:
The existing and contingent liabilities of the company, including names and
other details; the debts due to the company, including names and addresses; list
of contributories with amount details; details of trademarks, intellectual
properties, if owned by the company; details of contracts, joint ventures, and
collaborations, if any; details of holding and subsidiary companies.
On the basis of the Liquidator's report, the Tribunal will set a deadline for
the completion of all actions and the dissolution of the corporation. The
Tribunal may also order the Company's assets or a portion of its assets to be
sold as a continuing concern. The Tribunal shall resolve the list of
contributories, cause correction of the register of members in all circumstances
where needed, and use the company's assets to fulfil its responsibility after
passing a winding up order.
Analysis of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was suggested in 2014 by the Bankruptcy
Legislative Reforms Committee, led by T. K. Viswanathan (IBC). The goal of the
IBC was to consolidate and amend the laws relating to reorganisation and
insolvency resolution of corporate persons, partnership firms, and individuals
in a time-bound manner in order to maximise the value of such persons' assets,
promote entrepreneurship, increase credit availability, and balance the
interests of all stakeholders, including changing the priority of government
dues payment.
In May 2016, the IBC, 2016 was eventually adopted and published in the Indian
Gazette. The law strives for insolvency resolution by insolvency experts in a
time-bound way (originally 180 days, extendable by further 90 days under
specific circumstances, but currently extended to 330 days).
The statute assures that the judicial and business parts of the resolution
process are separated, rectifying previous legislative errors. Furthermore, the
National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), not the DRTs, will be the adjudicating
authority under the IBC. The IBC's primary goal is to help distressed corporate
debtors. The Code establishes a time-bound insolvency resolution process, which
must be completed within 330 days, including any litigation.
The cases that have been successfully resolved demonstrate that IBC's objectives
have been met. Despite the fact that the number of companies in liquidation is
nearly four times that of those rescued, the assets of the 250 rescued companies
are four times those of the 955 liquidated enterprises. Truly, the IBC has been
helpful to a large extent thus far; yet, timeliness remains a problem.
For resolving difficulties, the previously planned timescale of 180 days (+90
days extension) was expanded to 330 days. Despite the extension, resolution
ideas are still being submitted after the deadline has passed. The average time
it takes for resolution plans to be completed is 380 days. Most of the time,
this is due to delays in court proceedings, as the NCLT and the National Company
Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) are overburdened there are only 16 benches and 20
bench members.
The process also involves a lot of stakeholders with opposing viewpoints, making
settlement even more difficult and time-consuming. Furthermore, a number of
stakeholders have lately voiced concerns about IBBI enlisting valuers with
ambiguous degrees as registered valuers. Anomalies like these have an impact on
the valuation profession's credibility.
Another issue is that the creditors' committee has sole jurisdiction over the
RPs, with no guidelines in place. The need of the hour is to strengthen the NCLT
benches' institutional competence and increase transparency in the selection of
RPs.
Because the IBC is intended to provide a price discovery process for stressed
firms, the realisations must be viewed as a representation of the genuine worth
of the assets. Unreasonable reductions might result from a lack of technical
ability in evaluating assets or from time gaps. As a result, the Standing
Committee's advice that haircuts be capped violates the goal of the
institutional structure and imposes additional costs on investors as a result of
institutional inefficiencies. One of the accusations levelled at the IBC is that
it has resulted in more liquidations than resolutions.
The fall in asset reconstruction businesses' purchases of Scheduled Commercial
Banks' (SCB) assets in 2019-20 paralleled this trend. According to the Reserve
Bank of India's assessment, this is likely due to SCBs using other resolution
mechanisms such the IBC and the Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial
Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act 2002. As a result, it may be
necessary to establish a more strong structure for simultaneous reorganisation.
Finally, the IBC should not be judged merely on the basis of the recoveries it
has elicited, but also on the basis of the behavioural shifts it has induced.
The IBC resulted in a major deleverage for 2747 listed businesses in India,
according to the data. Over the course of three years, these firms' average debt
to equity ratio fell from 1.16 to 0.85.
SUMMARY
There are several ways for a company's existence to come to an end. The
liquidation and winding up of businesses is one method. Another option is to
strike the company's name from the Registrar's register of companies, as
provided for in section 560 of the Companies Act, 1956. Few firms have become
vanishing companies because its directors are either untraceable or the company
is not conducting business at its registered office, according to the
Registrar's records. In either instance, the company becomes a vanishing
company, which eventually leads to its closure. A company's business is
dissolved through the legal procedure of winding up. "Winding up" and
"liquidation" are terms that are used interchangeably. The modern corporate
insolvency framework in India, commonly known as the Corporate Insolvency
Resolution Process ("CIRP"), openly and comprehensively stipulates the
flexibility to depart in a timely and orderly manner, ensuring capital
preservation. Insolvency laws are primarily divided into two categories:
personal insolvency and corporate insolvency.
As India becomes more global and open through initiatives such as Make in India,
Digital India, and Start-up India, which aim to boost the country's popularity
and turn it into a preferred investment destination, completing the unfinished
agenda will bring insolvency laws in line with international standards and
provide a single point of contact for all insolvencies.
The insolvency proceedings will be more time constrained and fast if
professionals are given confidence but despite fast improvements in corporate
governance standards, there have been governance failures in Indian industry,
with Satyam serving as a classic example. These events have sparked a fresh wave
of changes, culminating in the implementation of the Companies Act, 2013 and the
International Business Code, 2016, which are projected to have a substantial
impact on Indian industry in the near future. More effort is needed to identify
challenges that are specific to the Indian business environment and to address
them with measures that are appealing to Indian enterprises from a variety of
viewpoints, including economic, social, political, and cultural.
Award Winning Article Is Written By: Mr.Aditya Kumar,
Company Secretary & Law Student
Faculty of Law, Delhi University
Authentication No: MR444731077346-21-0324
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