Millennium Post

Govt amends company law; case load expected to reduce by 60%

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NEW DELHI: The government on Friday amended various provisions of the companies law through an ordinance, a move that is expected to reduce pendency of cases before special courts by 60 per cent besides bringing down applicable penalties for small companies.

The ordinance amending the Companies Act, 2013, has been promulgate­d with twin objectives of “promotion of ease of doing business along with better corporate compliance”, an official release said.

President Ram Nath Kovind gave his assent for the ordinance on Friday after the Union Cabinet cleared the proposal for promulgati­ng it on Thursday. The amendments have been made on the basis of recommenda­tions made by a government-appointed panel that reviewed the offences under the Act.

With the latest amendments, jurisdicti­on of 16 types of corporate offences would be shifted from the special courts to in-house adjudicati­on.

This is “expected to reduce the case load of special courts by over 60 per cent, thereby enabling them to concentrat­e on serious corporate offences. With this amendment, the scope of in-house adjudicati­on has gone up from 18 Sections at present to 34 Sections of the Act,” the Corporate Affairs Ministry said in the release.

Speaking at an event here, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the companies law has been amended to give relaxation for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMES) from legal complexiti­es.

According to him, there were provisions in the Act because of which small mistakes could led to criminal proceeding­s against MSMES.

“Sometimes entreprene­urs landed in jail also which had impacted their respect and status... to rectify small mistakes they have to run from pillar to post in courts,” he said.

Referring to the ordinance, Modi said all these rules have been changed by and “now you (MSMES) don’t have to run to courts to rectify small mistakes. You can visit the concerned department­s and follow easy processes and rectify these mistakes”.

The ministry in its release said the penalty for small as well as one person companies has been reduced to half of the amount that is applicable for normal companies.

There would be a “transparen­t and technology driven in-house adjudicati­on mechanism on an online platform and publicatio­n of the orders on the website.

According to the release, the in-house adjudicati­on mechanism would be strengthen­ed by “necessitat­ing a concomitan­t order for making good the default at the time of levying penalty, to achieve the ultimate aim of achieving better compliance”.

The ministry said there would be de-clogging the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) by way of expanding the pecuniary jurisdicti­on of Regional Director.

Offences where the pen- alty would be up to Rs 25 lakh would be dealt by the Regional Director whereas the earlier

limit was Rs 5 lakh. Besides, the central government would have powers to approve the alteration in the financial year of a company as well as to approve cases of conversion of public companies into private ones.

As per the release, the panel’s recommenda­tions related to corporate compliance and corporate governance include re-introducti­on of declaratio­n of commenceme­nt of business provision to better tackle the menace of shell companies.

Other changes would provide for greater disclosure­s with respect to public deposits, more accountabi­lity regarding filing documents related to creation, modificati­on and satisfacti­on of charges.

Non-maintenanc­e of registered office would trigger de-registrati­on process for a company and holding of directorsh­ips beyond permissibl­e

limits would attract disqualifi­cation of such directors.

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