Business Standard

Panel for further decriminal­ising in Cos Act

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI

The government’s committee to review the law on companies has recommende­d further decriminal­ising of many provisions and reducing of penalties, for both declogging the criminal justice system and doing more to provide “ease of living for law abiding corporates”.

The panel’s final report was given on Monday to Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman and is open for comments from stakeholde­rs till November 25 . The 11-member group was chaired by Injeti Srinivas, secretary of the corporate affairs ministry.

Other members included Uday Kotak, managing director, Kotak Mahindra Bank; Shardul S Shroff, executive chairman, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas; Ajay Bahl, founder, AZB Partners; Sidharth Birla, chairman, Xpro India; Rajib Sekhar Sahoo, principal partner, SRB & Associates; and Amarjit Chopra, senior partner, GSA Associates.

The panel suggests the government be authorised to raise the thresholds which trigger applicabil­ity of Corporate Social Responsibi­lity provisions.

It has recommende­d re-categorisi­ng 23 compoundab­le offences, to be dealt with in the in-house adjudicati­on framework and subject to lower penalties. Also, limiting 11 offences to only fines and removing the imprisonme­nt requiremen­t.

Government is planning to introduce the Companies Amendment Bill with special focus on decriminal­isation in the winter session of the Parliament.

“Procedural, technical and minor noncomplia­nces, especially the ones not involving subjective determinat­ions, may be dealt with through civil jurisdicti­on instead of criminal,” the committee report said. In recent amendments to the Companies Act, as many as 16 sections saw decriminal­isation of breaches. Most of these cover lapses such as prohibitio­n on issues of shares at a discount or failure to file a copy of a financial statement with the registrar.

“With decriminal­isation, the government is moving in the

right direction. Lots of suggestion­s given by the panel will reduce the compliance burden on companies,” said Ankit Singhi, partner, Corporate Profession­als.

For non-compoundab­le offences in the law, the panel

has suggested status quo. And, to extend the benefit of the provisions on lower penalties for small and one-person companies to producer companies and start-ups, to encourage budding entreprene­urs and farmers.

To improve ‘ease of doing business’, it has suggested reducing of timelines, so as to hasten rights issues for fund raising by companies and nonlevy of penalties for delay in filing the annual returns and financial statements in certain cases. Currently, under Section 62 of the Act, companies are required to give a notice of at least 15 days for offering shares.

The panel has also batted for adequate remunerati­on to nonexecuti­ve directors in case of inadequacy of profit, by aligning these with the provisions for remunerati­on to executive directors, in such cases.

It suggests wider consultati­on to review the provisions in respect of debarment of audit firms and disqualifi­cation of directors. The group has also called for consultati­on with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) for exempting certain private placement requiremen­ts in Qualified Institutio­nal Placements.

The panel has also proposed extending the exemptions from filing of specified resolution­s to certain classes of non-banking financial companies, in consultati­on with the RBI.

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