De-Clogging of National Company Law Tribunal:
For companies that are not able to spend their full amount for CSR activities in ongoing projects within a particular financial year, the money can be transferred to a CSR account. The latter amount has to be spent within the next three financial years.
A Government committee has recommended companies to declare commencement of business in order to curb shell companies. It has also suggested capping independent directors’ remuneration.
The report also touches upon certain essential elements related to corporate governance such as declaration of commencement of business, maintenance of a registered office, protection of depositors’ interests, registration and management of charges, declaration of significant beneficial ownership, and independence of independent directors.
These are part of the recommendations of a committee under the Chairmanship of Corporate Affairs Secretary Injeti Srinivas which submitted its report to the Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister Arun Jaitley on Monday.
The committee’s view assumes significance especially as the Government is going all out against shell companies.
Technically speaking, there is no specific definition of a shell company under the Company Law. However, such companies are formed to launder money and thus become instrumental in generating black money. Keeping this in mind, the committee has recommended, the “re-introduction of declaration of commencement of business provision to better tackle the menace of ‘shell companies’.”
De-clogging NCLT:
The report also makes recommendations for de-clogging the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) through significant reduction in compounding cases before the Tribunal. Here are the recommendations restructuring of Corporate Offences to relieve Special Courts from adjudicating routine offences:
In order to de-clog the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), the committee has suggested enlarging the jurisdiction of the Regional Director with enhanced pecuniary limits for compounding of offences under section 441 of the Companies Act 2013 (the Act).
It recommended vesting in the Central Government the power to approve the alteration in the financial year of a company under Section 2(41); and conversion of public companies into private companies under section 14 of the Act.