Corporate Law Lectures 1-9-Merged
Corporate Law Lectures 1-9-Merged
Corporate Law Lectures 1-9-Merged
What is corporate law about? Any responses? Why do you need corporate
law to govern companies ?
It follows that a principal function of corporate law is to provide business
enterprises with a legal form that possesses these five core attributes.
Core of Corporate Law.
Function of Corporate Law
Transact Easily
Prevent Frauds
Lower Cost of governance
Facilitates Coordination
conflicts between managers and shareholders,
conflicts among shareholders,
and conflicts between shareholders and the corporation’s
other constituencies, including creditors and employees.
All three of these generic conflicts may usefully be characterized as what
economists call ‘agency problems.’
The main role of corporate law is to minimize agency problems.
Features of Company
Starting from the premise that the company is itself a person, in the eyes of
the law, it is straightforward to deduce that it should be capable of
entering into contracts and owning its own property; capable of
delegating authority to agents; and capable of suing and being sued in its
own name.
Contribution of corporate law and
effective working of corporate law
Entity Shielding
Authority
Procedure
Entity Shielding
the right to control the company, and the right to receive the company’s
net earnings.
Importance of Percentage
Restriction on Transfer of Shares.
Private Company
Flexibility
in appointment of trustee
Choice of beneficiary
Asset distribution
Dissolution
PE, VC and HF, and MF
Trust is pass through structure.
Trust Taxation
Determination of residence of trust in India is a tricky issue. In general, if neither the trustee
nor the protector, or the person who has the ability to control the management of
the assets of the trust fund and determine their distribution, is not located in India
at any time during the financial year, and the trust is not subject to Indian laws, then
the trust should not be considered a resident in India. For the purpose of ascertaining
the residency of the trust, the residence of the beneficiaries also has some bearing. In
order for an offshore trust not to be subject to tax in India based on the source rule,
none of its assets or source of income should be in India
Trust Use and Misuse
In the context of insolvency, the Sindh High Court had held that a trust is
unlawful and marred by Section 4 of the Trusts Act if the trust has been
created at the time of insolvency of the settlor and such settlement would
be against the official assignee.
The Supreme Court in the case of Chogmal Bhandari v Dy Commercial Tax
Officer had the occasion of examining an interesting question which was if
a trust has been created by a debtor for the benefit of his creditors and if
the debtor has provided an order of preference to pay the creditors will
that render the trust unlawful under Section 4 of the Trusts Act.
The Supreme Court held that such order of preference to pay the creditors
does not by itself create grounds for the inference that the intent of the
debtor is to defraud the creditors and the debtor is well within its right to lay
out such preference. Hence, such a trust will be valid.
What is the Goal of Modern Corporate
Law
Answers Please.
What are the Sources of Corporate
Law
Special and partial corporate forms.
Other bodies of corporate law
Tax, Securities, Disclosure requirements in US and Takeovers
German and French Code
Lifting of Corporate Veil
Evasion of Tax
Enemy contracts
Fraud or Improper conduct
Avoidance of welfare legislation
Used as sham
Breach Contracts
Object- the conflict that exists between creditors and shareholders regarding
how to allocate a company’s capital.
This conflict is obvious once the company is insolvent and, consequently, the
company has insufficient money to meet all of its financial obligations.
It is important to protect creditors even when company is solvent.
Conflict- between shareholders and between creditors too.
Shareholders Abuse?
Asset Diversion- Dividend payments and share buy backs.
Risk Shifting- Riskier projects and underinvestment.
Claim Dilution.
Creditors Abuse?
US- only contractual restrictions primarily.
Creditor Protection
Existing shareholders
Employees
Directly to outsider through special resolution ( Preferential allotment)
Conversion of debentures is not included here.
Government can convert debentures (even if contract doesn’t provide for
the same) specially in public interest.
Reduction of Share capital
ONLY NCLT
Cant be done when deposits are not paid back.
Audi Altrum Partem from Creditors and regulators
NCLT to be satisfied creditors interest is taken care of
Buy Back has a separate route
Fraud- Concealing name of creditor or misrepresent the debt amount.
Authority of Buy Back
Free reserves
Securities premium account
Funds obtained through further issue of shares.
Only when the article provides for it.
10 or less equity buy back can happen through just board
10 to 25 % through Special Resolution passed for the buy back
Outstanding debt is 1=2 ratio both secured and unsecured
Only one buy back in six months is allowed
Buy back to be completed in a year after resolution
Punishment- 3 lacs company and officer in default.
Method of buy Back
Existing shareholders
Open market
Purchasing back employee securities through ESOPS
Solvency from MD and 1 director- will be solvent at least for one year.
Destroy the security
No Buyback through associates
Exceptions-
Banking company
Loan to employees through trust
Direct loan 6 months salary not more than that
Report of voting rights exercised
Company liable for 25 lac rs and officer imprisonment of 3 years and 3 lac
fine.
Rights of debenture holders
If assets insufficient the Debenture trustee can file a case in NCLT to safeguard
interest. NCLT will direct not to incur further liabilities
If default in payment- case at NCLT and direction by the NCLT to pay the same.
Debenture trustee cant act smart- liability can not be contractually nullified.
Degree of care and diligence
Invitation to public or 500 members or more to appoint debenture trustee
DRR from profits
No debenture with voting rights
Convertible debentures only when Special Resolution is passed.
Default- 3 years imprisonment or 2 lacs minimum.
Dividend Payments
Insiders
Connected Possession
Persons of UPSI
Connected Persons
Deemed
Current or Past Connected
Persons
Connected Persons
Past Connections- SRSR Holdings v.
SEBI
SAT stated it was open for SEBI earlier in the absence of the
time limit to interpreted time period as till UPSI is generally
available.
However now since the period is provided in explanation
SEBI can not prosecute a connected person who left the
organization 6 months before the date of the Act. The Law
Presumes the information is generally available.
Possession Insiders-
SEBI will provide information that proves person had
possessed or had access to UPSI.
Deemed Connected persons
(a). an immediate relative of connected persons specified in clause
(i); or (US. Wife overheard M&A. Father acted on daughters due
diligence) Zylog systems in india. Wife showed financial
independence. But ZSL policy she was dependent.
(b). a holding company or associate company or subsidiary
company; or (common directors) (control BOD) (control
management) through one or more intermediaries. Significant
influence (business decisions under agreement or 20%)
(c). an intermediary as specified in section 12 of the Act or an
employee or director thereof; or
Stock brokers, sub-brokers, merchant bankers, depository,
depository participants, underwriters, portfolio managers,
investment advisors, STA, registrar to an issue and investment
advisors
Deemed connected persons
d). an investment company, trustee company, asset
management company or an employee or director thereof; or
(asset to be investment).
RAGS TO RICHES
&
BILLIONS TO BUST
Indian Insolvency Law By Prof. Anand Shrivas
Why Does Businesses Fail??
Reasons Please?
Internality and Externality.
Who Gets Affected
Answers Please?
INSOLVENCY
JET Airways
The consortium proposes to invest ₹600 crore in the first two years to repay
creditors and acquire an 89.79% stake in the carrier.
The resolution plan also proposes selling existing non-core assets such as
real estates and luxury cars by the end of the first year and said it will repay
to financial creditors, ₹131 crore, ₹193 crore, ₹259 crore at the end of the
third, fourth and fifth years, from the airline's cash flows, respectively.
The company intends to repay creditors a total of ₹1,183 crore over five
years, which includes collections from asset sale proceeds and cash flows.
Naresh Goyal- Cheat or Victim of
Business Failure
Serious Fraud Investigation Office, ED, Mumbai Police, ITD and CBI
Transactions of maintenance and lease agreements
Fraud by not using loan for sanctioned purpose
Tax Evasion
Money Laundering
Essar Steel Downfall
Essar Steel was one of India's largest steel manufacturers. Its overdue debt
of about INR 55,000 crore was the largest among the companies being
resolved under the IBC. Pursuant to the IBC process, a joint venture
between ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel acquired Essar Steel in December
2019.
Arcellor Mittal, Nippon v. Numetal (Rewant Ruia)
Curing ineligibility of Arcellor and nippon- RPT debts overdue
Case lasted for more than two years
Banks- Standard Chartered and SBI
Essar Resolution Plan
By an order6 dated July 4, 2019 ("NCLAT Order"), the NCLAT, inter-alia,: (i) approved
ArcelorMittal's resolution plan,
(ii) modified the distribution of amounts so that all creditors (secured, unsecured
and operational) were treated at par7 (resulting in approximately 60.7% recovery for
all the creditors),
(iii) increased the admitted claims of operational creditors to almost four times the
original amount,
(iv) granted operational creditors, whose claims had not been admitted by the NCLT
or the NCLAT, the liberty to institute or continue appropriate proceedings against
Essar Steel after the conclusion of its insolvency resolution process, and
(v) held that the guarantees issued in respect of Essar Steel's debt come to an end
upon clearance of the underlying debt.8
IBC Amendment that changed the
course
(i) the minimum payment to operational creditors under a resolution plan should be the
higher of the two amounts; the amount that would be payable to them in the event of
liquidation and the amount payable to such creditors if the resolution amount was
distributed in accordance with Section 53 of the IBC,9
(ii) any dissenting financial creditors should be paid a minimum of the amount that would
be payable to them in the event of liquidation, and
(iii) the committee of creditors may approve a resolution plan after considering the
manner of distribution of funds under the plan, taking into account the respective priority
of creditors under Section 53(1) of the IBC (including the priority and value of security of a
secured creditor). An explanation to Section 30(2)(b) of the IBC was also introduced,
which expressly clarified that a distribution in accordance with such section would be
considered "fair and equitable".
Further, the IBC Amendment Act also required all corporate insolvency resolution
processes to be "mandatorily" completed within a period of 330 days from the insolvency
commencement date. For the resolution processes that were already underway (including
those subject to litigation) a grace period of 90 days from commencement of this IBC
Amendment Act was granted.
SC- FC on Driver Seat. WHY????
The Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process ("CIRP") under the IBC is based
on a flexible model where market participants (as resolution applicants) can
propose solutions for revival of the corporate debtor. The Supreme Court
made it clear that the CoC is in the driver's seat for directing the insolvency
resolution process. The underlying assumption was that the financial creditors
are fully informed about the viability of the corporate debtor and feasibility of
any proposed resolution plan. This assumption is based on the fact that
financial creditors being in the business of money-lending, having undertaken
a detailed study and exercising due diligence while granting the loan to the
corporate debtor, are well placed to make such assessment.
SC- NCLT ensure below factors taken
into accoubnt.
i) the corporate debtor should continue as a going concern during the resolution
process,
(ii) value of assets of the corporate debtor should be maximized, and
(iii) interests of all stakeholders should be balanced. In the event that the
Adjudicating Authority, on a review of the facts of the case,
concludes that the aforesaid factors have not been considered, it may send the
resolution plan back to the CoC (but not alter the resolution plan of its own accord).
But since all information is not public how OC or other stakeholder will challenge
resolution plan of COC.
committee of creditors does not owe any fiduciary duty to any group of
creditors but is required to take a business decision with the requisite majority,
which binds all stakeholders including any dissenting creditor.
Equitable Treatment of All Creditors
Application: On July 13, 2017, application was filed by State Bank of India (Applicant) before the NCLT against Bhushan
Steel Limited in terms of Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 read with its Rules and Regulations.
Admission: The NCLT admitted the application of State Bank of India and appointed Mr. Vijaykumar V. Iyer as the Interim
Resolution Professional (IRP) vide its order dated July 26, 2017 (Insolvency Commencement Date, ICD).
Moratorium was imposed.
Appointment of IRP
Function as going concern during IRP
IRP inviting claims and forming COC
Confirmation of RP the Resolution Professional (RP) by the Committee of Creditors (CoC) pursuant to the voting at the first
CoC meeting held on August 24, 2017.
Preparation of Resolution Plan
Invitation to Resolution Applicant
Approval of Plan by COC and confirmation by NCLT
CIRP finished on time and implemented on time
Bhushan Steel acquisition by Tata Steel
Due to CIRP process, valuable and productive assets could be saved and various
stakeholders including employees continued to be gained fully employed. It also leads to
profitable utilisation of assets and generating positive EBITDA. As a next step, it is getting
merged with Tata Steel Ltd giving big opportunities to all the stakeholders to become part
of one of the largest steel producer and get returns.
This can be considered as a classic case under IBC which fulfills aspirations of all the
stakeholders and achieved the objectives as envisaged under the law. Let us hope that all
assets heavy corporate debtor under stressed (eg. steel, cement, metal companies) get
revived similarly and in the process productive assets and infrastructure are not required
to be dismantled and sold in open for recovery.
Other important case
Jaypee Group
Monnet Ispat
Amteck Auto
ABG Shipyard
Videocon
Jaypee
When you travel on the Noida-Greater Noida Expressway and then to the
Yamuna Expressway to Agra, you see the sheer scale of the ambitions of the
Gaur family. For kilometres on end, towers, most of them incomplete, keep
you company.
After IBC action against two group companies - holding firm Jaiprakash
Associates, or JAL, and infrastructure arm Jaypee Infratech, is over, the Gaur
empire would have shrunk to a few inconsequential pieces. They have already
sold some profitable cement plants to Aditya Birla's UltraTech in a distress sale.
The hydro power assets, too, have been sold. Manoj Gaur, the son of the
founder, Jaiprakash Gaur, tried to cut a deal with lenders in May with a
Rs10,000 crore offer for Jaypee Infratech. The proposal included paying a part
of the Rs9,800 crore debt, giving lenders equity and completing unfinished
housing projects. It did not go through.
Jaypee
the realisation for financial creditors till end March 2022 stood at Rs 2.25
trillion, much higher than liquidation value of Rs 1.31 trillion. The cumulative
admitted claims of financial creditors till end March 2022 were Rs 6.84 trillion.
The bid amount of companies during the resolution process is less than the
liquidation value so lenders opt for the latte
the lack of inherent value of the stressed assets itself may be one of the
reasons behind the absence of bidders.
Essar & Bhushan many bidders interested. Why???
Fact that liquidation value is more than enterprise value couldn’t be a
ground to liquidate a corporate debtor: NCLT
Long and bumpy road for Amtech
Auto
Arvind Dham
Established in 1985, Amtek specializes in forging, aluminium casting and
machining for applications in the engine, transmission driveline and chassis
segments.
Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEMs) in India namely, Maruti
Suzuki India (MSIL), Honda Motorcycle and Scooters (HMSI), Tata Motors,
Ford Motors, J.C. Bamford Excavators (JCB), Ashok Leyland, Eicher etc. and
the world's top Tier 1 customers namely, Sriram Pistons, Hitech Gears,
Unimotion, Valeo etc
Aggressive mis-timed ambitions of inorganic growth resulted in poor
utilization of funds and capital expenditures with long gestation period
returns were incurred.
Challenges
Piling up of debt and decline in sales specially after 2014 till insolvency
Trust deficit due to frequent defaults
All operating in Silos taking control became difficult
Massive operations
Employee not paid for long
Payment delays to stakeholders due to cash cruch in working capital
Trust deficit with client and no supplier wanting to supply
Long collection cycle for sales
Quality complaints due to no maintenance
Predatory pricing another reason.
Largest COC to be maintained
Long and bumpy road for Amtech
Auto
domestic operations spread across 15 states
plants, panning through Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra,
Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, the Corporate Debtor (CD) under its
direct and indirect holding
Amtek had businesses in different countries
Japan, Germany and Thailand
Limited control over these companies
Each factories had different methods of governing
Long and bumpy road for Amtek Auto
The Gujarat-based ABG Shipyard - once a key player in shipbuilding and ship repair - is
the flagship company of the ABG Group. Its shipyards - located in Gujarat's Dahej and
Surat - have built over 165 vessels in the last 16 years.
Rishi Agarwal, Muthuswamy and Ashwini Kumar
Fraud to the tune of 23000 crore
Outstanding aprox 20000 cr loan
Loans were misused for allegedly transfer money to overseas company
Pandemic hit
FC-SBI-ICICI, IDBI, PNB
It had managed to remained profitable till fiscal 2012-13 when it reported
revenues of Rs 2,149 crore and profits of Rs 107 crore. However, the financials
started deteriorating after 2013-14 as falling sales revenues and higher cost
including interest pushed the company in the red.
Videocon
Binani Cements
Swiss Ribbons case
Applicable
Individual
Firms
LLP
Companies
Statutory organizations having corporate form
Personal Guarantors
Claim defined
(d) the amount of any liability in respect of any lease or hire purchase
contract which is deemed as a finance or capital lease under the Indian
Accounting Standards or such other accounting standards as may be
prescribed;
(e) receivables sold or discounted other than any receivables sold on non-
recourse basis;
(f) any amount raised under any other transaction, including any forward
sale or purchase agreement, having the commercial effect of a borrowing;
Financial Debt
In Swiss Ribbons Private Limited and Another Vs. Union of India and Others [(2019) 4 SCC
17],
the Supreme Court held that a review of the definition of
“financial creditor” and “financial debt” makes it clear that a financial debt is a debt
together with any interest that is disbursed against the consideration for the time value of
money.
On the other hand, an “operational debt” would include a claim for the provision of goods
or services, including employment, or a debt in respect of payment of dues arising under
any law, and payable to the government or any local authority.
OC are unsecured and FC are secured.
Long term and short term.
Dispute resolution with OC is private such as arbitration
FCs are, from the very beginning, involved with assessing the viability of the CD.
Restructuring and reorganisation is common in FC
Who can start insolvency
FC
OC
Corporate Debtor (CD)
Initiation of Corporate Insolvency
Process by Financial Creditor
Any financial creditor or jointly can be filed
Debentures- 100 creditors in same class or not less than 10% of creditors in
same class whichever is less
Real Estate Project-100 allottees or 10% of allottees In the same project.
Application-record of default+IRP name.
NCLT will see default and no disciplinary proceedings pending against the
IRP and give order.
Insolvency Resolution by Operational
Creditor
Demand Notice on receiving the CD must bring
Bring Existence of dispute
Pay the amount
The application can be filed with proper evidence such as invoice.
The OC may propose IRP
NCLT will appoint the same
Dispute
The corporate applicant shall, along with the application, furnish- (a) the
information relating to its books of account and such other documents for
such period as may be specified;
(b) the information relating to the resolution professional proposed to be
appointed as an interim resolution professional; and
(c) the special resolution passed by shareholders of the corporate debtor or
the resolution passed by at least three-fourth of the total number of
partners of the corporate debtor, as the case may be, approving filing of
the application.]
Following Barred from Entry
(c) a corporate debtor or a financial creditor who has violated any of the
terms of resolution plan which was approved twelve months before the
date of making of an application under this Chapter; or
(d) a corporate debtor in respect of whom a liquidation order has been
made.
Pre-Package Insolvency to get
Preference over other applications
A. Disposal of applications under section 54C and under section 7 or section 9
or section 10. (1) Where an application filed under section 54C is pending, the
Adjudicating Authority shall pass an order to admit or reject such application,
before considering any application filed under section 7 or section 9 or section
10 during the pendency of such application under section 54C, in respect of the
same corporate debtor.
(2) Where an application under section 54C is filed within fourteen days of filing
of any application under section 7 or section 9 or section 10, which is pending,
in respect of the same corporate debtor, then, notwithstanding anything
contained in sections 7, 9 and 10, the Adjudicating Authority shall first dispose of
the application under section 54C.
Barring (3) Where an application under section 54C is filed after fourteen days
of the filing of any application under section 7 or section 9 or section 10, in
respect of the same corporate debtor, the Adjudicating Authority shall first
dispose of the application under section 7, section 9 or section 10.
Time Line
No suit
No transfer
No charge
No enforcement
No recover of property
Supply essentials
Public Announcement
IRP shall after collation of all claims received against the corporate debtor and determination of
the financial position of the corporate debtor, constitute a committee of creditors.
All FCs are part of COC
Related party FC of CD has no voting or participation right in COC.
Related party through conversion of debt to equity via RBI Scheme is included for voting and
participation
Each party to consortium also has voting rights based on their proportion of debt.
Debenture trustee to act for debenture holders
Save as otherwise provided in this Code, all decisions of the committee of creditors
shall be taken by a vote of not less than fifty-one per cent. of voting share of the financial
creditors
COC to appoint RP by 66% of vote
OC May attend meeting
RP Powers
Insolvent
Wilful defaulter
Non Performing Assets or NPA under the control of promoter
Arcellor Mittal Case-eligible after payment
Two years imprisonment under act specified in 12th schedule
7 years imprisonment otherwise
Prohibited by SEBI
Disqualified to be a director in the company
Promoter or control of management in company where All avoidance transactions have been
committed
RA has executed [a guarantee] in favour of a creditor in respect of a corporate debtor against
which an application for insolvency resolution made by such creditor has been admitted under
this Code [and such guarantee has been invoked by the creditor and remains unpaid in full or
part];
RP to examine Plan in compliance with
Law
Provides for following
Insolvency cost
Provides for payment of operational creditor not less than -
a) The amount in liquidation or
b) not less than if the Amount in revival plan were distributed according to waterfall
mechanism (which ever is higher)
Provide for payment of dissenting financial creditors- not less than liquidation
amount
Distribution shall be fair and equitable
Management of affairs of corporate debtor
Implementation and supervision of resolution plan
COC PLAN APPROVAL
Fraudulent
Preferential
Under-Valued Transactions
Extortionate Credit Transactions
Preferential Transaction
Foreign shareholders
Tata Mistry Case
provide sound incentives throughout the investment chain and provide for
stock markets to function in a way that contributes to good corporate
governance.
• All shareholders of the same series of a class should be treated equally
• Insider trading and abusive self-dealing should be prohibited
• Members of the board and key executives should be required to disclose to
the board whether they, directly, indirectly or on behalf of third parties,
have a material interest in any transaction or matter directly affecting the
corporation.
Disclosure and Transparency
Board diversification
Auditor
Royalty payments
Independent Directors
ESOP
Class action suits
Oppression and Mismanagement
M&A
Sub-committees- Audit committee, stakeholders committee
CSR committee and Nomination and remuneration committee
Directors duty
Fraud
Auditor
(a) a body corporate other than a limited liability partnership registered under the Limited
Liability Partnership Act, 2008
(b) an officer or employee of the company;
(c) a person who is a partner, or who is in the employment, of an officer or employee of the
company;
(d) a person who, or his relative or partner—
(i) is holding any security of or interest in the company or its subsidiary, or of its holding or
associate company or a subsidiary of such holding company:
Provided that the relative may hold security or interest in the company of face value not
exceeding one thousand rupees or such sum as may be prescribed;
(ii) is indebted to the company, or its subsidiary, or its holding or associate company or a
subsidiary of such holding company, in excess of such amount as may be prescribed; or
(iii) has given a guarantee or provided any security in connection with the indebtedness of
any third person to the company, or its subsidiary, or its holding or associate company or
a subsidiary of such holding company, for such amount as may be prescribed;
Auditor eligibility
(e) a person or a firm who, whether directly or indirectly, has business relationship
with the company, or its subsidiary, or its holding or associate company or
subsidiary of such holding company or associate company of such nature as may
be prescribed;
(f) a person whose relative is a director or is in the employment of the company as
a director or key managerial personnel;
1(g)a person who is in full time employment elsewhere or a person or a partner of a
firm holding appointment as its auditor, if such persons or partner is at the date of
such appointment or reappointment holding appointment as auditor of more than
twenty companies;
(h) a person who has been convicted by a court of an offence involving fraud and a
period of ten years has not elapsed from the date of such conviction;
(i)2[a person who, directly or indirectly, renders any service referred to in section
144 to the company or its holding company or its subsidiary company.
Case study
Future-Amazon
Volkeswagon
Apple
Barings bank
ICICI
Nike
punish
Fraud
Civil
Remuneration
Fine 5 lacs
Class action
Board to be diversified
Companies Act
LODR
Uday Kotak Committee
And other relevant norms
Jubilant
In FY 19, the holding company of Jubilant FoodWorks Ltd.—the operator of Domino’s Pizza
chain in India—
backtracked on charging a royalty from subsidiaries for using its brand name within hours as
it sparked concerns about rewarding promoters at the expense of shareholders. The company
lost market cap in excess of 1000 Crores, when the holding company made a proposal to
charge corporate brand royalty of 0.25 percent of consolidated revenues of the company.
Bhartias are promoters- charge to company for using jubilant
Similarly with Colagate and HUL- they pay royalty to their promoters
Colgate being charged for adding salt and pepper in the paste.
Jubilant doesn’t add any value to the brand in fact dominos does and for they are paying
royalty.
This was when zee promoters defaulted on loans and DHFL was involved in shady transactions
JSW steel took 125cr. 30% of their profits as royalty nobody bothered.
Akzo Noble
Similarly Tatas, Muthoot and Shriram also do charge for the brand name.
Other payments Raymond paid promoters for refurbishing promoters building
it was more than annual profits.
Maruti
The law doesn’t require shareholder approval for such royalty if it’s less than
10% of revenues (material related party rules) – but they should.
Since it is a material related party transaction.
Uday Kotak
where royalty payout levels are high and exceed 5% of consolidated
revenues, the terms of conditions of such royalty must require
shareholder approval
and should be regarded as material related party transactions. The
Listing Regulations currently prescribe a materiality limit at ten percent
of annual consolidated turnover of the Company. Therefore, the
Committee prescribed a stricter limit for brand usage and royalty i.e. 5%
instead of the existing limit which is 5% of consolidated turnover.
New Law
In general, every company’s action should be assessed in terms of impact, not just in
terms of assumed intent. if there is bad intent, royalty isn’t exactly the simplest way
to extract money from a listed company. In Jubilant’s case, they seem to have mended
fences somewhat. The market has a short memory and it will forget.
PTL Enterprise
PTL Enterprise - The management proposed to sell its entire stake in two
hospitals to Promoter Owned entities at very low valuations.
The proposal faced strong confrontation from shareholders due to its low
valuation. This was the time when Related Party Transactions (RPT) did not
require minority shareholders’ approval. Large shareholders objected to the
deal got a stay against the proposal and finally the sale was stopped. The
company had to shelve the plan, and in fact never raised it again.
Siemens India
In FY15, though Motors was making losses , it sought to pay high salaries to
KMP beyond the permissible limit. Shareholders voted against the resolution
and company, marking the first instance when shareholders successfully
stalled payment of excessive compensation to top executives in a company as
large as the Tata group firm. Eventually the company had to come back to
shareholders with greater disclosures and explanations of why the salary was
justified.
Balaji