Just a moment...

βœ•
Top
Help
πŸš€ New: Section-Wise Filter βœ•

1. Search Case laws by Section / Act / Rule β€” now available beyond Income Tax. GST and Other Laws Available

2. New: β€œIn Favour Of” filter added in Case Laws.

Try both these filters in Case Laws β†’

×

By creating an account you can:

Logo TaxTMI
>
Call Us / Help / Feedbackβœ•

Contact Us At :

E-mail: [email protected]

Call / WhatsApp at: +91 99117 96707

For more information, Check Contact Us

FAQs :

To know Frequently Asked Questions, Check FAQs

Most Asked Video Tutorials :

For more tutorials, Check Video Tutorials

Submit Feedback/Suggestion :

Email :
Please provide your email address so we can follow up on your feedback.
Category :
Description :
Min 15 characters0/2000
TMI Blog
Home / RSS

1985 (12) TMI 343

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....2.S.P. 167 3.Kapil Muni 166 4.Chander Muni 167 5.Shanti 127 6.Anand 100   1,000 S.P. was the chairman, Kapil Muni, the managing director, and the other three brothers, the directors of the company. The company's business was that of manufacture of radios, transistors and tape-recorders at its factory at Kishan Ganj, Delhi. S.P. died on March 16, 1968. After his death, between 1968 and 1973, there were some changes in the shareholdings and the directorship which are not, at present, relevant. It is sufficient to mention two facts. One is that the company acquired, for purposes of its factory, some time during the lifetime of S.P. a plot of land measuring 5,261 yards in Maya-puri Industrial Area for Rs. 1.98 lakhs, the market value of which has gone up tremendously in the past few years. The second is that a group of Agarwals (now respondents Nos. 3 to 5) acquired a good number of shares in the company. According to the petitioners, the entire shareholding of the Rajpals other than S.P. have been transferred to the Agarwals with the result that the company has, for all practical purposes, gone into the hands of the Agarwal group. The wife and children of S.P. experi....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....en to the petitioners, the petitioners may be granted the said relief instead of winding up. Without prejudice to the said submission, the petitioners reiterate that the facts and circumstances of the case only justify the winding up of the company which can provide adequate relief to the petitioners. The petitioners have no other alternative remedy/relief equally efficacious. The petitioners, therefore, pray as under: (a)that the company, Mckenzie Philip (India) P. Ltd., C-97, Maya- puri, Phase IT, New Delhi, may be wound up under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956; and/or (b)such other order may be made in the premises as shall be just". The petition was filed on May 6, 1981, and came for admission the next day, when notice was issued to the respondents to show cause why the petition should not be admitted. On July 15, 1981, the parties and their counsel appear to have agreed to a settlement by which the respondents should purchase the 167 shares of S. P. Rajpal at a price to be determined by a valuer appointed by the court. However, a question seems to have arisen as to whether this valuation should proceed, as claimed by the petitioners, on the basis that the total nu....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....is raising a contention to the effect that the petition is not maintainable because the petitioners are not registered shareholders. It obviously' means that he is going back on the commitment which had been made by his predecessor. Mrs. Kheterpal, in order to avoid any complication arising in future, wants time to move an appropriate application under section 155 of the Companies Act for rectification of the register of members. On her request adjourned to February 2, 1982". As mentioned above, the petitioners filed a petition under section 155 of the Act, viz, C. P. No. 25 of 1982, and the present petition was adjourned to await the outcome of that petition. Khanna J. disposed of the said petition on March 22, 1984, holding (a) that the 167 shares of S. P. should be transmitted to petitioners Nos. 2 to 6 here (who were also petitioners Nos. 2 to 6 in C. P. No. 25 of 1982, i.e., the children of S. P., petitioner No. 1, the widow, having died on February 8 1982; and (b) that the said petitioners be allotted further shares as directed in para 29 of the judgment, against payment. This order is, however, the subject-matter of an appeal by the respondents which is pending. After C. P.....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....f accepted, would result in the dismissal of the C. P. in limine without the merits being gone into. The first contention raised by Sri Mittal is an elaboration of the point raised by him earlier on January 27, 1982, and is based on the language of section 439(4) of the Act. This section, in so far as it is relevant, reads: "439(4). A contributory shall not be entitled to present a petition for winding up a company unless-... (b) the shares in respect of which he is a contributory, or some of them, either were originally allotted to him or have been held by him, and registered in his name, for at least six months during the eighteen months immediately before the commencement of the winding up, or have devolved on him through the death of a former holder" There can be no doubt (though counsel for the company seemed to dispute it) that petitioners Nos. 2 to 6 are contributories even though the shares on the basis of which the petition has been filed are fully paid-up shares and even though they stand in SP's name, the petitioners' names not having been placed on the company's register. This is abundantly clear on a joint reading of sections 426, 428 and 430 of the Act. The argume....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....resentative on whom shares have devolved through the death of a former holder. In my view, I do not think that such an invidious distinction was ever contemplated by the Legislature. There is no such intendment or reason for such intendment. Excepting for the arrangement of the text of the sub-section which lends prima facie support to such a conclusion, such an obvious discriminatory treatment as between a member and a legal representative of the member cannot be easily countenanced. There should be a great and compelling reason to encourage such a marked distinction resulting in discrimination. To accept the text as it is would mean that what a member on the register cannot do, can be done by the legal representative of a former member. The language used in section 439(4) is plain; but while working out the mandates prescribed therein, certain unreasonableness sets in when we are posed with the difference in the privileges granted to the two classes of persons envisaged under the section. In my view, there is no necessity at all to make any distinction between the above two sets of persons. A member on the register is on the same level as another legal representative on whom sha....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....ct of 1948 is also in the same terms. As I see it, there is no ambiguity or difficulty in construing the section, but, as some confusion seems to have been created by the manner in which the categories of cases covered by the sub-section have been lumped together in one uninterrupted clause, it may be useful to extract the way in which Palmer reads the section, (Palmer, 22nd edition, volume I, section 81-16):" No contributory of a company is capable of presenting a petition unless- 1either the number of members is reduced, in the case of a private company, below two, or in the case of any other company, below seven; or 2the shares in respect of which he is a contributory or some of them were (a)originally allotted to him, or (b)have been held by him and registered in his name for at least six months during the eighteen months before the commencement of the winding up, or (c)have devolved upon him through the death of a former holder (section 224(1)(a))". This, I think, is the correct way of reading the sub-section. It really deals with the three types of cases corresponding to the three ways in which shares can be acquired: by original allotment, by transfer inter vivos and b....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

.... this type of case, a further restriction has been considered advisable in order to prevent abuse of process of court by busy-bodies obtaining shares on transfer for a short period only with a view to harass the company by filing a winding-up petition. But a transmission occurs on a fortuitous act over which no human being has any control and an abuse of a like nature is not possible. Moreover, as rightly pointed out by Sri Khanna, the legal representative of a deceased member is in a very peculiar position. He is no doubt entitled either to apply to become a member or transfer his share, subject to the right of the company to accept him or his transferee as a member in the light of its articles but until this happens-and it may take quite some time due to no fault of his-he can exercise none of his rights as a shareholder except to receive the dividends on the shares but is liable to be included in the list of contributories. This is clear from regulations 25 to 28 in Schedule I and section 430 of the Act. It is, therefore, only logical that he must also be able to file a winding-up petition, though his name may not have been entered on the register of members and that too, for so....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....ecessary to consider Sri Khanna's contention that, even if the respondents' interpretation of section 439 is taken to be correct, petitioners Nos. 2 to 6 can maintain the petition as they should be taken, by virtue of Khanna J.'s order in C.P. No. 25 of 1982, to have been placed on the company's register with retrospective effect as on the date of death of SP, viz., March 16, 1968. I now turn to the second principal ground on which the respondent company seeks dismissal of the company petition. The point raised is very short. It is pointed out that the petition is for the winding up of the respondent company. Counsel for the petitioner, on August 19, 1981, specifically gave up his claim for the winding up of the company. Sri Mittal argues that, after this, there is nothing further left in the petition to argue. He says that there can be no question of the petition being admitted to the limited extent of determining the price at which the petitioners' shares should be purchased by the respondents. If the idea is that the company should purchase the shares, it can be done only in accordance with the procedure prescribed in section 77 or as incidental to a petition under sections 397....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....the respondents had also agreed. He vehemently argues that if the respondents were to be allowed to go back on this understanding, then, he should not also be held bound by his undertaking not to press for the company's winding up. That apart, he also contends that the winding up court has full jurisdiction under sections 443(1)(d) and 443(2) to pass an order other than winding up that would effectively resolve the disputes between the parties. He points out that the contentions of the respondents, if accepted, would have the petitioners who have genuine grievances and also are seen, after Khanna J.'s order in CP No. 25 of 1982, to have been kept out of their just rights, totally remediless, a position which would be totally incompatible with the very wide and equitable jurisdiction conferred on the courts under the Companies Act. Sri Khanna referred, in this context, to the decisions in Lord Krishna Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Abnasli Kaur [1974] 44 Comp. Cas 210 (Delhi) and Moti Films P. Ltd. v. Harish Bansal [1983] 54 Comp Cas 856 (Delhi) and also on the judgment of Prakash Narain J. (as he then was) in Avinash Kaur v. Lord Krishna Sugar Mills Co. Ltd. (CO. No. 58 of 1960) affirmed on a....

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

Full Text of the Document

X X   X X   Extracts   X X   X X

....wind up the company is in the best interests of all the creditors and contributories. Where there are no creditors on the scene and the fight is only between say, two groups of shareholders, the remedy of winding up is a very expensive and a prolonged process during which, through the medium of the official liquidator, the assets of the company are realised or otherwise distributed amongst the shareholders. One conceivable method of such distribution could be by giving all the assets of the company to one group of shareholders, the other being compensated in terms of money or to put it in another way, the purchase of one group's interest in the company by the other. In this view of the matter, a relief of the type sought for, short of actual winding up, is not, in principle, wholly outside the purview of the process of winding up. That apart, when a winding up petition is filed, the court is not obliged, even in a case where the clauses of section 433 are satisfied, to order a winding up. Section 443(2) itself outlines the necessity for the court to explore the possibilities of directing the petitioner to seek a less radical remedy than winding up, if possible. Sections 397 and 398....