You are on page 1of 59

RIGHTS, DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITES & LIABILITIES OF A DIRECTOR

A PRESENTATION BY S ESHWAR

MASTER CLASS FOR DIRECTORS, IOD CHENNAI HOTEL RADISSON 08-08-08

HOW WE PROCEED
Section 1 FAQs, Appointment, Remuneration & Exit of a Director. Section 2 Role, Responsibilities, Duties & Powers. Section 3 Liabilities of a Director. Section 4 Role of an Independent Director.

FAQs FROM DIRECTORS


1. Is there any limit on the total number of
Companies where I can be a Director? Yes. A person can be a Director in a maximum of 15 Companies.

Exclusion in computing the Number:


Private Companies (other than subsidiaries of Public Companies); (b) Unlimited Companies; (c) Non-profit Associations; (d) Alternate Directorships.
(a)

FAQs contd
2. Is there a distinction between the designation of a Managing Director & an Executive Director?
There is no distinction under the Companies Act, 1956 in respect of the powers.

FAQs contd
3. Is there a limit on the total number of
Companies where I can be a Managing Director? If you are a Managing Director only in Private Limited Companies and not in Public Limited Companies, then there is no limit. If you are a Managing Director in a Public Company and a Private / Public Company, the maximum is 2. (Sec. 316)

FAQs contd
4. The Company where I am a Director is paying me negligible amount that does not even cover my conveyance as sitting fees. What is the law regarding sitting fees?

Primarily sitting fees is governed by the Articles of Association and Central Government notifications.

FAQs contd
SITTING FEES
Companies with paid-up capital and free reserves of Rs. 10 Crores and above or turnover of Rs. 50 Crores and above Sitting Fees not to exceed Rs. 20,000

Other Companies

Sitting Fees not to exceed Rs. 10,000

FAQs contd
5. The Company where I am a Director
wanted me to get a DIN. What is this DIN?

DIN is the acronym for Directors Identification Number. Every person who is a Director should have taken a DIN by now and any person before being appointed as a Director requires a DIN now.

FAQs
6. Is there any declaration that I need to give the Company where I am a Director at any time? 7. I have been appointed as a Director in another Company, do I need to inform the other Companies where I am a Director? 8. What should I do if there is a conflict of interest? 9. Can I enter into a contract for supply of materials / provision of service to the Company? 10. Is there a ceiling on remuneration of a Director? 11. Can I borrow money from my Company? 12. My son has done his Software Engineering, is there anything that I need to do before he joins the Software Company where I am a Director?

FAQs
13. I sent in my resignation from the Board of XYZ Ltd., they are yet to give me the Form 32 filed with RoC. Has my resignation taken effect? 14. Me and my Partner are the Directors, I feel that my Partner may chuck me out of the Company, is it possible? 15. The Company where I am a Director has started a business which is not there in its Memorandum. Is that fine? Will there be any liability on me?

WHO IS A DIRECTOR?
Companies Act - Any person occupying the position of a director by whatever name called. Managing Director Person vested with substantial powers of management. Whole-time Director includes a person in whole-time employment.

QUALIFICATIONS OF A DIRECTOR
Educational Qualification - ?? Share Qualification Check Articles of Association of the Company. Disqualification Yes.

Unsound mind, Insolvent, convicted for an

offence involving moral turpitude etc., Not filed the annual accounts and annual returns for a period of 3 years Public Company.

APPOINTMENT OF A DIRECTOR
Appointment by Incorporation documents. Appointment by Board

Additional Director Alternate Director Casual Vacancy

Appointment by Shareholders
General Meeting

Retirement by rotation.

APPOINTMENT OF A DIRECTOR

Appointment by Financial Institutions.


Appointment by Government.

REMUNERATION OF A DIRECTOR

Private Limited Company


No restrictions.

Public Limited Company


Remuneration of MD / ED / WTD Maximum of 11% of the Net Profits of a Company Where there is only 1 MD / ED / WTD 5% of NP Where there is more than 1 MD / ED / WTD 10% for all of them put together.

REMUNERATION OF A DIRECTOR

Public Limited Company


Remuneration of MD / ED / WTD Event of No Profit or Profit inadequate
Law permits payment in excess of 5%, on a slab rate based on effective capital Paid-up Capital + Reserves & Surplus + LT Loans (No WCL, OD etc) (Investments + accumulated losses + preliminary exps not w/o.)

Less than Rs. 1 Crore (Effective Capital)

Rs. 75,000

More than 1 Less than Rs. 5 Crores


More than 5 Less than Rs. 25 Crores More than 25 Less than Rs. 50 Crores More than 50 Less than Rs. 100 Crores More than Rs. 100 Crores

Rs. 1,00,000
Rs. 1,25,000 Rs.1,50,000 Rs. 1,75,000 Rs. 2,00,000

REMUNERATION OF A DIRECTOR

Public Limited Company


Remuneration of a person who is not a MD

/ ED / WTD

To pay a monthly, quarterly or annual payment obtain approval of Central Government Alternate structuring
Pay 1% Commission with Shareholders. approval of the

EMPLOYING A RELATIVE IN THE COMPANY

Office or Place of Profit held by


Partner of a Director.

Relative of a Director.
Firm in which the Director is a Partner. Firm in which a relative of a director is a

Partner. A Private Company where a Director is a Director or a Member.

EMPLOYING A RELATIVE IN THE COMPANY Salary, Fees, Commission, Perquisites, Rent Free Accommodation All are to be taken into account for computing the limits. Effect of not taking required approvals
Where there is no Board Approval

Appointment invalid. Where no Shareholder Approval obtained Vacates office.

EMPLOYING A RELATIVE IN THE COMPANY

Effect of not taking required approvals


The person is liable to return the money and

monetary equivalent of the benefit / perquisite. Company has no right to waive the recovery unless Central Government approval is obtained.

LOAN FROM COMPANY

Loan by a Company to its Director, to his relative, to any person who is a Partner of such Director, any firm in which the Director or his relative is a Partner, any private company where the Director is a Director or Member are regulated.

LOAN FROM COMPANY


Public Limited Company Closely held and widely held. Private Company which is a subsidiary of a Public Company. For Private Company this provision is exempt.

REQUIREMENT OF COMPANIES ACT


Approval of the Board of Directors Approval of Central Government. Not required for a Private Company. Entry in Register under Section 301. Housing Loan to Director is exempt by a notification. Disclosure in the Balance Sheet Debts due by directors, firms or private companies to stated separately.

CAN I SELL GOODS OR PROVIDE SERVICES TO THE COMPANY WHERE I AM A DIRECTOR?

Sale of Goods & Materials by Company top e r s o n

Supply of Goods & Materials by Company to-

Provision of Service by Company to-

Underwriting Contract with-

(a) A Director of the Company;

(b) Relative of a Director under Section 6 read with Schedule 1A; (c) Partnership firm in which the Director is a Partner; (d) Partnership firm in which the Relative (under Section 6) of a Director is a Partner; (e) A Partner of the Partnership firm in which the Director is a Partner; (f) A Partner of a Partnership firm in which the relative of a Director is a Partner; (g) A Private Company in which the Director of the Company is a Member; (h) A Private Company in which the Director of the Company is a Director.

Purchase of Goods & Materials by Company from-

Service availed by Company from-

REQUIREMENT OF THE COMPANIES ACT

Approval of the Board. If Capital of the Paid-up Company is in excess of Rs. 1 Crore, then prior approval of the Central Government. Making entry in Register maintained under Section 301.

EXIT FOR A DIRECTOR

Resignation
State the date from which Resignation should

be effective. Check Articles whether it states anything about resignation. Resignation if nothing stated in Articles will be effective from the date stated in the letter, and if no date stated then will take effect from the date of receipt by the company, if Articles does not have a provision for resignation.

EXIT FOR A DIRECTOR


Removal Vacation of Office Key items

Qualification Shares not obtained.

Absents from 3 consecutive Board Meetings

held over a period of 3 months without obtaining leave of absence. Takes a loan from the Company in violation of the Act. Fails to disclose interest in a contract / arrangement.

ROLE & RESPONSIBILITY OF THE BOARD

Primary role
To develop business and add value to the

Company

Value to the Enterprise


Fiduciary Duties.
Statutory Duties. Business Duties.

DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITY & LIABILITY


Duty Task or an action that a person is bound to perform for moral or legal reasons. Responsibility the state or position of being responsible; the ability or authority to act on ones own, without supervision. Liability A state of being liable (legally obliged or responsible)

POSITION OF DIRECTOR VIS--VIS THE COMPANY

Director is a Trustee of the Company


His position is that of an Agent to the Company.

FIDUCIARY DUTIES
The directors have several duties to discharge under the common
law some of which have been evolved by Courts from time to time, having regard to the position of directors in the company. Some of these duties are:

1. To exercise his power in good faith, honesty and in the interest of the Company.

2. Not to make secret profits.


3. Duty to take care. 4. Must avoid direct or indirect personal involvement in any transaction of the Company.

FIDUCIARY DUTIES ..
5. In case of conflict between his own interest and the interest of the Company, he must put the interest of the Company first. 6. Must exercise reasonable skill and diligence in the discharge of his duties. 7. Not to delegate their powers, which they are, required to exercise

personally.
8. To ensure that due compliance with the provisions of the Companies Act and all other laws, by- laws, regulations, etc. 9. To ensure that the all Government dues are paid accordingly.

POWERS OF THE DIRECTORS


The Board has the power to do everything that a
Company can do, Subject to: i. ii. Provisions of The Companies Act, 1956. (The Act) Provisions of Memorandum and Articles of

Association.

iii.

Shareholders approval wherever required.

POWERS TO BE EXCERCISED BY
The Directors, collectively as Board are responsible for the conduct of Management of the Company and have to exercise powers at Board meetings.(section 291- 293) (In case of emergency, by circular resolutions section 289) The Board can delegate its powers to: i. ii. iii. Committee of Directors. Any Single Director. Managing director / Whole-time director.

iv.

Any Officer.

The Delegation of powers must be done by Board resolution.

POWERS OF DIRECTORS AS INDIVIDUALS:

The Managing Director is entrusted with general powers of


management. He has to exercise the powers, subject to

superintendence, control and direction of the Board. (As per definition under section 2(26) of the Act.

One or more Whole-time Directors can assist a Managing Director, if required. (section 269)

The Non-executive Directors meet only at periodical Board meetings and are not concerned with the day-to-day Management of the Company. They involve in taking decisions, which are either policy or the ones required to be taken by the Board under the law.

GENERAL POWERS OF THE BOARD [Section 291]:


Except where express provisions are made that the powers of a company in respect of any matter are to be exercised by the company in general meeting, in all other cases the Board is entitled to exercise all its powers. They are authorised to do what the company is authorised to do, unless barred by restrictions on their powers by the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956, the Memorandum or Articles of the company. Thus, from the provisions of Section 291 and the exposition of the law stated above, it is clear that subject to the restrictions contained in the Act,

Memorandum, Articles, the powers of the directors are co-extensive with those of
the company itself.

POWERS TO BE EXERCISED ONLY AT BOARD MEETINGS [Section 292(1)]


The Board of directors of a company shall exercise the following powers on behalf of the company, and it shall do so only by means of resolutions passed at meetings of the Board: a. b. c. d. e. f. The power to make calls on shareholders in respect of money unpaid on their shares; The power to authorise the buy-back (if it is or less 10% of the total paid-up equity capital and free reserves of the company); The power to issue debentures; The power to borrow moneys otherwise than on debentures; The power to invest the funds of the company; and The powers to make loans. The Board may by a resolution passed at a meeting, delegate to any committee of directors, Managing Director, Manager or any other principal officer of the company or in case of a branch office, a principal officer of that office, the powers specified in clauses (d), (e), (f).

OTHER POWERS TO BE EXERCISED AT BOARD MEETINGS:


1. 2. The power to fill up casual vacancies in the office of directors [Section 262]. The power to make donation to political parties [proviso to sub-section (2) of Section 293A]. 3. The powers to accord sanction for specified contracts in which one or more directors are interested [Section 297(4)]. 4. 5. 6. 7. Disclosure of interest by a director [Section 299(1)]. The power to receive notice of disclosure of directors interest [Section 299(3)(c)]. The power to receive notice of disclosure of directors' shareholding [Section 308(2)]. The power to appoint or employ a person as Managing Director if he is the Managing Director or manager of one and not more than one company [Section 316(2)]. 8. The power to appoint or employ a person as its manager if he is the manager or Managing Director of other company [Section 386(2)]. 9. The power to make a declaration of solvency where it is proposed to wind up the company voluntarily [Section 488(1)].

POWERS, WHICH MUST BE EXERCISED BY UNANIMOUS VOTE AT BOARD MEETING

Power to appoint or employ a person as its Managing


Director under Section 316 or manager under section 386 if he is Managing Director or manager of one and not

more than one other company.

Power to invest in shares or debentures of any other body corporate under Section 372A. Not Applicable for a Private Company.

EXERCISABLE ONLY WITH THE CONSENT OF THE COMPANY IN GENERAL MEETING (Section 293):

To sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the whole or substantially the


whole of the undertaking.

To remit or give time for the re-payment of any due by a Director.

To invest, otherwise than in trust securities, the amount of


compensation received by the Company on compulsory acquisition of its property or undertaking.

To Borrow money where aggregate borrowing exceeding companys


paid up share capital and free reserves.

To Contribute to charitable or other funds.

LIABILITIES OF DIRECTORS
Civil and Criminal liabilities grouped under the following heads:

Liabilities to outsiders

Liabilities to the Company


Liabilities to the shareholders Liabilities for statutory defaults and violations

LIABILITIES TO OUTSIDERS
They are personally liable to outsider parties in the following cases: a. When they enter into contract on behalf of the Company if:
Contracts are ultra vires the Company They act outside the scope of the scope of their own authority They act in their own name and not for and on behalf of the Company b. When they issue Prospectus: in violation of the provisions of the Companies Act which contains misstatements when they found guilty or fraud; when they allot shares in irregular manner. When their liability becomes unlimited under section 322 & 323.

c. d. e.

LIABILITIES TO THE COMPANY Cases:

Negligent in the performance of their duty


and the Company suffers loss
Acts ultra vires their power or the

Company
Breach of trust

LIABILITIES TO THE SHAREHOLDERS

They work as trustee of the Companys property. They will be liable if


Breach of duty. Wrongful use of their rights. Personally liable if shareholders suffer

loss.

STATUTORY DEFAULTS
Directors are liable for consequences of the following situations

Failure to distribute dividend within 30 days of declaration


(imprisonment upto 3 years) section 207

Knowingly participating / voting in Board proceedings u/s 300 (fine upto Rs. 50,000) section 300(4)

Fails to disclose interest u/s 299 (fine upto Rs. 50,000) Section 283(1)(l)

Knowingly become party by contravening section 295 (fine upto Rs. 50,000 or imprisonment upto 6 month)

CRIMINAL LIABILITY

REMEMBER ALL OFFENCES UNDER ANY ECONOMIC LEGISLATION IS TRIED IN A CRIMINAL COURT

Section 44(4)- Filing of prospectus containing untrue statements two years imprisonment and/or fine upto Rs.50,000. Section 58A(6)(b)- Inviting deposits in contravention of the Rules, or manner or conditions-five years imprisonment and fine. Section 58A(10)- Failure to repay deposits as ordered by the CLB Three years imprisonment. Section 63 Criminal liability for mis-statement in prospectusImprisonment upto two years or fine upto Rs.50,000 or both. Section 68- Fraudulently inducing persons to invest moneyImprisonment upto five years, or fine Rs.1,00,000.

CRIMINAL LIABILITY

Section 73- Failure to repay excess application money-imprisonment

upto one year and fine upto Rs.50,000.

Section 105-Concealing name of creditor-Imprisonment upto one year or fine or both.

Section202(1)-Undischarged

insolvent

acting

as

director-

Imprisonment upto two years or fine upto Rs.50,000 or both.

Section 207 Default in distributing dividends- imprisonment upto 3

years and fine upto Rs.1,000 for every day.

Section 209A- Failure to assist Registrar or any officer so authorised by the Central Government in inspection of books of account, etc-

imprisonment upto one year and fine not less than Rs.50,000.

CRIMINAL LIABILITY

Section 210(5)- Failure to lay balance sheet etc.at annual general meetingimprisonment upto six months or fine upto Rs.10,000 or both.

Section 211(8)- Failure to comply Section 211 regarding form of balance sheet and matters to be stated- imprisonment upto six months or fine upto 10,000.

Section 217(5)- Failure to attach to balance sheet a report of the Board imprisonment upto six months for each offence or fine upto Rs.20,000 or

both.

Section 221(4)- Failure to supply information to auditor-Imprisonment upto six months, or fine upto Rs.50,000 or both.

Section 250(9))- Improper issue of shares- imprisonment upto six months or fine upto Rs.50,000 or both.

LIABILITY UNDER OTHER ENACTMENTS

Offences by Companies
If the person contravening any of the said

provisions is a company, every person who at the time of the offence was committed was in charge of, and was responsible to, the company for the conduct of the business of the company, as well as the company, shall be deemed to be guilty of the contravention and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.

DEFAULT UNDER COMPANIES ACT

Officer in Default Managing Director(s) Whole-time Director(s) Manager Secretary Any person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the Board is accustomed to act A person charged by the Board with responsibility of complying with that provision. Where a company does not have 1st 3, all Directors.

LIABILITY UNDER OTHER ENACTMENTS

Labour Laws
Factories Act Only a Director can be

appointed as an Occupier. ESI MD is prima facie incharge of and responsible for companys affairs and can be prosecuted Karnataka HC. EPF Raj. HC allowed prosecution of MD as he was responsible for and incharge of companys affairs.

LIABILITY UNDER OTHER ENACTMENTS


Income-tax Act Kerala HC Companys arrears of tax dues cannot be recovered from directors personally. Income-tax Act SC MD was held liable in the capacity of a principal officer under the IT Act, for false verification of incometax return.

LIABILITY UNDER OTHER ENACTMENTS


Perjury Cal HC allowed prosecution of MD for false statements made in a civil action initiated by the Company. Pollution Laws P&H HC Persons who are responsible for conduct of dayto-day business of the Company will be liable to be prosecuted for offence.

BEFORE JOINING
Annual Report-last three years Do an inspection / search on the company at the Roc. Visit the website Do a google search about the company for newspaper reports

ROLE OF AN INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR

Statutory Role
Audit Committee Sec. 292A Only

Public Companies having Paid-up Capital in excess of Rs. 5 Crores. Remuneration Committee Sch. XIII Decide remuneration of MD / ED / WTD in the event of Loss or Inadequate Profits.

ROLE OF AN INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR

Expected Role
Establish Governance Values and practices in

business model of companies. Bring an independent view on issues of strategy, policy, performance, accountability, resources, key appointments and standards of conduct. Scrutinise the companys performance in achieving agreed corporate goals and objectives.

ROLE OF AN INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR

Monitor the reporting of performance.


How to be a good independent director the Derek Higgs definition:
Non-executive directors need to be sound in

judgement and to have an inquiring mind. They should question intelligently, debate constructively, challenge rigorously and decide dispassionately. And they should listen sensitively to the views of others, inside and outside the board.

A Governance Model
Executive Directors Owner Directors Independent Directors

Board of Directors
Management Company
Supervisory & enforcement authorities

Shareholders

Stakeholders

Creditors

THANK YOU seshwar@eshwars.com www.eshwars.com

You might also like