ASSETS NOT HELD IN COMPANY’S NAME – COSTLY COMPLIANCE FAILURE
ROC GOA vs MEGA STRUCTURES REALESTATE LIMITED
FACTS OF THE CASE
- The
company acquired a proprietary business (M/s Reliance Construction) by issuing shares worth ₹2.02 crore to its Managing
Director.
- However,
even after acquisition:
- Properties
remained in the name of the
Managing Director, not the company.
- This
non-compliance continued for multiple years (FY 2017–18 to FY 2021–22).
LEGAL
PROVISION INVOLVED
Section 187 of the Companies Act, 2013
·
Mandates
that all investments and assets of a company must be held in its own name
·
Section
187(4)provides for penalty in case of default
CONTINUOUS DEFAULT UNDER SECTION 187
·
The company
failed to transfer ownership of acquired assets into its own name
·
This is a
continuous default under Section 187
·
Auditor’s
reports repeatedly flagged the issue
PENALTY
IMPOSED
ROC Goa imposed penalties under Section 454 read with Section 187(4):
·
Company:
₹5,00,000
·
Managing
Director (Officer in default): ₹50,000
KEY LEGAL PRINCIPLE
This case reinforces a critical compliance rule:
A company cannot “beneficially own” assets while legal
ownership remains with directors or others.
Even if:
·
Consideration
is paid (e.g., shares issued), and
·
Assets are
reflected in books
·
Legal title
must be in the company’s name
·
Auditor
qualifications can trigger ROC action
KEY TAKEAWAYS
·
Post-acquisition
compliance is critical
·
Continuous
default increases exposure
·
Weak
governance can lead to avoidable penalties
# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047
19295,






