CAN A COMPANY BE HELD CRIMINALLY LIABLE FOR OFFENSES REQUIRING MENS REA (A GUILTY MIND), SUCH AS CHEATING AND CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY? THE DOCTRINE OF ATTRIBUTION:
IRDIUM INDIA TELECOM LTD. V.
MOTOROLA INC. (2011)
In IRDIUM INDIA TELECOM LTD. V. MOTOROLA INC. (2011)
case, the Supreme Court of India firmly established that companies can be held
criminally liable in India, including for offences requiring mens rea (criminal
intent).
FACTS OF THE CASE
Iridium India Telecom accused Motorola of criminal
conspiracy and cheating under Section 420 read with Section 120-B of the Indian
Penal Code (IPC). Iridium alleged Motorola made false representations and
assurances in its Private Placement Memorandum to induce massive financial
investments into the commercially disastrous "Iridium" satellite
project.
THE INITIAL HURDLE:
The Bombay High Court quashed the criminal complaint.
It ruled that a corporation is an artificial entity without a physical body or
mind, making it legally incapable of possessing the mens rea (intent) to commit
fraud.
THE SUPREME COURT RULING:
The Supreme
Court set aside the High Court's decision. It established that corporations can
be prosecuted under the IPC.
THE DOCTRINE OF ATTRIBUTION:
The Court ruled
that the "intent" of the corporation's directors, managers, or
high-level agents (who control its affairs) is legally attributed to the
corporation itself.
PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS
·
Companies
in India can now face criminal prosecution for fraud, cheating, conspiracy, and
other offences.
·
Directors’
and officers’ actions can implicate the corporation itself.
·
Corporate
veil may be pierced when companies are used as instruments of fraud.
· This ruling aligns Indian law with global trends recognizing corporate criminal responsibility.
IRIDIUM CASE INFLUENCE ON LATSER
CORPORATE FRAUD CASES
|
SATYAM
COMPUTER SERVICES SCANDAL (2009) |
In Satyam,
both individual directors and the company faced charges under IPC provisions
for cheating and criminal breach of trust. |
|
SAHARA GROUP
CASE (2012–2014) |
The Supreme
Court held Sahara liable for misleading investors and violating SEBI
regulations. |
|
KINGFISHER
AIRLINES & VIJAY MALLYA (2016 ONWARDS) |
Allegations
of financial mismanagement and fraud in securing loans. Banks and regulators pursued both Mallya personally and Kingfisher
Airlines as a corporate entity. |
|
NIRAV MODI
& PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK FRAUD (2018) |
Fraudulent
Letters of Undertaking (LoUs) led to losses exceeding ₹11,000 crore.
Enabled investigators to pursue corporate entities
linked to Modi’s firms under IPC provisions. |
LESSONS LEARNED
Iridium India Telecom Ltd. v. Motorola Inc. (2010) is
a landmark Supreme Court judgment that firmly established corporate criminal
liability in India, confirming that corporations can be prosecuted for offences
requiring mens rea, thereby strengthening investor protection and corporate
accountability.
#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047
19295,





