THE DELHI HIGH COURT STAYED PENALTY ORDERS OF ₹27.1 lakh IMPOSED BY ROC NEW DELHI AGAINST MICROSOFT & LINKEDIN OVER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF SIGNIFICANT BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP (SBO) DISCLOSURE NORMS.
ALLEGATIONS
Microsoft & LinkedIn Executives allegedly failed
to disclose significant beneficial ownership (SBO) in LinkedIn India under
Sections 89 & 90 of the Companies Act, 2013.
RoC argued that Nadella and Roslansky were SBOs due to
their leadership roles and indirect control over LinkedIn India.
PENALTY
Penalty of ₹27.1
lakh imposed by the Registrar of Comnpanies (RoC), upheld by MCA’s Regional
Director
SBO UNDER INDIAN LAW
LEGAL BASIS:
Sections 89 & 90 of the Companies Act, 2013 + Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Rules, 2018.
DEFINITION:
An SBO is any individual who, directly or indirectly,
holds ≥10% shares, voting rights, or significant influence/control in a
company.
DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENT:
·
SBOs must
file Form BEN-1 with the company.
·
The company
must file Form BEN-2 with the Registrar of Companies (RoC).
PURPOSE:
To prevent benami holdings (hidden ownership) and
improve transparency in corporate structures.
EXAMPLE:
If a person owns 12% of shares in an Indian company
through another entity, they must disclose themselves as an SBO.
DEFENSE ARGUMENTS
Disclosures already filed: Petitioners claim they
submitted required declarations on January 29, 2024.
MISAPPLICATION OF LAW:
Authorities allegedly misinterpreted Sections 89 &
90.
IMPROPER RELIANCE ON U.S. SEC FILINGS:
Petitioners argued that U.S. securities law
disclosures cannot be equated with India’s SBO framework.
LEGAL SIGNIFICANCE
INDIAN VS. U.S. DISCLOSURE FRAMEWORKS:
The case highlights the tension between global
corporate reporting standards and India’s SBO rules.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PRECEDENT:
The outcome could set a benchmark for how
multinational executives are treated under Indian disclosure laws.
INTERIM RELIEF:
The stay prevents enforcement of penalties until the
matter is fully adjudicated.
FINAL THOUGHTS
The petitioners further contended that the ROC
improperly relied upon disclosures made before the United States Securities
& Exchange Commission (SEC) by the Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft
Corporation.
According to the petitioners, disclosures made under
the US regulatory framework were distinct from the disclosure obligations
applicable under the Indian Companies Act in relation to significant beneficial
owners.
The Court pointed out that, “The disclosure made before
the United States SEC are different and distinct from those applicable to the
Significant Beneficial Owners [SBOs] under the Indian statute.”
# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047
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