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Friday, April 3, 2026

WHY A RESIGNING DIRECTOR SHALL FILE FORM DIR-11 WITH CONCERNED ROC ? REAL CASE STUDIES ON THE IMPACT FILING AND NON-FILING OF DIR-11

 WHY A RESIGNING DIRECTOR SHALL FILE FORM DIR-11 WITH CONCERNED ROC ?

REAL CASE STUDIES ON THE IMPACT FILING AND NON-FILING OF DIR-11

Form DIR-11

Filing Form DIR-11 by a resigning director under the Companies Act, 2013 is not merely procedural—it serves several critical legal and evidentiary purposes. Although post-amendment, it is optional for the director (mandatory for the company via DIR-12), from a risk-management standpoint it is highly advisable.

NON FILING OF RESIGNING DIRECTOR'S DIR-12

Non filing of resigning director's DIR-12 by the company will create a non-compliance on the part of company and its remaining directors, whereas on the resigning director if he files a DIR-11 with notice of resignation and proof of dispatch will ensure, from that date he is not a director of the company and protects his part from subsequent acts of the company.

 But that filing should be within 30 days of his resignation but not a later date to protect him from that date. Whereas the company's duty to intimate ROC about resignation and get the master data changed and register of directors be updated will be on the part of company and its directors.

The filing of DIR-11 by the resigning director will not dispense the company and its remaining directors from their obligation to file the DIR-12 with ROC.

Even if resigning director not filed the DIR-11 will not absolve the company and its remaining directors from their duty to inform in DIR-12 within 30 days of his resignation.

INDEPENDENT INTIMATION TO ROC

·      DIR-11 allows the director to directly notify the Registrar of Companies about their resignation.

·      Prevents reliance solely on the company’s compliance.

·      Ensures the regulator records the cessation even if the company defaults in filing DIR-12.

LEGAL EVIDENCE OF RESIGNATION

It acts as conclusive proof of:

·      Date of resignation

·      Intention to step down

This is crucial in disputes, especially where the company delays or suppresses filing.

PROTECTION FROM FUTURE LIABILITIES

Under Section 168 of the Act:

·      A director is liable only for acts during their tenure.

·      DIR-11 helps establish a clear cutoff date, protecting against:

·      Regulatory penalties

·      Fraud or compliance violations occurring post-resignation.

IMPORTANT CASE LAWS ON THE SUBJECT

1. PENALTY SET ASIDE DUE TO TIMELY DIR-11 FILING (2025)

CASE: REGIONAL DIRECTOR (RD) BANGALORE –

FACTS:

A Managing Director resigned in 2014, but the company failed to file Form DIR-12. The Director, however, did not immediately file DIR-11, leading the ROC to penalize him as an officer in default.

DIR-11 ACTION:

 In 2019, the ex-director filed Form DIR-11, along with evidence of the 2014 resignation letter and board minutes.

OUTCOME:

 The Regional Director allowed the appeal, citing that the DIR-11 filing proved the resignation was valid in 2014. The penalties levied against the director were set aside because he was no longer an "officer in default" after the effective date of his resignation, despite the company's failure to file DIR-12.

2. LEGAL BATTLE AGAINST DEFAULTING COMPANY (2024)

CASE: RAJIV SHARMA VS. REGISTRAR OF COMPANIES, MUMBAI

FACTS:

 A petitioner resigned on 24th August 2021, to be effective 1st September 2021. The Company did not file DIR-12, nor did they file Form INC-20A (Commencement of Business).

DIR-11 ACTION:

The director faced difficulties in filing DIR-11 because the company had not filed the mandatory Form INC-20A. He consequently filed a complaint with the RoC to update his status.

OUTCOME:

The High Court case highlights that if a director cannot file DIR-11 because of the company's failure to comply with other regulations (like INC-20A), they must file their resignation copy and send evidence to the RoC to protect themselves from further liabilities

3. PROTECTION AGAINST POST-RESIGNATION LIABILITY (2022)

CASE: PRASHANT GARG VS MINIONS VENTURE PVT LTD

FACTS:

A director resigned, but disputes arose regarding decisions made during the transition.

DIR-11 ACTION:

The director had filed Form DIR-11 before the company filed DIR-12.

OUTCOME:

The High Court recognized the email and DIR-11 filed by the petitioner, limiting their liability to the period before the effective resignation date mentioned in the form.

5. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FAILURE AND LATE DIR-11 (2023)

CASE: AXTRON TEXCHEM (2023)

FACTS:

The company delayed filing DIR-12 for 1,703 days (nearly 5 years). The director had not initially filed DIR-11, assuming the company would comply.

OUTCOME:

Both the company and the directors were penalized (over ₹5 Lakhs). The case study highlights that without filing DIR-11, the director's DIN remains "Active" on the MCA master data, exposing them to liability for the company's failures during that 1,703-day period.

6. NON-COOPERATION WITH BOARD

• Company: Start-up in Delhi

• Reason: Director cited “differences with management.”

• DIR-11 Filing:

• DIN and resignation date filled.

• Resignation letter attached.

• No board resolution attached (optional).

• Outcome: ROC recorded resignation; company later delayed DIR-12 filing, attracting penalty.

7. RESIGNATION DUE TO CONFLICT OF INTEREST

• Company: Manufacturing SME in Pune

• Reason: Director joined another competing venture.

• DIR-11 Filing:

• Reason clearly stated as “conflict of interest.”

• Courier receipt attached as proof of dispatch.

• Board resolution acknowledging resignation added.

• Outcome: ROC accepted; director’s liability ceased from effective date.

DEFECTIVE DIR-11 FILING PENALTY (2023)

CASE:

Adjudication Order on Herballife Healthcare Private Limited

Facts:

A director filed DIR-11, but the date of resignation in the form did not match the date in the attached resignation letter (Filed on 3rd August 2021, but mentioned an incorrect resignation date).

Outcome:

 The ROC issued a show-cause notice and imposed a penalty on the director because the signatory is liable for the accuracy of the information provided in DIR-11, even though they were filing to protect themselves.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

While not mandatory, DIR-11 is a defensive compliance tool that:

·      Ensures transparency

·      Creates an independent legal record

·      Shields the director from downstream risk

INDEPENDENT RECORD

DIR-11 serves as an independent record with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. It protects the director in situations where:

 • The company delays or fails to file DIR-12

 • There is potential dispute regarding the date of resignation

 • Regulatory or creditor actions which may arise later

DIR-11 is not a statutory compulsion. It is a strategic move and sometimes that distinction makes all the difference.

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Thursday, April 2, 2026

AUDIT RELIEF FOR SMALL COMPANIES PROPOSED: WHAT BUSINESSES SHOULD KNOW?

 AUDIT RELIEF FOR SMALL COMPANIES PROPOSED: WHAT BUSINESSES SHOULD KNOW?


AUDIT EXEMPTIONS FOR SMALL COMPANIES

MCA plans audit exemptions for small companies via Companies Amendment Bill 2026, tied to expanded small company definition, experts seek strict thresholds and safeguards.

This could reduce compliance burdens for smaller businesses, though its final impact will depend on how eligibility is defined.

NEW SECTION 139(12) IN THE COMPANIES ACT, 2013

The Bill proposes inserting a new Section 139(12) in the Companies Act, 2013, enabling the government to exempt specific classes of companies from the requirement to appoint statutory auditors.

SMALL COMPANY

The proposal comes alongside a plan to expand the definition of “small company” by raising the paid-up capital limit from ₹10 crore to ₹20 crore and turnover from ₹100 crore to ₹200 crore.

This could widen the pool of companies eligible for simplified compliance.

ADVANTAGES

Exempting smaller companies from mandatory audits could offer multiple benefits:

ü Reduction in compliance costs

ü Lower administrative burden

ü Alignment with existing relaxations available to small companies, such as exemptions from preparing cash flow statements

ü Need for clear eligibility criteria

EXEMPTION APPLY ONLY TO UNLISTED PRIVATE LIMITED COMPANIES

“The exemption should apply only to unlisted private limited companies meeting specified thresholds, companies with listed debt, public deposits, or those operating in regulated sectors may need to be excluded.

GUARDRAILS TO LIMIT MISUSE

Among the conditions that could be considered, experts point to:

ü Restricting eligibility to companies without public deposits

ü Excluding entities in sectors such as banking, insurance, NBFCs or those under market regulation

ü Linking eligibility to demonstrable business activity, such as GST filings or employee-related contributions

ü Factoring in past compliance history

ü Alternative oversight mechanisms

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Experts suggest that such Companies could be required to submit self-certified financial statements signed by a director and a qualified accountant, with regulatory authorities retaining the power to review and withdraw exemptions if needed.

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

NEW CHAIRMAN , COMPANY SECRETARY WHO NEVER LEFT - CORPORATE GOVERNANCE RED FLAGS AT SUNDARAM CLAYTON LTD

 NEW CHAIRMAN , COMPANY SECRETARY WHO NEVER LEFT - CORPORATE GOVERNANCE RED FLAGS AT SUNDARAM CLAYTON LTD


"72-HOUR U-TURN"

The corporate governance story at Sundaram Clayton Limited involves a rapid "72-hour U-turn" in March 2026, where the company abruptly reversed high-level resignations and leadership changes.

INITIAL EXIT (MARCH 27, 2026):

The board initially accepted the resignation of P.D. Dev Kishan, the long-standing Company Secretary and Compliance Officer, effective April 5, 2026, citing "personal reasons".

NEW APPOINTMENT:

At the same meeting, M. Muthulakshmi was appointed to succeed him starting April 6, 2026.

SUDDEN REVERSAL (MARCH 30, 2026):

Only three days later, in a meeting convened with less than 24 hours' notice, the board rescinded these decisions.

·      P.D. Dev Kishan withdrew his resignation and will continue in his role with "no break in service".

·      M. Muthulakshmi's appointment was cancelled.

THE "NEW" CHAIR: VENU SRINIVASAN'S RETURN

TRANSITION REVERSAL:

Retired bureaucrat R. Gopalan, who had been appointed Chairman in 2022 to professionalize leadership, stepped down from the role with immediate effect.

SRINIVASAN BACK AT HELM:

Venu Srinivasan, previously Chairman Emeritus, was redesignated as Chairman and Managing Director.

GOPALAN'S ROLE:

He remains on the board as a Non-Executive Independent Director.

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTEXT

Succession Questions: These moves reversed a "textbook" transition plan from 2022 that had placed professional managers and the next generation, like Managing Director Lakshmi Venu, in key roles.

REPORTING FRICTION:

 Reports suggest internal concerns regarding the reporting structure.

Lakshmi Venu reportedly questioned why the Company Secretary (Kishan) was not a full-time employee and why he reported to the CFO of TVS Holdings instead of directly to her.

New SEBI regulations (Regulation 6) recently clarified that a Compliance Officer should report no more than one level below the Board or Managing Director to ensure independence.

CEO CHURN:

These changes occurred alongside the resignation of CEO Vivek S. Joshi (effective March 31) and the appointment of R. Venkatesh as the new CEO starting April 1, 2026.

GOVERNANCE RED FLAGS:

·      Continuity without accountability can dilute the intent of leadership change

·      Perception risks: Stakeholders may question independence and internal controls

·      Board oversight gaps if key managerial personnel remain unexamined

KEY TAKEAWAY:

·      A new Chair alone cannot reset governance culture. True reform requires:

·      Re-evaluation of Key Managerial Personnel (KMP)

·      Strengthening independence in compliance functions

·      Clear signaling of accountability across all governance layers

THE LARGER LESSON:

Corporate governance is not about who leads, but how systems function. Without aligning both, even well-intended leadership changes risk becoming cosmetic.

This episode highlights how corporate governance in family-led conglomerates often blends tradition with rapid adjustments to maintain stability.

 

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

FORM MR-1 HAS BEEN FILED WITH DELAY OF 41 DAYS PROBABLY WITH ADDITIONAL FEES. STILL THE COMPANY IS PUNISHABLE BY ROC?

 FORM MR-1 HAS BEEN FILED WITH DELAY OF 41 DAYS PROBABLY WITH ADDITIONAL FEES. STILL THE COMPANY IS PUNISHABLE BY ROC?

MCA CRACKS DOWN ON DELAY IN FORM MR-1 FILING

GARUDA AEROSPACE LIMITED VS ROC, CHENNAI

In a recent adjudication, the Registrar of Companies, Chennai imposed penalties on Garuda Aerospace Limited for delay in filing Form MR-1, reinforcing the strict compliance stance under the Companies Act, 2013.

 WHAT WAS THE ISSUE?

The company filed Form MR-1 (return of appointment of managerial personnel) 41 days beyond the prescribed 60-day timeline.

ROC’s POSITION:

The authority made it clear that:

·      Statutory timelines are mandatory in nature

·      Inadvertence or internal lapses do not constitute a valid defense

FORM MR-1 HAS BEEN FILED WITH DELAY OF 41 DAYS PROBABLY WITH ADDITIONAL FEES. STILL THE COMPANY IS PUNISHABLE BY ROC?

Under Section 196(4) of the Companies Act, 2013, every company must file Form MR-1 within 60 days of appointment of a managerial person.

KEY POINT

Additional fee = procedural compliance

Penalty = consequence of statutory violation

These operate independently.

WHY PENALTY MAY STILL APPLY?

The Registrar of Companies (ROC) treats delayed filing as a default, even if:

·      The form is eventually filed, and additional fees are paid.

·      Late filing means the company failed to comply within the prescribed timeline, triggering penal provisions under:

PENALTY IMPOSED:

COMPANY:

₹51,000

OFFICERS IN DEFAULT:

₹50,000 each ( On Two directors)

 LEGAL BACKING:

Action taken under Section 196 read with Section 454 of the Companies Act, 2013.

KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR PROFESSIONALS & COMPANIES:

️ Timely filing of MR-1 is non-negotiable

️ Even short delays can result in financial exposure

️ Personal liability of directors/KMPs is real and enforceable

️ Robust compliance tracking systems are essential

COMPLIANCE INSIGHT:

This case reiterates MCA’s increasing reliance on strict, system-driven enforcement, leaving little room for procedural laxity.

#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER – R V - SECKAR , FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Monday, March 30, 2026

PENALTY ON SECRETARIAL AUDITOR ₹2,00,000 (TWO LAKHS) FOR CRITICAL REPORTING FAILURES IN THE SECRETARIAL AUDIT REPORT.

 PENALTY ON SECRETARIAL AUDITOR ₹2,00,000 (TWO LAKHS) FOR CRITICAL REPORTING FAILURES IN THE SECRETARIAL AUDIT REPORT.


ESSAR SHIPPING LTD VS ROC GUJARAT PENALTY ON SECRETARIAL AUDITOR

The Registrar of Companies (ROC), Gujarat, imposed a penalty of ₹2,00,000 (Two Lakhs) on the Secretarial Auditor of Essar Shipping Limited for violating Section 204 of the Companies Act, 2013. The order, dated May 18, 2023, followed an inspection that revealed critical reporting failures in the Secretarial Audit Report.

KEY FINDINGS OF THE VIOLATION

The inspection, ordered by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), identified that the Secretarial Auditor failed to report the following in the audit report for the financial year ended March 31, 2019:

SECTION 186 NON-COMPLIANCE:

The auditor did not mention the company's failure to comply with provisions regarding loans and investments by the company.

 

SECRETARIAL STANDARDS:

The auditor failed to report that the Minutes Books for Board Meetings and Audit Committee meetings were not maintained in accordance with the Secretarial Standards issued by the Institute of Company Secretaries of India (ICSI).

PENALTY DETAILS

Imposed On: The Practicing Company Secretary (PCS) acting as the Secretarial Auditor.

Amount: ₹2,00,000, which is the maximum penalty prescribed under Section 204(4) for such contraventions.

Adjudication Process: The Secretarial Auditor's representative argued that the company had no operations and was in loss, claiming the omissions were "inadvertent errors" with no unfair gain. However, the Adjudicating Officer held that professional diligence is mandatory and imposed the penalty.

SIGNIFICANCE

This case is considered a landmark "eye-opener" for professionals, as it reinforces that Secretarial Auditors are held strictly accountable for ensuring all regulatory non-compliances are qualified in their reports, regardless of the company's operational status.

#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER – R V - SECKAR , FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Sunday, March 29, 2026

VIJAYPAT SINGHANIA FOUNDER OF RAYMOND LTD SAYS HIS SON GAUTAM HAS REDUCED HIM TO HAND-TO-MOUTH LIFE

 VIJAYPAT SINGHANIA  FOUNDER OF RAYMOND LTD SAYS HIS SON GAUTAM HAS REDUCED HIM TO HAND-TO-MOUTH LIFE

Dr Vijaypat Singhania, who built Raymond Ltd into one of the largest apparel brands in the country

Ex-tycoon’s lawyer alleges his client’s simple perks such as a car and a driver have been withdrawn and payment of rent to an alternate accommodation withheld.

·       Dr. Vijaypat Singhania is locked in a legal battle with Raymond, a firm he helped build.

·       He alleges that his son, Gautam Singhania, has forced him to live a hand-to-mouth existence.

·       The retired tycoon claims he is struggling financially

·       He gave away a substantial portion of his wealth and ownership in the company to his son.

·       Subsequently, he alleged that he was not provided adequate financial support.

·       He has stated that he now lives in a rented apartment in Mumbai.

·       He has also been involved in legal disputes with his son over property and maintenance.

This case study reinforces

·       Family business succession planning

·       Estate transfer without safeguards

YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER – R V SECKAR FCS, LLB 79047 19295

Saturday, March 28, 2026

NO SINGLE WOMAN DIRECTOR IN 179 GOVERNMENT-OWNED COMPANIES, PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES- COMPANY LAW VIOLATION BY PUBLIC SECTOR COMPANIES

 NO SINGLE WOMAN DIRECTOR IN 179 GOVERNMENT-OWNED COMPANIES, PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES- COMPANY LAW VIOLATION BY PUBLIC SECTOR COMPANIES


NO SINGLE WOMAN DIRECTOR ON THEIR BOARDS IN 179 STATE-OWNED COMPANIES

A significant number of government companies are failing to meet legal requirements. As many as 179 state-owned companies including Public Sector Enterprises, do not have a single woman director on their boards.

This non-compliance affects companies that are required to have at least one woman director under the Companies Act.

REQUIREMENT UNDER THE COMPANIES ACT ,2013

Under Section 149(1) of the Companies Act, 2013, read with Rule 3 of the Companies (Appointment and Qualification of Directors) Rules, 2014, certain classes of companies are mandatorily required to appoint at least one woman director, including:

  • ·      Listed companies
  • ·Public companies meeting prescribed capital/turnover thresholds

·      Additionally, for listed PSUs, the requirement is reinforced under SEBI (LODR) Regulations, 2015, which mandates:

At least one woman director, and

For top entities, at least one independent woman director

Every listed company and every other public company having paid-up share capital of Rs 100 crore or more or having a turnover of Rs 300 crore or more is required to appoint at least one woman director on its board.

GOVERNANCE IMPLICATIONS

Failure to appoint a woman director is not merely a technical lapse—it reflects:

·      Weak board diversity practices

·      Non-alignment with ESG norms (especially “Social” and “Governance” pillars)

·      Regulatory non-compliance risk, including penalties

GENDER DIVERSITY IN BOARDROOMS

It also contradicts the policy intent of improving gender diversity in boardrooms, especially in public sector undertakings that are expected to set governance benchmarks

WHY REGISTRAR OF COMPANIES ARE RELUCTANT TO INITIATE ACTION AGAINST 179 PUBLIC SECTOR ENTERPRISES?

The jurisdictional Registrar of Companies (ROC) under the Ministry of Corporate Affairs can:

·      Initiate adjudication proceedings

·      Impose penalties on the company and officers in default

In listed PSUs, Securities and Exchange Board of India may:

  • ·      Levy fines
  • ·      Freeze promoter shareholding (in extreme cases of prolonged non-compliance)

WHY 74 WOMEN MPs IN THE PARLIAMENT HAVE NOT RAISED THEIR VOICES FOR NON-APPOINTMENT OF WOMEN DIRECTORS ?

As of June 2024, there are 74 women MPs elected to the 18th Lok Sabha, accounting for approximately 13.6% of the total 543 seats.

It is shocking to note that even a single women MP has raised their voices in the Parliament for these violations.

WHY THIS HAPPENS IN PSUS?

This issue is particularly prevalent in government-owned entities due to:

·      Delays in appointments by administrative ministries

·      Vacancies pending ACC (Appointments Committee of the Cabinet) approvals

·      Over-reliance on government nomination processes rather than independent search mechanisms

STRATEGIC TAKEAWAY

For compliance officers and board advisors:

·      Ensure continuous board composition monitoring

·      Maintain a pipeline of eligible woman candidates

·      Trigger early escalation to administrative ministries in case of PSU vacancies

·      Document compliance efforts to mitigate liability exposure.

#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER – R V - SECKAR , FCS, LLB 79047 19295,