ARE THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS PROTECT THE MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS INTEREST IN INDIA?
PROTECTION OF MINORITY SHARE
HOLDER’S INTEREST BY
INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR IS A MYTH OR
REALITY?
The Companies Act, 2013 and SEBI’s Listing Obligations
and Disclosure Requirements (LODR) Regulations give them explicit
responsibilities to safeguard minority investors, especially in
promoter-controlled companies where conflicts of interest are common.
Schedule IV outlines their Code of Conduct, including
duties to act in the interest of all shareholders, especially minorities.
SEBI LODR REGULATIONS, 2015
·
IDs must
oversee related party transactions (RPTs), which often involve promoter
interests.
·
IDs chair
or sit on key committees like the Audit Committee and Nomination &
Remuneration Committee (NRC).
·
Regulation 25
requires IDs to meet separately at least once a year to evaluate board
performance and independence.
INFORMATION
ASYMMETRY:
IDs rely on management for data, which may be incomplete or biased.
CASES WHERE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS PROTECTED
MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS
|
CASE LAW
NAME |
DETAILS |
|
Tata–Cyrus Mistry Case
(2016) |
Independent
directors of Tata group companies, such as Nusli Wadia, openly supported
Cyrus Mistry after his ouster as Chairman of Tata Sons. They raised concerns
about governance practices and minority shareholder rights, showing IDs can
act as a check on promoter dominance. |
|
Infosys Whistleblower
Allegations (2019) |
Anonymous
whistleblowers alleged that the CEO and CFO were engaging in unethical
practices to inflate short-term profits. The company’s independent directors
took the allegations seriously, hired independent law firms to conduct a
thorough investigation, and demonstrated transparency to protect retail and
institutional shareholders from sudden panic. |
CASES WHERE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS FAILED
TO PROTECT MINORITY INTERESTS
|
CASE LAW
NAME |
DETAILS |
|
Satyam
Computer Services (2009) |
The
independent directors on the audit committee—despite their highly
distinguished professional backgrounds—failed to scrutinize the fake accounts
and resigned shortly after the scam broke, drawing severe criticism for
acting as passive "rubber stamps". |
|
Infrastructure
Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) (2018): |
Despite a robustly constituted board, independent directors failed to flag massive related-party transactions and excessive debt leveraging. This led to a liquidity crisis that severely eroded minority shareholder and public investor wealth. |
|
Manpasand
Beverages (2019): |
Following
the resignation of their statutory auditors, independent directors on the
audit committee approved financial results without sufficient due diligence.
SEBI penalized the independent directors for failing to exercise proper
oversight over financial reporting, proving that mere participation isn't
enough to protect shareholders |
|
Defeating Promoter
Resolutions (2023): KRBL Ltd |
Emboldened
by proxy advisory firms and stricter corporate governance norms under the
Companies Act, minority shareholders successfully banded together to vote down
resolutions—such as disproportionate remuneration hikes for promoter
families—at prominent companies (e.g., KRBL Ltd.). Independent oversight has
empowered these proxy advisory systems. |
|
Fortis
Healthcare Case (2018) |
Independent
directors were criticized for not acting decisively against alleged diversion
of funds by the promoters (Singh brothers). SEBI later intervened to protect
minority shareholders, showing IDs had not fulfilled their duty effectively. |
KEY
TAKEAWAY
Independent directors in India do have a statutory
duty to protect minority shareholders, especially through oversight of related
party transactions, board independence, and transparency.
So, while the law in India clearly mandates
independent directors to safeguard minority shareholders, real-world outcomes
vary widely. In some cases, they’ve been strong protectors; in others, they’ve
failed due to lack of independence or oversight.
#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047
19295,




