WHETHER SUPREME COURT OF INDIA IS AGAINST THE CORPORATE CLASS ACTION SUIT AS THE JINDAL POLY FILMS LTD MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS ALLEGE THAT THEY WERE SIDELINED BECAUSE SC REFERRED THE DISPUTE TO PRIVATE ARBITRATION?
REFERRING THE DISPUTE TO PRIVATE ARBITRATION
The Supreme Court has ended India’s first-ever corporate class action
suit against Jindal Poly Films Ltd., referring the dispute to private
arbitration after both sides consented. This move has sparked controversy, as
minority shareholders allege they were sidelined, with nearly 40,000 investors
losing a statutory remedy.
KEY FACTS ABOUT THE CASE
CASE ORIGIN:
Filed in March 2024 by minority shareholder Ankit Jain, alleging
siphoning of ₹2,500 crore through undervalued related-party transactions.
NCLT & NCLAT ORDERS:
Both tribunals admitted and upheld
the class action under Section 245 of the Companies Act, 2013, marking India’s
first admitted shareholder class action.
SUPREME COURT DECISION (JUNE 2026):
Set aside NCLT/NCLAT orders and
appointed Justice Manindra Mohan Shrivastava (Retd. Chief Justice) as sole
arbitrator, with Delhi as the arbitration seat.
LEAD PETITIONER EXIT:
Ankit Jain sold his stake in March
2026; Monet Securities substituted as petitioner in May and then consented to
arbitration.
SHAREHOLDER CONCERNS
LACK OF CONSULTATION:
Minority investors claim 40,000 shareholders were not consulted before the case was diverted to arbitration.
ALLEGED STRATEGY:
Critics argue Monet Securities’
substitution and immediate consent to arbitration may have been a pre-arranged
strategy with Jindal Poly to defeat the class action.
INVESTOR PROTECTION DEBATE:
Legal experts warn this sets a
precedent where class actions can be privately settled, undermining statutory
safeguards for retail investors
ROLE OF SEBI
INTERVENTION:
SEBI filed an investigative report
confirming ₹760 crore losses to public shareholders due to opaque related-party
transactions and disclosure violations.
PENDING ACTION:
Despite arbitration, SEBI
continues pursuing regulatory proceedings, meaning the company may still face
penalties or compliance directives.
RISKS & TRADE-OFFS
TRANSPARENCY LOSS:
Arbitration is private, reducing visibility for retail investors.
PRECEDENT RISK:
May discourage future shareholder activism under Section 245.
INVESTOR REMEDIES:
Shareholders may need to pursue individual claims or rely on SEBI’s
enforcement.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
In short, while the Supreme Court’s referral to arbitration resolves the
dispute procedurally, it raises serious questions about minority shareholder
rights, transparency, and the future of class actions in India.
Investors should closely monitor SEBI’s ongoing proceedings, as that remains the only avenue for broader accountability.
# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,






