The Evolutionof Corporate Law
The Evolutionof Corporate Law
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The Evolution Of Corporate Law In Post‐Colonial India:
From Transplant To Autochthony
Umakanth VAROTTIL
v.umakanth@nus.edu.sg
[January 2015]
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UMAKANTH VAROTTIL*
ABSTRACT
The essential thesis of this paper is that while Indian corporate law began as a legal
transplant from England, it has been progressively decoupled from its source with
subsequent amendments and reforms being focused either on finding solutions to local
problems or borrowing from other jurisdictions. To that extent, decolonization has had a
significant effect of radically altering the course of Indian corporate law. Current Indian
corporate law not only represents a significant departure from its colonial origins, but
the divergence between Indian law and English law as they have developed since
independence has been increasing. While the Indian lawmaking process indulged in
close cross‐referencing of English legal provisions during the colonial period and
immediately thereafter, the more contemporary legislative reforms pay scant regard to
corporate law in the origin country that initially shaped Indian corporate law.
This offers valuable lessons. First, even though India is considered to be part of the
“common law” family, corporate law has evolved somewhat differently from the origin
country, England. In that sense, it casts significant doubt on the assumption that all
countries within a legal family bear similarities. On the contrary, each host country may
follow a trajectory that is different from that followed by the origin country of corporate
law. Second, it supports the proposition that legal transplants can be challenging unless
the local conditions in the host country are similar to that in the origin country.
Variations in economic, social, political and cultural factors may bring about dissonance
in the operation of a transplanted legal system. Third, a comparison of the historical
colonial experience in the functioning of the transplanted legal system and the more
contemporary experience in the post‐colonial period suggests fragility in the
foundations of the transplant.
Key words: Colonial continuities, India, corporate law, decolonization, legal transplant, English
common law
*
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore. I thank (i) Rohit De, Arif
Jamal and Arun Thiruvengadam for helpful conversations on the subject matter of this paper, (ii)
participants at the Law and South Asia Studies section entitled “The Postcolonial Lives of Colonial Law in
South Asia” at the 2015 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Law Schools in Washington DC
on January 3, 2015 for comments, and (iii) Shreya Prakash and Upamanyu Talukdar for research
assistance. I acknowledge the financial support of the Centre for Asian Legal Studies, Faculty of Law,
National University of Singapore. Errors or omissions remain mine alone.
1
An influential set of studies is encapsulated in a series of articles published in the late 1990s.
These are Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, Andrei Shleifer & Robert Vishny, Legal
Determinants of External Finance, 42 J. FIN. 1131 (1997), Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes,
Andrei Shleifer & Robert Vishny, Law and Finance, 106 J. POL. ECON. 1113 (1998); Rafael La Porta,
Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes & Andrei Shleifer, Corporate Ownership Around the World, 54 J. FIN. 471
(1999) and Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, Andrei Shleifer & Robert Vishny, Investor
Protection and Corporate Governance, 58 J. FIN. ECON. 3 (2000).
2
La Porta, et. al., Legal Determinants of External Finance, supra note 1 at 1137; La Porta, et. al.,
Law and Finance, supra note 1 at 1116.
3
For a brief survey of this literature, see John Armour & Priya Lele, Law, Finance and Politics:
The Case of India, 43 LAW & SOC’Y REV. 491, 493-95 (2009). At the same time, various alternative
theories have evolved to explain the differences between corporate law systems. These explore matters
beyond the law, such as history, politics, interest groups and even anthropology and culture. See MARK J.
ROE, STRONG MANAGERS, WEAK OWNERS: THE POLITICAL ROOTS OF AMERICAN CORPORATE FINANCE
(1994); MARK J. ROE, POLITICAL DETERMINANTS OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: POLITICAL CONTEXT,
CORPORATE IMPACT (2003); Raghuram G. Rajan & Luigi Zingales, The Great Reversals: The Politics of
Financial Development in the Twentieth Century, 69 J. FIN. ECON. 5 (2003); RAGHURAM G. RAJAN & LUIGI
ZINGALES, SAVING CAPITALISM FROM THE CAPITALISTS: UNLEASHING THE POWER OF FINANCIAL MARKETS
TO CREATE WEALTH AND SPREAD OPPORTUNITY (2004); Amir N. Licht, The Mother of All Path
Dependencies: Toward a Cross-Cultural Theory of Corporate Governance Systems, 26 DEL. J. CORP. L.
147 (2001).
4
nuanced analysis, as there could be considerable variation in corporate law in systems
within each type of legal family.4
The diffusion of corporate law on the lines of legal families can be attributed to
the phenomenon of “legal transplants,” particularly those that occurred during the
colonial times in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that witnessed migration of
entire systems of law from the empires to the colonies.5 While the concept of legal
transplants has received considerable affirmation in legal scholarship,6 it has also been
viewed with caution.7 Mere importation of a legal rule or a statutory code without
proper adaptation to local conditions is susceptible to failure.8 This is on account of the
fact that several social, political and economic factors that are present in the legal
system of origin may not be present in the host country, or may be present with
substantial variations, all of which make the importation a fairly complex exercise.9
While legal transplants have been ubiquitous, their efficacy and stickiness may vary
across jurisdictions as experiences have differed. Despite an evolved scholarship in this
field, it is hard to identify a coherent theory that explains the utility and impact of legal
transplants.
4
Katharina Pistor, et. al., The Evolution of Corporate Law: A Cross-Country Comparison, 23 U.
PA. J. INT’L ECON. L. 791 (2002). See also Holger Spamann, Contemporary Legal Transplants: Legal
Families and the Diffusion of (Corporate) Law, 2009 BYU L. REV. 1813; Mathias M. Siems, Legal
Origins: Reconciling Law & Finance and Comparative Law, 52 MCGILL L.J. 55
5
Spamann, supra note 4, at 1812-13; Daniel Berkowitz, Katharina Pistor & Jean-Francois Richard,
The Transplant Effect, 51 Am. J. Comp. L. 163, 165 (2003).
6
A seminal book represents the leading scholarship in the field. ALAN WATSON, LEGAL
TRANSPLANTS: AN APPROACH TO COMPARATIVE LAW (1993).
7
Pierre Legrand, The Impossibility of Legal Transplant, 4 MAASTRICHT JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN
AND COMPARATIVE LAW 111 (1997).
8
See K. ZWEIGERT & H. KOTZ, AN INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE LAW (1992).
9
See Berkowitz, Pistor & Richard, supra note 5, at 168 observing as follows:
However, if the law was not adapted to local conditions, or if it was imposed via
colonization and the population within the transplant was not familiar with the law, then
we would expect that initial demand for using these laws to be weak. … Countries that
receive the law in this fashion are thus subject to the “transplant effect”: their legal order
would function less effectively than origins or transplants that either adapted the local
law to local conditions and/or had a population that was familiar with the transplanted
law.
5
Given the colonial linkages of legal transplants, one potential avenue to measure
their efficacy and acceptability would be to explore the evolution of the transplanted
law in the host country during the colonial period as well as that following its
decolonization.10 It may be reasonable to hypothesize that if a law that has been
transplanted into a host country during the colonial period does not fit with local
conditions, the post‐colonial free state may embark upon the process of radically
departing from the transplanted law. Similarly, if the economic and social conditions
alter significantly following the decolonization, one may expect changes to the law. It is
only when there are legal and institutional similarities in the colonial and postcolonial
period that inertia creeps in resulting in continuity in the transplanted law.11 It may also
be the case that colonial continuities may arise due to the insistence of the post‐colonial
state to rely upon the transplanted laws to advance its own interests, often at the cost
of the rights and liberties of its citizens.12
In this theoretical backdrop, my aim in this paper is to test these phenomena by
examining the evolution of corporate law13 in India since its inception during the
colonial period through India’s emergence as an independent state and until the current
period when it is growing to be one of the leading economies in the world.14 The study
of Indian corporate law is appealing on several counts that are intrinsic to the aforesaid
analysis. India is uncontrovertibly a member of the “common law” family given its
10
COMPANION TO LAW AND SOCIETY (2004); Iza Hussin, Circulations of law: colonial precedents,
contemporary questions, 2 ONATI SOCIO-LEGAL SERIES 18 (2012); J.N. Matson, The Common Law
Abroad: English and Indigenous Laws in the British Commonwealth, 42 INT'L & COMP. L.Q. 753 (1993).
11
See e.g. Moiz Tundawala, On India’s Postcolonial Engagement With the Rule of Law, 6 NUJS L.
REV. 11 (2013).
12
Rohit De, ‘Commodities must be controlled’: economic crimes and market discipline in India
(1939-1955), 10 INT. J. LAW CONTEXT 277 (2014); Anil Kalhan, et. al., Colonial Continuities: Human
Rights, Terrorism, and Security Laws in India, 20 COLUM. J. ASIAN L. 93 (2006).
13
The use of the expression “corporate law” in this paper merits some explanation. While it
essentially refers to companies’ legislation, regulation and judicial decisions relating to company law,
where relevant it also includes securities laws and regulations that deal with investor protection and
corporate governance.
14
Much has been said about the emergence of India as a leading economic power, which requires no
further elaboration. See e.g. Goldman Sachs, Global Economics Paper No. 99, Dreaming With BRICs: The
Path to 2050 (2003), available at http://www2.goldmansachs.com/ideas/brics/book/99-dreaming.pdf.
6
colonial origins as part of the larger British Empire.15 It offers an elegant platform for the
study of legal transplants given that the inception of corporate law in India is a result of
replication of English company law.16 Finally, given that India has existed as an
independent state following decolonization for over sixty years now, it is an apt test
case for determining whether company law in that jurisdiction continues to
demonstrate strict adherence to its colonial origins or whether it has instead sought to
depart radically from the corporate law of its source country.
The evolution of corporate law in India can be traced back to the colonial era
with several previous companies’ legislation being modeled on parallel English
legislation. The influence of colonial laws continued even after decolonization in 1947
when the most significant piece of corporate legislation, the Companies Act, 1956, was
modeled on the English Companies Act of 1948. Although the Companies Act, 1956 was
the result of a classic legal transplant, its evolution thereafter took on a different
trajectory. Constant amendments to the Act were necessitated due to legislative
requirements that arose due to local conditions and problems that were unique to the
Indian corporate setting. Moreover, Indian courts too refused to accept English
judgments without adjusting and adapting the legal principles to suit the conditions of
Indian society.
The divergence between Indian corporate law and its English counterpart
became clearer with India’s economic liberalization in 1991. With the expansion of
foreign investment and the development of India’s capital markets, the focus of
corporate law extended beyond the Companies Act, 1956 and into securities laws
pertaining to or promulgated by the securities regulator, the Securities and Exchange
Board of India. In this phase, while some influence of English laws did subsist, the Indian
15
M.C. SETALVAD, THE COMMON LAW IN INDIA 3-4 (1960); M.P. JAIN, OUTLINES OF INDIAN LEGAL
& CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY (6TH EDN) 364-67 (2007); V.D. KULSHRESHTHA, LANDMARKS IN INDIAN
LEGAL HISTORY AND CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY, ch. XIII (1972); PETER DE CRUZ, COMPARATIVE LAW IN
A CHANGING WORLD 127-29 (1995).
16
For a detailed discussion of such transplant, see infra Part II.
7
Parliament and regulators began to either look to other jurisdictions such as the United
States (U.S.) to draw inspiration for legal reforms or indulged in soul‐searching to mold
customized solutions to India’s unique problems.
The transition from legal transplant to autochthony17 culminated in the recent
enactment of the Companies Act, 2013 that is being brought into effect in parts so as to
replace the Companies Act, 1956. The 2013 legislation is not only the result of nearly
two decades of debates and discussions, but also a reaction to corporate law and
governance problems that have plagued India more recently. The transition away from
English company law is nearly complete as the reforms are almost entirely tailored to
suit local needs.
The essential thesis of this paper is that while Indian corporate law began as a
legal transplant from England, it has been progressively decoupled from its source with
subsequent amendments and reforms being focused either on finding solutions to local
problems or borrowing from other jurisdictions such as the U.S. To that extent,
decolonization has had a significant effect of radically altering the course of Indian
corporate law. Although the shift was not evident in the period immediately following
decolonization, it began to take shape about a decade thereafter. Current Indian
corporate law not only represents a significant departure from its colonial origins, but
the divergence between Indian law and English law as they have developed since
independence has been increasing. In that sense, decolonization can be metaphorically
signified as a “fork in the road” when the Indian Parliament, after initial hesitation,
sought to move away from the colonial origins and develop the law in a trajectory that is
substantially different from the developments in the United Kingdom (U.K.). While the
Indian lawmaking process indulged in close cross‐referencing of English legal provisions
during the colonial period and immediately thereafter, the more contemporary
17
Autochthony is generally associated with something indigenous or “born from the soil,” and
contrasts with the connotation of a transplant. See Goh Yihan, Tort Law in the Face of Land Scarcity in
Singapore, 26 Ariz. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 335, 353 (2009); Linda Bosniak, Soil and Citizenship, 82 Fordham
L. Rev. 2069, 2074 (2014).
8
legislative reforms pay scant regard to corporate law in the origin country that initially
shaped Indian corporate law.
The evolution of corporate law in post‐colonial India offers valuable lessons.
First, even though India is considered to be part of the “common law” family, corporate
law has evolved somewhat differently from the origin country, England. In that sense, it
casts significant doubt on the assumption that all countries within a legal family bear
similarities. On the contrary, each host country may follow a trajectory that is different
from that followed by the origin country of corporate law. This necessitates a more
involved understanding of corporate law in the legal families. Second, it supports the
proposition that legal transplants can be challenging unless the local conditions in the
host country are similar to that in the origin country. Variations in economic, social,
political and cultural factors may bring about dissonance in the operation of a
transplanted legal system. Third, a comparison of the historical colonial experience in
the functioning of the transplanted legal system and the more contemporary experience
in the post‐colonial period suggests fragility in the foundations of the transplant. As I
seek to demonstrate in this paper, the radical shift in the trajectory of corporate law in
the post‐colonial period is suggestive of the fact that the transplant of English corporate
law in colonial India was perhaps not consistent with the desires of the local populace
thereby indicating problems of reception.
While there exists a burgeoning body of scholarship in the field of post‐colonial
theory specifically with reference to India,18 its focus on corporate and commercial laws
is scanty despite the prominence of these laws in the contemporary period. This paper
attempts to fill the gap. It is also intended to supplement the growing body of research
that seeks to determine the influence of colonial corporate laws in the post‐colonial era,
18
Kalhan, et. al, supra note 12; De, supra note 12; Tundawala, supra note 11; Elizabeth Kolsky,
Codification and the Rule of Colonial Difference: Criminal Procedure in British India, 23 LAW & HIS.
REV. 631 (2005); Marc Galanter, The Aborted Restoration of ‘Indigenous’ Law in India, 14 COMPARATIVE
STUDIES IN SOCIETY AND HISTORY 53 (1972); RINA VERMA WILLIAMS, POSTCOLONIAL POLITICS AND
PERSONAL LAWS: COLONIAL LEGAL LEGACIES AND THE INDIAN STATE (2006).
9
both in former colonies of the British Empire19 as well as other jurisdictions.20 The
historical and comparative analysis herein might also equip us to better understand
contemporary corporate law in India.21
Part II contains a detailed historical discussion of the evolution of Indian
corporate law from the colonial period until the current position. This will identify
trends that can be gleaned in terms of the impact that decolonization had on the shape
that corporate law took in India. Part III analyzes the changes brought about to Indian
corporate law in the post‐colonial period across several key aspects such as corporate
personality and structure, corporate finance and capital structuring, corporate
governance and the corporate law enforcement machinery. This Part also demonstrates
the increasing divergence between English and Indian corporate law over time. Part IV
concludes with an effort to correlate the findings in this paper to existing theoretical
debates across different planes including comparative corporate law and post‐colonial
theory.
II. HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF CORPORATE LAW IN INDIA
A discussion of the historical trends in corporate law beginning with the colonial period
through India’s independence and during the post‐colonial era will illuminate our
19
ROB MCQUEEN, A SOCIAL HISTORY OF COMPANY LAW: GREAT BRITAIN AND THE AUSTRALIAN
COLONIES 1854-1920 (2009); Rob McQueen, Company Law as Imperialism, 5 AUST. J. CORP. L. 46
(1995);Phillip Lipton, A History of Company Law in Colonial Australia: Economic Development and Legal
Evolution, 31 MELB. UNIV. L. REV. 805 (2007); L.C.B. Gower, Company Law Reform, 4 MAL. L. REV. 36
(1962); Walter Woon, Regionalisation of Corporate and Securities Law: The Singapore and Malaysia
Experience, 5 AUST. J. CORP. L. 356 (1995); Petra Mahy & Ian Ramsay, Legal Transplants and Adaptation
in a Colonial Setting: Company Law in British Malaya, [2014] SING. J.L.S. 123 (2014); Ron Harris &
Michael Crystal, Some Reflections on Transplantation of British Company Law in Post-Ottoman Palestine,
10 THEORETICAL INQ. L. 561 (2009). For a similar study in a related commercial area, see Christopher
Chen, Measuring the Transplantation of English Commercial Law in a Small Jurisdiction: An Empirical
Study of Singapore’s Insurance Judgments Between 1965 and 2012, 49 TEX. INT’L L.J. 469 (2014).
20
Petra Mahy, The Evolution of Company Law in Indonesia: An Exploration of Legal Innovation
and Stagnation, 61 AM. J. COMP. L. 377 (2013); Mariana Pargendler, Politics in the Origins: The Making of
Corporate Law in Nineteenth-Century Brazil, 60 AM. J. COMP. L. 805 (2012); Pistor, et. al., supra note 4;
Spamann, supra note 4.
21
See JOHN W. HEAD, GREAT LEGAL TRADITIONS 22 (2011) (referring in similar vein to comparative
law as a “reflective exercise”).
10
understanding of the trajectory adopted. A longitudinal study will help tease out the
extent of colonial law’s influence during the post‐colonial period. This analysis, while
primarily dealing with developments in the legal sphere, also takes into account
economic and social circumstances prevailing at the relevant time.
In this Part, greater emphasis is placed on analyzing the legislative developments
pertaining to corporate law in India, and to a lesser extent on case law. Particularly
during the colonial period, the diffusion of English law to the colonies occurred through
legislation.22 The relevance of English case law arises only due to the interpretation of
transplanted legislation that has parallels with English legislation.23
A. CORPORATE LAW DURING THE COLONIAL ERA (1850‐1947)
Business organizations are not an altogether recent phenomenon in India. They existed
in some form or the other in ancient India. Although they were essentially guilds or
groups of businesspersons or artisans engaged in a similar activity, they displayed some
of the features of a modern corporation, at least in a rudimentary form.24 However,
these business forms faded out during the series of invasions and other disturbances
that preceded the advent of European traders in India at the end of the fifteenth
century.25
The emergence of the modern business corporation in India can be attributed to
the establishment of the English East India Company (“EIC”) in 1600, which was granted
22
B.H. MCPHERSON, THE RECEPTION OF ENGLISH LAW ABROAD 256, 258 (2007).
23
Id. at 363.
24
One study of the corporate form referred to as sreni suggests it was prevalent in India “from at
least 800 B.C., and perhaps even earlier …” Vikramaditya Khanna, The Economic History of the Corporate
Form in Ancient India, WORKING PAPER (2005), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=796464, at 1.
25
Khanna, supra note 24, at 1; RADHE SHYAM RUNGTA, THE RISE OF BUSINESS CORPORATIONS IN
INDIA 1851-1900 1 (1970).
11
a royal charter that effectively conferred upon it a monopoly to trade in India.26 Since
then, other English companies received similar privileges and commenced activities in
India.27 It appears that for nearly two‐and‐a‐half centuries, companies were established
and carried on business in India without the existence of a specific body of law
regulating companies. The establishment of companies in India, particularly banking
companies, was nearly impossible given the “relentless opposition” of the EIC to the
grant of any charters for companies in India.28
1. Developments in the Nineteenth Century
Specific company legislation made a debut in India only in the year 1850 when an Act for
Registration of Joint Stock Companies was passed.29 This legislation was passed along
the lines of the Companies Act, 1844 in England and marks the beginning of an era when
legislative developments in the corporate field in India merely kept up with
developments in England.30 In other words, Indian corporate law functioned as a
continuum of transplants from English law, which phenomenon continued for a period
of over a century, as I elaborate further. The oddity about the Act of 1850 was that
registration was only optional as it conferred certain privileges.31 Limited liability was
not one such privilege, which is unsurprising given that the concept was yet to make
inroads in England as yet. Although the Act of 1850 signifies an important milestone in
Indian corporate law history as the maiden legislation in the field as it enacted key
26
Ron Harris, The English East India Company and the History of Company Law in ELLA GEPKEN-
JAGER, GERARD VAN SOLINGE, LEVINUS TIMMERMAN (EDS.), VOC 1602-2002 - 400 YEARS OF COMPANY
LAW 219 (2005).
27
Robert C. Rosen, The Myth of Self-Regulation or the Dangers of Securities Regulation without
Administration: The Indian Experience, 2 J. INT’L L. 261 (1979).
28
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 36.
29
C.R. DATTA, DATTA ON THE COMPANY LAW 29 (2008); Government of India, Report of the
Company Law Committee 16 (1952) (the “Bhabha Committee Report”). See also S.M. SHAH, SM SHAH’S
COMPANY LAW LECTURES 4 (1990).
30
P.M. Vasudev, Capital Stock, Its Shares & Their Holdings – A Comparison of India and
Delaware, Working Paper, available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=913282, at 17.
31
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 41.
12
legislative provisions for the management of joint stock companies for the first time,32 it
was rather ineffective given its optionality and the lack of protection for shareholders
through limited liability.33
Limited liability was first introduced in England by way of the Joint Stock
Companies Act, 1856,34 although this protection was not available to banks and
insurance companies.35 This legislation underwent amendment in 1857.36 In the same
year, legislation was enacted in India conferring the limited liability protection to
companies other than banking and insurance companies.37 Thereafter, following an
English legislation of 1858, the privilege of limited liability was extended to banking
companies in India through the Act of 1860, although the same privilege was not
extended to insurance companies.38
The pattern of mimicking English legislation continued even shortly thereafter.
Following the enactment of the Companies Act of 1862 in England, a new legislation was
passed in India in 1866 “for consolidating and amending the ‘laws relating to
incorporation, regulation and winding up of Trading Companies and other
Associations’.”39 This legislation also made available the benefit of limited liability to
insurance companies.40 This consolidation exercise was meant to keep pace with the
English Act.41 Yet another consolidation effort was undertaken in India in the form of the
32
Bhabha Committee Report, supra note 29, at 16 (observing that “the Act of 1850 may be said to
be nucleus around which subsequent Companies Acts developed,” adding that “though strictly speaking
they were all enacted on the lines of the English Companies Acts”).
33
Id. at 45.
34
This was briefly preceded by the Limited Liability Act of 1855. DATTA, supra note 29, at 28.
35
Id. at 68. See also Vasudev, supra note 30, at 17.
36
DATTA, supra note 29, at 28.
37
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 64.
38
Id. at 70.
39
Id. at 212.
40
Id.
41
DATTA, supra note 29, at 29.
13
Companies Act of 1882 in order to incorporate the amendments in the English
legislation since the early 1860s so as to make them applicable to the Indian context.42
2. Developments in the Twentieth Century
Following the Companies Act of 1882, five different sets of amendments were made
until the first decade of the twentieth century. Then, following the English Companies
(Consolidation) Act, 1908, a new legislation was enacted in India in the form of the
Companies Act, 1913.43 This was “as were previous Acts, a close reproduction of the
English Act §§ in its comparable provisions,” although it was recognized that “in certain
particulars, the Indian Act differed from the English Act.”44 Subsequently, following the
enactment of the English Companies Act of 1929, significant amendments were made to
Indian law by way of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1936. A unique aspect of this
legislative effort is that the Indian legislature decided to embark upon an amendment
process rather than a reenactment along the lines of the 1929 English legislation,
indicative for the first time of a hesitation in a wholesale transplant. The Statement of
Objects and reasons of the 1936 amendments suggests that it was decided not to adopt
the wholesale English legislation due to some unfavorable criticism it attracted, and also
because of the recognition that problems peculiar to India had to be dealt with,
especially those relating to the managing agency system.45 This trend began emanating
from the judiciary as well. Although it was common during the colonial period for courts
to refer to English decisions,46 they now began recognizing the fact that “where there is
a positive enactment of the Indian legislature, the proper course is to examine the
language of that statute and to ascertain its proper meaning uninfluenced by any
42
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 212; RITU BIRLA, STAGES OF CAPITAL: LAW, CULTURE, AND MARKET
GOVERNANCE IN LATE COLONIAL INDIA 40 (2009).
43
Bhabha Committee Report, supra note 29, at 17.
44
Id.
45
Id. at 18.
46
GURU PRASANNA SINGH, PRINCIPLES OF STATUTORY INTERPRETATION 225 (1999).
14
considerations derived from the previous state of the law – or of the English law upon
which it may have been founded.”47
Since 1936 until Indian independence, the Indian Companies Act, 1913
underwent several further amendments principally to address certain defects in the
legislation and also on account of constitutional developments such as the enactment of
the Government of India Act, 1935. This position ensued until India’s independence that
necessitated a further round of reforms.48
The following table tracks the chronology of legislative developments in England
and India, which clearly demonstrates that the Indian legislature was simply following
the lead from English law through an ongoing transplantation process.
TABLE 1: KEY LEGISLATIVE DEVELOPMENTS IN CORPORATE LAW IN ENGLAND AND INDIA49
England India
Companies Act, 1844 Act for Registration of Joint Stock
Companies, 1850
Limited Liability Act, 1855 Companies Act, 1857
Joint Stock Companies Act, 1856 Companies Act, 1860
Companies Act, 1862 Companies Act, 1866
Amendments to the Companies Act, 1862 Companies Act, 1882
Companies (Consolidation) Act, 1908 Companies Act, 1913
Companies Act, 1929 Companies (Amendment) Act, 1936
47
Ramanandi Kuer v. Kalawati Kuer, AIR 1928 PC 2, § 9.
48
These reforms are discussed infra Part IIB2.
49
See also Mahy & Ramsay, supra note 19, at 128-29 (for a discussion of the development of
company law in the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States based on English law, much of
which travelled through India.
15
3. The Impact of Corporate Lawmaking in the Colonial Era
A chronological analysis of legislative developments is by itself unsatisfactory as it does
not inform us of the motives for introducing the legislation (primarily through continual
legal transplants) and also the prevailing context in India that takes into account the
economic and social factors.50 In this sub‐part, I seek to incorporate these factors and
analyze the impact that corporate legislation had on Indian businesses in the colonial
period, and also the motives behind the introduction of such legislation.51 Two trends
are quite evident in the colonial period. First, the transplant of English corporate law
into India was to serve British business interests rather than to modernize Indian
corporate law more generally. Second, English company law as transplanted to India
operated as an instrument of market regulation, a sort of “colonial laissez faire.”52
The motive behind transplanting English company law into India was to facilitate
better trade between England and India, which could be accomplished if there was
symmetry in the corporate legislation between the two countries.53 In other words, the
familiarity of the British businesses with Indian corporate law was thought to minimise
their risk in trading with that colony.54 The motivation that the law in England and India
should be the same was quite explicit in that it occupied a place in the Statement of
Objects and Reasons of the Joint Stock Companies Act, 185655 and the Companies Act,
1882.56 Rungta is unequivocal in his analysis:
50
MCQUEEN, supra note 19, at 7.
51
Historical literature on the evolution of Indian corporate law in the colonial period is quite limited,
although the path breaking work of Radhe Shyam Rungta (focusing on the second half of the nineteenth
century) and Ritu Birla (for a longer period) throws significant light on the social and economic conditions
of the period as well as the legislative motives. RUNGTA, supra note 25; BIRLA, supra note 42. See also
Ritu Birla, Capitalist Subjects in Transition, in DIPESH CHAKRABARTI, ROCHONA MAJUMDAR & ANDREW
SARTORI (EDS.), FROM THE COLONIAL TO THE POSTCOLONIAL: INDIA AND PAKISTAN IN TRANSITION (2007).
Rungta’s work on colonial corporate lawmaking in India has received acclaim in international literature
dealing with transplant of English corporate law into other colonies. See MCQUEEN, supra note 19, at 279;
Mahy & Ramsay, supra note 19.
52
Birla, supra note 51, at 243.
53
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 68; McQueen, supra note 19, at 10.
54
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 68
55
Id.
56
BIRLA, supra note 42, at 40.
16
If there is any underlying theme running through the company legislation of a
full half century in India, with the Act of 1850 somewhat excepted, it is a
steadfast adherence to the policy that what was good for Britain must also be
good for India. It was not that the legislators responsible for these Acts were not
able men, some of them were well qualified and experienced in company affairs
in India. … What they seemed to lack the most was the will, rather than the
wisdom, to change.57
The transplant of English law into India so as to favor British businesses was
accompanied by a consequential impact, in that it often ran counter to local business
interests.58 It paid scant regard to the needs of local business forms such as the Hindu
Undivided Family (HUF) and other kinship based indigenous business structures.59 For
example, it was unclear whether the Companies Act, 1882 operated to ensnare these
local business forms when it required that all “partnerships” carrying on trading with
more than twenty persons was required to be registered as a company under that Act.60
In that sense, not only did the transplanted corporate legislation in India fail to take into
account the needs of vernacular business forms, but also it often acted counter to their
interests.
Since the transplanted law was intended to operate for the benefit of British
traders and to free business “from the binds of tradition and ancient customary
codes,”61 it adopted a largely free‐market ideology. This was consistent with
developments within England at the time.62 During the colonial period, law was used as
an instrument to facilitate trade. As Birla notes:
57
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 214. Rungta’s observations that pertain to the second half of the
nineteenth century largely hold good for the remainder of the colonial period spanning the first half of the
twentieth century.
58
MCQUEEN, supra note 19, at 10 (extrapolating Rungta’s conclusions).
59
BIRLA, supra note 42, at 51-52 (referring to the local forms as “vernacular” commercial
organizations).
60
Id. at 51.
61
Id. at 5.
62
Id. at 35.
17
I would like to reconsider the performance of colonial sovereignty, this time as a
staging of market actors and as an implementation of a certain kind of colonial
laissez‐faire, manifest in legal frameworks standardizing the ‘free circulation’ of
credit and commodities, most especially in the institutionalization of the law of
contract as operative mode for market exchange.63
In sum, the continuous transplantation of English law into India beginning in 1850 and
ongoing until decolonization was motivated by the need to facilitate British businesses
to trade with India, due to which it adopted a free‐market approach. All of these had the
effect of adversely impacting local business forms in one way or the other.
Yet, the colonial period in India witnessed the emergence of a rather unique
form of management technique involving the use of managing agents to manage
companies. Despite the close cross‐referencing of Indian developments (both in the
business and legislative spheres) with England, the evolution of the managing agency in
India bears little connection with England and emerged on account of specific local
requirements. Any historical account of corporate law in India would be incomplete
without an analysis of the concept of managing agency, which also garnered significant
attention of legislators during the initial years of the postcolonial period.
4. Evolution of the Managing Agency System
In nineteenth century India, the somewhat unique managing agency system emerged
due to the necessities of “[h]istory, geography and economics.”64 As previously seen,
Indian business history is replete with informal business structures based on family
63
Birla, supra note 51, at 243.
64
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 220.
18
relations and kinship.65 However, where businesspersons who did not have familial or
kinship ties came together to contribute capital to a new idea and where only a few of
them had the capabilities and interest in commercializing the idea through managing
the operations, it became necessary to place the management of the business in the
hands of the capable and willing businesspersons.66 The passive investors had neither
the time nor the intention to participate in the day‐to‐day management of the business.
Hence, a system evolved whereby some of the investors would take responsibility for
the management of the business. A process that began informally due to the trust
capital and reputation available with those managing the business eventually took on a
more formal structure.67 Managing agencies were created in the form of partnerships or
small corporations, which then entered into management contracts with businesses to
manage them.68
Managing agencies soon became a dominant force in the colonial Indian
corporate sphere. They began exercising control over several industries such as cotton,
jute and tea, particularly in the Eastern part of the country.69 In her work on business,
race and politics in India explored through the managing agency system, Maria Misra
finds that British firms rather than the domestic ones dominated the managing agency
system.70 Their strong presence in Indian business also made them a dominant member
of the colonial community in the country.71
65
See supra note 58-60 and accompanying text.
66
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 227; TIRTHANKAR ROY, COMPANY OF KINSMEN: ENTERPRISE AND
COMMUNITY IN SOUTH ASIAN HISTORY 1700-1940 121 (2010).
67
Id.
68
Rosen, supra note 27, at 263.
69
RUNGTA, supra note 25, at 227; Omkar Goswami, Sahibs, Babus, and Banias: Changes in
Industrial Control In Eastern India, 1918-50, 48 THE JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES 289 (1989).
70
MARIA MISRA, BUSINESS, RACE, AND POLITICS IN BRITISH INDIA, C. 1850-1960 4 (1999) (noting:
“Most British private direct investment in India in the colonial period was represented by the managing
agencies, and by 1914 they controlled capital of over £ 200 million in India”). See also Goswami, supra
note 69, at 292 (noting: “The British mercantile presence in eastern India on the eve of World War I was
truly staggering. Of 849 tea plantations, 729 (86 percent) were managed by Britons”); RUNGTA, supra note
25, at 227 (finding: “… the number of European firms holding managing agencies was larger than the
number of Indian firms”).
71
MISRA, supra note 70, at 4.
19
Although the managing agency system was inherently meant to induce efficiency
and arose out of necessity, its functioning was soon mired in a great deal of controversy.
It gave rise to the possibility of grave abuse.72 The managing agents began to enrich
themselves at the cost of the passive investors,73 who were unable to monitor the
managing agents due to the problem of information asymmetry. The managing agents
who already enjoyed enormous autonomy in their functioning were further buttressed
through the grant of proxies by passive investors.74 In all, managing agencies had limited
financial investment in businesses, but obtained disproportionately high amount of
control over the businesses, which not only made them powerful actors in the economy
but also susceptible to abusing their powers.75 That leads to the question as to what role
the law played in regulating their conduct during the colonial period.
In the initial years of operation of the managing agency system, no legislative or
regulatory fiat directly came in its way. This is an illustration of the inefficiencies caused
by transplanted legislation unless that takes into consideration the prevailing local
circumstances. Since the abuse of the managing agency system was predominantly a
local Indian problem and did not capture the attention of lawmakers in England, the
transplanted law paid short shrift to those problems, and did not offer any protection to
shareholders of companies that were subjected to mismanagement under the managing
agency system. It is also possible that due to the predominance of British firms as
managing agents, the necessary political will was absent in India to rein them in.76 It was
only at the very end of the colonial era that the managing agency system received
legislative recognition. The Companies (Amendment) Act, 1936, which was the first to
make at least some departures from English corporate law,77 took cognizance of the
72
Rosen, supra note 27, at 264.
73
ROY, supra note 66, at 122.
74
MISRA, supra note 70, at 6-7; Goswami, supra note 69, at 294.
75
The problems that emanated from this managing agency system are viewed from the lens of
corporate law and governance subsequently. See infra Part IIIC1.
76
As Misra’s work demonstrates, aspects of race and politics may have had an influential role to
play in the persistence of the managing agency system untouched by regulation despite strong criticism by
shareholders who were predominantly Indian businesspersons. MISRA, supra note 70, at 7-8.
77
See also supra notes 44-45 and accompanying text.
20
abuses pertaining to the managing agency system, and sought to introduce some checks
and balances by limiting the duration of the managing agency contract and also to
permit the removal of the managing agent for cause.78
The managing agency system is characteristic of the legislative phenomenon that
occurred in colonial India where legal transplants through legislative instruments failed
to take into account local social and economic circumstances. This was exacerbated by
the motive of transplants, which were indirectly aimed at preferring British interests to
local interests. This phenomenon continued for nearly a century until some signs of
change began emanating in 1936.
Having explored the phenomenon of transplants during the colonial period, it is
now necessary to examine the implication of decolonization that occurred through
India’s independence from the British in 1947.
B. THE EFFECT OF DECOLONIZATION ON INDIAN CORPORATE LAW (1947‐1960)
In this sub‐part I consider whether India’s independence had any significant effect on
the evolution of its corporate law. For this purpose, I examine the developments around
the first decade following independence, i.e. until the late 1950s. Any discussion of
corporate law during this period must necessarily be set in the context of India’s
economic policies and political imperatives that held sway at the time. As I elaborate,
despite a radical shift in economic policies of the Indian Government immediately
following independence, it was not accompanied by any significant change in the
legislative process for corporate law as the preexisting phenomenon of legal transplant
from England continued unabated.
78
Rosen, supra note 27, at 264.
21
1. Economic Policy Shift Following Independence
Upon decolonization, although the Indian Government obtained the freedom to
determine its own economic policies, it had also inherited an economy that was riddled
with poverty, low levels of life expectancy and high rates of illiteracy.79 Economic
policymaking became a challenging exercise given widespread distrust for a wholly
capitalistic order following the colonial dispensation for centuries using laissez faire
policies, which were believed to have impoverished Indian businesses and the local
economy.80 Even the preeminent policy makers of free India were divided as regards the
appropriate economic policies to be adopted. Jawaharlal Nehru, who eventually became
India’s first Prime Minister, advocated the model of “Fabian socialism” which embraced
principles of “state ownership, regulation, and control over key sectors of the economy
in order to improve productivity and at the same time curb economic concentration.”81
Adopting a different view were certain members of his Congress party such as
Vallabhbhai Patel, who became India’s Home Minister, who argued for pursuing “liberal
economic policies and incentives to private investment that were justified in terms of
the sole criterion of achieving maximum increases in production.”82 The tensions arising
through obviously opposing economic policies runs through the initial years of Indian
independence.
In this background, the Indian government effectively pursued the policy for a
“mixed economy,” a fact that became evident with the first Industrial Policy Resolution
of 1948.83 While the importance of private capital was recognized and several Indian
business groups continued to thrive during this era,84 the bulk of the focus during this
period was the direct participation of the state in the process of industrialization.
79
Nirmalya Kumar, India Unleashed, 20 BUSINESS STRATEGY REVIEW 4, 7 (2006).
80
DWIJENDRA TRIPATHI & JYOTI JUMANI, THE OXFORD HISTORY OF INDIAN BUSINESS 19 (2007).
81
FRANCINE R. FRANKEL, INDIA’S POLITICAL ECONOMY 1947-2004: A GRADUAL REVOLUTION __
(2005). See also B.R. TOMLINSON , THE ECONOMY OF MODERN INDIA, 1860-1970 168 (1993); TRIPATHI &
JUMANI, supra note 80, at 20.
82
FRANKEL, supra note 81, at __. See also TOMLINSON, supra note 81, at 168.
83
TOMLINSON, supra note 81, at 169; TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at 20.
84
TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at __-__.
22
Certain capital‐intensive industries were reserved for the government.85 It was found
that “these measures brought about a sea change in the nation’s business
environment.”86 Moreover, “[i]ndependent India did not abandon the free enterprise
system altogether, but what these policies together sought to introduce was a system
very different from the one that had operated under colonialism.”87
Even though the stated policy did not display any aversion towards private
capital and entrepreneurialism, certain legislative measures introduced that effect.
Principal among them was the enactment of the Industries (Development and
Regulation) Act, 1952, under which industrial units, including private ones, were
required to obtain licences from the Government before they were established and
operated.88 Licences were required even for expansion of capacity.89 Relatedly, a wide
network of legislation enacted in the years immediately following India’s independence
introduced “an extensive system of quantitative controls over capital issues, industrial
licensing, foreign exchange rationing, imports and exports and the prices and movement
of foodgrains.”90 Under this dispensation, government’s authority over private
businesses was all‐pervasive given that entrepreneurs had to obtain licences for almost
every activity they carried out. This gave rise to “widespread rent‐seeking”91 resulting in
85
TIRTHANKAR ROY, THE ECONOMIC HISTORY OF INDIA: 1857-1947 294 (2011); Anne O. Krueger &
Sajjid Chinoy, The Indian Economy in Global Context, in ANNE O. KRUEGER & SAJJID CHINOY, ECONOMIC
POLICY REFORMS AND THE INDIAN ECONOMY (2002), at 5 (noting these industries were considered the
“commanding heights of the economy”); J. Bradford DeLong, India Since Independence: An Analytic
Growth Narrative, in DANI RODRIK, ED., IN SEARCH OF PROSPERITY: ANALYTIC NARRATIVES OF ECONOMIC
GROWTH, at 15.
86
TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at 23.
87
Id (noting further: “Except for the brief interregnum of the Second World War, the colonial
government had seldom imposed any overt restriction on the freedom to conceive, organize, and implement
business plans, and the businessmen were free to manage their show on the basis of their understanding of
the world around them”).
88
Omkar Goswami, Corporate Governance in India, in TAKING ACTION AGAINST CORRUPTION IN
ASIA AND THE PACIFIC (2002) at 87.
89
TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at 22.
90
TOMLINSON, supra note 81, at 171-72. These legislative packages comprised among others the
Essential Commodities Act, 1955, the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, and the Capital
Issues Control Act, 1947.
91
Goswami, supra note 88, at 87.
23
the prevalence of the “licence Raj” that dominated the Indian business sphere for
decades to come.92
It is in this economic and political context that I analyze the first legislative
exercise in corporate law in post‐colonial India, the enactment of the Companies Act,
1956, which also turned out to be the most enduring piece of corporate legislation in
India.
2. The First Companies’ Legislation in Post‐Colonial India
In view of the economic and political tensions discussed in the previous sub‐part, it
would be reasonable to assume that the Companies Act, 1956 would mark a significant
departure from corporate law in the colonial era. The economic compulsions of the
socialist approach of India’s first democratically elected government ought to have
driven corporate law in a different direction. Surprisingly, though, that was not the case.
Post‐colonial corporate lawmaking followed exactly the same path adopted over and
over again during the colonial period, which was to indulge in yet another exercise of
legal transplant from England, thereby smacking of colonial continuity. However, the
transplant effort this time was not a mechanical exercise, but rather well thought‐out.
The inspiration for a new companies’ legislation in post‐colonial India arose from
the appointment of the Company Law Amendment Committee in England (known as the
Cohen Committee), which suggested far‐reaching changes to the then applicable English
company law,93 whose recommendations resulted in the enactment of the English
Companies Act of 1948. After some initial law reform efforts, the Indian Government
appointed a committee under the chairmanship of C.H. Bhabha, which undertook an
extensive exercise (including interviewing experts across the country) and submitted its
92
TOMLINSON, supra note 81, at 171.
93
Report of the Committee on Company Law Amendment (Cohen Committee Report 1945),
available at http://www.takeovers.gov.au/content/resources/other_resources/cohen_committee.aspx.
24
477‐page report to the Government in March 1952.94 The Government accepted most
of the recommendations of the Bhabha Committee thereby enacting the Companies
Act, 1956.
Both the Bhabha Committee Report as well as the Companies Act, 1956 are
striking in many ways. Despite the momentous shift in India’s destiny through
decolonization, the reliance on English laws as the model for Indian corporate law was
unaffected. The tenor of the Bhabha Committee Report is such that on every aspect of
the law, it largely referred to the developments in English company law and considered
whether that would be relevant to the Indian context or not. There was no intention
whatsoever to frame an indigenous legislation that is apt to India’s changed
circumstances given the enormous shift in its economic policies. In order to obtain a
better sense of the extent of reliance on English law, a review of the Bhabha Committee
Report indicates approximately 148 references to the English Companies Act of 1948,
adopting with approval 64 of its provisions, and modifying or rejecting only 21
provisions.95 The faithful adherence to English law also meant a continuation of the
colonial policy of laissez‐faire, which stood at stark contrast not only to the broader
economic mindset of the time but also to the other statutes that were being enacted
contemporaneously.96 It is somewhat hard to fathom the rationale for such a
bewildering approach of the Indian Parliament.
At one level, it may be possible to attribute this development to inertia, and the
inability to immediately break away from the colonial mindset.97 However, that fails to
explain the Government’s enthusiasm to introduce socialistic legislation in related areas
of the law, and to steer clear of a purely market‐based approach.98 Ultimately, it boils
94
Bhabha Committee Report, supra note 29.
95
Similarly, the Bhabha Committee Report makes several references to the Cohen Committee
Report.
96
See supra note 90.
97
This phenomenon has been evident in other areas of the law, some even long past decolonization.
See e.g., De, supra note 12; Kalhan, supra note 12.
98
See supra note 90.
25
down to the compromises that the Government had to make in its economic philosophy
to incorporate both a socialist approach that grants a large role to the state in business,
but at the same time preserving the importance of the private sector. As one study
notes: “That the government had no intention to unduly curtail the freedom of the
private sector was also reflected in the new Company Law enacted in 1956.”99
Moreover, “the new policy enunciations did not offer much of an immediate threat to
private enterprise, the socialist rhetorics notwithstanding. This was so because the
private sector was left undisturbed in the areas in which it had been operating or in
which it was likely to expand.”100 Despite the path dependence demonstrated by
corporate law and the retention of the free philosophy therein, businesses were
nevertheless faced with governmental control, albeit through other legislation rather
than corporate law.
The legislative outlook towards company law can be illustrated by the treatment
meted towards managing agencies, which had become even more controversial with
the advancing tide of economic nationalism in the country.101 Although the Bhabha
Committee recognized the dysfunctional nature of the managing agency system, it was
hesitant to jettison it through legislation.102 It saw “an advantage to continue to rely on
the managing agency system”103 as it “may yet prove to be a potent instrument for
tapping the springs of private enterprise.”104 The Committee however recommended
the tightening up of several provisions of the Companies Act relating to managing
agencies. This approach seems to have invited furor, as it “was immediately denounced
by a broad spectrum of Indian political opinion.”105 The matter was therefore reviewed
by a Parliamentary committee that suggested further strengthening.106 As an outcome
of this process, the Companies Act, 1956 “included strict limitations on managing
99
TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at 25.
100
Id. at 26.
101
MISRA, supra note 70, at 190.
102
For a discussion of the managing agency system, see supra Part IIA4.
103
Bhabha Committee Report, supra note 29, at 84.
104
Id. at 85.
105
MISRA, supra note 70, at 191.
106
Id.
26
agency remuneration, a limit on the numbers of companies any one agency house could
manage, and a ban on intercompany loans between companies within the same
managing agency group.”107 At no point during this process was there adequate
legislative will to radically address the matter by eliminating the managing agency
system altogether due to its mounting ill effects.
In all, although the Indian Parliament was presented with the opportunity
following independence to radically alter the nature of company law, especially given
the altering economic sentiment, it chose to adopt the path dependence approach and
continue to rely on transplanted law from England. In other words, decolonization did
not represent any break whatsoever from the past. But, change became evident, albeit
gradually and incrementally, in the years to follow.
C. THE APOGEE OF SOCIALISM IN INDIAN CORPORATE LAW (1960‐1991)
India’s corporate law began witnessing a departure from its colonial past only from the
early part of the 1960s. The socialist ideology of the Government appears not to have
taken effect immediately upon decolonization, but only in the years that followed.108
The Companies Act, 1956 proved to be a dynamic legislation, and beginning the 1960s
has undergone amendments nearly 30 times during its life.109 Most of these
amendments were based on recommendations of committees appointed by the
Government from time to time.110 During the first three decades of its operation, it was
constantly infused with socialistic ideals.
One such move related to greater influence of the government in the operation
of companies, a departure from the previous market‐oriented light‐touch regulation
107
Id.
108
TRIPATHI & JUMANI, supra note 80, at 26-27.
109
A. RAMAIYA, GUIDE TO THE COMPANIES ACT 1-3 (2010).
110
Vasudev, supra note 30, at 21. The amendments and committee reports are too numerous to be
discussed in detail within the space available in a single paper.
27
ranging back from the colonial times. For example, provisions relating to audit and
investigation of the affairs of companies by the government were strengthened.111 The
concept of “deemed public companies” was introduced to enhance the regulatory
sphere over private companies.112 Through this, private companies that had share
capital or business turnover beyond specified limits were treated as if they were public
companies and regulated as such. This signifies a departure from English law, which not
only made a clear distinction between private and public companies, but also subjected
private companies to limited regulation and conferring considerable freedom given they
were treated as organizations akin to partnerships.113 Moreover, during this period, the
concept of “public interest” was widely infused into company law. For example, the
Companies Act, 1956 was amended to provide that any scheme of compromise or
arrangement (such as an amalgamation) would be permitted only if was not prejudicial
to public interest,114 and that shareholders were entitled to seek the oppression remedy
if the affairs of the company were conducted in a manner prejudicial to public
interest,115 thereby riddling the company legislation with the prevailing socialist
ideology.
Continuing with the ongoing illustration of the managing agency system,116 it too
was caught by the rising wave of socialism. Despite having survived the turmoil it
attracted during the enactment of the Companies Act, 1956, its death knell was
sounded at the end of the 1960s. By way of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1969, the
entire managing agency system was sought to be abolished, as it was found to have
111
These provisions were introduced in the aftermath of certain corporate scandals of the time.
DATTA, supra note 29, at 9. See also Thanjavur, Companies Act Amendment Bill: Corporate Regulation in
Reverse Gear, 22 ECONOMIC & POLITICAL WEEKLY 2245 (1987); Madan Gopal Jajoo, Companies
Legislation in India: Plea for a Rational Review, 8 ECONOMIC & POLITICAL WEEKLY 1033 (1973).
112
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960 introduced § 43A into the Companies Act, 1956 that dealt
with deemed public companies.
113
Vasudev, supra note 30, at 21.
114
Companies Act, 1956, § 394, proviso, as amended by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1965.
115
Companies Act, 1956, § 397(1), as amended by the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1963.
116
See supra Part IIA4, and notes 101-107 and accompanying text.
28
concentrated power in the hands of a few.117 This represents an important step in post‐
colonial India as it clearly separates an institution that was historically dominated by the
British business houses, particularly in the colonial period.118
During this era, other statutes were enacted to supplement company law in
further solidifying the socialist tendencies of the government. Two such statutes
deserve a mention. The first is the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969
(“MRTP Act”), which was intended to prevent the concentration of economic power.
The other is the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973 by which the Government
restricted foreign companies from holding more than 40 percent shares of Indian
companies. In addition to the altering shape of company law, these statutes had the
effect of curbing private enterprise.
These developments had an arguably negative impact on corporate governance.
They led to the growth of certain business families and industrial groups (largely to the
exclusion of others) that held large chunks of capital in even publicly listed companies.
Finance was essentially available only through banking channels (as opposed to the
capital markets). During this era, due to concentrated ownership of shares, the
controlling shareholders, which were primarily business families or the state, continued
to exert great influence over companies at the cost of minority shareholders.119
The legislative activity during this era was ably supported by innovation in
judicial decision‐making that stretched the contours of corporate law to fit within the
117
DATTA, supra note 29, at 10. The final deadline for abolition was extended until 1970. MISRA,
supra note 70, at 192.
118
MISRA, supra note 70, at 192 (noting also that this was targeted to end “the old British managing
agency houses and the socially exclusive business culture which they embodied”).
119
Umakanth Varottil, A Cautionary Tale of the Transplant Effect on Indian Corporate Governance,
21 NAT. L. SCH. IND. REV. 1, 6 (2009).
29
“socialist” theme underlying the times.120 In a significant ruling, the Supreme Court of
India observed:
The traditional view of a company was that it was a convenient mechanical
device for carrying on trade and industry, a mere legal frame work providing a
convenient institutional container for holding and using the powers of company
management. … This doctrine glorified the concept of a free economic society in
which State intervention in social and economic matters was kept at the lowest
possible level. But gradually this doctrine was eroded by the emergence of new
social values which recognised the role of the State as an active participant in the
social and economic life of the citizen in order to bring about general welfare
and common good of the community. … The adoption of the socialistic pattern
of society as the ultimate goal of the country’s economic and social policies
hastened the emergence of this new concept of the corporation. … But, one
thing is certain that the old nineteenth century view which regarded a company
merely as a legal device adopted by shareholders for carrying on trade or
business as proprietors has been discarded and a company is now looked upon
as a socio‐economic institution wielding economic power and influencing the life
of the people.121
In interpreting the provisions of the Companies Act, the Supreme Court was willing to
depart from the provisions of parallel English law, where the circumstances so
warranted, thereby requiring it to “shake off the inhibiting legacy of its colonial past and
assume a dynamic role in the process of social transformation.”122
120
Furthermore, the Constitution was amended to include the word “socialist” in the Preamble, which
now provides that India is a “Sovereign Socialist Secular Democratic Republic.” Constitution (Forty-
second Amendment) Act, 1976, § 2.
121
National Textile Workers’ Union v. P.R. Ramakrishnan, AIR 1983 SC 75, ¶ 4 (per P.N. Bhagwati,
J.).
122
Id. at § 9. See also Hind Overseas Pvt. Ltd. v. R. P. Jhunjhunwala, AIR 1976 SC 565, at ¶ 31
(observing: “… it is more apposite now that the background, conditions and circumstances of the Indian
society, the needs and requirements of our country call for a somewhat different treatment”); VEPA
SARATHI, INTERPRETATION OF STATUTES 454-55 (2003); RAMAIYA, supra note 109, at 15-16.
30
During this era, the legislative measures in corporate law coupled with activist
interpretation by the judiciary brought about a sea change regarding the manner in
which companies were viewed. What was essentially a private business organization
took on public overtones with much broader societal implications being recognized and
popularized in India.123
The socialist era came under severe strain towards the late 1980s124 and a
precipice was reached in 1990 when India’s foreign exchange reserves depleted to
alarmingly low levels.125 In 1991, the Government then in power was forced to abandon
the socialist principles and embark upon a process of economic liberalization, which
once again altered India’s economic course significantly. This also had a cascading effect
on the destiny of Indian corporate law thereafter.
D. CORPORATE LAW FOLLOWING INDIA’S ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION (1991‐2013)
In 1991, the Government introduced a string of policy measures to address the
prevailing economic situation. By way of economic liberalization, they were intended to
boost business activity and foreign investment in India. These measures included the
reduction of industrial licensing only to a small range of industries, permitting
companies to freely issue capital without any restrictions, and gradually opening up
various sectors for foreign investment.126 This new economic outlook naturally triggered
a slew of changes to corporate law in India, which operated on different fronts,
including (i) amendments to the Companies Act, 1956, (ii) introduction of securities
legislation to promote the stock markets, and (iii) adoption of specific measures to
123
A.N. Oza, Committee on Company Law and MRTP Act: Exercise in Futility, 12 ECONOMIC &
POLITICAL WEEKLY 1268 (1977).
124
India’s socialist policies has also been the subject matter of strident criticism by several
economists. See e.g. JAGDISH N. BHAGWATI, INDIA IN TRANSITION (1993); ARVIND PANAGARIYA, INDIA:
THE EMERGING GIANT (2008).
125
Kumar, supra note 79, at 8.
126
Id.
31
enhance corporate governance. I examine the impact of each of these efforts
separately.
1. Amendments to the Companies Act, 1956
During the liberalization period, the key changes were the flexibility introduced to
companies to raise as well as to restructure capital. This was intended to enable Indian
companies to attract investments, particularly from foreign investors. For example,
Indian companies were allowed to issue shares with differential rights as to dividend
and voting.127 Similarly, concepts such as employee stock option and sweat equity that
were by then common in the U.S. now received statutory recognition in India.128 A
capital maintenance regime that had previously been extremely stringent was relaxed to
permit companies to buy back their own securities.129 These measures had the effect of
transitioning this area of Indian corporate law more towards laws from other
jurisdictions (e.g. Delaware law),130 with less emphasis or cross‐referencing to the
English provisions.131
Consistent with the introduction of greater flexibility, legislative reforms of
corporate law during this period also sought to reverse the effects of the previous
socialist tendencies. For instance, in the year 2000 the concept of “deemed public
companies” was deleted,132 thereby reverting to the previous scenario where only two
types of companies exist, i.e. private and public.133 Similarly, the rigors of the MRTP Act
were eased through its amendment, which did away with the concept of pre‐merger
127
Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000.
128
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999.
129
Id.
130
Vasudev, supra note 30, at 21.
131
This transition is discussed in greater detail later. See infra Part III.
132
Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000.
133
At the same time, the situation was far from being streamlined with the English parallel. For
instance, now subsidiaries of private companies were automatically treated as public companies (and
subjected to more extensive regulation). This situation continues to date.
32
notification. During that regime, mergers and takeovers were effectively permitted
without any antitrust law whatsoever.134
2. Reforms in Securities Regulation
Prior to 1992, India followed the merit‐based regulation of securities offerings.135
Companies intending to offer securities to the public were required to obtain the
approval of the Controller of Capital Issues, a government body, which would
specifically approve each public offering and its terms, including the price at which
shares were to be offered.136 Due to the extensive governmental oversight that
intensified during socialist era and the resultant excessive stringency in accessing the
capital markets, public offering of shares by Indian companies was not that prevalent.
The establishment of India’s securities regulator, the Securities and Exchange
Board of India (“SEBI”) was a watershed event in India’s corporate and securities sphere.
SEBI’s foray not only led to more of a disclosure‐based regulation of public offerings of
securities by Indian companies,137 but its role was also focused on promoting India’s
capital markets in general. This enabled companies since the mid‐to‐late 1990s to raise
billions of dollars in capital through public offering of shares and accompanied listings.
These factors triggered a dramatic shift in the Indian capital markets.
134
Although a new Competition Act, 2002 was enacted during the liberalization era to rein in mergers
and acquisitions and reintroduce pre-merger notifications, that law did not take effect in regulating
combinations until 2011.
135
Merit regulation involves a review by a securities regulator of the quality and suitability of the
offering of securities by a company within the jurisdiction of the regulator. See Ronald J. Colombo, Merit
Regulation Via the Suitability Rules, 12 J. INT’L. BUS. & L. 1, 7 (2013).
136
G. Sabarinathan, Securities and Exchange Board of India and the Indian Capital Markets – A
Survey of the Regulatory Provisions, IIM BANGALORE RESEARCH PAPER NO. 228, available at
http://ssrn.com/abstract=2152909, at 10-11. The Controller of Capital Issues was established under the
Capital Issues Control Act, 1947. See supra note 90 and accompanying text.
137
Upon the establishment of SEBI, the office of the Controller of Capital Issues was abolished.
PANAGARIYA, supra note 124, at 242.
33
In the two decades that followed its establishment, SEBI has promulgated a
number of regulations that affect almost every segment of the capital markets. It also
acquired powers under the Companies Act, 1956 to regulate matters pertaining to the
issue and transfer of securities by listed companies or those that are proposing to
embark upon a listing of their securities.138 In that sense, the regulatory domain over
public listed companies was transitioned from the Central Government under the
Companies Act, 1956 to an independent market regulator in the form of SEBI that it
exercised through a combination of various corporate and securities laws.
SEBI’s entry into the corporate law domain signifies an important step in
breaking the linkages that India had with its colonial past. To a large extent, the U.S.
Securities Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has inspired SEBI’s mandate as well as its role
and functioning.139 As far as securities regulation is concerned, there seems to be very
little reference to the U.K. model suggesting that the Indian Government had been keen
to adopt the U.S. model as a reference point, if at all, while reviewing its own securities
regulation. For instance, a substantial part of the jurisprudence relating to insider
trading has closely tracked that of the U.S.140 In all, while SEBI’s entry into the Indian
regulatory scene marks an important milestone in the evolution of Indian corporate law,
it also signifies a further departure not only from the colonial past but the reluctance to
rely upon the U.K. model as far as securities regulation is concerned.
138
Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000.
139
For a comparison between the role and performance of the SEC and SEBI, see Suchismita Bose,
Securities Market Regulations: Lessons from US and Indian Experience, ICRA Bulletin (Jan.-Jun., 2005),
available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1140107.
140
See e.g., Rakesh Agrawal v. Securities and Exchange Board of India, [2004] 49 SCL 351. See also
Securities and Exchange Board of India, Report of the High Level Committee to Review the SEBI
(Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 1992 Under the Chairmanship of N.K. Sodhi (Dec. 7, 2013),
available at http://www.sebi.gov.in/cms/sebi_data/attachdocs/1386758945803.pdf; Somasekhar
Sundaresan, SEBI has greater powers than US SEC, BUSINESS STANDARD (Oct. 26, 2009).
34
3. Corporate Governance Measures
In the 1990s, SEBI rapidly began ushering in corporate governance reforms as well as a
measure to attract foreign investment. Curiously, the first corporate governance
initiative was sponsored by industry. In 1998, a National Task force constituted by the
Confederation of Indian Industry (“CII”) recommended a code for “Desirable Corporate
Governance,” which was voluntarily adopted by a few companies.141 Here, we witness
the re‐emergence of the English developments as an influencing factor because the CII
Code was largely based on the Cadbury Committee report issued in the U.K.142
Thereafter, a committee chaired by Mr. Kumar Mangalam Birla submitted a
report to SEBI “to promote and raise the standard of Corporate Governance in respect
of listed companies.”143 Based on the recommendations of the Kumar Mangalam Birla
committee, the new Clause 49 containing norms for corporate governance was inserted
in 2000 into the Listing Agreement that was applicable to all listed companies of a
certain size.144 Although the substance of the corporate governance norms contained in
Clause 49 were similar to those recommended in the U.K. by the Cadbury Committee
Report and which subsequently found their place in the Combined Code on Corporate
Governance,145 there was one material difference. While the Combined Code operated
141
Confederation of Indian Industry, Desirable Corporate Governance: A Code (Apr. 1998)
available at http://www.acga-asia.org/public/files/CII_Code_1998.pdf (“CII Code”). The CII Code, which
was directed at large companies, contained some of the measures that continue to date, such as the
appointment of a minimum number of non-executive independent directors, an independent audit
committee, the unimpeded flow of key information to the board of directors and norms for corporate
disclosures to shareholders.
142
U.K., Financial Reporting Council, Report of the Committee on the Financial Aspects of
Corporate Governance (1992), available at http://www.ecgi.org/codes/documents/cadbury.pdf.
143
See Securities and Exchange Board of India, Report of the Kumar Mangalam Birla Committee on
Corporate Governance (Feb. 2000), available at http://www.sebi.gov.in/commreport/corpgov.html.
144
Securities and Exchange Board of India, SMDRP/POLICY/CIR-10/2000 dated Feb. 21, 2000,
available at http://www.sebi.gov.in/circulars/2000/CIR102000.html. Clause 49 contained a schedule of
implementation whereby it was applicable at the outset to large companies and newly listed companies, and
thereafter to smaller companies over a defined timeframe.
145
The Combined Code has since been renamed the “UK Corporate Governance Code”. See, U.K.,
Financial Reporting Council, The UK Corporate Governance Code (Sep. 2014).
35
as voluntary code on a “comply‐or‐explain” basis,146 Clause 49 was mandated for large
listed companies. Hence, there was explicit recognition that what works in the U.K. will
not necessarily work in India due to the various institutional circumstances and other
local factors.147
Thereafter, following Enron and other global corporate governance scandals that
occurred at the turn of the century, SEBI decided to strengthen Indian corporate
governance norms. In the wake of the enactment of the Sarbanes‐Oxley Act (“SOX”) in
the U.S. in 2002, SEBI appointed the Narayana Murthy Committee to examine Clause 49
and recommend changes to the existing regime.148 Following the recommendations of
the Narayana Murthy Committee, SEBI, on October 29, 2004, issued a revised version of
Clause 49, which came into effect from January 1, 2006. Thus, we see that although
there was some reference to the English position under the Cadbury Committee report
during the initial stages of formulation of corporate governance norms in India, these
norms have subsequently been strongly influenced by developments in the U.S. The
corporate governance reforms during this era can at best be said to operate as a mixed
transplant from both the U.S. and the U.K.
146
Other former British colonies such as Australia, Canada and Singapore too have adopted voluntary
codes similar to the U.K. See Anita Indira Anand, An Analysis of Enabling vs. Mandatory Corporate
Governance: Structures Post-Sarbanes Oxley, 31 DEL. J. CORP. L. 229, 229 (2006); TAN LAY HONG, TAN
CHONG HUAT & LONG HSUEH CHING, CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN SINGAPORE
(2006). Furthermore, for European jurisdictions, see Eddy Wymeersch, Enforcement of Corporate
Governance Codes (2005), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=759364.
147
The Kumar Mangalam Committee report built upon the pattern established by the CII Code and
recommended that “under Indian conditions a statutory rather than voluntary code would be far more
purposive and meaningful, at least in respect of essential features of corporate governance.” Id., at ¶ 1.7.
For a detailed discussion regarding the transition from the CII Code to the Kumar Mangalam Birla
Committee Report, see Bernard S. Black and Vikramaditya S. Khanna, Can Corporate Governance
Reforms Increase Firms’ Market Values? Evidence from India, 4 J. Emp. Legal. Stud. 749 (2007).
148
Securities and Exchange Board of India, Report of the SEBI Committee on Corporate Governance
(Feb. 2003), available at http://www.sebi.gov.in/commreport/corpgov.pdf. The need for a review of Clause
49 was in part triggered by events that occurred in the U.S. at the turn of the century, such as the collapse of
Enron and WorldCom. See id. at para. 1.6.1. Considerable emphasis was placed in this report on financial
disclosures, financial literacy of audit committee members as well as on chief executive officer (CEO) and
chief financial officer (CFO) certification, all of which are matters similar to those dealt with by SOX.
36
In sum, during the liberalization era, we see a strong shift from the pre‐existing
socialistic disposition towards a more open market‐oriented approach, albeit gradually.
While there are some indications of continued guidance from India’s former colonizer,
this era has been marked by the stronger influence of the U.S. on all fronts, including
corporate finance, securities regulation and corporate governance.
During the liberalization phase, considerable efforts were also made to review
the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956 given that it had undergone significant
change over the years and had possibly outlived its relevance and utility. There were
calls for a new companies’ legislation. After nearly two decades of debate, the new
Companies Act, 2013 was enacted that ushered in an entirely new era in Indian
corporate law.
E. CURRENT STATE OF PLAY: THE COMPANIES ACT, 2013
In this sub‐part, I discuss some of the policy imperatives and tensions that were
prevalent during the elongated process of enacting the Companies Act, 2013. It is
essential to analyze the factors that were at play behind the scenes for the new
legislation in order to determine whether it breaks further away from India’s colonial
past as well as the current trajectory of English company law. As I argue, the new
legislation marks a further departure away from English law.149 While the liberalization
phase that began in 1991 attempted to break away from the shackles of the previous
socialist approach of company law, the new legislation bucks that trend and reinforces
some of the social aspects of corporate law, but in a subtler and more nuanced fashion.
Since the early 1990s, efforts had been underway to revamp the companies’
legislation in India due to the difficulties encountered in the implementation of the
149
While I deal with some of the broader political and economic factors at play in the lawmaking
process in this subpart, I analyze some of the more substantive provisions in detail subsequently. See infra
Part III.
37
Companies Act, 1956, which had to be amended. Although several proposals were made
and Bills drafted and presented in Parliament over the last two decades (specifically in
1993, 1997 and 2003),150 it was the appointment of an Expert Committee on Company
Law in 2004 under the chairmanship of Mr. J.J. Irani (“Irani Committee”) that triggered
the shaping of the current legislation. The Irani Committee issued a concept paper
based on which it conducted a public consultation, following which it issued its report
for drafting a new legislation.151 The report suggested a simplification of the law, and
was indeed business friendly, but at the same time subscribed to stringent norms of
corporate governance.152 Based on the recommendations of the Irani Committee, the
Companies Bill, 2008 was presented in Parliament, which lapsed.153
In the interim, corporate India was rocked by a massive corporate governance
scandal involving Satyam Computers. In January 2009, the chairman of the company
confessed to fraud to the magnitude of over US$ 1 billion.154 This triggered renewed
calls for strengthening corporate law and governance norms in India. Intriguingly,
however, when the Companies Bill, 2009 was presented in Parliament, it contained no
changes whatsoever from its previous incarnation in 2008.
The Companies Bill, 2009 was referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee
on Finance under the chairmanship of Mr. Yashwant Sinha. The Standing Committee
150
Aparna Viswanathan, Reinventing the company in India: the Expert Committee Report on
Corporate Form and Governance: Part 1, 17 I.C.C.L.R. 1, 1 (2006).
151
Expert Committee on Company Law, Report on Company Law (May 31, 2005), available at
http://www.primedirectors.com/pdf/JJ%20Irani%20Report-MCA.pdf.
152
S. Balakrishnan, Irani committee norms stringent, The Hindu (Aug. 22, 2005).
153
John Paterson, Corporate governance in India in the context of the Companies Bill 2009: Part 1:
Evolution, 21 I.C.C.L.R. 41, 42 (2010).
154
Letter from B. Ramalinga Raju, Chairman, Satyam Computer Services Ltd., to the Board of
Directors, Satyam Computer Services Ltd. (Jan. 7, 2009), available at http://www.hindu.com/nic/satyam-
chairman-statement.pdf. See also Heather Timmons and Bettina Wassener, Satyam Chief Admits Huge
Fraud, N.Y. TIMES, Jan. 8, 2009,
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/08/business/worldbusiness/08satyam.html. This scandal has often drawn
parallels with that of Enron. See Vikramaditya Khanna, Corporate Governance in India: Past, Present and
Future?, 1 JINDAL GLOB. L.R. 171, 188-89 (2009).
38
reviewed the Bill and issued its report in 2010.155 Although the Companies Bill, 2009
appeared to turn a blind eye to the fateful occurrences of scandals that rocked
corporate India, the Standing Committee undid the effects of those deficiencies by
recommending detailed provisions in corporate law to prevent such failures in the
future. Specific among the Standing Committee’s recommendations were heightened
standards of corporate governance and measures to rein in company managements and
impose higher standards on gatekeepers such as independent directors and auditors.
Another set of measures introduced by the Standing Committee is of immense
significance as it redefined the role of the corporation in the Indian context. While the
Companies Bill, 2009 was shareholder‐oriented, in that directors owed duties to carry
on the business of the company “for the benefit of its members as a whole”,156 the
Standing Committee insisted on a broader stakeholder approach to corporate law,
insisting that directors have a duty “to promote the objects of the company in the best
interests of its employees, the community and the environment as well.”157 Most
significantly, a concomitant concept was the introduction of a corporate social
responsibility (“CSR”) provision requiring a mandatory spending by large companies
towards social causes.158 Based on the Standing Committee Report, the Government
introduced the Companies Bill, 2011 in Parliament, which naturally contained significant
changes from the Companies Bill, 2009. The 2011 Bill was referred back to the Standing
Committee for review of the revised provisions, particularly because it contained
significant changes from the previous version. The Standing Committee issued another
report,159 following which the Companies Act, 2013 was passed by both Houses of
Parliament and received the assent of the President of India on August 31, 2013. This
155
Standing Committee on Finance (2009-2010), Fifteenth Lok Sabha, The Companies Bill, 2009 –
Twenty-First Report (Aug. 2010).
156
Companies Bill, 2009, § 147(2).
157
Standing Committee on Finance (2009-2010), supra note 155, at ¶ 11.80.
158
Id. at ¶¶ 49-51.
159
Standing Committee on Finance (2011-2012), Fifteenth Lok Sabha, The Companies Bill, 2011 –
Fifty-Seventh Report (Jun. 2012).
39
legislation is being brought into force in stages, with several of its key provisions having
already been notified.160
At this juncture, it would be useful to consider some of the policy issues
underlying the enactment of the Companies Act, 2013. In all, while the Companies Bill,
2009 (and its identical predecessor of 2008) was based on the Irani Committee
recommendations, which were business friendly in nature, the result of its review by the
Standing Committee transformed it into a document with radically different
philosophical overtones that emphasized on stricter controls through regulation and
also emphasized the social responsibility of corporations. These philosophical pressures
are quite evident. It is clear that the Irani Committee was concerned with attracting
greater investment and providing a simple and clear regime for businesses.161 However,
the Standing Committee approached the legislative process from a completely different
perspective. Significantly, it was operating in the shadow of a corporate scandal that
evoked outrage within the country, particularly against the corporate sector and the
business community.162 That might perhaps explain the Standing Committee’s insistence
on a stakeholder approach that encompasses constituencies such as the employees,
160
For a list of the provisions that have already taken effect, see Ministry of Corporate Affairs,
Government of India, Table containing provisions of Companies Act as notified up to date and
corresponding provisions thereof under Companies Act, 1956, available at
http://www.mca.gov.in/Ministry/pdf/ProvisionsTable_CompAct.pdf. The entire legislation is expected to
become effective progressively once the Government of India notifies the relevant rules under the
legislation. Until then, the previous legislation, the Companies Act, 1956 will continue to be in force on
such matters.
161
That is understandable given that the committee was chaired by an industrialist representing a
leading industrial conglomerate in India, the Tata Group. See At 75, J.J. Irani bids adieu to Tata Steel, The
Hindu Business Line (Jun. 6, 2011); Christabelle Noronha & Cynthia Rodrigues, A different life: Dr. JJ
Irani reminisces about life and times in Jamshedpur (Aug. 2007), available at
http://www.tata.com/careers/articlesinside/Cj0IJRfNjr0=/TLYVr3YPkMU=. Moreover, the membership of
the Irani Committee was rather broad based. As its report noted: “The Expert Committee consists of 13
members and 6 special invitees drawn from various disciplines and fields including trade and industry,
chambers of commerce, professional institutes, representatives of Banks and Financial Institutions, Sr.
Advocates etc.” Expert Committee on Company Law, supra note 151, at ¶ 8.
162
The Satyam scandal had to some extent sullied the image of the crucial Indian information
technology (IT) industry and also posed a threat to the future of its stakeholders such as employees,
customers and creditors. See NASSCOM Announces Formation of Corporate Governance and Ethics
Committee, BUSINESS STANDARD (India), Feb. 11, 2009.
40
customers and the environment as beneficiaries within the corporate law sphere rather
than merely shareholders as has been the approach in several developed jurisdictions.
In the wake of these scandals, a lukewarm response by the political class would be met
with an element of scorn. It may also be seen as a counteraction by the political class to
curb the influence of the business sector and to impose adequate checks and balances
through corporate law.163 It is a confluence of these factors that led to a compromise
that is evident in the Companies Act, 2013 and a number of its specific provisions.
This discussion, without doubt, indicates that the present shape of corporate law
is the result of local issues and concerns, and is shorn of any influence by the colonial
past or its legal regime. During the law reform process that lasted nearly two decades
before culminating in the Companies Act, 2013, there was almost no reference
whatsoever to English company law. This stands at stark contrast to the process for the
enactment of the Companies Act, 1956, which was essentially a transplant of the English
Companies Act of 1948.164 Neither the Irani Committee nor the Parliamentary Standing
Committee on Finance (on both occasions in 2010 and 2012) made any significant
references whatsoever to the prevailing English position in company law.165 This despite
English corporate law having made giant strides in its evolution since India’s
decolonization with the Companies Act of 1985 and the more recent Companies Act of
2006. The present English position has been the subject matter of extensive
consultation,166 most of which has been closely followed by other former British
colonies.167 But, Indian lawmakers chose to ignore those completely.
163
Another factor would be to note the composition of the Standing Committee, which essentially
consisted of Members of Parliament, unlike the Irani Committee that displayed a wider representation.
Moreover, the Standing Committee was chaired by Mr. Yashwant Sinha, a senior member of the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP), which was at the time in the opposition. These factors may have had an invisible role to
play in the tenor of the Standing Committee’s recommendations.
164
For a detailed discussion, see supra Part IIB2.
165
Compare this with the extensive cross-referencing during the process for enacting the Companies
Act, 1956. See supra note 95 and accompanying text.
166
The English Companies Act of 2006 was enacted following a series of lengthy consultations that
included a review and a white paper. DTI, Company Law Reform: Modern Company Law Reform for a
Competitive Economy (1998); DTI, Company Law Reform, Cm. 6456 (Mar. 2005). The series of documents
that formed the basis of the legislation are available at
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20121029131934/http:/www.bis.gov.uk/policies/business-
41
Although there is no evidence of explicit resistance from the Indian lawmaking
process in embarking on the colonial and the initial post‐colonial approach of
transplanting English law into India, the focus of the current process was entirely inward
looking in attempting to locate solutions for problems that are specific to India. In other
words, the solutions proposed were entirely autochthonous, thereby signifying a
fundamental change from the previous attitude of Indian legislation.
In concluding this Part, it is evident that the rather lengthy historical narrative
regarding the evolution of Indian corporate law was necessitated for a number of
reasons. First, the literature regarding the historical analysis of companies’ legislation in
India is sparse, especially over several time horizons. Such a narrative would fill a gap in
the literature and also aid in the understanding of the various factors that were in play
at different points in time so as to explain the status of some of the present legislative
provisions. Second, and more immediately for the purposes of this paper, the historical
explanation supports the core thesis that what began as a continual process of
transplantation in the colonial era and in the period immediately following India’s
decolonization subsequently converted itself into an introspective process (with some
experiences derived from other jurisdictions such as the U.K. and the U.S.), but without
wholesale adoption of English law as was hitherto the case. Finally, to be sure, it is not
my case that the Companies Act, 2013 or the preceding legislation during India’s
socialist era were entirely different from parallel English legislation. Of course, several
provisions of the Companies Act, 1956 (which were transplanted from the English
Companies Act of 1948) continue to find their place in some form or the other under the
present law. This might be the result of the attitude represented by the saying “if it ain’t
broke, don’t fix it”.168 But, rather than provisions which have been left untouched, what
42
is of greater importance to my analysis is the areas of law where specific changes have
been proposed from time to time and those that have required policy‐oriented
discourses. It is in these areas where, the reference point that was previously on
England has either moved to other jurisdictions such as the U.S. or has simply moved
inwards in the search of an indigenous solution to solve problems that are unique to the
Indian context. That is what establishes the visible shift from transplant to
autochthony.169
III. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF CORPORATE LAW: IMPACT OF DECOLONIZATION
In this Part, I analyze the principal concepts under Indian corporate law and compare (or
contrast) them with parallel provisions under English law. This comparison adopts two
approaches. One is to consider how Indian law has evolved across various key topics
since decolonization and in comparison with laws transplanted from England during the
colonial period. The other is to compare Indian corporate law with the developments in
parallel English legislation since India’s decolonization and to examine how (and why)
the two countries have adopted somewhat different trajectories despite their shared
common law heritage.
I undertake this comparison of substantive legal concepts through four broad
concepts, viz. (i) corporate structure and personality, (ii) corporate finance and capital
structuring, (iii) corporate governance, and (iv) corporate law enforcement
machinery.170
169
To that extent, merely because countries may share the same legal heritage, it does not
automatically result in similarities in specific legislation such as corporate law.
170
While it would be impossible to deal with all these topics with equal weight within the course of
this paper, greater emphasis will be placed on corporate governance as that is a core (and usually
contentious) aspect of corporate law.
43
A. CORPORATE PERSONALITY AND STRUCTURE
When it comes to corporate personality and structure, the corporate law in India is strict
and somewhat inflexible, and continues to carry some of the rigors of its colonial past,
which have been buttressed further by measures introduced in the post‐colonial era. On
the other hand, England has progressively eased various structural impediments that
have made it far more straightforward for companies to be incorporated and structured.
To that extent, Indian corporate law has moved in a direction that is very different from
the path adopted by its former colonizer. I seek to support my assertion through some
illustrations.
Corporate law stipulates that a company that has been incorporated in
accordance with the law is a legal personality that is separate from its shareholders,
directors, creditors and other constituencies.171 This principle forms the foundation of
the limited liability protection offered to shareholders that encourages entrepreneurs to
establish business and carry out trade that benefits the economy as a whole.172
However, the law pertaining to “piercing the corporate veil” steps in to create a balance
whereby the limited liability doctrine is not abused to adversely affect the interests of
third parties (particularly creditors).173 My comparison suggests that English law is
rather circumspect about the idea of piercing the corporate veil, thereby treating the
principles of separately legal personality and limited liability as sacrosanct.174 More
recent evidence from the English courts considerably narrow the situations where the
veil can be pierced.175 Contrast this with the position in India where courts have been
more liberal in piercing the veil.176 The differing treatments are indicative of the
171
See Companies Act, 2013, § 9.
172
Frank H. Easterbrook & Daniel R. Fischel, Limited Liability and the Corporation, 52 U. Chi. L.
Rev. 89 (1985).
173
Henry Hansmann & Reinier Kraakman, Towards Unlimited Shareholder Liability for Corporate
Torts, 100 YALE L.J. 1879 (1991).
174
The principle of limited liability was first established in the landmark case of Salomon v. Salomon,
[1897] AC 22. See also Adams v. Cape Industries plc, [1991] 1 All ER 929.
175
Prest v. Petrodel Resources Ltd, [2013] UKSC 34.
176
The attitude of the Indian courts in piercing the veil is set forth below:
44
variance in the philosophy, whereby England continues to follow a market‐oriented
approach wherein incorporation is considered a facilitative process for advancing the
business needs of entrepreneurs, whereas the courts in India tend to adopt a broader
view taking into account the interests of all stakeholders whose interests are affected by
the actions of companies.177
One of the colonial‐era requirements under Indian law obliges companies to
include in their memorandum of association178 the objects for which they are
incorporated. This gives rise to the doctrine of ultra vires whereby a business activity
carried out by the company which is beyond its stated objects is considered void for
exceeding the company’s capacity.179 Over the years, this doctrine has caused some
level of consternation in countries that have adopted English law.180 Therefore, both
England181 as well as some of its former colonies182 have done away with the
requirement that companies must have objects clauses in their memorandum of
association. Consequently, the ultra vires doctrine has been effectively abolished in
these jurisdictions. Despite the liberalization of this rule in the light of the evolving
The horizon of the doctrine of lifting of the corporate veil is expanding. It can be lifted
even at the invitation of the company itself. Contemporary trend shows that the lifting of
the corporate veil is permissible whenever public interest so demands. The courts have
been pragmatic in their approach in unveiling companies, especially the subsidiary
companies to see their real face in the interests of justice. The modern tendency is, where
there is identity and community of interest between companies in the group, especially
where they are related as holding company and wholly owned subsidiary or subsidiaries,
to ignore their separate legal entity and look instead at the economic entity of the whole
group tearing of the corporate veil. [footnotes omitted]
DATTA, supra note 29, at 176. See also Ritu Birla, Maine (and Weber) Against the Grain: Towards a
Postcolonial Genealogy of the Corporate Person, 40 J. L. & SOC’Y 92 (2013) (finding that on corporate
veil piercing India has adopted a different trajectory from the Western markets).
177
This is consistent with the broader “socialistic” approach adopted by the Indian courts generally in
corporate law. See supra notes 120-122 and accompanying text.
178
The constitutional documents of a company (both in England and India) consist of the
memorandum of association and the articles of association.
179
This doctrine was established in a leading case of Ashbury Railway Carriage & Iron Co. Ltd. v.
Riche, (1875) LR 7 HL 653.
180
For instance, one method adopted to overcome this strict prohibition was to follow a “kitchen
sink” approach by drafting elaborate objects clauses in the constitutional documents to include any business
activity that can possibly be envisaged.
181
Davies, supra note 166, at 153-54. See also U.K. Companies Act, 2006, § 31(1) (providing that a
company’s objects are unrestricted unless otherwise specified).
182
For Singapore, see TAN CHENG HAN (ED.), WALTER WOON ON COMPANY LAW 113 (2009).
45
business environment, India has remained unwavering in its faithfulness to the ultra
vires rule. Even the Companies Act, 2013 mandates that Indian companies must carry in
their memorandum of association objects clauses specifying the type of business activity
that they are permitted to carry on.183 India has therefore opted to display some level of
rigidity on this count despite reforms implemented in other “common law”
jurisdictions.184
Similarly, on several matters regarding the corporate structure, corporate law in
India is far stringent not only in comparison with its colonial past, but more so with
reference to contemporary English corporate law. While English law clearly bifurcates
the extent of regulation between private companies (small, closely‐held and hence light
regulation) and public companies (large, widely‐held and hence more extensive
regulation), this distinction is far less clear in India, whose regulatory philosophy tends
to be rather overarching. Under current English law, the incorporators possess adequate
choice to determine whether to go for a private company or a public one.185 The
philosophy of Indian corporate law is quite the opposite. Under the Companies Act,
2013, a private company that is the subsidiary of a public company is treated for all
intents and purposes as if it is a public company.186 By this, the state is not only
arrogating to itself from the incorporators the choice of corporate form (that is
otherwise available to them in other Western jurisdictions), but it also has the effect of
enhancing the scope of regulation because several private companies incorporated as
such are subjected to extensive regulation if they are subsidiaries of public companies.
This demonstrates the philosophy of the Indian state to exercise broader control over
183
Companies Act, 2013, § 4(1)(c).
184
The U.S. too has granted considerable freedom to companies to carry on their business and has
paid scant regard to the ultra vires doctrine. Stephen J. Leacock, The Rise and Fall of the Ultra Vires
Doctrine in United States, United Kingdom, and Commonwealth Caribbean Corporate Common Law: A
Triumph of Experience Over Logic, 5 DePaul Bus. & Com. L.J. 67 (2006).
185
DAVIES, supra note 166, at 15. The philosophy behind this approach is to “think small first” and to
avoid the application of regulation to private companies that were written for public companies. DTI,
Company Law Reform, Cm. 6456, supra note 166, at ch. 4.
186
Companies Act, 2013, § 2(71), proviso.
46
the corporate sector, although it arguably has the effect of inducing greater
transparency that may benefit various stakeholders.
Other measures in Indian legislation that have crept in over the years represent a
rather interventionist approach of the state compared to the market‐oriented approach
of the colonial period. For example, Indian corporate law places undue restraints on the
establishment and operation of corporate groups, although they are quite common in
India.187 The Companies Act, 2013 confers powers on the Government to prescribe the
number of layers of subsidiaries that a specific class of company may have.188 Moreover,
a company cannot make investments through more than two layers of investment
companies.189 Although there can be no case against the need for restricting the abuse
of group company structures, the present stance arguably goes too far. It is unusual for
jurisdictions to impose such absolute curbs on the use of investment vehicles and this
provision appears somewhat unusual in the international context. This requirement
appears to have emanated from specific episodes witnessed in India in the past, in this
case the stock market scam involving the use of investment vehicles for routing funds
back and forth from companies and their controlling shareholders, which was the
subject matter of a Joint Parliamentary Committee report over a decade ago.190
Although such a legislative response ensnares specific abuses of corporate group
structures, it also has the unintended effect of capturing genuine business transactions
and structures thereby curbing the ability of companies to organize more efficiently.
While the general method utilized in other countries to prevent abuse is to invoke the
doctrine of piercing the veil, albeit in exceptional circumstances, the law in India
proscribes such structures at the outset. In addition, corporate law in India imposes
severe restrictions on the movement of funds between group companies (such as
187
See Marianne Bertrand, Paras Mehta & Sendhil Mullainathan, Ferreting Out Tunneling: An
Application to Indian Business Groups, 117(1) QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS 121, 121 (2002). See
also Rajesh Chakrabarti, Corporate Governance in India – Evolution and Challenges 14-20 (2005),
available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=649857, at 7.
188
Companies Act, 2013, § 2(87).
189
Id., § 186(1).
190
Lok Sabha Secretariat, Joint Committee on Stock Market Scam and Matters Relating Thereto (Dec.
2002), available at http://www.watchoutinvestors.com/JPC_REPORT.PDF.
47
holding companies and subsidiaries) whether by way of investment or loan
transactions.191 This makes transactions between group companies extremely
onerous.192
Hence, on matters relating to corporate personality and structure, Indian
corporate law has continued to hold firmly on to some colonial vestiges such as the ultra
vires doctrine although the mother country and its other former colonies have
jettisoned it along the way. On other matters such as group structures, India’s approach
has been far more restrictive not only compared to the colonial period, but also in the
context of developments in the U.K. and other Western jurisdictions which have moved
in the opposite (more liberal) direction.
B. CORPORATE FINANCE AND CAPITAL STRUCTURING
I begin this sub‐part by exploring the evolution of the law relating to the equity
finance in India, and how that compares with the colonial era as well as subsequent
developments in England. Here, I find that India has made giant strides in introducing
flexibility to companies as compared to the colonial period, and has also substantially
kept with developments in England in this field (although the law in India continues to
be somewhat more restrictive than England). This partially explains the explosive
growth of India’s equity capital markets over the last two decades since liberalization.193
A combination of company legislation and securities regulation established a
conducive framework for securities offerings in the Indian markets, which permitted
offerings of the type recognized internationally. The assumption of regulatory
191
Companies Act, 2013, §§ 185-186.
192
See also the restriction on related party transactions, infra Part IIIC2.
193
While the equity capital markets have witnessed significant growth over the years, the debt markets
(e.g. for corporate bonds) have failed to gather steam. See Vikramaditya Khanna & Umakanth Varottil,
Developing the Market for Corporate Bonds in India, NSE WORKING PAPER (Mar. 2012), available at
http://ssrn.com/abstract=2021602.
48
responsibilities by SEBI in 1992 resulted in a complete shift from fixed‐price offerings to
book‐built offerings.194 Under this regime, companies are free to invite bids from
investors within certain indicative limits on the basis of a draft prospectus that contains
all the necessary disclosures.195 Pricing through regulatory intervention gave way to a
market‐based price discovery process. This enabled companies since the mid‐to‐late
1990s to raise billions of dollars in capital through public offering of shares and
accompanied listings.196 These factors triggered a dramatic shift in the Indian capital
markets, particularly on the primary‐markets front.197
SEBI’s emphasis on disclosure‐based regulation has witnessed a proliferation of
disclosure norms for various types of capital raising activities by Indian companies. Over
the last two decades, SEBI has gradually expanded the disclosure norms and prospectus
requirements, culminating in the presently applicable SEBI (Issue of Capital and
Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2009 (the “ICDR Regulations”). The ICDR
Regulations contain detailed disclosure requirements to be complied with by companies
undertaking various types of securities offerings. For public offerings, the ICDR
Regulations are prescriptive and encompass disclosures pertaining to the business, risks,
legal matters, capital structure and even the controlling shareholders and other entities
within the group in which they hold shares. The requirements in the ICDR Regulations
are so onerous that the disclosures required to give effect to a public offering in the
Indian markets are comparable (or possibly even far exceed) those required in most
194
Nitish Ranjan & T.P. Madhusoodhanan, IPO Underpricing, Issue Mechanisms, and Size (2004),
available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=520744, at 3-4.
195
For a brief description of the manner in which the bookbuilding process was to be carried out for
the purpose of price discovery, see S.S.S. Kumar, Short and Long-run Performance of Bookbuilt IPOs in
India, available at http://dspace.iimk.ac.in/bitstream/2259/523/1/sssk.pdf, at 20-21.
196
It is also the case that “the Indian bookbuilding process is the most transparent in the world in that
the bookbuilding activity is shown live on stock exchange website with updates every 30 minutes”. Arif
Khurshed, Stefano Paleari, Alok Pande & Silvio Vismara, IPO Certification: The Role of Grading and
Transparent Books, available at
http://www.cass.city.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/86640/Khurshed.pdf, at 3. This allows retail
investors to make their bids with full knowledge of the nature of bids made by the better-informed
institutional investors. Ibid at 3-4.
197
Jayanta Kumar Seal & Jasbir Singh Mataru, Long Run Performance of Initial Public Offerings and
Seasoned Equity Offerings in India, INDIAN INSTITUTE OF FOREIGN TRADE WORKING PAPER NO. FI-13-19
(May 2012), available at http://cc.iift.ac.in/research/Docs/WP/19.pdf, at 2.
49
developed markets. The trajectory followed by SEBI in the last two decades
demonstrates the pivotal nature of disclosure as a tool for securities regulation in the
primary markets.198
Other measures have introduced flexibility in equity financing. Previously, public
companies in India were restricted to two types of shares, i.e. preference shares and
equity shares. However, another category was added in 2000 whereby Indian
companies have been allowed to issue shares with differential rights as to dividend and
voting.199 Other hybrid instruments such as global depository receipts200 and
derivatives201 have received express statutory recognition. All of these provide different
financing options to Indian companies. Moreover, concepts such as employee stock
options202 and sweat equity enable the use of equity shares203 to compensate
employees. As far as the menu of options available for equity financing is concerned, the
Indian legislation is quite modern.
However, when it comes to capital maintenance, corporate law in India
continues to be fairly restrictive in nature. For instance, companies are still required to
follow the concept of authorized capital204 and par value of shares.205 The concepts that
were infused into Indian corporate law during the colonial period were intended to offer
some form of creditor‐protection.206 However, these have since outlived their utility, as
they had no correlation with the true value of the company that was of greater concern
198
At the same time, the disclosure standards imposed in the secondary markets are considerably
inferior in comparison with those in the primary markets. See Sandeep Parekh, Integrated Disclosure –
Streamlining the Disclosure Norms in the Indian Securities Market, INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT,
AHMEDABAD WORKING PAPER 2005-01-04 (2005), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=653703.
199
Companies (Amendment) Act, 2000. Although there was intense debate about the issues
surrounding shares with differential rights, they have been retained in the new legislation. Companies Act,
2013, § 43(a)(ii).
200
Companies Act, 2013, § 2(44).
201
Id., § 2(33).
202
Id., § 2(37).
203
Id., § 2(88).
204
Id., 2013, §§ 2(8), 60-61.
205
See e.g. id., § 65.
206
DAVIES, supra note 166, at 260.
50
to its creditors.207 Several Western jurisdictions have either not been following these
requirements,208 or have been following them partly.209 Even some of the former
colonies of the British Empire have since moved away from these somewhat archaic
requirements.210 Even though Britain and some of its colonies have migrated away from
the concepts of authorized capital and par value of shares that were considered a form
of creditor‐protection in the colonial era, India has remained wedded to this concept,
wherein no reform was suggested even during the most recent process of enacting the
Companies Act, 2013.
The rather restrictive approach continues in other areas of capital maintenance
and capital restructuring. For example, strict rules permit buyback of shares by a
company only out of free reserves, share premium or the proceeds of a fresh issue of
shares.211 Moreover, there are ceilings in terms of total amounts that a company can
pay out in a buyback (25% of paid up capital and free reserves) and a maximum
percentage (25%) of shares it can buy back.212 In order to protect the creditors, directors
must issue a solvency certificate and the company must maintain a minimum debt‐
equity ratio following the buyback.213
The current regime in India regarding buyback of shares represents a radically
different position from the colonial period when a company was not permitted to
acquire its own shares under any circumstances whatsoever. The flexibility allowing
companies to buy back their own shares was introduced only as late as 1999,214 after
207
TAN, supra note 182, at 425-29; How Yew Kee & Lan Luh Luh, The Par Value of Shares: An
Irrelevant Concept in Modern Company Law, [1999] Sing. J. Leg. Stud. 552.
208
For a discussion on Delaware law, see Vasudev, supra note 30, at 28; WILLIAM T. ALLEN, REINIER
KRAAKMAN & GUHAN SUBRAMANIAN, COMMENTARIES AND CASES ON THE LAW OF BUSINESS
ORGANIZATION 123-24 (2012).
209
While the U.K. has done away with the concept of authorized capital, it has retained the par value.
DAVIES, supra note 166, at 260-61, 265-66.
210
For Singapore, see TAN, supra note 182, at 425-29.
211
Companies Act, 2013, § 68.
212
Id., at § 68(2).
213
Id., at § 68(2)(d),(6).
214
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1999.
51
which it has taken a prominent place. It is somewhat comparable to the present English
position, which too permits companies to purchase their own shares, although the
conditions and requirements are somewhat differently structured with less rigid
conditions.215
As a final matter relating to capital maintenance, the rule against financial
assistance operates in an absolute manner whereby companies are prohibited from
providing any form of financial assistance for the acquisition of its own shares.216 While
this rule has been controversial owing to its rigidity, a number of jurisdictions have
made modifications over the years. Some carry whitewash provisions that enable
shareholders to approve the financial assistance so long as the company continues to be
solvent thereafter.217 Others make the rule inapplicable to private companies.218 In such
a case, where a public company has been acquired, it can first be converted into a
private company following which it could provide financial assistance.219 This provides
options for acquirers of companies to carry out leveraged acquisitions (whereby the
financing of the acquisition is secured by the assets of the company acquired). The
Indian position is rather rigid as it does not provide for any exceptions (such as
whitewash provisions). Although the rule against financial assistance is not applicable to
private companies, this is not altogether attractive as targets in large leveraged buyouts
are likely to be public companies. Moreover, even if they are privatized following the
acquisition, they could continue to be treated as public companies if they become
215
Companies Act, 2006, Part 18. Other former British colonies have adopted varying approaches to
capital maintenance and buyback of shares, ranging from several conditions imposed for buyback of shares
as prevalent in Singapore to the emphasis largely on the solvency of the company for permitting a buyback
in New Zealand. For a discussion, see Wee Meng Seng, Reforming Capital Maintenance Law: The
Companies (Amendment) Act 2005, 19 SING. AC. L.J. 295 (2007).
216
Companies Act, 2013, § 67(2).
217
Singapore has adopted this approach. See Wee, supra note 215.
218
Companies Act, 2006, § 678.
219
Paros Plc v Worldlink Group Plc [2012] EWHC 394 (Comm) at ¶ 73, where an undertaking by
the company while it was a public company to provide some sort of financial assistance to a purchaser of
shares after it was re-registered as a private company (which was a pre-condition) was found to be lawful.
For a brief discussion of this case, see GEOFFREY MORSE (ED), PALMER’S COMPANY LAW (1992), at ¶
6904.1.
52
subsidiaries of acquirers that are themselves public companies.220 For this reason, the
rule against financial assistance is unduly restrictive in the Indian circumstances, with no
meaningful exceptions contained in the legislation. Surprisingly, the law reform process
that resulted in the Companies Act, 2013 does not seem to have considered this issue at
all. To this extent, India’s position continues to rely heavily on its colonial origins and has
made little progress despite the advancement in equity markets and capital
restructuring transactions.
In all, on matters of corporate finance and capital maintenance, on several
aspects such as public offerings, options on types of securities and buyback of shares,
the Indian legislation has evolved over a period of time. However, on other matters of
capital maintenance such as the rule against financial assistance, it has failed to dislodge
itself from its rigid stance that continues to affect transactions in the Indian context
although the U.K. and some of its former colonies have adopted a more pragmatic
approach given the commercial development of the times.221
C. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
While corporate governance222 has been an inherent part of corporate law since its
inception, the concept has gathered considerable momentum in India in the last two
decades (and for a longer period of time in Western jurisdictions). During this period,
India has adopted corporate governance measures from other jurisdictions, particularly
220
See supra note 186 and accompanying text.
221
As far as corporate restructuring is concerned, Indian corporate law continues to operate on the
basis of concepts derived from the colonial era, which the U.K. too follows to a large extent. These include
the concepts of scheme of compromise and arrangement (for effecting amalgamation of companies),
contractual mergers (in very limited circumstances), schemes of reduction of capital, compulsory
acquisitions and the like. See Umakanth Varottil, Corporate Governance in M&A Transactions, 24 NAT. L.
SCH. IND. REV. 50; Vikramaditya Khanna, Mergers & Acquisitions and Corporate Governance, NSE
QUARTERLY BRIEFING (Oct. 2013), available at http://www.nseindia.com/research/content/res_QB3.pdf.
222
Corporate governance relates to the “system by which companies are directed and controlled.”
Cadbury Committee Report, supra note 142, at ¶ 2.5. It represents the set of checks and balances within the
corporate structure that helps create long-term value enhancement for stakeholders in a company. See
ROBERT A.G. MONKS & NELL MINOW, CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 2 (1995).
53
the U.S. and the U.K.223 This despite considerable variances between conditions
prevailing in those Western jurisdictions and locally in India. For example, the U.S. and
the U.K. follow the “outsider” model of corporate governance224 wherein most
companies in those jurisdictions display dispersed shareholding and it is not too
common to find controlling shareholders.225 On the other hand, India follows the classic
“insider” system226 where most public companies are controlled (by virtue of dominant
shareholding) by either business families or the state.227
Although there could be several possible methods to analyze the corporate
governance issues in a legal system (and more so in comparison with other systems),
here I resort to the “agency problems” paradigm that provides an elegant underlying
framework.228 As explained in an influential book on the subject,229 the effort of
corporate law is “to control conflicts of interest among corporate constituencies”.230
These conflicts are referred to in economic literature as “agency problems”.231
223
See supra notes 141-148 and accompanying text; Varottil, supra note 119
224
Stilpon Nestor & John K. Thompson, Corporate Governance Patterns in OECD Economies: Is
Convergence Under Way?, available at http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/7/10/1931460.pdf, at 5.
225
While this theory has come under some strain in the U.S. context, it remains true in the U.K. For a
discussion on the U.S., see Ronald J. Gilson & Jeffrey N. Gordon, The Agency Costs of Agency Capitalism:
Activist Investors and the Revaluation of Governance Rights, 113 Colum. L. Rev. 863 (2013); Clifford G.
Holderness, The Myth of Diffuse Ownership in the United States, 22 REV. FIN. STUD. 1377 (2009). For a
discussion on the U.K., see Bernard S. Black & John C. Coffee, Jr., Hail Britannia?: Institutional Investor
Behavior Under Limited Regulation, 92 MICH. L. REV. 1997, 2001 (1994); Brian R. Cheffins, Putting
Britain on the Roe Map: The Emergence of the Berle-Means Corporation in the United Kingdom in JOSEPH
A. MCCAHERY, PIET MOERLAND, THEO RAAIJMAKERS & LUC RENNEBOOG (EDS.), CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
REGIMES: CONVERGENCE AND DIVERSITY 151, 151 (2002).
226
Nestor & Thompson, supra note 224, at 9. See also LaPorta, et. al., Law & Finance, supra note 1
227
For an analysis of India’s shareholding structure and controlling shareholder dominance, see
Chakrabarti, supra note 187; Shaun J. Mathew, Hostile Takeovers in India: New Prospects, Challenges,
and Regulatory Opportunities, 2007(3) COLUM. BUS. L. REV. 800; N. Balasubramanian & R.V. Anand,
Ownership Trends in Corporate India 2001 – 2011: Evidence and Implications, INDIAN INSTITUTE OF
MANAGEMENT, BANGALORE, WORKING PAPER NO: 419, available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2303684.
228
It is to be noted, however, that the agency concept is used by academics in corporate governance
literature in a wider economic sense and ought to be distinguished from the legal (contractual) concept of
agency. Brian Cheffins, The Trajectory of (Corporate Law) Scholarship 26 (2003), available at
http://ssrn.com/abstract=429624.
229
REINIER R. KRAAKMAN, ET AL., THE ANATOMY OF CORPORATE LAW: A COMPARATIVE AND
FUNCTIONAL APPROACH (2009).
230
Id. at 35.
231
For a detailed analysis of agency theory in economic literature, see J. Michael Jensen & William
Meckling, Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs, and Ownership Structure, 3 J. FIN.
54
Corporate law and corporate governance literature define three generic agency
problems.232 The first agency problem relates to the conflict between the company’s
managers and its owners (being the shareholders).233 Hereinafter referred to as the
“manager‐shareholder agency problem”, such conflict exists largely in jurisdictions
which manifest diffused shareholding in companies. This is due to collective action
problems and the resultant inability of shareholders to properly monitor the actions of
managers. The second relates to the conflict between the majority or controlling
shareholders on the one hand and minority shareholders on the other.234 Such conflict,
which is referred to hereinafter as the “majority‐minority agency problem” is largely
prevalent in jurisdictions that display concentrated shareholding where the interests of
minority shareholders are significantly diluted. The third agency problem relates to the
conflict between the owners and controllers of the firm (such as the shareholders and
managers) and other stakeholders (such as creditors, employees, consumers and
public), with many of whom the company may enter into a contractual arrangement
governing their affairs inter se.235 This conflict, referred to hereinafter as the “controller‐
stakeholder agency problem” exists both in jurisdictions that have diffused shareholding
as well as those that have concentrated shareholding, but its role is accentuated in
those that have concentrated shareholding.236
ECON. 305 (1976). For a simpler expression of the agency analysis, see KRAAKMAN, ET. AL., supra note
229, at 35, noting that:
an ‘agency problem’—in the most general sense of the term—arises whenever the welfare of one
party, term the ‘principal,’ depends upon actions taken by another party, termed the ‘agent.’ The
problem lies in motivating the agent to act in the principal’s interest rather than simply the agent’s
own interest. Viewed in these broad terms, agency problems arise in a broad range of contexts that
go well beyond those that would formally be classified as agency relationships by lawyers.
232
KRAAKMAN, ET. AL., supra note 229, at 36; Paul L. Davies, The Board of Directors: Composition,
Structure, Duties and Powers, PAPER ON COMPANY LAW REFORM IN OECD COUNTRIES: A COMPARATIVE
OUTLOOK OF CURRENT TRENDS (2000), available at http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/21/30/1857291.pdf., at
2.
233
KRAAKMAN, ET. AL., supra note 229, at 36; Davies, supra note 232, at 2.
234
Id.
235
Id.
236
There is some correlation between ownership structure and the shareholder-stakeholder focus.
Interesting political explanations have been proffered for this phenomenon. Professor Roe notes that “when
we line up the world’s richest nations on a left-right political continuum and then line them up on a close-
to-diffuse ownership continuum, the two correlate powerfully.” Mark J. Roe, Political Preconditions to
55
Through this “agency problems” paradigm, I now discuss the evolution of
corporate law in post‐colonial India and how it has sought to address these different
agency problems.
1. Controlling the Managers
The manager‐shareholder agency problem is of limited relevance in India due to
the general concentration of shareholding. However, looking at historical evolution in
India, legal instruments were indeed utilized to address this agency problem that existed
during independence. As we have seen,237 the managing agents that proliferated during
the colonial era gave rise to the manager‐shareholder agency problem. The managing
agents of the time held only a small percentage shareholding in the companies they
managed. Since the outside investors were not only large in number and unrelated to
the managers, they were also disinterested in participating in the management of the
companies. Arguably, the governance issues afflicting Indian companies that were
managed during the colonial period by the managing agents were somewhat akin to
those faced by the classic Berle & Means corporation in the U.S.238 Although there was
initial hesitation to confront this agency problem directly both towards the end of the
colonial period and immediately upon India’s independence,239 sufficient political will
Separating Ownership from Corporate Control, 53 STAN. L. REV. 539, 539 (2000). See also Alan Dignam
& Michael Galanis, Corporate Governance and the Importance of Macroeconomic Context, 28 OXFORD J.
LEGAL STUD. 201, 202 (2008).
237
See supra Part IIA4.
238
These companies displayed the separation of ownership and management (control). See ADOLF A.
BERLE & GARDINER C. MEANS, THE MODERN CORPORATION AND PRIVATE PROPERTY 66 (1940 [c1932]). A
comparative study of the Berle & Means corporation in the U.S. and companies in India that were managed
by the managing agencies in India during the colonial period and the different agency problems faced by
them respectively would itself be an interesting topic for further research, which will have to await another
day.
239
See supra notes 101-107 and accompanying text.
56
was mustered in the late 1960s to eliminate the institution of managing agencies
altogether.240
To that extent, India’s experience in dealing with the manager‐shareholder
agency problem is somewhat distinctive. The transplant of English law into India until
1960s did not specifically address the problems relating to managing agencies. Although
English law was focused on addressing the manager‐shareholder agency problem
generally, the indigenous innovation of managing agencies in India required a more
targeted solution. This required the Indian Parliament to make a clean break from the
colonial era in eliminating the concept of managing agencies altogether. Thereafter, the
agency problems that were more prevalent in India relate to those between controlling
shareholders and minority shareholders, wherein neither the colonial laws nor the
corporate governance regime as it has evolved in England provide any solution.
2. Protecting the Minority
Due to the concentration of shareholding in Indian companies, the majority‐
minority agency problem is rampant. Hence, the role of corporate law and governance
norms ought to be to address that specific problem. Until recently, corporate law in
India failed to directly address this problem. In the two decades following liberalization,
several corporate governance norms were gradually introduced in the Indian context.241
The efficacy of importing several corporate governance concepts into an emerging
economy like India from the developed economies like the U.S. and U.K. is open for
debate.242 Any problems with regard to transplantation of these corporate governance
240
See supra notes 116-118 and accompanying text.
241
For a discussion of these norms and how they were introduced, see supra Part IID.
242
Jairus Banaji & Gautam Mody, Corporate Governance and the Indian Private Sector,
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, QUEEN ELIZABETH HOUSE WORKING PAPER NUMBER 73, 8 (2001), available at
http://www3.qeh.ox.ac.uk/pdf/qehwp/qehwps73.pdf.
57
concepts are exacerbated by the differing political, social and economic considerations
that operate in these two sets of jurisdictions, namely the U.S. and U.K. (the outsider
system) on the one hand, and India (an insider system) on the other.243 As I have argued
elsewhere, several corporate governance concepts remained unimplemented effectively
in India, and this implementation failure raises questions regarding the viability of the
transplant itself.244
Just to illustrate this point further, during this phase, one key transplant related
to the concept of board independence, which was transplanted to India from the U.S.
and the U.K.245 As mentioned earlier, controlling shareholders in Indian companies
possess significant voting power, both de jure and de facto, and can determine the
composition of the boards of most Indian public listed companies by exercising their
voting power to appoint or remove directors.246 This holds good for the appointment of
independent directors as well. Hence, although independent directors (a seemingly
critical component of the corporate governance norms) are required to act in the
general interests of the company and the shareholder body as a whole and as monitors
of managers and controlling shareholders, in practice they are generally likely to owe
their de facto allegiance to the controlling shareholders, as such directors depend on
the controlling shareholders for their board seats (as well as remuneration and other
terms and conditions). In view of this, independent directors may have a tendency to
passively approve actions taken by controlling shareholders and the managers (whose
appointments again are subject to be influenced substantially by the controlling
243
See, Troy Paredes, A Systems Approach to Corporate Governance Reform: Why Importing U.S.
Corporate Law Isn’t the Answer, 45 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1055, 1058 (2004).
244
Varottil, supra note 119.
245
For a more detailed analysis on this transplant, see Umakanth Varottil, Evolution and Effectiveness
of Independent Directors in Indian Corporate Governance, 6 HASTINGS BUS. L.J. 291 (2010).
246
In India, the appointment of each director is to be voted on individually at a shareholders’ meeting
by way of a separate resolution. Each director’s appointment is to be approved by a majority of
shareholders present and voting on such resolution. Hence, controlling shareholders, by virtue of being able
to muster a majority of shareholders present and voting on such resolution, can control the appointment of
every single director on the board. Companies Act, 1956, § 263. Similarly, any director may be removed
before the end of her term without cause by a majority of shareholders present and voting on such
resolution. Companies Act, 1956, § 284.
58
shareholders). Proceeding on the assumption that one of the fundamental purposes of
corporate governance in India is to address the controller‐minority agency problem by
protecting the interests of the minority shareholders from actions of the controlling
shareholders, this purpose is defeated at its very source because the instrumentality of
independent directors that has been created to solve this agency problem is itself
subject to potential dominance by the controlling shareholders.247 This illustration of the
independent director concept is replete with problems that are likely to be encountered
when concepts from outsider systems are transplanted to insider systems without
adequate consideration of inherent differences in corporate structures or other relevant
factors.
The latest round of corporate law reforms have, however, shifted away from a
wholly transplant‐oriented approach to a more indigenous approach that takes into
account the local circumstances, particularly the concentration of shareholding in Indian
companies and hence the presence of the majority‐minority agency problem. The
Companies Act, 2013 brings about substantial changes to the concept of board
independence and also introduces other measures such as rules pertaining to related‐
party transactions, all of which seek to directly address the majority‐minority agency
problem. Under the new legislation, independent directors are to be chosen by a
nomination committee of the board, which has been made mandatory.248 Moreover, a
widening monitoring role of independent directors also extends specifically to
protecting the interest of the minority shareholders, thereby providing a pointed
solution to the agency problem prevalent in India.249 The altered role of independent
directors under the contemporary legislation is an effort to devise indigenous solutions
as opposed to simply relying on transplants.
247
As controlling shareholders have vast powers to determine the selection of the independent
directors, it is likely that controlling shareholders would most likely appoint persons who would be passive
to their decision-making. Further, even independent directors who may wish to act in the larger interests of
the company may be precluded from doing so because of the wide-ranging powers that controlling
shareholders exercise.
248
Companies Act, 2013, § 178.
249
Id., Schedule IV, ¶ II(5),(6),(8).
59
The enormous stress placed on regulating related‐party transactions under the
new legislation is yet another evidence of autochthony. Previously transplanted legal
regimes pertaining to corporate governance in India paid short shrift to related‐party
transactions as they are less relevant in jurisdictions such as the U.K. (and the U.S.)
where shareholding is diffused. They are, however, rampant where shareholding is
concentrated and corporate groups structures are common, such as in India.250 The
Companies Act, 2013 introduces strict measures to regulate related‐party transactions.
For instance, such transactions are now required to be approved by the board of
directors of the company, and in the case of material transactions they also require the
approval of the shareholders (wherein a shareholder who is a related party is disallowed
from voting).251 Disinterestedness and independence in decision‐making would ensure
that the transactions are carried out at arm’s length and are not abusive in nature so as
to unduly transfer value from a company to a related party (such as a controlling
shareholder) so as to adversely affect the interests of the minority shareholders.
These illustrations are indicative of India’s shift away not only from colonial era
laws (that did not encompass matters of corporate governance in as much detail), but
also from developments in the U.K. (as well as perhaps other former colonies such as
Australia and Canada) in recognition of the specific majority‐minority agency problem
that is prevalent in India.
250
Related-party transactions are defined as those transactions between a company, its subsidiaries,
employees, its controlling shareholders, management or members of their immediate family, and affiliates.
While related-party transactions are often beneficial to companies, they also have the potential to be
abusive in nature thereby unduly benefiting the controlling shareholders while adversely affecting the
interests of minority shareholders. See OECD, Guide on Fighting Abusive Related Party Transactions in
Asia 11 (2009).
251
Companies Act, 2013, § 188.
60
3. Enabling Other Stakeholders
The question whether companies should be run for the benefit of their shareholders or
whether the interests of other stakeholders must be taken into account is a vexed
one,252 and directly attracts the controller‐stakeholder agency problem. The colonial law
in India was unequivocal in its zeal to protect shareholders so as to enable companies to
attract capital.253 Corporate law did not play any role at all in taking cognizance of the
interests of non‐shareholder constituencies. This position continues immediately
following decolonization, but the change in philosophy began taking shape in the 1960s
with amendments to the Companies Act, 1956, which was also consistent with the
escalation of the socialistic sentiment of the period.254 In this sub‐part, I seek to
demonstrate that the legal position has evolved substantially in the post‐colonial era
such that corporate law’s approach towards viewing the company as a private matter
has given way to an approach that considers the company as carrying wider societal
ramifications and affecting public interest. This vision of the corporate entity not only
contrasts with the colonial origins of Indian corporate law, but stands at considerable
variance with the English position, which continues to be staunchly shareholder‐
oriented.
Following decolonization, consistent with its journey through years of socialism,
the role of company law in India has extended beyond merely the protection of
shareholders.255 It encompasses the protection of employees, creditors, consumers and
society. For instance, employees obtain certain special rights under company law, such
252
Martin Gelter, Taming or Protecting the Modern Corporation? Shareholder-Stakeholder Debates
in a Comparative Light, 7 N.Y.U. J.L. & BUS. 641, 642 (2011).
253
See supra Part IIA3. This was consistent with the laissez faire policy prevalent during the period.
254
See supra Part IIC.
255
Tarun Khanna & Krishna Palepu, Globalization and Convergence in Corporate Governance:
Evidence from Infosys and the Indian Software Industry, 35 J. INT’L BUS. STUDIES 484, 500 (2004) (laying
out the debate in the context of protection of employees using the stakeholder theory).
61
as preferential payment for dues in case of winding up of a company,256 and also the
right to be heard in case of significant proceedings involving a company such as in a
scheme of arrangement (merger, demerger or other corporate restructuring)257 or in a
winding up258 of the company. As far as creditors are concerned, while company law
does provide them with the standard rights and remedies,259 other special laws confer
further corporate law rights such as the ability of the creditors to convert their loans
into equity of the debtor company and, more specifically from a corporate governance
standpoint, to appoint nominee directors on boards of debtor companies.260 These
rights are seemingly provided to protect the interests of the creditors. Building upon the
element of “public interest”, affected parties may exercise remedies in case the affairs
of a company are carried out in a manner prejudicial to public interest,261 or if a scheme
of arrangement262 is not in consonance with public interest.263 For example, while
according its sanction to a merger, demerger or corporate restructuring that is carried
out through a scheme of arrangement, the court must take into consideration the effect
of such a transaction on public interest, a matter that is alien to English law.264
256
Companies Act, 2013, § 325.
257
Companies Act, 2013, §§ 230-232. See also In Re, River Steam Navigation Co. Ltd., (1967) 2
Comp. L.J. 106 (Cal.) (holding that in considering any scheme proposed, the Court will also consider its
effects on workers or employees); In Re, Hathisingh Manufacturing Co. Ltd., (1976) 46 Comp. Cas. 59
(Guj.) and Bhartiya Kamgar Sena v. Geoffrey Manners & Co. Ltd., (1992) 73 Comp. Cas. 122 (Bom.)
(approving the proposition that while sanctioning a scheme of arrangement the court should consider not
merely the interests of the shareholders and creditors but also the wider interests of the workmen and of the
community).
258
Companies Act, 2013, § 282. See also National Textile Workers’ Union v. Ramakrishnan (P.R.),
A.I.R. 1983 SC 75 (holding that workers of a company have a right to appear and be heard in support or
opposition of a winding up petition).
259
These include the right to initiate a winding up of the company. Companies Act, 2013, §
272(1)(b), which is a customary company law right conferred on creditors in most jurisdictions.
260
See e.g., State Bank of India Act, 1955 (Act No. 23 of 1955), s. 35A.
261
Companies Act, 2013, § 241(1)(a). See also supra note 115.
262
Mergers, demergers and other forms of corporate restructuring are usually effected through a
scheme of arrangement that not only requires the approval of different classes of shareholders and
creditors, but also the sanction of the relevant court of law. See Jennifer Payne, Schemes of Arrangement,
Takeovers and Minority Shareholder Protection, 11 J. CORP. L. STUD. 67 (2011).
263
Companies Act, 2013, § 232.
264
Hindustan Lever Employees’ Union v. Hindustan Lever Limited, AIR 1995 SC 470, ¶ 5:
What requires, however, a thoughtful consideration is whether the company court has
applied its mind to the public interest involved in the merger. In this regard the Indian
law is a departure from the English law and it enjoins a duty on the court to examine
objectively and carefully if the merger was not violative of public interest. No such
provision exists in the English law.
62
If Indian corporate law was already stakeholder‐oriented during the socialist era,
the recent reforms culminating in the Companies Act, 2013 stress that further in several
ways. Here, I deal with two such reforms that are indicative of this move, viz. (i)
expansion of directors’ duties, and (ii) corporate social responsibility.
Hitherto, directors of Indian companies had negligible guidance under company
law as regards their duties and liabilities. The preexisting Companies Act, 1956 did not
explicitly stipulate directors’ duties, which made it necessary to fall back on common
law principles (to be articulated by courts while delivering specific decisions). The
statutory uncertainty was compounded by the absence of significant cases of director
duties and liabilities before Indian courts. This somewhat unsatisfactory situation has
been mended in the Companies Act, 2013, which is rather explicit about directors’
duties. The new provisions not only provide greater certainty to directors regarding
their conduct, but also enable the beneficiaries as well as courts and regulators to judge
the discharge of directors’ duties more objectively.
More important for our present purpose, the Companies Act, 2013 extends the
stakeholder principle further while codifying directors’ duties. It provides:
A director of a company shall act in good faith in order to promote the objects of
the company for the benefit of its members as a whole, and in the best interests
of the company, its employees, the shareholders, the community and for the
protection of environment.265
Even if there was a doubt under previous legislation as to the extent to which
stakeholder interests are to be considered by directors of a company, it has been put to
rest in the new legislation. In other words, shareholders are not the only constituency
265
Companies Act, 2013, § 166(2).
63
that deserves the attention of directors; other constituencies such as employees and
even the community and the environment are to be considered by the directors.
While the stakeholder approach was considered during the latest English
company law reform process, matters were resolved rather differently. There, the
Company Law Review came up with proposals to cater to stakeholder interests.266
Essentially, two approaches that were considered: (i) the pluralist approach, which
states that “company law should be modified to include other objectives so that a
company is required to serve a wider range of interests, not subordinate to, or as a
means of achieving, shareholder value …, but as valid in their own right”,267 which
represents an expansive conception of stakeholder interest; and (ii) the enlightened
shareholder value (“ESV”) approach, which takes the position that the ultimate
objective of company law to generate maximum shareholder value is also the best
means of securing protection of all interests and thereby overall prosperity and
welfare.268 In other words, the latter approach conceives of a merger of interests of
stakeholders and shareholders by adopting the position that if the company acts to
preserve stakeholder interests, then that would necessarily bring about enhancement of
shareholder value. However, after some extensive debate, it is the ESV model that has
received statutory recognition in the UK. This appears to be a hybrid approach that is
primarily for the benefit of shareholders, but also obliquely takes into account the
interests of other stakeholders.269 Notwithstanding this compromise, it is clear that in
case of conflict between various interests, the directors must prioritize shareholders’
interests, which is the paramount goal.270
266
Supra note 166.
267
Id. at ¶ 5.1.3 (explaining that the approach is “pluralist because it argues that the interests of a
number of groups should be advanced without the interests of a single group (shareholders) being
overriding”).
268
Id. at ¶ 5.1.2.
269
Companies Act, 2006, § 172(1).
270
CHRISTOPHER M. BRUNER, CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN THE COMMON-LAW WORLD: THE
POLITICAL FOUNDATIONS OF SHAREHOLDER POWER 34, 44 (2013).
64
On the other hand, in the context of the aforesaid dichotomy, the Companies
Act, 2013 in India has preferred to adopt the pluralist approach by providing recognition
to both stakeholders and shareholders, without necessarily indicating a preference to
either. Despite the superficial similarity between the English and Indian legal provisions
on directors’ duties, there is a vital distinction in that shareholders continue to occupy a
pivotal position in England, whereas in India they are only one among a number of
constituencies that command the attention of directors.
Related to this is the newly introduced requirement of CSR,271 which has gained
considerable traction. The concept of social responsibility of corporations is not novel,
and has been part of the indigenous thinking during the colonial era.272 After much
debate, CSR found its place in the Companies Act, 2013 whereby every company of a
certain size is to announce a CSR policy. More importantly, India is one of the earliest
countries to require large companies to spend at least two percent of its average net
profits made during the three immediately preceding financial years in pursuance of its
CSR policy towards specified activities.273 During the legislative process, there was an
intense debate as to whether the spending requirements must be made mandatory, but
in the end due to a compromise the position resulted in a “comply‐or‐explain” approach
although the wording of the statutory provision largely operates as a mandate.274 While
there is strident criticism against such a broad and overarching CSR policy on various
counts, the requirements are here to stay.275 These developments are a far cry from the
position that prevailed during the colonial period, which was a single‐minded focus on
271
See supra note 158.
272
For example, Mohandas K. Gandhi is credited with the idea of the trusteeship obligations of
businesses. See BIRLA, supra note 42, at 103. See also Colin Mayer, THE FIRM COMMITMENT: WHY THE
CORPORATION IS FAILING US AND HOW TO RESTORE TRUST IN IT (2013).
273
Companies Act, 2013, § 135.
274
Umakanth Varottil, Companies Bill, 2011: CSR, INDIACORPLAW BLOG (Dec. 16, 2011), available
at http://indiacorplaw.blogspot.in/2011/12/companies-bill-2011-csr.html.
275
For a growing literature on CSR in India, see Afra Afsharipour, Directors as Trustees of the
Nation? India's Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Reform Efforts, 34 SEATTLE
U. L. REV. 995 (2011); Caroline Van Zile, India's Mandatory Corporate Social Responsibility Proposal:
Creative Capitalism Meets Creative Regulation in the Global Market, 13 ASIAN-PAC. L. & POL'Y J. 269
(2012); Afra Afsharipour & Shruti Rana, The Emergence of New Corporate Social Responsibility Regimes
in China and India, 14 U.C. DAVIS BUS. L.J. (forthcoming, 2014).
65
shareholder interests. They also take India in a different direction compared to the
largely shareholder‐oriented focus that continues to operate in contemporary U.K.
While the corporation has acquired public overtones in India, which have only increased
over time, the broader stakeholder interest is subservient to shareholder value
enhancement in the U.K. context.
In all, we find diverging philosophies in corporate governance that operate in
India and its colonizer. Viewed from the agency problems paradigm, the manager‐
shareholder agency problem that is the focus of corporate law in the U.K. hardly exists
in India. Similarly, the recent focus of the Indian legislators in dealing with the majority‐
minority agency problem is of limited interest in the U.K. Finally, while shareholders
continue to hold the attention of corporate managements in the U.K., other
stakeholders are entitled to the wider protection of corporate law in India. Here too,
transplant has given way to autochthony.
D. CORPORATE LAW ENFORCEMENT MACHINERY
Corporate law may be enforced either through the public enforcement apparatus or
through private action. In public enforcement, the state (or an independent regulatory
body) initiates proceedings against alleged violators of corporate law with a view to
imposing civil or criminal penalties.276 Private enforcement consists of legal action by
the victims of wrongdoing (who are private parties) to recover damages or obtain
injunction by way of a civil suit.277 The “legal origins” strain of literature posits that in
common law countries the judiciary plays an important role in enforcing investor rights,
thereby enhancing the value of capital markets.278 On the other hand, civil law countries
tend to rely heavily on governmental intervention in regulating the capital markets.
276
Bernard Black, The Core Institutions that Support Strong Securities Markets, 55 BUS. LAW. 1565,
1576-77 (2000).
277
Id. at 1577-78.
278
Supra note 1.
66
In India, during the colonial period, there was greater emphasis on private
enforcement and very little on public enforcement. This is consistent with the approach
in England (which largely continues to date) wherein private enforcement plays a
significant role in enforcing corporate law. However, beginning the socialist phase in
Indian corporate law history, the focus shifted rather significantly towards public
enforcement whereby the government obtained extensive powers of investigation and
other forms of enforcing corporate law.279 This approach was fortified after SEBI’s
establishment when it obtained significant powers of enforcement.
It is simple at first blush to attribute the growth to India’s legal system through
civil liability and its enforcement through the judiciary. This would be consistent with
the “legal origins” notion of investor protection due to India’s colonial legal heritage.280
India not only has a sufficiently robust substantive law on investor protection, but the
independent judicial system drawn from the common law tradition allows for judges to
mold the law to suit specific circumstances and thereby adapt to the dynamicity in the
capital markets.
However, as I argue elsewhere,281 the efficacy of India’s legal system as a tool for
enforcing corporate and securities laws necessitates a more nuanced treatment.
Counter‐intuitively, India’s common law legal system operating through the judiciary has
not played a vital role in the development of the capital markets through the imposition
of civil liability upon issuer companies or the compensation of investors for losses due to
misstatements. Despite the existence of substantial rules for civil liability and
compensation and the presence of an elaborate court system, the associated conditions
for the judiciary to make an impact on corporate law and investor protection are
279
See supra Part IIC.
280
Armour &, supra note 3, at 499; Afra Afsharipour, Rising Multinationals: Law and the Evolution
of Outbound Acquisitions by Indian Companies, 44 UC DAVIS L. REV. 1029, 1047-49 (2011).
281
Umakanth Varottil, The Protection of Minority Investors and the Compensation of Their Losses: A
Case Study of India, in PIERRE-HENRI CONAC & MARTIN GELTER, GLOBAL SECURITIES LITIGATION AND
ENFORCEMENT (forthcoming), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2421098.
67
conspicuous by their absence.282 The Indian court system is plagued by delays, costs,
and other inefficiencies. Nearly 32 million cases are pending before different levels
within the Indian judiciary thereby causing a significant strain on the system.283 Cases
can on average take 15 years to achieve final outcomes.284 For this reason, civil liability
and compensation of investors’ losses have almost never been utilized to any
meaningful extent in India as a tool for enforcing corporate law.
By way of comparison, under English law while case law forms the bulwark of the
evolution in areas of corporate such as directors’ duties, there is sparse case law in post‐
colonial India in this crucial area of the law despite over half a century of judicial
experience in implementing the Companies Act, 1956.285 Similarly, the shareholder
remedy of derivative law suits, an important form of private enforcement of directors’
duties, has been hardly utilized in India.286
Recognizing the need for private enforcement of corporate law, the Companies
Act, 2013 has introduced a statutory shareholder class action mechanism.287 In order to
obviate the delays faced before the regular court system, the legislation proposes the
establishment of a specialized body in the form of the National Company Law Tribunal
282
Armour & Lele, supra note 3, at 508-11.
283
M.J. Antony, Only the bad news, THE BUSINESS STANDARD (Jan. 14, 2014). See also, Jayanth
Krishnan, Globetrotting Law Firms, 23 GEO. J. OF LEGAL ETHICS 57 (2010).
284
Press Information Bureau, Government of India, National Legal Mission to Reduce Average
Pendency Time from 15 Years to 3 Years (2010), available at
http://pib.nic.in/release/rel_print_page1.asp?relid=62745.
285
Paterson, supra note 153, at 50. The lack of case law on directors’ duties has made the law
somewhat less certain in India compared to other jurisdictions where the judiciary sets the standards for
director conduct. It has also be argued that without local judicial pronouncements, the law may appear
rather static. For an example from the Singapore insurance sector, see Chen, supra note 19.
286
Vikramaditya Khanna & Umakanth Varottil, The rarity of derivative actions in India: reasons and
consequences, in DAN. W. PUCHNIAK, HARALD BAUM & MICHAEL EWING-CHOW, THE DERIVATIVE
ACTION IN ASIA: A COMPARATIVE AND FUNCTIONAL APPROACH 380 (2012) (finding that “[o]ver the last
sixty years only about ten derivative actions have reached the high courts or the Supreme Court. Of these,
only three were allowed to be pursued by shareholders, and others were dismissed on various grounds”).
287
Companies Act, 2013, § 135. However, this provision is yet to take effect as of the date of this
writing.
68
(“NCLT”) that will hear shareholder class actions and other corporate law disputes.288
Nevertheless, I am not sanguine about their effectiveness due to the lack of institutional
factors necessary for their utilization. For example, India follows the English rule on
costs, whereby the loser pays the reasonable costs of the opponent as ordered by the
courts.289 This may act as a disincentive to shareholders to bring suits even if they have a
strong case on the merits. Moreover, in India the costs are not limited to attorneys’
fees. Because investor actions are brought before the regular civil courts, plaintiffs
usually have to pay stamp duty and court fees, which may be significant in some states.
Contingency fees are one way to motivate entrepreneurially minded attorneys to take
on riskier suits with the likelihood that they would partake a portion of the proceeds if
the suit were successful. Although this system has worked in the U.S. and a number of
other jurisdictions, contingency fees are prohibited in India290 thereby disincentivizing
plaintiff attorneys from taking on riskier suits. Although the establishment of the NCLT
will eliminate some of the costs such as stamp duty and court fees, the lack of
institutional factors that promote a class action culture make it unlikely that private
enforcement will obtain the necessary fillip.
India’s enforcement is vastly different from that of the U.K. on yet another
count, particularly in the area of corporate governance. In order to implement corporate
governance norms, legal systems have utilized two broad approaches. One relates to
the use of a voluntary code of corporate governance. Under this approach, either the
government or an industry body (self‐regulator) may establish a code of conduct for
companies. This is often referred to as “soft law”.291 Although there is no compulsion to
288
Although the constitutional validity of the establishment of the NCLT was previously upheld by
the Supreme Court of India, subject to certain conditions and modifications in Union of India v. R. Gandhi,
[2010] 100 SCL 142 (SC), its potential establishment under the Companies Act, 2013 has been challenged
again more recently before the courts, which makes it likely that there would be further delays before the
NCLT can see the light of day. See Indu Bhan, What’s the role of tribunals?, THE FINANCIAL EXPRESS (Jan.
22, 2014).
289
Civil Procedure Code, 1908, s 35(2).
290
Bar Council of India Rules, Part VI, Chapter II, s II, Rule 20.
291
Melvin Aron Eisenberg, The Architecture of American Corporate Law: Facilitation and
Regulation, 2 BERKELEY BUS. L.J. 167, 182 (2005).
69
comply with such a code, companies are required to make appropriate disclosures on
whether they comply with the code, or alternatively to explain the reasons for non‐
compliance. The Combined Code in the UK is a classic example of such a voluntary
“comply‐or‐explain” approach.292
While India began briefly with the “comply‐or‐explain” approach,293 it quickly
migrated to a mandatory approach towards corporate governance,294 which has since
continued. This resonates with the legal tradition and enforcement culture in India,
wherein in the postcolonial period there has been reliance on government regulation of
the corporate sector. Since independence, the Indian industry has been subject to close
regulation and supervision by the government through mandatory regulation.295 This
approach has become further solidified with the enactment of the Companies Act, 2013,
which encapsulates detailed corporate governance provisions. The push towards
mandatory rules in India has therefore become complete.296
Hence, the enforcement machinery in corporate law in India has undergone a
sea change not just compared to colonial time (which is understandable given the pace
of developments in India’s corporate sector since decolonization), but it has developed
in a direction that is very different from that of its colonizer.
As this Part indicates through the extensive use of various legal concepts that
apply under contemporary Indian corporate law, not only has there been a break from
292
See supra note 146. The voluntary approach is the brainchild of the institutional investor
community that plays a significant role in the U.K. corporate sector. Simon C.W. Wong, Developing and
Implementing Corporate Governance Codes 5 (2008), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1321127, at 9.
293
See supra note 141 and accompanying text.
294
See supra note 144 and accompanying text.
295
See, Khanna, Past, Present and Future?, supra, note 154, at 174-79; Rajesh Chakrabarti, William
L. Megginson & Pradeep K. Yadav, Corporate Governance in India, 20 J. APP. CORP. FIN. 59, 62-63
(2008).
296
At the same time, mandatory rules of corporate governance imposed through legislation might be
subject to criticism. Given that corporate governance is dynamic and requires a flexible approach with
constant updating in accordance with developments in the markets, addressing ongoing concerns in an
efficient manner would be impossible through legislative amendments.
70
India’s colonial past, but India has also charted its own course which is considerably
different from those of Britain as well as several of its leading former colonies.
IV. LESSONS & CONCLUDING REMARKS
In this article, I have analyzed the evolution of corporate law in India since the colonial
period and the considerable shifts it has witnessed in the post‐colonial era. While Indian
corporate law began as a legal transplant from England, subsequent amendments and
reforms have moved it further away from its origin as they have been focused either on
finding solutions to local problems or borrowing from other jurisdictions such as the U.S.
To that extent, decolonization has had a significant effect of radically altering the course
of Indian corporate law. Although the shift was not evident in the period immediately
following decolonization, it began to take shape about a decade thereafter. Current
Indian corporate law not only represents a significant departure from its colonial origins,
but the divergence between Indian law and English law as they have developed since
independence has been increasing. This study offers some valuable lessons that add to
the theoretical debates across various planes, including on comparative corporate law
and post‐colonial legal systems. Here, I summarize some of the key messages emanating
from the analysis.
First, as I seek to demonstrate in this paper, the corporate law in India has
evolved in a rather fundamentally different fashion from that in England despite both
countries being part of the “common law” family and one being a former colony of the
other. This raises doubt about the bolder and more free ranging claims made by the
proponents of the “legal origins” thesis as to the differences between the “common
law” systems and the “civil law” systems.297 A more nuanced approach ought to be
297
Supra note 1.
71
taken while considering the effect of dispersion in the law among systems that share the
same legal family.298
This assertion can be supported by several findings in this paper. For example,
although “common law” systems are generally understood to be shareholder‐oriented,
there is ample evidence of India adopting a broader stakeholder approach. While
“common law” systems tend to rely on judge‐made law in the development of their
jurisprudence, in the corporate sphere India has largely relied on a codification process
rather than through judge‐made law (which is almost non‐existent in this subject area).
Consequently, greater reliance in placed on public enforcement of corporate law rather
than private enforcement. At one level, if a combination of these factors is taken into
account, India begins to resemble the typical civil law jurisdiction where these factors
are present. But that is too simplistic an analysis. For example, nothing explains why
India has not gone as far as civil law jurisdictions in insisting on codetermination
whereby workers obtain a set on the board of directors and hence participation in the
management of the company.299
India’s position as a member of the “common law” family is different from
others, particularly the U.K. This is on account of historical, economic and political
reasons that have determined its destiny in a manner that is different from that of its
colonizer. The economic policies of the Indian government following decolonization
appear to have had some role to play by which some of the socialist mindset and
government oversight of corporate affairs continues to the day.
Second, India’s initial corporate law during the colonial period was a direct
transplantation of English law on an ongoing basis. Such a legal transplant did not take
into account local conditions. For instance, the law was focused on enabling British
businesses to trade with India, and failed to heed to the indigenous business
298
My approach resonates with the literature set out in supra note 4. See also Mahy, supra note 20.
299
Spamann, supra note 4, at 1866-67.
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organizations, which did not find any place in corporate law.300 Similarly, the
transplanted legislation paid little regard to the problem of managing agencies, which
did not pose any significant problem in England.
Resistance to the transplanted legal system began occurring only in the post‐
colonial scenario. Some signs of decoupling are evidenced by legislative reforms such as
the abolishment of the managing agency systems. More importantly, the transplanted
legislation was incapable of addressing local issues in the post‐colonial era due to which
ongoing reliance on English law for legislative reform in India came to an end. All future
corporate law reform processes looked inward for solutions to problems and did not
look at all to the origin country for guidance. This suggests that transplants that do not
take cognizance of local circumstances may be present formally but may not possess
much functional effect. Moreover, following the lapse of time, one may witness change
at the formal level itself.
Finally, a comparison of the historical colonial experience in the functioning of
the transplanted legal system and the more contemporary experience in the post‐
colonial period suggests fragility in the foundations of the transplant. It is also an
indication that formal transplants may be inevitable during the colonial era, but
following decolonization such transplants could be called into question. India’s post‐
colonial economic history also appears to have a significant role to play in the evolution
of corporate law. A laissez faire policy at independence gave way to socialist
propensities for nearly three decades followed by a process of gradual liberalization of
the economy.
This paper presents a macro‐comparative analysis of the evolution of corporate
law in India across two planes. First, it compares the law as it evolved in the colonial
period, and how decolonization operated as a break from the past due to which the
300
See supra Part IIA3.
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post‐colonial developments took on a rather different tone. Second, it compares the
post‐colonial evolution of corporate law in India and England to determine the different
direction that India took from its fellow‐member of the “common law” family. The
findings presented herein take into account not only the legal evolution, but also places
it in the context of historical, economic and political factors that were at play in
determining the legal regime from time to time.
Several avenues for further research arise from this paper. For instance, research
in specific areas of corporate law may be analyzed in depth to test the conclusions made
in this paper at a macro‐level. Such a body of literature may not only aid in our
understanding of post‐colonial legal developments, but also operate as a reflective and
introspective exercise that will help better understand contemporary corporate law in
India.
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