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Delhi High Court Dismisses Ex-Management’s Challenge to Share Transfers: Affirms Bona Fide Purchasers’ Right to Register Shares and Receive Accretions Despite Liquidation Restrictions

Delhi High Court Dismisses Ex-Management’s Challenge to Share Transfers: Affirms Bona Fide Purchasers’ Right to Register Shares and Receive Accretions Despite Liquidation Restrictions

Delhi High Court Dismisses Ex-Management’s Challenge to Share Transfers: Affirms Bona Fide Purchasers’ Right to Register Shares and Receive Accretions Despite Liquidation Restrictions

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Court’s Decision

The appeals filed by the ex-management of CRBCML were dismissed as non-maintainable. The court upheld the applicants’ right to register the shares of Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) purchased in 1997 in their names. The court directed the Official Liquidator (OL) to:

  1. Transfer the shares to the applicants within seven days.
  2. Provide the applicants all accretions (dividends, bonuses, etc.) earned on the shares from 1997 onwards.

Facts

  1. Background:
    • The applicants had purchased shares of RIL in April 1997 through stockbrokers on the Delhi Stock Exchange (DSE) and duly paid for them.
    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued a directive on April 9, 1997, barring CRBCML from selling, transferring, or otherwise dealing with its assets. This directive, however, was not in the public domain at the time.
    • The Company Court, in a winding-up petition against CRBCML, froze the company’s assets on May 22, 1997, and appointed a Provisional Liquidator.
  2. Applicant’s Grievance:
    • When the applicants sought to transfer the shares in their names, KARVY (RIL’s share transfer agent) refused, citing the RBI directive and the Company Court’s order.
    • The applicants claimed they purchased the shares in good faith without knowledge of these restrictions.
  3. Legal Actions:
    • The applicants approached the court to clarify their entitlement to have the shares registered in their names.

Issues

  1. Could the ex-management of CRBCML challenge the registration of shares purchased in the open market?
  2. Were the applicants entitled to have the shares registered in their names despite the restrictions imposed during liquidation?

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner’s (Ex-Management) Arguments

Respondent’s (Applicants) Arguments


Legal Analysis

Applicability of Sections 531 and 536

  1. Section 531: This section invalidates transfers made during the “twilight period” (six months before the initiation of liquidation) if deemed fraudulent preferences. However, it allows bona fide transactions made in the ordinary course of business.
  2. Section 536(2): Protects bona fide transactions during the winding-up process if they serve the company’s benefit.

Court’s Observations

Precedent Analysis

Locus Standi of Ex-Management


Court’s Reasoning

  1. Bona Fide Nature of Transactions:
    • The applicants provided credible evidence of their transactions, including contract notes, bank statements, and transfer deeds.
    • The court observed that the transactions occurred before the restrictive orders, safeguarding them under Sections 531 and 536 of the Companies Act.
  2. Jurisdiction of Company Court:
    • The Company Court cannot entertain objections from the ex-management regarding transactions with bona fide purchasers unless fraud or collusion is proven.
  3. Delay in Raising Objections:
    • The Official Liquidator, despite being aware of the transactions for over 18 years, did not initiate any legal action to challenge the validity of the share transfers.

Conclusion


Implications

Also Read – Delhi High Court Dismisses Contempt Petition, Holds Sentence Review Board Complied with Directions: “Petitioner at Liberty to Challenge Premature Release Rejection Through Substantive Petition”

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