1. Winding Up through Tribunal (Compulsory Winding Up under Companies Act, 2013)
- A Public Limited Company may be wound up by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under Section 271 of the Companies Act, 2013.
- Grounds include:
- Inability to pay debts
- Acting against the interest of the sovereignty or integrity of India
- Fraudulent or unlawful business
- Non-filing of financial statements or annual returns for five consecutive years
- It is just and equitable to wind up the company.
- Inability to pay debts
- A petition is filed by the company, creditors, Registrar of Companies, or any authorized person.
- NCLT appoints a Company Liquidator, and all company operations cease except for liquidation activities.
- The liquidator realizes assets, pays debts, and distributes the remaining assets to shareholders.
- On completion, NCLT passes a dissolution order, and the company is struck off by the Registrar of Companies (ROC).
2. Winding Up through Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016
- If the company is financially distressed or unable to pay its debts, winding up may occur under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016.
- Initiated by the company (voluntary) or by creditors (financial or operational), through an application to the NCLT.
- Once admitted, a moratorium is declared, and a Resolution Professional is appointed.
- If no resolution plan is approved within 180–330 days, NCLT orders liquidation.
- A Liquidator sells assets, settles liabilities in priority order, and applies for company dissolution.
- After completion, the company is legally dissolved and removed from the MCA register.
3. Voluntary Winding Up (for solvent companies without debt)
- Although replaced for most cases by IBC, solvent companies with no liabilities can apply for voluntary winding up under Section 248 of the Companies Act, 2013.
- Steps include:
- Board and shareholder approval through a special resolution
- Filing of Form STK-2 with the ROC, along with relevant documents and affidavits
- Declaration of solvency by directors
- ROC publishes notice and, if no objections are raised, strikes off the company
- A notice of dissolution is issued in the Official Gazette.
- Board and shareholder approval through a special resolution
4. Role of the Liquidator
- In all forms of winding up, a Liquidator is responsible for:
- Taking control of company assets and books
- Realizing and distributing assets
- Settling debts as per the statutory order of preference
- Filing regular reports with NCLT and ROC
- Finalizing accounts and applying for dissolution
- Taking control of company assets and books
5. Effects of Winding Up
- The company ceases to conduct business, except as needed for winding up.
- Directors’ powers are suspended and transferred to the liquidator.
- The company’s name is removed from the MCA registry after legal dissolution.
- Creditors, employees, and stakeholders are notified and settled as per law.
- All legal proceedings involving the company are halted or transferred to the NCLT jurisdiction.
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