The winding up or liquidation of a company is the process by which a company’s assets are collected and sold in order to pay its debts. Any assets remaining after all debts, expenses and costs have been paid off are distributed amongst the shareholders of the company. When the winding up has been completed, the company is formally dissolved and it ceases to exist.
Section 304 of the Companies Act, 2013 states that a company may be wound up voluntarily in the following two ways:
Types of Winding up of a Company
Steps of Winding up of a Company
Section 307 provides that where a company has passed resolution for voluntary winding up, the company shall within 14 days of passing of the resolution give notice of resolution by advertisement in the Official Gazette and also in the newspaper which is in circulation in the district where the registered office or principal office of the company is situated.
As per section 308, the process of winding up commences at the time when the resolution is passed.
Before 2013, the companies act had two kinds of voluntary winding up processes i.e. by members and by creditors. Under the Companies Act 2013, the creditors can convert the winding up into winding up by Tribunal as per section 306 of the Companies Act, 2013. Thus, there is only one kind of voluntary winding up, namely members’ voluntary winding up.
Section 305 (1) provides that where it is proposed to wind up a company voluntarily, its directors, or in case the company has more than two directors, the majority of its directors, shall, at a meeting of the Board, make a declaration verified by an affidavit which says:
The declaration must also include:
This declaration will have effect only if it is made within five weeks immediately preceding the date of passing the resolution for winding up the company and it is delivered to the Registrar for registration before that date.
Section 310 provides that the company in its general meeting, where the resolution of voluntary winding up is passed, would appoint a company liquidator from the panel prepared by the Central Government. The Company Liquidator shall be appointed for the purpose of winding up its affairs and distributing the assets. The meeting also recommends the fee to be paid to the liquidator.
The company has to give notice to the Registrar of the appointment of the Liquidator within ten days of such appointment.
The Liquidator shall have following powers and duties with regard to the process of winding up:
As soon as the affairs of the company have been fully wound up, the Liquidator has to prepare a report of winding up showing that the property and assets of the company have been disposed of and its debts fully discharged. Thereafter a meeting of the company shall be called for the purpose of laying the final winding up accounts.
If the majority of the members of the company after considering the report of the Liquidator are satisfied that the company should be wound up, they may pass the resolution for dissolution.
The Company Liquidator, within two weeks after the final meeting, shall send to the Registrar, a copy of the final winding up accounts and copies of resolutions passed at various meetings. Liquidator shall also file an application along with his report, books and papers of the company relating to winding up, before the Tribunal for passing an order of dissolution.
If the Tribunal is satisfied that the process of winding up has been just and fair, it shall pass an order of dissolving the company within sixty days of the receipt of the application.
The Registrar, on receiving a copy of the order passed by the Tribunal, shall forthwith publish a notice in the Official Gazette about the dissolution of the company.