COMPANIES ACT MASTER SERIES - CHAPTER 15

RM14 - Compromises, Arrangements and Amalgamations

A complete restructuring guide covering schemes, mergers, demergers, fast-track and cross-border combinations, takeover arrangements, minority exits, public-interest amalgamations, record preservation and continuing officer liability.

Sections 230-24011 statutory sectionsCAA Rules + Forms
Reviewed: 28 June 2026Finin2min Companies Act Master Series
Rules Master scope

Compromises, Arrangements and Amalgamations

Companies (Compromises, Arrangements and Amalgamations) Rules, 2016; cross-border and fast-track merger rules; current CAA forms.

Source control: Apply the enacted Act, current Rules, Gazette amendments and live form or authority procedure on the action date. Bill proposals and expired relaxations are not operative merely because they appear in commentary.
Chapter architecture

Choose the route before drafting the scheme

Section 230 scheme

Debt compromise, member arrangement, capital reorganisation, takeover offer or restructuring under NCLT supervision.

Sections 230 + 232

Merger, demerger, transfer of undertaking, reconstruction and dissolution without winding up.

Section 233 fast track

Administrative confirmation for eligible classes, solvency declarations and high consent thresholds.

Section 234 cross border

Inbound/outbound mergers with RBI, FEMA, jurisdiction, tax and sectoral overlays.

Sections 235-236 exit

Dissenting shareholder acquisition and 90% majority/minority purchase routes.

Section 237 public interest

Central Government ordered amalgamation with compensation safeguards.

Route error is expensive: a commercially simple transaction can fail if classes, jurisdiction, voting denominator, valuation, accounting, tax or regulator sequence is designed after filing instead of before it.
Decision matrix

Ordinary scheme, fast track, cross border or minority exit?

RoutePrimary authorityCore approvalBest used forMajor risk
230 arrangementNCLT75% in value of voting class + sanctionDebt/member restructuring, capital reorganisation, unlisted takeoverWrong class composition or incomplete disclosure
230/232 mergerNCLTClass votes + sanctionMerger, demerger, undertaking transferAppointed-date, accounting, tax and regulatory mismatch
233 fast trackCentral Government / Regional DirectorCurrent statutory high member and creditor thresholdsEligible small/start-up/group/unlisted combinationsAssuming eligibility without current Rule 25 testing
234 cross borderNCLT or prescribed fast-track authority + RBI frameworkCompanies Act approvals plus FEMA conditionsInbound/outbound merger, reverse flipJurisdiction, tax, overseas asset/liability and investor rights
235 transfer contractTransferee with Tribunal challenge route90% in value within four monthsCompulsory acquisition of dissentersMissed statutory windows
236 minority purchaseCompany/majority under statute90% equity trigger + registered valuationSqueeze-out or minority sell rightValuation, bank funding and unclaimed holders
Section 230 execution

From concept to binding scheme

Design the perimeter

Identify companies, stakeholders, classes, consideration, rights changed, debt terms, capital effects, tax and regulatory dependencies.

Build disclosure and evidence

Latest financials, investigations, auditor report, valuation, accounting treatment, creditor/member lists and solvency/funding support.

File and seek meeting directions

Apply to the competent Tribunal with the scheme and proposed notice, advertisement, voting and chairperson mechanics.

Serve stakeholders and authorities

Send individual notices, publish advertisement, place documents online and serve statutory/sector regulators.

Conduct class voting

Authenticate claims and voting rights, manage proxies/e-voting/postal ballots and record abstentions, invalid votes and objections.

Seek sanction

Present chairperson reports, authority responses, fairness, accounting and implementation evidence.

File and implement

File the certified order, complete consideration, transfers, dissolution, employee and license steps, and continuing CAA-8 reporting.

Section 230

Power to compromise or make arrangements with creditors and members

Create the Tribunal-supervised route for debt, member, capital and takeover arrangements.

Current Bare Act text

230. Power to compromise or make arrangements with creditors and members.—(1) Where a compromise or arrangement is proposed— (a) between a company and its creditors or any class of them; or (b) between a company and its members or any class of them, the Tribunal may, on the application of the company or of any creditor or member of the company, or in the case of a company which is being wound up, of the liquidator,[appointed under this Act or under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (31 of 2016), as the case may be,] order a meeting of the creditors or class of creditors, or of the members or class of members, as the case may be, to be called, held and conducted in such manner as the Tribunal directs. Explanation.—For the purposes of this sub-section, arrangement includes a reorganisation of the company’s share capital by the consolidation of shares of different classes or by the division of shares into shares of different classes, or by both of those methods. (2) The company or any other person, by whom an application is made under sub-section (1), shall disclose to the Tribunal by affidavit— (a) all material facts relating to the company, such as the latest financial position of the company, the latest auditor’s report on the accounts of the company and the pendency of any investigation or proceedings against the company; (b) reduction of share capital of the company, if any, included in the compromise or arrangement; (c) any scheme of corporate debt restructuring consented to by not less than seventy-five per cent. of the secured creditors in value, including— (i) a creditor’s responsibility statement in the prescribed form; (ii) safeguards for the protection of other secured and unsecured creditors; (iii) report by the auditor that the fund requirements of the company after the corporate debt restructuring as approved shall conform to the liquidity test based upon the estimates provided to them by the Board; (iv) where the company proposes to adopt the corporate debt restructuring guidelines specified by the Reserve Bank of India, a statement to that effect; and (v) a valuation report in respect of the shares and the property and all assets, tangible and intangible, movable and immovable, of the company by a registered valuer. (3) Where a meeting is proposed to be called in pursuance of an order of the Tribunal under sub- section (1), a notice of such meeting shall be sent to all the creditors or class of creditors and to all the members or class of members and the debenture-holders of the company, individually at the address registered with the company which shall be accompanied by a statement disclosing the details of the compromise or arrangement, a copy of the valuation report, if any, and explaining their effect on creditors, key managerial personnel, promoters and non-promoter members, and the debenture-holders and the effect of the compromise or arrangement on any material interests of the directors of the company or the debenture trustees, and such other matters as may be prescribed: Provided that such notice and other documents shall also be placed on the website of the company, if any, and in case of a listed company, these documents shall be sent to the Securities and Exchange Board and stock exchange where the securities of the companies are listed, for placing on their website and shall also be published in newspapers in such manner as may be prescribed: Provided further that where the notice for the meeting is also issued by way of an advertisement, it shall indicate the time within which copies of the compromise or arrangement shall be made available to the concerned persons free of charge from the registered office of the company. (4) A notice under sub-section (3) shall provide that the persons to whom the notice is sent may vote in the meeting either themselves or through proxies or by postal ballot to the adoption of the compromise or arrangement within one month from the date of receipt of such notice: Provided that any objection to the compromise or arrangement shall be made only by persons holding not less than ten per cent. of the shareholding or having outstanding debt amounting to not less than five per cent. of the total outstanding debt as per the latest audited financial statement. (5) A notice under sub-section (3) along with all the documents in such form as may be prescribed shall also be sent to the Central Government, the income-tax authorities, the Reserve Bank of India, the Securities and Exchange Board, the Registrar, the respective stock exchanges, the Official Liquidator, the Competition Commission of India established under sub-section (1) of section 7 of the Competition Act, 2002 (12 of 2003), if necessary, and such other sectoral regulators or authorities which are likely to be affected by the compromise or arrangement and shall require that representations, if any, to be made by them shall be made within a period of thirty days from the date of receipt of such notice, failing which, it shall be presumed that they have no representations to make on the proposals. (6) Where, at a meeting held in pursuance of sub-section (1), majority of persons representing three- fourths in value of the creditors, or class of creditors or members or class of members, as the case may be, voting in person or by proxy or by postal ballot, agree to any compromise or arrangement and if such compromise or arrangement is sanctioned by the Tribunal by an order, the same shall be binding on the company, all the creditors, or class of creditors or members or class of members, as the case may be, or, in case of a company being wound up, on the liquidator [appointed under this act or under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (31 of 2016), as the case may be,] and the contributories of the company. (7) An order made by the Tribunal under sub-section (6) shall provide for all or any of the following matters, namely:— (a) where the compromise or arrangement provides for conversion of preference shares into equity shares, such preference shareholders shall be given an option to either obtain arrears of dividend in cash or accept equity shares equal to the value of the dividend payable; (b) the protection of any class of creditors; (c) if the compromise or arrangement results in the variation of the shareholders’ rights, it shall be given effect to under the provisions of section 48; (d) if the compromise or arrangement is agreed to by the creditors under sub-section (6), any proceedings pending before the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction established under section 4 of the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985 (1 of 1986) shall abate; (e) such other matters including exit offer to dissenting shareholders, if any, as are in the opinion of the Tribunal necessary to effectively implement the terms of the compromise or arrangement: Provided that no compromise or arrangement shall be sanctioned by the Tribunal unless a certificate by the company's auditor has been filed with the Tribunal to the effect that the accounting treatment, if any, proposed in the scheme of compromise or arrangement is in conformity with the accounting standards prescribed under section 133. (8) The order of the Tribunal shall be filed with the Registrar by the company within a period of thirty days of the receipt of the order. (9) The Tribunal may dispense with calling of a meeting of creditor or class of creditors where such creditors or class of creditors, having at least ninety per cent. value, agree and confirm, by way of affidavit, to the scheme of compromise or arrangement. (10) No compromise or arrangement in respect of any buy-back of securities under this section shall be sanctioned by the Tribunal unless such buy-back is in accordance with the provisions of section 68. (11) Any compromise or arrangement may include takeover offer made in such manner as may be prescribed: Provided that in case of listed companies, takeover offer shall be as per the regulations framed by the Securities and Exchange Board. (12) An aggrieved party may make an application to the Tribunal in the event of any grievances with respect to the takeover offer of companies other than listed companies in such manner as may be prescribed and the Tribunal may, on application, pass such order as it may deem fit. Explanation.—For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that the provisions of section 66 shall not apply to the reduction of share capital effected in pursuance of the order of the Tribunal under this section.

Finin2min decode

  • Application may be made by the company, creditor, member or liquidator. Class constitution and jurisdiction must be designed before filing.
  • Material facts, latest financial position, auditor report, investigations, capital reduction and any corporate debt restructuring package must be disclosed by affidavit.
  • Notice, explanatory statement and valuation material go to affected creditors/members/debenture-holders and to statutory authorities. Authorities normally have 30 days to represent.
  • Approval requires persons representing three-fourths in value of the relevant class who vote. The statute does not retain a separate headcount test.
  • Only persons with at least 10% shareholding or at least 5% of outstanding debt have statutory standing to object under section 230(4).
  • The Tribunal order may protect classes, address preference-dividend arrears, vary rights through section 48, provide exit offers and contain implementation directions.
  • Auditor confirmation of accounting-standard conformity is mandatory; the order is filed with the Registrar within 30 days.
  • Creditor meetings can be dispensed with where creditors holding at least 90% in value agree by affidavit.
  • Buy-backs must comply with section 68. Listed takeover offers follow SEBI rules; unlisted takeover offers use the prescribed Rule 3A route.
Practical example: A company proposes to convert secured debt into equity, extend unsecured debt and cancel part of promoter capital. It should identify separate creditor/member classes, obtain valuation and auditor reports, design voting and exit mechanics, send authority notices and avoid treating one class vote as approval by all affected persons.
Evidence file: Board-approved scheme, class memorandum, latest financials, auditor certificate, valuation report, creditor list, CAA notices, service/advertisement proof, voting register, chairperson report, authority responses and certified NCLT order.
Section 231

Power of Tribunal to enforce compromise or arrangement

Keep the sanctioned scheme under Tribunal supervision and provide a failure route.

Current Bare Act text

231. Power of Tribunal to enforce compromise or arrangement.—(1) Where the Tribunal makes an order under section 230 sanctioning a compromise or an arrangement in respect of a company, it— (a) shall have power to supervise the implementation of the compromise or arrangement; and (b) may, at the time of making such order or at any time thereafter, give such directions in regard to any matter or make such modifications in the compromise or arrangement as it may consider necessary for the proper implementation of the compromise or arrangement. (2) If the Tribunal is satisfied that the compromise or arrangement sanctioned under section 230 cannot be implemented satisfactorily with or without modifications, and the company is unable to pay its debts as per the scheme, it may make an order for winding up the company and such an order shall be deemed to be an order made under section 273. (3) The provisions of this section shall, so far as may be, also apply to a company in respect of which an order has been made before the commencement of this Act sanctioning a compromise or an arrangement.

Finin2min decode

  • The Tribunal may supervise implementation, issue directions and modify the scheme where necessary for proper implementation.
  • If the sanctioned arrangement cannot be worked satisfactorily, the Tribunal may order winding up under section 273.
  • The supervision power applies to current schemes and to qualifying pre-2013 Act orders.
Practical example: A sanctioned debt scheme assumes sale of a plant, but the sale is delayed and payment dates become impossible. Parties should seek a reasoned modification or direction rather than privately changing binding terms.
Evidence file: Implementation dashboard, payment certificates, stakeholder communications, deviation log, modification application and Tribunal directions.
Section 232

Merger and amalgamation of companies

Provide the main NCLT route for merger, demerger, transfer of undertaking and reconstruction.

Current Bare Act text

232. Merger and amalgamation of companies.—(1) Where an application is made to the Tribunal under section 230 for the sanctioning of a compromise or an arrangement proposed between a company and any such persons as are mentioned in that section, and it is shown to the Tribunal— (a) that the compromise or arrangement has been proposed for the purposes of, or in connection with, a scheme for the reconstruction of the company or companies involving merger or the amalgamation of any two or more companies; and (b) that under the scheme, the whole or any part of the undertaking, property or liabilities of any company (hereinafter referred to as the transferor company) is required to be transferred to another company (hereinafter referred to as the transferee company), or is proposed to be divided among and transferred to two or more companies, the Tribunal may on such application, order a meeting of the creditors or class of creditors or the members or class of members, as the case may be, to be called, held and conducted in such manner as the Tribunal may direct and the provisions of sub-sections (3) to (6) of section 230 shall apply mutatis mutandis. (2) Where an order has been made by the Tribunal under sub-section (1), merging companies or the companies in respect of which a division is proposed, shall also be required to circulate the following for the meeting so ordered by the Tribunal, namely:— (a) the draft of the proposed terms of the scheme drawn up and adopted by the directors of the merging company; (b) confirmation that a copy of the draft scheme has been filed with the Registrar; (c) a report adopted by the directors of the merging companies explaining effect of compromise on each class of shareholders, key managerial personnel, promoters and non-promoter shareholders laying out in particular the share exchange ratio, specifying any special valuation difficulties; (d) the report of the expert with regard to valuation, if any; (e) a supplementary accounting statement if the last annual accounts of any of the merging company relate to a financial year ending more than six months before the first meeting of the company summoned for the purposes of approving the scheme. (3) The Tribunal, after satisfying itself that the procedure specified in sub-sections (1) and (2) has been complied with, may, by order, sanction the compromise or arrangement or by a subsequent order, make provision for the following matters, namely:— (a) the transfer to the transferee company of the whole or any part of the undertaking, property or liabilities of the transferor company from a date to be determined by the parties unless the Tribunal, for reasons to be recorded by it in writing, decides otherwise; (b) the allotment or appropriation by the transferee company of any shares, debentures, policies or other like instruments in the company which, under the compromise or arrangement, are to be allotted or appropriated by that company to or for any person: Provided that a transferee company shall not, as a result of the compromise or arrangement, hold any shares in its own name or in the name of any trust whether on its behalf or on behalf of any of its subsidiary or associate companies and any such shares shall be cancelled or extinguished; (c) the continuation by or against the transferee company of any legal proceedings pending by or against any transferor company on the date of transfer; (d) dissolution, without winding-up, of any transferor company; (e) the provision to be made for any persons who, within such time and in such manner as the Tribunal directs, dissent from the compromise or arrangement; (f) where share capital is held by any non-resident shareholder under the foreign direct investment norms or guidelines specified by the Central Government or in accordance with any law for the time being in force, the allotment of shares of the transferee company to such shareholder shall be in the manner specified in the order; (g) the transfer of the employees of the transferor company to the transferee company; (h) where the transferor company is a listed company and the transferee company is an unlisted company,— (A) the transferee company shall remain an unlisted company until it becomes a listed company; (B) if shareholders of the transferor company decide to opt out of the transferee company, provision shall be made for payment of the value of sharesheld by them and other benefits in accordance with a pre-determined price formula or after a valuation is made, and the arrangements under this provision may be made by the Tribunal: Provided that the amount of payment or valuation under this clause for anyshare shall not be less than what has been specified by the Securities and Exchange Board under any regulations framed by it; (i) where the transferor company is dissolved, the fee, if any, paid by the transferor company on its authorised capital shall be set-off against any fees payable by the transferee company on its authorised capital subsequent to the amalgamation; and (j) such incidental, consequential and supplemental matters as are deemed necessary to secure that the merger or amalgamation is fully and effectively carried out: Provided that no compromise or arrangement shall be sanctioned by the Tribunal unless a certificate by the company’s auditor has been filed with the Tribunal to the effect that the accounting treatment, if any, proposed in the scheme of compromise or arrangement is in conformity with the accounting standards prescribed under section 133. (4) Where an order under this section provides for the transfer of any property or liabilities, then, by virtue of the order, that property shall be transferred to the transferee company and the liabilities shall be transferred to and become the liabilities of the transferee company and any property may, if the order so directs, be freed from any charge which shall by virtue of the compromise or arrangement, cease to have effect. (5) Every company in relation to which the order is made shall cause a certified copy of the order to be filed with the Registrar for registration within thirty days of the receipt of certified copy of the order. (6) The scheme under this section shall clearly indicate an appointed date from which it shall be effective and the scheme shall be deemed to be effective from such date and not at a date subsequent to the appointed date. (7) Every company in relation to which the order is made shall, until the completion of the scheme, file a statement in such form and within such time as may be prescribed with the Registrar every year duly certified by a chartered accountant or a cost accountant or a company secretary in practice indicating whether the scheme is being complied with in accordance with the orders of the Tribunal or not. [(8) If a company fails to comply with sub-section (5), the company and every officer of the company who is in default shall be liable to a penalty of twenty thousand rupees, and where the failure is a continuing one, with a further penalty of one thousand rupees for each day after the first during which such failure continues, subject to a maximum of three lakh rupees.] Explanation.—For the purposes of this section,— (i) in a scheme involving a merger, where under the scheme the undertaking, property and liabilities of one or more companies, including the company in respect of which the compromise or arrangement is proposed, are to be transferred to another existing company, it is a merger by absorption, or where the undertaking, property and liabilities of two or more companies, including the company in respect of which the compromise or arrangement is proposed, are to be transferred to a new company, whether or not a public company, it is a merger by formation of a new company; (ii) references to merging companies are in relation to a merger by absorption, to the transferor and transferee companies, and, in relation to a merger by formation of a new company, to the transferor companies; (iii) a scheme involves a division, where under the scheme the undertaking, property and liabilities of the company in respect of which the compromise or arrangement is proposed are to be divided among and transferred to two or more companies each of which is either an existing company or a new company; and (iv) property includes assets, rights and interests of every description and liabilities include debts and obligations of every description.

Finin2min decode

  • Section 232 works with section 230 where the arrangement is connected with reconstruction, merger or amalgamation and all or part of an undertaking, property or liabilities will transfer.
  • The Tribunal may order meetings and require circulation of the draft scheme, directors’ report explaining effect and share-exchange ratio, valuation report, supplementary accounting statements where needed and other prescribed information.
  • The sanction order may transfer property and liabilities, allot or appropriate shares, continue proceedings, dissolve a transferor without winding up, address dissenters and foreign shareholders, and make incidental provisions.
  • Any treasury shares held by a transferee in the transferor, including through trust, are cancelled or extinguished and cannot be allotted under the scheme.
  • Accounting treatment must comply with section 133 standards and be supported by an auditor certificate.
  • The scheme must state an appointed date and is deemed effective from that date, but becomes legally operative through the order and filing mechanics.
  • A certified order is filed with the Registrar within 30 days. Annual CAA-8 compliance statements continue until the scheme is fully implemented.
  • Where the transferor is listed and the transferee is unlisted, the order must address listing or exit mechanics in the statutory manner.
Practical example: A listed parent demerges a business into an unlisted resulting company. The scheme must solve class approval, exchange ratio, accounting, tax, creditor protection, listing/exit, employee transfer, licenses, appointed date and post-order implementation as one integrated design.
Evidence file: Scheme and schedules, board reports, valuation/fairness materials, supplementary accounts, auditor certificate, regulatory approvals, NCLT pleadings/order, INC-28 filing, CAA-8 statements, asset/liability and employee transfer registers.
Section 233

Merger or amalgamation of certain companies

Create an administrative fast-track route for eligible company classes without the ordinary NCLT sanction process.

Current Bare Act text

233. Merger or amalgamation of certain companies.—(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 230 and section 232, a scheme of merger or amalgamation may be entered into between two or more small companies or between a holding company and its wholly-owned subsidiary company or such other class or classes of companies as may be prescribed, subject to the following, namely:— (a) a notice of the proposed scheme inviting objections or suggestions, if any, from the Registrar and Official Liquidators where registered office of the respective companies are situated or persons affected by the scheme within thirty days is issued by the transferor company or companies and the transferee company; (b) the objections and suggestions received are considered by the companies in their respective general meetings and the scheme is approved by the respective members or class of members at a general meeting holding at least ninety per cent. of the total number of shares; (c) each of the companies involved in the merger files a declaration of solvency, in the prescribed form, with the Registrar of the place where the registered office of the company is situated; and (d) the scheme is approved by majority representing nine-tenths in value of the creditors or class of creditors of respective companies indicated in a meeting convened by the company by giving a notice of twenty-one days along with the scheme to its creditors for the purpose or otherwise approved in writing. (2) The transferee company shall file a copy of the scheme so approved in the manner as may be prescribed, with the Central Government, Registrar and the Official Liquidator where the registered office of the company is situated. (3) On the receipt of the scheme, if the Registrar or the Official Liquidator has no objections or suggestions to the scheme, the Central Government shall register the same and issue a confirmation thereof to the companies. (4) If the Registrar or Official Liquidator has any objections or suggestions, he may communicate the same in writing to the Central Government within a period of thirty days: Provided that if no such communication is made, it shall be presumed that he has no objection to the scheme. (5) If the Central Government after receiving the objections or suggestions or for any reason is of the opinion that such a scheme is not in public interest or in the interest of the creditors, it may file an application before the Tribunal within a period of sixty days of the receipt of the scheme under sub-section (2) stating its objections and requesting that the Tribunal may consider the scheme under section 232. (6) On receipt of an application from the Central Government or from any person, if the Tribunal, for reasons to be recorded in writing, is of the opinion that the scheme should be considered as per the procedure laid down in section 232, the Tribunal may direct accordingly or it may confirm the scheme by passing such order as it deems fit: Provided that if the Central Government does not have any objection to the scheme or it does not file any application under this section before the Tribunal, it shall be deemed that it has no objection to the scheme. (7) A copy of the order under sub-section (6) confirming the scheme shall be communicated to the Registrar having jurisdiction over the transferee company and the persons concerned and the Registrar shall register the scheme and issue a confirmation thereof to the companies and such confirmation shall be communicated to the Registrars where transferor company or companies were situated. (8) The registration of the scheme under sub-section (3) or sub-section (7) shall be deemed to have the effect of dissolution of the transferor company without process of winding-up. (9) The registration of the scheme shall have the following effects, namely:— (a) transfer of property or liabilities of the transferor company to the transferee company so that the property becomes the property of the transferee company and the liabilities become the liabilities of the transferee company; (b) the charges, if any, on the property of the transferor company shall be applicable and enforceable as if the charges were on the property of the transferee company; (c) legal proceedings by or against the transferor company pending before any court of law shall be continued by or against the transferee company; and (d) where the scheme provides for purchase of shares held by the dissenting shareholders or settlement of debt due to dissenting creditors, such amount, to the extent it is unpaid, shall become the liability of the transferee company. (10) A transferee company shall not on merger or amalgamation, hold any shares in its own name or in the name of any trust either on its behalf or on behalf of any of its subsidiary or associate company and all such shares shall be cancelled or extinguished on the merger or amalgamation. (11) The transferee company shall file an application with the Registrar along with the scheme registered, indicating the revised authorised capital and pay the prescribed fees due on revised capital: Provided that the fee, if any, paid by the transferor company on its authorised capital prior to its merger or amalgamation with the transferee company shall be set-off against the fees payable by the transferee company on its authorised capital enhanced by the merger or amalgamation. (12) The provisions of this section shall mutatis mutandis apply to a company or companies specified in sub-section (1) in respect of a scheme of compromise or arrangement referred to in section 230 or division or transfer of a company referred to clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 232. (13) The Central Government may provide for the merger or amalgamation of companies in such manner as may be prescribed. (14) A company covered under this section may use the provisions of section 232 for the approval of any scheme for merger or amalgamation.

Finin2min decode

  • Eligible companies use section 233 subject to the current prescribed classes. Historically this covered small companies and holding company/wholly-owned subsidiary mergers; start-up combinations were added, and the notified 2025 rules widened eligibility for additional unlisted companies subject to borrowing and default conditions.
  • Each company issues notice of the proposed scheme to the Registrar, Official Liquidator and affected persons for objections/suggestions.
  • Members holding at least 90% of total shares approve under current enacted section 233(1)(b). The 2026 Bill proposes a 75% value-of-shares-present-and-voting test, but that is not current law.
  • Each company files a declaration of solvency. Creditors representing nine-tenths in value approve under current law.
  • The transferee files the approved scheme with the Central Government, Registrar and Official Liquidator. The confirmation authority may confirm, raise concerns or refer the scheme to the Tribunal.
  • Confirmation transfers assets and liabilities, dissolves the transferor without winding up, cancels inter-company holdings and imposes the required filing and fee consequences.
  • A company may still choose the section 232 route.
Practical example: Two eligible unlisted operating companies with low debt and no repayment default propose a merger. Before relying on the 2025 expanded class, they should test exclusion of section 8 companies, borrowing measurement date, auditor certification, solvency, member/creditor thresholds and all current CAA form instructions.
Evidence file: Eligibility memo, borrowing and default certificate, CAA-9 notice, objections log, CAA-10 solvency declarations, member and creditor consents, authority filings, confirmation order and post-merger ROC records.
Section 234

Merger or amalgamation of company with foreign company

Permit inbound and outbound cross-border combinations under Companies Act and RBI rules.

Current Bare Act text

234. Merger or amalgamation of company with foreign company.—(1) The provisions of this Chapter unless otherwise provided under any other law for the time being in force, shall apply mutatis mutandis to schemes of mergers and amalgamations between companies registered under this Act and companies incorporated in the jurisdictions of such countries as may be notified from time to time by the Central Government: Provided that the Central Government may make rules, in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India, in connection with mergers and amalgamations provided under this section. (2) Subject to the provisions of any other law for the time being in force, a foreign company, may with the prior approval of the Reserve Bank of India, merge into a company registered under this Act or vice versa and the terms and conditions of the scheme of merger may provide, among other things, for the payment of consideration to the shareholders of the merging company in cash, or in Depository Receipts, or partly in cash and partly in Depository Receipts, as the case may be, as per the scheme to be drawn up for the purpose. Explanation.—For the purposes of sub-section (2), the expression “foreign company” means any company or body corporate incorporated outside India whether having a place of business in India or not.

Finin2min decode

  • Chapter XV applies mutatis mutandis to mergers between Indian companies and foreign companies in notified jurisdictions.
  • Prior approval of the Reserve Bank of India is required; compliance with the Foreign Exchange Management (Cross Border Merger) Regulations can operate as deemed approval where their conditions are fully met.
  • Consideration may include cash, depository receipts or a combination, subject to applicable law.
  • Inbound and outbound structures require jurisdiction eligibility, valuation, FEMA, tax, sectoral, competition, sanctions, employee, data and creditor analysis.
  • Rule 25A includes declaration requirements for entities from countries sharing a land border with India.
  • The 2024 rule change created a faster reverse-merger route for a foreign holding company into its wholly-owned Indian subsidiary, using the section 233 administrative process subject to RBI and prescribed conditions.
Practical example: A Singapore holding company proposes to merge into its wholly-owned Indian operating subsidiary before an Indian IPO. The team must test the fast-track reverse-flip rule, RBI conditions, tax cost, investor share issuance, overseas assets/liabilities, valuation and sectoral approvals rather than assuming Companies Act approval alone is sufficient.
Evidence file: Jurisdiction certificate, RBI/FEMA analysis, valuation and share-exchange report, tax opinion, foreign-law documents, sanctions/beneficial-owner checks, sectoral approvals, CAA filings and post-merger foreign asset/liability register.
Section 235

Power to acquire shares of dissenting shareholders

Enable a transferee to compulsorily acquire dissenting shares after a qualifying 90% approval.

Current Bare Act text

235. Power to acquire shares of shareholders dissenting from scheme or contract approved by majority.—(1) Where a scheme or contract involving the transfer of shares or any class of shares in a company (the transferor company) to another company (the transferee company) has, within four months after making of an offer in that behalf by the transferee company, been approved by the holders of not less than nine-tenths in value of the shares whose transfer is involved, other than shares already held at the date of the offer by, or by a nominee of the transferee company or its subsidiary companies, the transferee company may, at any time within two months after the expiry of the said four months, give notice in the prescribed manner to any dissenting shareholder that it desires to acquire his shares. (2) Where a notice under sub-section (1) is given, the transferee company shall, unless on an application made by the dissenting shareholder to the Tribunal, within one month from the date on which the notice was given and the Tribunal thinks fit to order otherwise, be entitled to and bound to acquire those shares on the terms on which, under the scheme or contract, the shares of the approving shareholders are to be transferred to the transferee company. (3) Where a notice has been given by the transferee company under sub-section (1) and the Tribunal has not, on an application made by the dissenting shareholder, made an order to the contrary, the transferee company shall, on the expiry of one month from the date on which the notice has been given, or, if an application to the Tribunal by the dissenting shareholder is then pending, after that application has been disposed of, send a copy of the notice to the transferor company together with an instrument of transfer, to be executed on behalf of the shareholder by any person appointed by the transferor company and on its own behalf by the transferee company, and pay or transfer to the transferor company the amount or other consideration representing the price payable by the transferee company for the shares which, by virtue of this section, that company is entitled to acquire, and the transferor company shall— (a) thereupon register the transferee company as the holder of those shares; and (b) within one month of the date of such registration, inform the dissenting shareholders of the fact of such registration and of the receipt of the amount or other consideration representing the price payable to them by the transferee company. (4) Any sum received by the transferor company under this section shall be paid into a separate bank account, and any such sum and any other consideration so received shall be held by that company in trust for the several persons entitled to the shares in respect of which the said sum or other consideration were respectively received and shall be disbursed to the entitled shareholders within sixty days. (5) In relation to an offer made by a transferee company to shareholders of a transferor company before the commencement of this Act, this section shall have effect with the following modifications, namely:— (a) in sub-section (1), for the words “the shares whose transfer is involved other than shares already held at the date of the offer by, or by a nominee of, the transferee company or its subsidiaries,”, the words “the shares affected” shall be substituted; and (b) in sub-section (3), the words “together with an instrument of transfer, to be executed on behalf of the shareholder by any person appointed by the transferee company and on its own behalf by the transferor company” shall be omitted. Explanation.—For the purposes of this section, “dissenting shareholder” includes a shareholder who has not assented to the scheme or contract and any shareholder who has failed or refused to transfer his shares to the transferee company in accordance with the scheme or contract.

Finin2min decode

  • Where a transfer scheme or contract is approved within four months by holders of at least 90% in value of the shares whose transfer is involved, the transferee may give statutory notice to dissenters within two months after that four-month period.
  • A dissenter may apply to the Tribunal within one month of notice. Unless the Tribunal orders otherwise, the transferee becomes entitled and bound to acquire on the approved terms.
  • The transferor registers the transferee and holds consideration in trust for dissenters once statutory documents and consideration are delivered.
  • The section includes special treatment where the transferee or its nominee already holds substantial shares and contains rights for remaining shareholders where the transferee reaches the specified threshold.
  • The procedure is document- and timeline-sensitive and is distinct from section 236 minority squeeze-out.
Practical example: An acquirer obtains approval from 94% in value of the target shares under a transfer contract. It must calculate the statutory four-month and two-month windows, identify dissenters, serve compliant notices and prepare for a one-month Tribunal challenge period.
Evidence file: Offer/contract, acceptance register, threshold calculation, dissenter list, notice and service proof, Tribunal status, consideration deposit and trust ledger, transfer register.
Section 236

Purchase of minority shareholding

Create a 90% majority/minority buyout framework with reciprocal sell rights and registered valuation.

Current Bare Act text

236. Purchase of minority shareholding.—(1) In the event of an acquirer, or a person acting in concert with such acquirer, becoming registered holder of ninety per cent. or more of the issued equity share capital of a company, or in the event of any person or group of persons becoming ninety per cent. majority or holding ninety per cent. of the issued equity share capital of a company, by virtue of an amalgamation, share exchange, conversion of securities or for any other reason, such acquirer, person or group of persons, as the case may be, shall notify the company of their intention to buy the remaining equity shares. (2) The acquirer, person or group of persons under sub-section (1) shall offer to the minority shareholders of the company for buying the equity shares held by such shareholders at a price determined on the basis of valuation by a registered valuer in accordance with such rules as may be prescribed. (3) Without prejudice to the provisions of sub-sections (1) and (2), the minority shareholders of the company may offer to the majority shareholders to purchase the minority equity shareholding of the company at the price determined in accordance with such rules as may be prescribed under sub-section (2). (4) The majority shareholders shall deposit an amount equal to the value of shares to be acquired by them under sub-section (2) or sub-section (3), as the case may be, in a separate bank account to be operated by the [company whose shares are being transferred] for at least one year for payment to the minority shareholders and such amount shall be disbursed to the entitled shareholders within sixty days: Provided that such disbursement shall continue to be made to the entitled shareholders for a period of one year, who for any reason had not been made disbursement within the said period of sixty days or if the disbursement have been made within the aforesaid period of sixty days, fail to receive or claim payment arising out of such disbursement. (5) In the event of a purchase under this section, the [company whose shares are being transferred] shall act as a transfer agent for receiving and paying the price to the minority shareholders and for taking delivery of the shares and delivering such shares to the majority, as the case may be. (6) In the absence of a physical delivery of shares by the shareholders within the time specified by the company, the share certificates shall be deemed to be cancelled, and the [company whose shares are being transferred] shall be authorised to issue shares in lieu of the cancelled shares and complete the transfer in accordance with law and make payment of the price out of deposit made under sub-section (4) by the majority in advance to the minority by dispatch of such payment. (7) In the event of a majority shareholder or shareholders requiring a full purchase and making payment of price by deposit with the company for any shareholder or shareholders who have died or ceased to exist, or whose heirs, successors, administrators or assignees have not been brought on record by transmission, the right of such shareholders to make an offer for sale of minority equity shareholding shall continue and be available for a period of three years from the date of majority acquisition or majority shareholding. (8) Where the shares of minority shareholders have been acquired in pursuance of this section and as on or prior to the date of transfer following such acquisition, the shareholders holding seventy-five per cent. or more minority equity shareholding negotiate or reach an understanding on a higher price for any transfer, proposed or agreed upon, of the shares held by them without disclosing the fact or likelihood of transfer taking place on the basis of such negotiation, understanding or agreement, the majority shareholders shall share the additional compensation so received by them with such minority shareholders on a pro rata basis. Explanation.—For the purposes of this section, the expressions “acquirer” and “person acting in concert” shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in clause (b) and clause (e) of sub- regulation (1) of regulation 2 of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations, 1997. (9) When a shareholder or the majority equity shareholder fails to acquire full purchase of the shares of the minority equity shareholders, then, the provisions of this section shall continue to apply to the residual minority equity shareholders, even though,— (a) the shares of the company of the residual minority equity shareholder had been delisted; and (b) the period of one year or the period specified in the regulations made by the Securities and Exchange Board under the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 (15 of 1992), had elapsed.

Finin2min decode

  • When an acquirer/persons acting in concert or any person/group holds 90% or more of issued equity share capital, the majority must notify the company of its intention to buy the remaining equity shares.
  • Minority shareholders can also offer their shares to the majority.
  • Price is determined by a registered valuer under the prescribed methodology; listed-company securities-law requirements may also apply.
  • The majority deposits the full purchase value in a separate bank account operated by the company; payment is made within 60 days and the account remains available for one year for unclaimed amounts.
  • The company acts as transfer agent. Where physical shares are not delivered, statutory deemed-cancellation and replacement mechanics can complete transfer.
  • Rights continue for certain deceased/untraced holders for three years, and undisclosed higher-price arrangements may require pro-rata sharing of additional consideration.
  • Residual minority rights continue even after delisting or expiry of a one-year/securities-regulation period.
Practical example: A promoter group reaches 92% after a conversion. Before commencing the section 236 process, the company should confirm the issued-equity denominator, persons acting in concert, valuation date, separate bank funding, beneficial ownership and treatment of unclaimed/deceased holdings.
Evidence file: Cap table, PAC analysis, board notice, registered valuation, bank deposit proof, minority offer/notice, payment and unclaimed ledger, share cancellation/reissue records.
Section 237

Power of Central Government to provide for amalgamation in public interest

Allow compulsory public-interest amalgamation by notified Central Government order.

Current Bare Act text

237. Power of Central Government to provide for amalgamation of companies in public interest.—(1) Where the Central Government is satisfied that it is essential in the public interest that two or more companies should amalgamate, the Central Government may, by order notified in the Official Gazette, provide for the amalgamation of those companies into a single company with such constitution, with such property, powers, rights, interests, authorities and privileges, and with such liabilities, duties and obligations, as may be specified in the order. (2) The order under sub-section (1) may also provide for the continuation by or against the transferee company of any legal proceedings pending by or against any transferor company and such consequential, incidental and supplemental provisions as may, in the opinion of the Central Government, be necessary to give effect to the amalgamation. (3) Every member or creditor, including a debenture holder, of each of the transferor companies before the amalgamation shall have, as nearly as may be, the same interest in or rights against the transferee company as he had in the company of which he was originally a member or creditor, and in case the interest or rights of such member or creditor in or against the transferee company are less than his interest in or rights against the original company, he shall be entitled to compensation to that extent, which shall be assessed by such authority as may be prescribed and every such assessment shall be published in the Official Gazette, and the compensation so assessed shall be paid to the member or creditor concerned by the transferee company. (4) Any person aggrieved by any assessment of compensation made by the prescribed authority under sub-section (3) may, within a period of thirty days from the date of publication of such assessment in the Official Gazette, prefer an appeal to the Tribunal and thereupon the assessment of the compensation shall be made by the Tribunal. (5) No order shall be made under this section unless— (a) a copy of the proposed order has been sent in draft to each of the companies concerned; (b) the time for preferring an appeal under sub-section (4) has expired, or where any such appeal has been preferred, the appeal has been finally disposed off; and (c) the Central Government has considered, and made such modifications, if any, in the draft order as it may deem fit in the light of suggestions and objections which may be received by it from any such company within such period as the Central Government may fix in that behalf, not being less than two months from the date on which the copy aforesaid is received by that company, or from any class of shareholders therein, or from any creditors or any class of creditors thereof. (6) The copies of every order made under this section shall, as soon as may be after it has been made, be laid before each House of Parliament.

Finin2min decode

  • The Central Government may order two or more companies to amalgamate where it considers the step essential in public interest.
  • The order can specify constitution, property, powers, rights, liabilities, proceedings and incidental provisions.
  • Members and creditors should receive substantially equivalent interests; shortfall is compensated through prescribed assessment with a 30-day Tribunal appeal.
  • Draft orders go to affected companies, with at least two months for suggestions/objections, and appeals/compensation steps must be addressed before final order.
  • Every final order is laid before Parliament.
Practical example: A systemically important sector requires consolidation of two distressed entities to protect public interest. The Government route still requires draft-order notice, consideration of objections, compensation protection and Parliamentary laying.
Evidence file: Public-interest record, draft order, service proof, stakeholder objections, compensation assessment, Tribunal appeal status, final Gazette order.
Section 238

Registration of offer of schemes involving transfer of shares

Ensure offer circulars under section 235 contain adequate information and verified funding statements.

Current Bare Act text

238. Registration of offer of schemes involving transfer of shares.—(1) In relation to every offer of a scheme or contract involving the transfer of shares or any class of shares in the transferor company to the transferee company under section 235,— (a) every circular containing such offer and recommendation to the members of the transferor company by its directors to accept such offer shall be accompanied by such information and in such manner as may be prescribed; (b) every such offer shall contain a statement by or on behalf of the transferee company, disclosing the steps it has taken to ensure that necessary cash will be available; and (c) every such circular shall be presented to the Registrar for registration and no such circular shall be issued until it is so registered: Provided that the Registrar may refuse, for reasons to be recorded in writing, to register any such circular which does not contain the information required to be given under clause (a) or which sets out such information in a manner likely to give a false impression, and communicate such refusal to the parties within thirty days of the application. (2) An appeal shall lie to the Tribunal against an order of the Registrar refusing to register any circular under sub-section (1). (3) The director who issues a circular which has not been presented for registration and registered under clause (c) of sub-section (1), shall be [liable to a penalty of one lakh rupees.]

Finin2min decode

  • Every directors’ circular recommending acceptance must contain prescribed information and accompany the offer.
  • The transferee states the steps taken to ensure necessary cash is available.
  • The circular must be presented to and registered by the Registrar before issue.
  • The Registrar may refuse within 30 days where information is missing or misleading; appeal lies to the Tribunal.
  • Issuing an unregistered circular attracts a penalty of Rs 1 lakh for the responsible director.
Practical example: A takeover circular states that funding is “arranged” but provides no evidence. The Registrar may refuse registration; the transferee should document committed funds and avoid language that creates a false impression.
Evidence file: Draft circular, prescribed disclosures, cash-availability evidence, ROC submission and registration, board recommendation and distribution record.
Section 239

Preservation of books and papers of amalgamated companies

Prevent post-merger destruction of records that may contain evidence of offences.

Current Bare Act text

239. Preservation of books and papers of amalgamated companies.—The books and papers of a company which has been amalgamated with, or whose shares have been acquired by, another company under this Chapter shall not be disposed of without the prior permission of the Central Government and before granting such permission, that Government may appoint a person to examine the books and papers or any of them for the purpose of ascertaining whether they contain any evidence of the commission of an offence in connection with the promotion or formation, or the management of the affairs, of the transferor company or its amalgamation or the acquisition of its shares.

Finin2min decode

  • Books and papers of an amalgamated company or a company whose shares were acquired under the Chapter cannot be disposed of without prior Central Government permission.
  • The Government may first appoint a person to examine whether the records contain evidence of offences connected with formation, management, amalgamation or acquisition.
  • This section overrides ordinary document-destruction schedules for affected legacy records.
Practical example: After a merger, the group proposes to destroy the transferor’s old email archive under its eight-year policy. It should ring-fence Chapter XV records and obtain required permission before disposal.
Evidence file: Legacy-record inventory, preservation hold, custodian map, Government permission, examination report and destruction certificate.
Section 240

Liability of officers for offences committed before merger or acquisition

Preserve personal liability for transferor-company offences after corporate restructuring.

Current Bare Act text

240. Liability of officers in respect of offences committed prior to merger, amalgamation, etc.— Notwithstanding anything in any other law for the time being in force, the liability in respect of offences committed under this Act by the officers in default, of the transferor company prior to its merger, amalgamation or acquisition shall continue after such merger, amalgamation or acquisition.

Finin2min decode

  • Merger, amalgamation or acquisition does not extinguish the liability of officers in default for pre-transaction Companies Act offences.
  • Due diligence, indemnity and insurance allocate economic risk but do not erase statutory liability.
  • Post-closing investigation and evidence access should be addressed in transaction documents and retention controls.
Practical example: A transferor filed a false return before merger. Its former officers can remain exposed after dissolution; the transferee should preserve records and cooperation rights rather than assume the merger cured the default.
Evidence file: Pre-closing compliance report, disclosure schedule, officer list, indemnity and D&O review, record-access covenant, investigation cooperation plan.
CAA Rules, 2016

Rule-by-rule operating register

The principal Rules dated 14 December 2016 have been amended repeatedly, including takeover, start-up, cross-border, fast-track timing, reverse-flip and 2025 eligibility changes. Portal forms and the latest Gazette text must be checked on filing date.

RuleSubjectPractical operating effect
1-2Title, commencement and definitionsUse the Act definitions, NCLT Rules, registered valuer framework and current electronic-form instructions together.
3Application for meeting orderApplication is filed with the scheme, prescribed disclosures, creditor/member data and supporting affidavit; the Tribunal may require additional material.
3AUnlisted-company takeover offerA member with persons acting in concert holding at least three-fourths of shares may seek a section 230 takeover arrangement, supported by registered valuation and a separate bank deposit of at least half the consideration.
4Applicant disclosuresIdentify the applicant, companies, relationship, capital, objects, financial position, investigations, scheme purpose, stakeholders, valuation and material interests.
5Directions at first hearingTribunal fixes classes, meetings, chairperson/scrutiniser, quorum, notice, advertisement, voting modes, claim cut-off and reporting.
6Individual noticeCAA-2 notice carries the scheme, explanatory statement, valuation and voting instructions through permitted service modes sufficiently before meeting.
7AdvertisementMeeting notice is advertised in English and vernacular newspapers and placed on relevant websites; joint publication may be directed.
8Notice to authoritiesCAA-3 goes to Central Government, income-tax, RBI, SEBI, ROC, stock exchanges, Official Liquidator, CCI and affected sector regulators; representations are expected within 30 days.
9-10Voting and proxiesVoting rights, claims, proxies, authorised representatives, postal/electronic methods and lodging deadlines follow the Tribunal directions and Rules.
11-13Free copies, service affidavit and meeting reportScheme copies are furnished free; service/advertisement compliance is sworn; the chairperson reports voting and objections in CAA-4.
14-16Sanction petition, hearing and orderCAA-5 petition follows the meeting report; hearing is advertised/served; sanction order is drawn in CAA-6 and filed with ROC within 30 days.
17-18Section 232 merger application and orderAdditional merger documents, draft scheme, exchange ratio, valuation, supplementary accounts and accounting certificate support directions and the CAA-7 order.
19Annual compliance statementCAA-8 is filed within the prescribed post-year-end period each year until implementation, certified by a practising CA/CS/CMA.
20-24Working reports, liberty, inspection, fees and connected procedureTribunal can monitor working; parties may seek directions; records remain inspectable subject to orders; fees and NCLT procedure apply.
25Fast-track mergerCAA-9 notice, CAA-10 solvency, member/creditor approvals and CAA-11 onward filings support time-bound confirmation or reference to NCLT. Deemed/mandatory action timelines introduced in 2023 must be tracked.
25ACross-border mergerPermitted jurisdictions, RBI/FEMA compliance, valuation and prescribed declarations apply. Land-border-country combinations require CAA-16 declaration. The 2024 reverse-flip route uses section 233 for qualifying foreign holding company/WOS Indian combinations.
2025 amendmentExpanded fast-track classAdditional unlisted companies can use Rule 25 where each satisfies the notified borrowing/no-default conditions; section 8 companies are excluded. Obtain current auditor certificate and form text before relying on the class.
Fast-track mergers

Section 233 and Rule 25 current decision framework

Eligibility file

  • Company class under current Rule 25
  • Listed/unlisted and section 8 status
  • Small/start-up/group relationship
  • 2025 borrowing threshold and measurement date
  • No repayment default evidence
  • Auditor certificate and solvency

Approval file

  • CAA-9 notice and objection period
  • Current section 233 member threshold
  • Current 90% creditor-in-value threshold
  • CAA-10 declaration of solvency
  • ROC/Official Liquidator observations
  • Regional Director confirmation or NCLT referral
2025 current update: contemporaneous notification reporting states that eligible unlisted companies, other than section 8 companies, were added where each company’s borrowings are below Rs 200 crore at the prescribed point and there is no repayment default. Verify the Gazette wording, auditor certificate and portal form on the filing date.
Do not apply the 2026 Bill early: the proposed shift to a 75% present-and-voting member test and 75% creditor value is not current enacted section 233 law.
Cross-border restructuring

Section 234, Rule 25A and FEMA control map

AreaInbound mergerOutbound mergerControl question
Resultant entityIndian companyForeign companyWhere will ownership, assets and liabilities legally reside?
RBI/FEMAForeign investment, overseas assets/liabilities, guarantees and borrowing rulesResident ownership of foreign securities, Indian assets/business and permitted liabilitiesDoes the structure meet deemed-approval conditions or need specific RBI approval?
ValuationInternationally accepted pricing methodology by prescribed/recognised professionalsAre share exchange, cash and depository receipts supportable?
TaxTax neutrality and shareholder consequences depend on statutory conditionsOutbound structures can create significant company/shareholder taxHas tax been modelled before finalising consideration?
JurisdictionForeign jurisdiction must meet notified eligibility and regulatory standardsAre sanctions, AML, beneficial ownership and enforcement standards acceptable?
Reverse flipForeign holding company into Indian WOS may use the 2024 fast-track routeNot the typical use caseAre section 233, RBI and foreign-law conditions all met?
Frequent failure: treating an RBI/FEMA-compliant structure as automatically Companies Act, tax, competition, securities and sector compliant.
Accounting, tax and regulatory integration

One scheme, multiple legal systems

Accounting

Identify common-control or acquisition accounting, appointed date, reserves, goodwill/capital reserve, inter-company elimination, share capital and auditor certification.

Income tax

Test statutory amalgamation/demerger definitions, continuity of business/assets, shareholder consideration, losses, withholding, stamp and indirect tax consequences.

Competition

Assess CCI combination thresholds, exemptions, standstill and sequence before scheme effectiveness.

Securities law

Listed entities require stock-exchange/SEBI scheme process, valuation/fairness, public shareholder voting where applicable and listing/exit mechanics.

Sector regulators

RBI, IRDAI, PFRDA, CERC, telecom, aviation and other licenses can require prior consent or change-of-control approval.

Stamp and property

State stamp duty, land records, lease consents, charges, registrations and local transfer mechanics must be budgeted.

Minority and dissent

Sections 235 and 236 are not interchangeable

Section 235

  • Starts with a transfer scheme or contract
  • 90% in value approval within four months
  • Transferee gives notice to dissenters
  • One-month Tribunal challenge
  • Acquisition on the approved scheme terms

Section 236

  • Starts when equity holding reaches 90%
  • Majority buy obligation and minority sell right
  • Registered valuer determines price
  • Full value deposited in separate bank account
  • 60-day payment and one-year unclaimed mechanism
Check listed-company overlays: takeover, delisting, open-offer, valuation and stock-exchange requirements may operate in addition to Chapter XV.
Forms and evidence

CAA and implementation filing matrix

Form / recordPurposeControl point
CAA-1Creditor responsibility statement for corporate debt restructuringUse only where section 230(2)(c) applies and reconcile all secured debt.
CAA-2Meeting notice and advertisementScheme, explanatory statement, valuation and voting information must agree.
CAA-3Notice to statutory authoritiesMaintain 30-day response tracker and proof of service.
CAA-4Chairperson’s meeting reportShow class, attendance, votes, invalid votes, objections and result.
CAA-5Petition for sanctionFile after meeting report with complete compliance affidavit.
CAA-6Order on compromise/arrangementCertified copy and ROC filing within section 230 timeline.
CAA-7Merger/amalgamation orderCapture transfer, dissolution, consideration, appointed date and incidental directions.
CAA-8Annual statement of scheme complianceContinue each year until full implementation; professional certification required.
CAA-9 to CAA-15Fast-track notice, solvency, authority and confirmation/referral sequenceUse current substituted e-forms and Regional Director instructions.
CAA-16Land-border-country declaration for specified cross-border schemesConfirm beneficial ownership and applicable government approval.
INC-28Filing of NCLT/authority order with ROCFile against each relevant company and verify master-data effect.
PAS-3 / SH-7 / charge formsPost-scheme capital and security updates where applicableSequence with order, allotment, cancellation and charge transfer/satisfaction.
Scheme implementation registerTrack every condition, asset, liability, employee, license and paymentBoard/Audit Committee sign-off and exception escalation.
2025 CAA form-control alert: G.S.R. 603(E) dated 4 September 2025 revised/substituted Forms CAA-9, CAA-11 and CAA-12 and inserted Form CAA-10A. Use the current MCA electronic form, instruction kit and effective-date transition rather than a pre-2025 specimen.
Case-law orientation

Landmark principles for exams and professional review

CaseWorking principle
Miheer H. Mafatlal v. Mafatlal IndustriesTribunal/court supervises legality, class representation, fairness and public policy; it does not ordinarily replace informed commercial wisdom with its own.
Hindustan Lever Employees’ Union v. Hindustan LeverValuation is an expert exercise; judicial interference generally requires manifest unfairness, illegality or material defect.
S.K. Gupta v. K.P. Jain“Arrangement” is broad and the sanctioning court has implementation/modification power to make a workable scheme.
Marshall Sons & Co. v. ITOAn appointed date in a sanctioned amalgamation has legal/accounting significance subject to the order and statutory framework.
Meghal Homes v. Shree Niwas GirniA scheme in winding up must be genuine, workable, fair and in public interest; revival language cannot mask an unviable proposal.
Arun Kumar Jagatramka v. Jindal SteelA person ineligible under IBC section 29A cannot use a section 230 liquidation scheme as a back-door revival route.
Use full judgments: these are orientation points, not substitutes for the facts, ratio, later cases or current NCLT/NCLAT/SEBI practice.
Applied cases I

Scheme design and approval cases

Wrong creditor class

Situation: Secured lenders with different collateral and priority are placed in one class.

Answer: Reassess whether rights are sufficiently similar for informed common consultation; class error can invalidate the vote.

Meeting dispensation

Situation: Creditors holding 91% in value sign affidavits, but one secured creditor class is omitted.

Answer: Apply the 90% waiver separately to the correctly constituted class and disclose the omitted creditor.

Appointed date

Situation: Scheme states 1 April but completion occurs the following January.

Answer: Use section 232 appointed-date treatment consistently in accounting, tax, operations and order filing; explain any conditionality.

Treasury shares

Situation: Transferee indirectly holds transferor shares through a trust.

Answer: Identify and cancel/extinguish holdings under section 232 rather than allotting shares to itself.

Fast-track eligibility

Situation: An unlisted section 8 company has borrowings below Rs 200 crore.

Answer: The 2025 expanded class excludes section 8 companies; test another eligible class or use section 232.

Debt threshold day

Situation: Company repays borrowings one week before filing to fall below Rs 200 crore.

Answer: Test the prescribed measurement date and auditor certification; a last-minute repayment may not satisfy the rule.

Reverse flip

Situation: US parent proposes merger into Indian WOS before IPO.

Answer: Coordinate section 233/Rule 25A, RBI, foreign law, tax, investor share issue and Indian listing readiness.

Authority silence

Situation: No authority representation arrives within 30 days.

Answer: Document service and expiry; statutory presumption is no representation, not positive substantive approval under every other law.

Applied cases II

Implementation, minority and cross-border cases

Listed-to-unlisted merger

Situation: Listed transferor will dissolve into an unlisted transferee.

Answer: Build listing of transferee or statutory exit for shareholders into the scheme and SEBI process.

Dissenter acquisition

Situation: Transferee reaches 90% approval but serves notices late.

Answer: Section 235 windows are strict; late service can defeat compulsory acquisition.

Minority bank account

Situation: Majority deposits only estimated consideration.

Answer: Section 236 requires amount equal to value of shares; fund the separate account fully and reconcile unclaimed amounts.

Higher side deal

Situation: 75% of minority negotiates a higher post-acquisition price without disclosure.

Answer: Assess pro-rata sharing of additional compensation under section 236(8).

Legacy records

Situation: Transferor records are scheduled for destruction immediately after merger.

Answer: Section 239 requires prior Central Government permission; preserve offence-relevant records.

Pre-merger offence

Situation: Officer says dissolution ended liability for a false ROC filing.

Answer: Section 240 continues officer liability; preserve evidence and cooperation rights.

IBC liquidation scheme

Situation: Ineligible promoter proposes a section 230 scheme during liquidation.

Answer: Apply IBC section 29A/regulation principles and Arun Kumar Jagatramka; Companies Act cannot become a back-door route.

Accounting mismatch

Situation: Scheme uses pooling in the document but acquisition accounting in financial models.

Answer: Resolve before notice and obtain section 133 auditor confirmation; inconsistent accounting can block sanction.

Legislative watch

Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 - proposals only

The Bill introduced on 23 March 2026 is not operative law unless enacted and commenced.

ProvisionProposed changeCurrent treatment
Section 230Remove IBC liquidator references and centralise applications under sections 230-233 before the Tribunal having jurisdiction over the transferee/resultant company, with pending-case transition.Apply the current jurisdiction and IBC-linked text until commencement of any amendment.
Section 232Clarify cancellation/extinguishment of transferee-held transferor shares “on the merger or amalgamation”.Current section 232 cancellation rule remains the baseline.
Section 233 member voteReplace the current 90%-of-total-shares approval with majority in number of members/class present and voting holding at least 75% in value of shares present and voting.Do not use the proposed 75% test today.
Section 233 creditor voteReplace nine-tenths creditor value with at least three-fourths.Current 90% creditor value remains enacted law.
Section 233 noticeOfficial Liquidator filing may be unnecessary for a transfer/division of undertaking.Follow current statutory and Rule 25 service requirements.
New section 233AThree-year disposal/cancellation framework for certain pre-2013 arrangement treasury shares.No current section 233A.
Finin2min visual framework

Scheme and merger approval lifecycle

RM14 Map2
Finin2min visual framework

Fast track, cross-border and minority exit map

RM14 Map1
Finin2min FAQs

Questions professionals ask first

Is a scheme approved merely because 75% voted yes?

No. The class must be correctly constituted, disclosure and procedure must comply, and the Tribunal must sanction an ordinary section 230/232 scheme.

Is there still a headcount test?

Section 230(6) uses a majority of persons representing three-fourths in value, but the 2017 amendment removed the former separate majority-in-number formulation from the statutory approval test.

Who can object to a scheme?

Section 230(4) gives statutory objection standing to persons holding at least 10% shareholding or at least 5% of total outstanding debt, without removing the Tribunal’s broader fairness review.

Can creditor meetings be waived?

Yes, the Tribunal may dispense with a creditor/class meeting where creditors holding at least 90% in value agree by affidavit.

When does a merger become effective?

The scheme states an appointed date, but legal operation depends on sanction/confirmation, filing and scheme conditions. Accounting and tax must follow the final order and applicable standards.

Can every unlisted company use fast track after 2025?

No. The notified class has conditions, including borrowing/no-default tests and exclusion of section 8 companies; other statutory approvals and current forms still apply.

Does authority silence mean approval?

For section 230(5), no representation within 30 days creates a statutory presumption of no representation on the proposal, not automatic clearance under every regulator’s separate law.

Can a foreign parent merge into its Indian subsidiary without NCLT?

A prescribed fast-track reverse-merger route exists subject to Rule 25A, section 233, RBI/FEMA and other conditions. Structure-specific advice remains essential.

What is the difference between sections 235 and 236?

Section 235 follows a 90%-approved transfer contract and dissent notice process; section 236 follows reaching 90% equity and creates majority purchase/minority sell rights at registered valuation.

Can old transferor records be destroyed after merger?

Not without prior Central Government permission under section 239.

Does merger erase old officer defaults?

No. Section 240 expressly preserves liability for pre-merger Companies Act offences.

Can an IBC-ineligible promoter propose a section 230 scheme in liquidation?

The Supreme Court in Arun Kumar Jagatramka held that IBC ineligibility cannot be bypassed through a section 230 scheme in liquidation.