Voluntary Winding Up
Voluntary Winding Up
Voluntary Winding Up
A. By Ordinary Resolution
B. By Special Resolution
A company may at any time pass a special resolution providing that the
company be wound up voluntarily. Winding Up commences at the time when
the resolution is passed. Within fourteen days of the passing of the
resolution, the company shall give notice of the resolution by advertisement
in the Official Gazette and also in some newspaper circulating in the district
of the registered office of the company. The corporate state and powers of
the company shall continue until the company is dissolved, but it shall stop
its business, except so far as may be necessary for beneficial winding up.
1. Board Meeting
2. Notice
3. Publication
4. Meeting Of Creditors
5. Dissolution Of The Company
Past Members:
These are the persons whose names do not appear in the register of members of the
company, as on the date of the commencement of the winding-up of the company;
but were members of the company within one year prior to the commencement of
the winding-up.
They ceased to be members of the company not by death but by transfer or
forfeiture of their shares.
No past member shall be liable to contribute unless it appears to the Court that the
present members are unable to satisfy the contributions required to be made by
them in pursuance of this Act.
A past member shall not be liable to contribute in respect of any debt or liability of
the Company contracted after he ceased to be a member.
In the case of a Company limited by shares, no contribution shall be required from
any past member exceeding the amount, if any, unpaid on the shares in respect of
which he is liable as such member.
In Jtt Chandler and Co. v. H. Philips A 1926 All 550 case, the Court held that
the liability as contributory shall continue unless they get rid of the shares before
one year from the date of commencement of the winding-up and get the names of
transferees registered in the company’s register of members.
In Mirza Ahamad Namazi, re, AIR 1924 Mad 703 case, the Court held that a
person whose shares have been forfeited is also liable as a past member, provided
the liquidation commences within one year of the date of forfeiture and the past
member could not be liable to contribute till liability of present members was
exhausted.