ROC Share Transfer – 1 to 6
What is Share Transfer ?
An important characteristic of a company is that its shares are transferable. Shares or debentures are movable property. They are transferable in the manner provided by the articles of the company, especially, the shares of any member of a public company.
The transfer of securities is possible through any contract or arrangement between two or more persons. The provisions of the Companies Act deals with the transfer and transmission of securities. Transmission of securities means loss of title on these securities due to death, succession, inheritance, bankruptcy etc. In short, it is something other than transfer.
Who has to file the form?
Transfer of shares means the voluntary handing over of the rights and possibly, the duties of a company member (as represented in a share of the company). The rights and duties of the share transfer happen from a shareholder who wishes to not be a member of the company any more to a person who wishes of becoming a member.
Thus, shares in a company are transferable like any other movable property in the absence of any expressed restrictions under the articles of the company.
When has to be done?
- A Company having share capital:The Company shall not register transfer of securities of the Company or member’s interest in the Company other than beneficial owners without a proper instrument of transfer within a period of 60 days from the date of execution.
- Application by transferor alone: The transfer shall not be registered until and unless the company gives notice of the application to transferor and transferee gives no objection certificate within 2 weeks from receipt of the notice.
- Company shall deliver certificates of all securities allotted/ transferred/ transmitted in the following cases and within the following mentioned time limits:-
- In case of subscribers to memorandum– within a period of 2 months from the date of incorporation.
- In case of allotment of any of its shares– within a period of 2 months from allotment date.
- Receipt by the company of the instrument of transfer/ intimation of transmission– within a period of 1 month from the date of receipt.
- Allotment of debenture– within a period of 6 months from the date of allotment.
The following Steps to be followed .
- Step 1: Obtain share transfer deed in the prescribed format.
- Step 2: Execute the share transfer deed duly signed by the Transferor and Transferee.
- Step 3: Stamp the share transfer deed as per the Indian Stamp Act and Stamp Duty Notification in force in the State.
- Step 4: Have a witness sign the share transfer deed with his/her signature, name and address.
- Step 5: Attach the share certificate or allotment letter with the transfer deed and deliver the same to the Company.
- Step 6: The company must process the documents and if approved, issue new share certificate in the name of the transferee.
Procedure for Transfer of Shares under the Companies Act, 2013
- Firstly, the transfer deed needs to be obtained in the prescribed form i.e. Form SH-4, endorsed by the prescribed authority.
- The instrument of transfer may not be in the prescribed form (Form SH-4) in the following cases:
- Where a director or nominee transfers shares on behalf of another body corporate under section 187 of the Companies Act, 2013;
- Where a director or nominee transfers shares on behalf of a corporation owned or controlled by the central or state Government;
- Shares transferred by way of deposit as a security for repayment of any loan or advance If they are made with any of the following:
- State Bank of India; or
- Any scheduled bank; or
- Any other banking company; or
- Financial Institution; or
- Central Government; or
- State Government; or
- Any corporation held by the Central or State Government; or
- Trustees who have filed the declarations.
- For transferring debentures, a standard format can be used as the instrument of transfer.
- Get the Articles of Association in case of shares, trust deed in the case of debentures and transfer deed registered either by the transferor and the transferee or on their behalf in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act, 2013.
- According to the Indian Stamp Act and stamp duty notification in force in the state concerned, the transfer deed should need to have stamps. The present stamp duty rate for transfer of share is 25 paise for every one hundred rupees of the value of the share or part thereof. That means for shares valued Rs. 1,050, the stamp duty will be Rs. 2.75.
- Check that the stamp affixed on the transfer deed is cancelled at the time of or before the signing of the transfer deed.
- A person who gives his signature, name and address as approval for transfer must see the transferor and the transferee sign the share/debentures transfer deed in person.
- The relevant share/debenture certificate or allotment letter with the transfer deed must be attached and sent to the company.
- In case the application made by the transferor is for partly paid shares, the company has to duly notify the amount due on shares/debentures to the transferee. Also, a no objection from the transferee is required within two weeks from the date of receipt of the said notice.
- Affix the same value stamp on a written application if the signed transfer deed has been lost. In this case, the board may register the transfer on specific terms of indemnity as it thinks fit.
- If the shares of the company are listed in a recognized stock exchange, then the company cannot charge any fee for the registration of transfers of shares and debentures.
Note: A company shall not register a transfer of partly paid shares in these two cases:
- The company has given a notice in Form No. SH.5 to the transferee.
- Till the transferee has given a no objection certificate to the transfer within two (2) weeks from the date he received the notice from the company.
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