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Section 11B cannot be invoked in respect of the alleged misc

Raj Kumar Makkad ,
  11 March 2010       Share Bookmark

Court :
Supreme Court of India
Brief :
Company -Alleged misstatement of facts in prospectus of company and misguiding investors - Restraint order from assessing securities market - Power of SEBI to issue directions - Section 11B of the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 - SEBI restrained respondent-Director of Company from assessing securities market on prima facie case that facts were misstated in the prospectus of the company during public issue of shares and therefore, investors were misguided - Appellate Board ruled in favour of respondent on ground that provision of Section 11B cannot be invoked in respect of the alleged misconduct which took place at a point of time when Section 11B was not on the statute book - Whether Section 11B of the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 could be invoked by the Chairman of the in conjunction with Sections 4(3) and 11 for restraining the respondent-Joint Managing Director of the Company from associating with any corporate body in accessing the securities market and prohibiting him from buying, selling or dealing in securities.
Citation :
Securities and Exchange Board of India v. Ajay Agarwal (Decided on 25.02.2010) MANU/SC/0137/2010
Held, the impugned Order was passed by the Board in exercise of its power under Section 4(3) read with Section 11 and Section 11B of the said Act and as per Section 11 of the said Act the Board has the power of restraining a person from accessing the securities market or prohibiting any person associated with securities market to buy, sell or deal in securities. Such power is given to the Board under Section 11(4)(b) of the said Act. Therefore, restrain order passed on the respondent strictly speaking was not under Section 11B of the said Act. However, the provisions of Section 11(4)(B) of the said Act also came by way of amendment in 2002. It should, however, be noted that by the time the Board passed the order on 31st March 2004 all the amendments were on the statute. Therefore, the question here is not of retrospective operation of the amendments. Even if the amendments to the said Act are allowed to operate prospectively by the time the order was passed by the Board, it was empowered by the aforesaid amendments to do so. Therefore, without giving any retrospective operation to those provisions, the impugned order can be passed by the Board in as much as the amendments in questions empowered the Board to pass such an order when it passed the order. So, the question that survives is whether the Board could pass the order in respect of allegations which surfaced prior to the coming into effect of those amendments in 1995 and 2002.

 
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Published in Corporate Law
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