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The Companies Act 2013 (No. 18 of 2013) is an Act of the Parliament of India which forms the primary source of Indian company law. It received presidential assent on 29 August 2013, and largely superseded the Companies Act 1956 .
The Amendment Act (21 of 2015), passed to consolidate and amend the 2013 Companies Act, received assent from the President of India on 25 May 2015, and contained 23 sections. Official notice was published in the Gazette of India , [ 2 ] specifying 29 May as the date on which sections 1–13 and 15–23 of the act would come into force.
The Companies Acts 1948 to 1980 was the collective title of the Companies Act 1948, Parts I and III of the Companies Act 1967, the Companies (Floating Charges and Receivers) (Scotland) Act 1972, section 9 of the European Communities Act 1972, sections 1 to 4 of the Stock Exchange (Completion of Bargains) Act 1976, section 9 of the Insolvency ...
The section had not been considered by the court. But guidance was to be found in the authorities which interpret and apply the similarly-worded section 252 of the Companies Act, [5] dealing with oppressive or unfairly prejudicial conduct in the management of limited liability companies. [6]
Boeing's Big News Is Bigger News for These 3 Companies. Lee Samaha, The Motley Fool ... offering of 112.5 million shares at $143 and $5 billion in depositary shares, helping to shore up its ...
The Companies (Amendment) Act, 2015, of India, was granted the assent of the President on May 25, 2015, but was published in the Official Gazette on May 26, 2015. [1] This Amendment aims to swiftly bridge some of the most pressing concerns of stakeholders such as the need to align business exigencies with certain actions deemed punishable with criminal law under the original Act of 1956 but ...
The alleged incident occurred on Tuesday, Dec. 3, while 11 students and seven staff members visited the Cracker Barrel in Waldorf, according to a Dec. 5 statement from Superintendent of Charles ...
From December 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Linda B. Bammann joined the board, and sold them when she left, you would have a -62.3 percent return on your investment, compared to a 61.1 percent return from the S&P 500.