You hold 18 percent of a closely held family company. The majority directors stop sending you board notices, declare no dividend for three years while paying themselves fat salaries, and then float a rights issue offered only to themselves, cutting your stake to 9 percent. You can apply to the National Company Law Tribunal under Sections 241 and 242 of the Companies Act 2013, and the Tribunal can order the majority to buy you out at a fair value, cancel the rigged rights issue, and remove the directors responsible.
If you are short on time, jump to the eligibility table to check whether you cross the Section 244 threshold or need a waiver.
Closely held companies have no public market for their shares. A minority holder cannot simply sell and walk away. That gives a controlling group room to squeeze the minority out.
The classic pattern is a slow freeze-out. First the minority loses board access. Then dividends dry up while the controllers extract money as remuneration or related-party deals. Finally a fresh share issue, offered only to insiders, dilutes the minority to irrelevance.
Indian company law treats this as oppression and mismanagement. The remedy is not a damages suit in a civil court. It is a tailored application to the NCLT, which can reshape the company itself.
Section 241 lets a member apply to the NCLT in two situations. The first is where the company's affairs are being conducted in a manner prejudicial or oppressive to any member, or prejudicial to the company's own interest. The second is where a material change has taken place in the management or control that is prejudicial to members. The Central Government can also make an application.
Section 242 gives the Tribunal its teeth. Once the NCLT is satisfied that the facts justify a winding up on just and equitable grounds, but that winding up would unfairly prejudice the complaining members, it can instead grant targeted relief to end the matters complained of.
This route is distinct from a class action under Section 245 and from insolvency proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code. Use Sections 241 and 242 when the grievance is unfair conduct against a member, not insolvency or a mass investor claim. See the RTI and statute reference for how to trace statutory text.
You must clear a minimum holding before you can apply, unless the NCLT waives it. The threshold for a company having share capital is set out below.
| Basis | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Number of members | Not less than 100 members, or not less than one tenth of the total number of members, whichever is less |
| Share capital held | Members holding not less than one tenth, that is 10 percent, of the issued share capital of the company |
You need to satisfy either the member-count basis or the share-capital basis. You do not need both.
The NCLT may waive these requirements and let an otherwise ineligible member apply. So even a smaller holder can ask the Tribunal for leave to proceed if the facts are serious enough.
Under Section 242 the Tribunal has wide power. It can:
In the freeze-out scenario above, the practical relief is usually a buy-out at a valuation fixed by the Tribunal, plus cancellation of the diluting rights issue.
For background on the broader citizen-remedy framework, see The RTI Playbook.
An appeal from an NCLT order lies to the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) under Section 421, within 45 days of the order. The NCLAT can condone a further short delay for sufficient cause.
From the NCLAT, an appeal lies to the Supreme Court under Section 423, but only on a question of law, within 60 days. Plan your timeline around these windows from the date you receive the order.
Yes, if you ask the NCLT to waive the Section 244 threshold. The Tribunal has express power to allow an otherwise ineligible member to apply. You must show the grievance is serious enough to justify the waiver. The waiver request is usually made within the same petition.
Generally the conduct should show a continuing pattern that is prejudicial or oppressive to members, or a prejudicial material change in management or control. A one-off dispute may not qualify. Courts look at whether the affairs are being conducted unfairly, not at an isolated grievance.
Yes. Section 242 expressly empowers the Tribunal to order the purchase of one group's shares by another group or by the company itself. In freeze-out cases this buy-out, at a value the Tribunal fixes or supervises, is one of the most common reliefs granted.
You have 45 days to appeal to the NCLAT under Section 421. From the NCLAT to the Supreme Court under Section 423, you have 60 days, and only on a question of law. Calculate both periods from the date you receive the order, and file early to allow for service.