Amendment
of Companies Act
Professional
partisanship not desirable
K.
A. Muqtadir FCS
With an effort to
inject further discipline and streamline accountability, the laws and
regulations in the corporate sector are constantly undergoing various
updates and upgradations. This is also intended to put those at par
with other relevant statutes around this part of the world. In that
exercise, the Bangladesh Companies Act is now at the reviewing table.
A team by the name of 'Company Law Reforms Committee' has been assigned
to work out the proposed amendments for upgradation and improvement
of the Act.
It may be mentioned
that the existing Companies Act 1994 was put in place replacing the
age old statute the Companies Act 1913, which was long outdated and
unfit in the present digital era. Long before our new enactment, both
India and Pakistan have already got their relevant Companies Acts reframed
back in 1956 and 1984 respectively. And that wasn't the end, they are
reviewing their Acts almost every year and in 2003 both the Pakistani
and Indian Acts have undergone massive revisions. However, though our
new Act included so many novel and improved provisions over those of
the Act of 1913, there were quite a few mismatches as well. The new
Act also introduced some highly debatable provisions in areas like Board
affairs, managing director's appointment, disclosure requirements, auditors'
engagement and removal, preservation of documents etc., which came under
instant criticism from concerned quarters. And then, there were contradictions
and inconsistency in the Act between its sections and schedules. So,
in view of its so many drawbacks, suggestions to review the Act and
to amend the controversial provisions were pouring in immediately after
its enactment. Finally, after a decade, the task of updating of the
Companies Act is now on the government's action agenda.
Now, as stated earlier,
the Company Law Reforms Committee (CLRC), which was entrusted to review
and make recommendations for amendment/improvement of the Companies
Act 1994, is reported to have finalised its proposal for the same. Interestingly,
though the team was assigned to put forward amendments to the standing
law (i.e. Companies Act-1994), it is learnt that the Committee has worked
out to the length of drafting altogether a new act as a whole. This
is good on the count that now readers would not require to go back and
forth for cross-references to the original act. But the underlying worry
is that the Committee is learnt to have craftily rewritten the law in
a markedly biased form. Quite noticeably, five out of eight members
of the CLRC are professional accountants. As a result, the draft is
prepared reportedly with a view only to promote the profession of accountants.
Positions in a company, which are essentially functional in nature,
viz. finance officials or accountants are conspicuously finding place
to play roles in the new act without relevance, whilst statutory position
such as the company secretary is relegated to the back bench. Whereas,
it is the company secretary who, as the corporate compliance officer,
is primarily responsible for implementation of the provisions of statutes
in any company. Even, the draft act has reportedly given noticeable
focus to the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bangladesh, as has
been exposed latter in this article.
It warrants to be
explained here that functional responsibilities are those, which arise
apparently out of the customary functions of a company as it may call
for, while statutory responsibilities are the ones that stem from the
requirements of any law or statute. That is why the later is more of
an obligation on the part of the company than the functional ones. A
company, large or small, private or public, cannot just put aside its
obligatory responsibilities towards the market, the regulators and the
society at large. Whereas, it is optional for it to decide about the
functional discharge. It may even combine several functions into one,
depending on its standing. But a company just cannot shrug off its statutory
liabilities from carrying out meticulously.
The
subtle approach
It may be mentioned that the CLRC had invited suggestions from concerned
quarters for inclusion in the proposed amendments. It is gathered that
a few such suggestions were also submitted to them. However, it is reported
that none of those were considered for inclusion. Whereas it has conspicuously
strived to include the roles of the finance and accounts officials at
various chores in the draft act, a venture nowhere available in the
Pakistani or Indian Acts. To cite a few of the illustrative, but not
exhaustive mark of partisan approach, we extract the following from
the suggested draft :
(a) The term 'officer'
has been defined to mean and include 'a director, chief financial officer,
chief internal auditor, secretary, manager, or any other officer of
a company' [sec.2(r)].
(b) About authentication
of financial statements, the draft act provides - 'any financial statement
shall be approved by the directors and shall be signed by two directors
(including the Managing Director) and the Chief Financial Officer' [sec.205(1)].
(c) About auditors'
remuneration it is stipulated in the draft that 'the remuneration of
the auditors of a company shall not be lower than that fixed in the
Schedule of fees determined by the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of Bangladesh (ICAB)' [sec.227(10)(b)].
As it can be seen
at the first two instances above that functional positions have got
undue inclusion in the provisions, though the Board of Directors of
a company have either very little or no inter-action with them. None
of the Acts of 1913 or 1994 provided like that. If we look at the Pak
and Indian acts as the sub-continental bench mark, we see no such mention
of functional positions in the Companies Act there, and it is rightly
so.
The most unscrupulous
part about authentication of accounts at draft section 205(1) (mentioned
at b above) is that this goes against all judgement and moral. Authentication
of accounts should not be left for the same person who, according to
section 206(2) of the same draft, is made 'primarily responsible' for
preparation part of the accounts and who, as such, is manifestly interested.
A person interested, when authenticates, it leave rooms for manipulation,
much to the detriment of the Board. It should have been, ideally, the
Company Secretary to authenticate (signature) the accounts, once those
are approved by the Board. In fact, as of now, the Act of 1994 does
provide so and there is no apparent need to bring in any amendment at
that place. The Pakistan and Indian stipulations also match to the same.
Actually, our culture is that we look upon Pakistan and India when it
corresponds to our need, but immediately pull out when it doesn't. In
Pakistan, Company Secretary is the Chief Compliance Officer (CCO), and
in India, he is regarded as the Chief Governing Office or CGO, because
of his central role-playing in corporate governance. The Bangladesh
case should not lag behind in its insight appreciation.
At the third instance
above, it is quite funny to see that ICAB is unduly given an upper hand
over the act, in fixing the fee of a company's auditor. That kind of
a stipulation is evidently partisan and profoundly demeans the act under
review. It is also against all ethics and tantamount to imposing fine
to the company concerned. Fees to be paid by one cannot be fixed by
some other. Auditors' remuneration has always been a case-by-case issue
and is supposed to be fixed mutually by the parties. It is not to be
generalised. We should remember that there are both large and small
entities existing and they should not be weighed evenly, not even on
the count of their share capital. Such a stipulation is a manifest breach
of, and infringement in, company's rights and deserves to be summarily
withdrawn before putting ahead the draft act.
The Companies Act
is a sectoral statute and is enacted by the government for general regulatory
control of the corporate sector at large. It often comes under study
by the foreign investors as well, before they decide anything in Bangladesh.
Such a basic law cannot afford to be periled or prejudiced towards any
particular profession, nor should it deviate from universal norms, practices
and principles. Therefore, it would be advisable to thoroughly scrutinise
the draft act by corporate experts. It should also include chartered
secretaries in the process of its formulation, reforms or enhancement,
so as to put in place the required check and balance.
The
writer is a Fellow Chartered Secretary.