A producer company is a corporate body regulated by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs and is regulated by the Companies Act of 2013 and is formed with the aim of engaging in activities connected to any primary produce.
A producer company is created with the main objective of procurement, harvesting, production, pooling, marketing, grading, handling, and selling primary produce of the members of the producer company or import of such produced goods providing any services for the benefit of the members. Hence, producer companies primarily deal with agricultural and post-harvest activities of processing
A producer company has been defined as a body corporate this engagement activities or has objects as specified under Section 378A of the Companies Act of 2013 and is registered as a producer company with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs.
The objects of the producer company, as mentioned under Section 378A of the Companies Act of 2013, is as follows:
The members of a producer company shall be primary producers or a producer institution. Producer companies shall be incorporated as private limited companies, not public ones. The liability of the members of a producer company shall be limited to the number of shares held by them. The name of the producer company shall have "Producer Company Limited" added as a suffix. There is no limit to the number of maximum members who can be a part of the producer company.
The minimum requirements to form a producer company are as follows:
Every producer company duly incorporated under the Companies Act of 2013 is required to adhere to certain compliances to avoid incurring penalties. Annual compliances refer to specific mandates dictated by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs which are necessary to be complied with by the companies during a financial year. It mainly involves filing particular forms with the Registrar of Companies. Annual ROC compliance is mandatory in most cases. There are many benefits which a producer company can obtain by complying with the yearly ROC compliance. Since Compliance is compulsory for producer companies, it increases the credibility and transparency of the companies involved as they are required to furnish details pertaining to the operations of their business or their financial situations while complying with the requirements of the MCA. Moreover, non-compliance can lead to heavy fines.
Ministry of Corporate Affairs requires companies to adhere to certain compliances. These compliances range from annual to event-based compliances and meet requirements that every company must comply with. Non-compliance with these mandates of the MCA can lead to heavy fines and other penalties. There are specific forms which are required to be filed with the registrar of companies once or annually, or half-yearly. Below mentioned are the forms which are required to be filed with the ROC:
This form must be filed before the expiry of 180 days from the date of the company’s incorporation registrar of companies. Form INC-20A must be filed by companies incorporated after November 2nd, 2018, to inform the ROC of the commencement of the company's business. This is provided under the Companies Act of 2013, Section 10(A).
Every producer company incorporated under the Companies Act is required to duly maintain the company's annual financial statements. The financial information shall contain details regarding, inter alia, the balance sheet, trading account, and profit and loss account. Every company is required to file Form AOC-4 to submit the annual financial statements of the company to the registrar of companies. The form is required to be filed within 30 days from when the annual general meeting is held.
Section 139 of the Companies Act of 2013 companies to appoint an auditor. The auditor appointed shall be a statutory auditor and will be responsible for auditing the company's book of accounts and annual reports. Companies making such appointments are required to inform the ROC of the appointment of the statutory auditor by filing Form ADT-1 before the expiry of 15 days from the date on which the annual general meeting is held. A statutory auditor is appointed for a period of 5 years. The first statutory auditor of the company must be appointed within 30 days of the incorporation of the company. This is stated in Section 139(6) of the Companies Act of 2013. Appointment of the first statutory auditor is required to be reported to the ROC before the expiry of 30 days from the date of incorporation of the company by filing a particular form.
Section 140 of the companies after 2013 mandates that every company is required to inform the ROC of any resignation of the company's statutory auditor from the expiry of 30 days from the date on which such resignation was submitted. This form is to be filed with the ROC regarding details pertaining to such resignation of the statutory or the time.
All company directors are required to inform the company of their interests in other entities during the first board of directors meeting of the company under Form MBP-1. Any change in the interests of such directors is also required to be informed to the company by filing a fresh Form MBP-1.
This form is required to be filed by the company providing statements regarding unclaimed shares or dividends which are necessary to be transferred to the Investor Education and Protection Fund as is mandated under Section 125 of the Companies Act of 2013 and IEPF Authority (Accounting, Audit, Transfer and Refund) Rules of 2016. Form IEPF-2 must be filed within 60 days of the annual general meeting.
All directors must file Form DIR-3 KYC with a director identification number or DIN for the KYC directors of the company. This is provided under Rule 12A of Companies (Appointment and Qualification of Directors) Rules, 2013. Every director is required to file this form annually for MCA. Directors who have previously filed Eform 10 in the last financial year can complete their KYC through the web-based KYC services of the MCA. They shall be verified through OTPs, which will be sent on the registered mobile number and email ID. Form DIR-3 KYC shall be found within six months from the cessation of the financial year.
All directors of a company are required to file this form every financial year with the company to disclose their non-disqualification, if any.
This form is filed as per the Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules of 2014- Rule 16 by all companies other than government company furnish details regarding deposits or transactions involving money or loans which do not amount to deposit. This form must be filed annually with the ROC by June 30th of every year.
Form BEN-1 is required to be filed giving information regarding any declartion made by significant beneficial owners of the company. Significant beneficial owners must make declarations to the reporting company regarding their interests as provided under the Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Amendment Rules, 2019. Such statements need to be made to the reporting company and shall include information regarding any change in the significant beneficial ownership. This form must be filed within 30 days from when such person was made a significant beneficial owner or from when there was any change in the said ownership.
The producer company must file this form with the registrar of companies giving information of any declarations made by the significant beneficial owners of the company. Section 90 of the Companies Act of 2013 and Rule 4 of the Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Rules, 2014, provide that a company must file this form before the expiry of 30 days from the date on which the company received such declaration under Form BEN-1.
MSME Form-1 must be filed by companies taking supplies from other vendors which are Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises or MSMEs. There must be an outstanding payment which remains to be made to such entities by the producer companies. The amount should be due for a period of more than 45 days. MSME Form-1 shall be filed once every six months with the registrar of companies.
Form MGT-4 shall be filed by the persons who are registered owners of shares but do not hold any beneficial interest in the shares of the company. Declaration under the form is to be made to the reporting company within 30 days from the date on which the person's name was written in the register of the company's members. Any change in the interests of such registered owners of shares shall also be declared under this form.
Form MGT-5 is required to be filed to furnish declarations made to the reporting company by persons who have a beneficial interest in the shares of the reporting company, but their names have yet to be added to the register of members of the company. The declarations must be made within 30 days from the date on which the person received the beneficial interest. Any change in the beneficial interests of such persons shall also be declared under this form.
A producer company shall file this form with the registrar of companies to furnish details pertaining to the declarations made by persons under Form MGT-5 and Form MGT-4. Section 89 of the Companies Act of 2013 mandates this. Form MGT-6 shall be filed within 30 days from the receipt of Form MGT-5 and Form MGT-4 by the company.
This form is submitted by companies to the registrar of companies to file their annual returns in a financial year. This form shall be filed from the expiry of 60 days from the date on which the annual general meeting was conducted.
This form must be filed to provide information to the registrar of companies on any resolutions passed in any company meetings. Form MGT-14 must be filed within 30 days from the date on which such resolution was passed.
This form is only required to be filed by companies on whom cost audit applies as mandated by the central government under the Companies Act of 2013- Section 148 read with Companies (Cost Records and Audit Rules), 2014- Rule 6. Form CRA-2 shall be filed with the registrar of companies to provide details of the appointment of the cost auditor for the company. This form shall be filed before the expiry of 180 days from the start of the financial year or before the expiry of 30 days from the appointment of the cost auditor. Suppose the appointment is to fill a casual vacancy, in that case, such vacancy must be filled within 30 days and information pertaining to such appointment shall be furnished before the expiry of 30 days from when the board meeting was held.
Form CRA-4 is only required to be filed by companies on whom cost audit applies as mandated by the central government under the Companies Act of 2013- Section 148. The reporting company shall file the form once it receives cost audit report prepared by the cost auditor.The cost auditor is required to submit the report to the company before the expiry of 180 days from the closure of the financial year. The audit report is required to be submitted to the central government by the company before the expiry of 30 days from when the cost audit report was received from the cost auditor.
An OPC’s income tax return should be prepared with the Income Tax Department every year by September 30th of the n
Other than the annual compliances discussed above, producer companies must also duly comply with specific event-based compliances in the event of the occurrence of certain events or circumstances. Mentioned below are some of the event-based compliances:
Section 170(2) of the Companies Act of 2013 places the onus on the company to report to the MCA of any appointment of directors or any cessation or change in directorship or regularization of directors of the company under Form DIR-12. This form shall be filed within 30 days from the date when the annual general meeting was held.
ext financial year.
Every producer company is required to conduct its first board meeting before the expiry of 30 days from the company's date of incorporation. It shall also complete at least four board meetings in a financial year, and the gap between any two consecutive meetings shall in no case exceed 120 days. Notice of the board meetings is required to be sent to the directors at least seven days from the date on which such board meeting is scheduled to be held.
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has put in place specific procedures and mandates to which all companies are required to adhere. Non-compliance can often lead to incurring heavy fines and other penalties. Mentioned below are some penalties that producer companies can incur for non-compliance with the MCA mandates:
A producer company should have a minimum 5 number of Directors which may extend to 15 Directors who can hold the office for a maximum of five years.
There is no maximum limit of members that a Producer Company can have.
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