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2016 (12) TMI 308 - HC - Companies Law


Issues Involved:
1. Whether a nominee of a holder of shares or securities under Section 109A of the Companies Act, 1956, read with the Depositories Act, 1996, is entitled to the beneficial ownership of the shares or securities to the exclusion of all other persons entitled to inherit the estate as per the law of succession.
2. Whether the nominee holds the securities in trust for the legal representatives entitled to inherit under the law of inheritance.
3. Whether a bequest made in a Will supersedes the nomination made under Sections 109A and Bye-Law No.9.11 of the Depositories Act, 1996.

Detailed Analysis:

Issue 1: Beneficial Ownership of Nominee
The primary question was whether the nominee under Section 109A of the Companies Act, 1956, and the Depositories Act, 1996, gains beneficial ownership of the shares to the exclusion of all other persons entitled to inherit the estate. The court examined the case of Harsha Nitin Kokate v. The Saraswat Cooperative Bank Limited, which held that the nominee becomes the beneficial owner of the shares, excluding all other persons. However, the court noted that this interpretation was not consistent with the general principles of succession and the purpose of nomination provisions under various statutes.

Issue 2: Nominee as Trustee
The court analyzed whether the nominee holds the securities in trust for the legal representatives who are entitled to inherit under the law of inheritance. The court referred to several precedents, including the Supreme Court's decisions in Sarbati Devi v. Usha Devi and Vishin N. Khanchandani v. Vidya Lachmandas Khanchandani, which clarified that a nominee does not become the owner of the property but merely holds it in trust for the legal heirs. The court concluded that the nominee under Section 109A does not get absolute ownership but holds the securities as a trustee for the legal heirs.

Issue 3: Supersession by Will
The court examined whether a bequest made in a Will executed according to the Indian Succession Act, 1925, supersedes the nomination under Sections 109A and Bye-Law No.9.11 of the Depositories Act, 1996. The court held that the nomination does not override the testamentary disposition made by the deceased. The nomination's purpose is to ensure that the estate is represented until the legal heirs establish their rights. The court reaffirmed that the law of succession governs the distribution of the deceased's estate, and the nomination does not create a third mode of succession.

Conclusion:
The court concluded that the view taken in Harsha Nitin Kokate's case was incorrect. It held that the nominee does not become the beneficial owner of the shares to the exclusion of the legal heirs. The nominee holds the securities in trust for the legal representatives entitled to inherit under the law of succession. The nomination does not supersede a valid Will executed under the Indian Succession Act, 1925.

Orders:
- Appeal No.313 of 2015 was dismissed, confirming the order in Suit No.503 of 2014.
- The order was set aside concerning Testamentary Petition No.457 of 2014, as the issue of the effect of nomination could not be decided in probate proceedings.
- Pending Notices of Motion were disposed of.
- Interim orders were extended for ten weeks from the date of the judgment.

 

 

 

 

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