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NCLAT sets aside NCLT order on making MCA party in all IBC cases

New Delhi, May 27: In a relief to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) set aside an order of the Principal Bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) which had directed that the MCA be made a party in all cases filed under the Section 7, 9, and 10 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

A three-member Bench of the NCLAT held that the NCLT order asking the Ministry to be made a party in all IBC cases, without giving the MCA a chance to present its side would have resulted in “serious miscarriage of justice, besides causing undue hardship”, The Indian Express reported.

“In short, the impugned order making it applicable throughout the country to all the Benches of the National Company Law Tribunal is an untenable one and the said order suffers from material irregularity and patent illegality in the eye of law. As a logical corollary, this Tribunal sets aside the impugned order,” the NCLAT said.

The Principal Bench of NCLT had, on November 22, directed that the MCA as well as the central government be made a respondent party in all cases of insolvency as well as Companies Act filed across the country. The adjudicating authority had then observed that the same was needed so that authentic records of companies undergoing insolvency are made available by the officers.

The said directions were passed by the NCLT in a case where despite repeated reminders from the tribunal, the Registrar of Companies had failed to update the master data regarding the status of the company under the IBC.

In its response, MCA officials had initially said that the NCLT order would increase the workload of the Ministry. Later, the MCA had moved the NCLAT challenging the jurisdiction of the lower tribunal and said that “rule making power” was the exclusive domain of the Centre and thus the same could be done only by the Parliament.

“Adjudicating Authority before passing the impugned order ought to have issued notice to the Union of India, since the subject matter in issue concerns about the imposition of a new rule, which the said authority has no power to make especially its direction to implead,” the NCLAT order noted.

Last November, the NCLT had also asked the MCA to update the master list containing the data of companies undergoing insolvency or liquidation, so as to keep the “public at large” informed about the status of the company.

After the nudge from NCLT, the MCA had said that it had initiated the process of updating the master data of companies undergoing corporate insolvency or facing liquidation under IBC.

The MCA had then also said that it had started working on a framework that would enable the interim resolution professional (IRP) or resolution professional (RP) of a company to upload necessary regulatory filings for compliance with the Companies Act.

https://indianexpress.com/article/business/nclat-sets-aside-nclt-order-on-making-mca-party-in-all-ibc-cases-6427151/

German court rules against Volkswagen in ‘dieselgate’ scandal

May 26: Volkswagen has lost a landmark legal battle in Germany’s highest civil court over compensation for the buyer of a secondhand minivan fitted with emissions-cheating software.

The world’s largest carmaker must take back the plaintiff’s manipulated car and pay him €28,257.74 (£25,325), in a case that will lead to the company paying compensation to 60,000 German VW owners, The Guardian reported.

The ruling is the latest blow in the so-called diesel gate scandal, in which Volkswagen and fellow German carmaker Daimler have paid more than €30bn (£28bn) in fines and compensation around the world since it was revealed in 2015.

VW was found to have installed software that artificially lowered emissions of nitrogen oxides when the vehicles were being tested, meaning the output of the harmful pollutants were much higher in real-life conditions.

Germany’s federal court of justice said Herbert Gilbert was entitled to compensation for the purchase price of the Volkswagen Sharan people carrier minus mileage costs. Gilbert bought the car in January 2014.

Claus Goldenstein, a lawyer handling about 21,000 VW cases including Gilbert’s, said: “The ruling means legal certainty for millions of consumers in Germany and shows once again that even a large corporation is not above the law. Today we have made history.”

In the UK, Volkswagen faces 91,000 consumer complaints under a group litigation order. A high court judge hearing the case found that Volkswagen installed a “cheat device” in cars under its Volkswagen, Audi, Seat and Skoda brands. Despite being found to have cheated emissions in the US, Volkswagen had disputed the accusation in the UK.

The dieselgate scandal rocked Volkswagen, with billions of euros wiped from its market value and fraud charges for its former chief executive Martin Winterkorn. The fallout has also been credited for spurring Volkswagen to accelerate plans to become the world’s large manufacturer of battery electric vehicles, with zero exhaust emissions.

The latest ruling removes one of the last remaining legal risks to Volkswagen in Germany in relation to the scandal. The company in February paid a settlement with about 240,000 car owners in a separate action that will cost it about €750m.

Volkswagen said it would pay compensation in Germany as soon as possible and offer one-off payments dependent on individual claims.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/may/25/german-court-rules-against-volkswagen-dieselgate-scandal

Solomon & Co. promotes two to Associate Partner role

Mumbai, May 25: One of the oldest and most reputed law firms in the country, the Mumbai headquartered Solomon & Co., has promoted Ms. Kinjal Katkoria Parihar and Ms. Mansi V. Kaku to Associate Partner roles.

Kinjal joined the firm’s Corporate practice in April 2013 and now leads a team of lawyers in the firm’s Fort (Mumbai) office. Kinjal deals with a variety of corporate and commercial matters such as foreign investments, mergers and acquisitions, corporate restructuring, business and trade laws, commercial contracts and other general corporate, commercial and regulatory matters. She also advises on employment laws and contracts. She qualified (LLB) in 2010 and obtained her LLM in International Commercial Law from the University of Nottingham (UK) in 2012.

Mansi joined the firm’s Dispute Resolution department in November 2013 and now heads a team of dispute resolution lawyers in the firm’s Fort (Mumbai) office. She handles litigation as well as arbitration matters and regularly appears before courts in Mumbai including the Bombay High Court, the Bombay City Civil and Sessions Court, Court of Small Causes, Mumbai, and the Debt Recovery Tribunal. She qualified (LLB) in 2012 and obtained her Masters in Commerce from the University of Mumbai in 2013. Prior to joining the legal profession, Mansi also worked with J. P. Morgan in their Mumbai and Delaware (USA) offices.

Both Kinjal and Mansi work for a mix of domestic and international clients, both companies and individuals.

The firm now has 8 Partners, 8 Associate Partners and over 65 lawyers across their 3 offices – 2 in Mumbai and 1 in Pune.

Supreme Court allows ED to attach assets of JP Morgan after it identifies Rs 187 crore as proceeds of crime

New Delhi, May 22: The Supreme Court on Friday allowed Enforcement Directorate (ED) to attach properties of JP Morgan, which was engaged in transactions with the now-defunct Amrapali Group to allegedly siphon off home buyers money in violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and FDI norms. 

The ED told the top court that it has prima facie identified Rs 187 crores in the accounts of JP Morgan, as proceeds of crime under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) and it needs permission to attach its properties to recover the same, The Economic Times reported. 

A bench of Justices Arun Mishra and U U Lalit, which took up the matter through video conferencing, granted the permission to the ED to attach the properties of the multi-national firm, a senior lawyer associated with the case said. 

Additional Solicitor General Sanjay Jain, appearing for ED told the bench that the probe agency has so far prima facie identified Rs 187 crore in the accounts of JP Morgan, which according to them are proceeds of proceeds of crime under the anti-money laundering law. 

He said that the top court had on December 2, last year restrained the agency from attaching any properties and therefore now it needs permission to attach them, in order to move ahead as per law. 

Meanwhile, the top court asked Additional Solicitor General Vikramjeet Banerjee to seek instructions on providing Rs 500 crore as loan to NBCC for completing the stalled projects of the embattled real estate firm Amrapali, as there is no private player involved in it. 

Banerjee told the bench that a meeting is scheduled in finance ministry on the issue and he would inform the concerned authorities of the views expressed by the court. 

He said that the suggestions given by court appointed receiver, senior advocate R Venkataramani, are being looked into by the State Bank of India for relaxing the guidelines for disbursing of loan. 

The bench said that government has to take care of the funding as there are no private players involved in this and these stalled projects are stuck due to lack of funding. 

It said that these unsold inventories also have money stuck and if they are completed and sold, they may fetch a considerable amount. 

The bench said that funding through SBI Cap under government’s stress funding is concerned, a relaxed policy can be issued for Amrapali projects. 

The top court said that it would take up the matter next week and asked Banerjee to seek instructions on possible funding of stalled projects. 

On January 13, top court had orally asked the ED to attach Indian properties of JP Morgan after the probe agency said that it had prima facie found violations of FEMA norms by the US-based JP Morgan and that a complaint in this regard was lodged. 

It had also allowed the ED to take into custody the defunct group’s CMD, Anil Kumar Sharma, and two other directors, Shiv Priya and Ajay Kumar, who are behind bars on the top court’s order, for interrogation as regards alleged money-laundering offences. 

According to the share subscription agreement between JP Morgan and Amrapali Group, the US-based firm had invested Rs 85 crore on October 20, 2010 to have a preferential claim on profits in the ratio of 75 per cent to JP Morgan and 25 per cent to the promoters of Amrapali Homes Project Private Limited and Ultra Home. 

Later, the same number of shares was bought back from JP Morgan for Rs 140 crore by two companies — M/s Neelkanth and M/s Rudraksha — owned by a peon and an office boy of Amrapali’s statutory auditor Anil Mittal. 

On December 2 last year, the ED had informed the top court that it had prima facie found evidence of violation of FEMA by the multi-national firm and recorded the statements of the country head of the company with regard to dealings with the Amrapali Group. 

The apex court had then directed the ED that the investigation should be carried out impartially, properly and expeditiously within a period of three months. 

On July 23 last year, the top court had cracked its whip on errant builders for breaching the trust of home buyers, ordered cancellation of Amrapali Group’s registration under real estate law RERA and ousted it from its prime properties in the NCR by nixing the land leases. 

It had ordered a probe by the ED into allegations of money laundering and to look into the charge of FEMA violation by JP Morgan. 

“The money of the home buyers has been diverted. The directors diverted the money by the creation of dummy companies, realising professional fees, creating bogus bills, selling flats at an undervalued price, payment of excessive brokerage etc. They obtained investment from JP Morgan in violation of FEMA and FDI norms,” the top court had said. 

It had said the equity shares of the group were purchased at an exorbitant price to suit the requirements of JP Morgan and the Amrapali Zodiac Developers Pvt Ltd had diverted home buyers’ funds. 

“The shares were overvalued for making payments to JP Morgan. It was adopted as a device for siphoning off the money of the home buyers to foreign countries,” the top court had said as it accepted the reports of forensic auditors. 

It had also noted that the shares of Amrapali Zodiac from JP Morgan were ultimately purchased for Rs 140 crore by M/s Neelkanth and M/s Rudraksha, shell companies owned by a peon and an office boy respectively. 

Read more at:

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/supreme-court-allows-ed-to-attach-assets-of-jp-morgan-after-it-identifies-rs-187-crore-as-proceeds-of-crime/articleshow/75901577.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

US Supreme Court rejects lawsuit against Facebook for hosting terrorists

May 18: The US Supreme Court has rejected a lawsuit claiming Facebook provided “material support” to terrorists by hosting their content. It declined to hear Force vs Facebook, a case brought by the families of five Americans who were hurt or killed by Palestinian attacks in Israel, The Verge reported. 

The suit had already been dealt a serious blow last year, strengthening a legal precedent against suing social media platforms over terrorist attacks.

The 2016 lawsuit Force v. Facebook argued that Facebook knowingly hosted accounts belonging to Hamas, which the US classifies as a terrorist organisation. 

Websites generally can’t be sued for user-created content under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, but the complaint contended Facebook’s algorithm promoted terrorist content to people who liked similar pages or posts, saying that should reduce its immunity.

The Second Circuit appeals court found that logic unconvincing. It shot down the complaint last year, saying there was “no basis” for making Facebook liable because it arranged content with algorithms. Rather than being a unique property of Facebook’s recommendation system, displaying material that specific users want to click on “has been a fundamental result of publishing third‐party content on the Internet since its beginning.” 

The US Supreme Court didn’t comment on why it rejected the case, but it let that ruling stand. It has previously declined to hear a harassment-related lawsuit against Grindr that hinged on Section 230 (of that country’s Communication Decency Act) as well as a case involving defamatory Yelp reviews.

Force v. Facebook was one of many lawsuits against social media platforms for allegedly spreading terrorist propaganda or playing a role in violent attacks. These suits have been almost universally unsuccessful — including one case brought by the families of Pulse nightclub shooting victims and several related to ISIS terrorism. The rulings don’t all invoke Section 230 (that says ‘No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider’), but it’s one of social media companies’ key defences, and Monday’s rejection preserves its legal heft.

https://www.theverge.com/2020/5/18/21262248/supreme-court-rejects-stuart-force-facebook-section-230-lawsuit-algorithms

Delhi High Court asks RBI, Centre to respond to plea for action against Google Pay

New Delhi, May 15: The Delhi High Court has sought response of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Centre on a plea seeking action and suspension of operations of the Google India Digital Service in UPI through its application ‘Google Pay’ till it fully complies with interoperability.

Justice Asha Menon, who conducted the hearing through video conferencing, issued notices to the RBI, the Centre and Google India Digital Service Pvt Ltd and granted them three weeks to file their responses, The Print reported.

The petitioner approached the high court after Google Pay did not allow him to contribute to the PM CARES Fund, without making another VPA or UPI ID on its own app.

Petitioner Shubham Kapaley tried to use his already existing VPA/ UPI ID for other transactions as well, however, the same issue of denial of interoperability persisted.

The petition alleged that Google India’s app ‘Google Pay’ was flouting the rules of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) interoperability and that it does not allow new users to use their existing Virtual Payment Address (VPAs) or UPI ID on its platform, which the consumer might have created through other UPI platforms or apps.

As per an earlier NPCI circular, no merchant can/ shall force the customer to create a VPA or register for UPI to avail any services on a merchant app.

The plea claimed that Google Pay insists consumers to create a new UPI ID or VPA to use its platform and sought initiation of action against Google India Digital which is provisioning its services by way of this app in the country.

It sought to direct RBI and Centre to conduct a thorough third party and independent investigation of the app to check compliance of every directive and guidelines issued by National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which operates various digital payment instruments including UPI, and RBI.

The plea said that a hefty penalty of at least 10 times revenue of Google Pay, since start of its operations in India, be imposed and be contributed towards Covid-19 Relief Fund here.

Facebook to pay moderators $52M for psychological damages

May 15: Facebook has agreed to pay $52 million to its content moderators whose job has them viewing graphic and disturbing posts and videos on its platforms.

In a 2018 lawsuit, third-party contractors for the company said that Facebook failed to properly protect them against severe psychological and other injuries that can result from repeated exposure to graphic material such as child sexual abuse, beheadings, terrorism, animal cruelty and other disturbing images, The Associated Press reported.

The settlement grants U.S. moderators who were part of the class action lawsuit $1,000 each. Those who have been diagnosed with conditions related to their work will be able to get medical treatment and damages of up to $50,000, according to the preliminary settlement filed in the Superior Court of California for the County of San Mateo.

In a statement, Facebook said it is “grateful to the people who do this important work to make Facebook a safe environment for everyone. We’re committed to providing them additional support through this settlement and in the future.”

https://apnews.com/faa5df03e40f6b9736225e49d8ceaf19

Legal tech start-up LexCheck raises $3M in seed funding

New York, May 12: LexCheck, a New York-based artificial intelligence (AI) and legal technology platform, completed a USD 3 million seed financing round.

The round was led by Kli Capital (formerly known as BNSG Capital) and included Howard Morgan, retired co-founder of First Round Capital, and Vivek Garipalli, co-founder and CEO of Clover Health, among other investors.

The company intends to use the funds to expand its business reach internationally.

Led by CEO Gary Sangha, who also participated in the round, LexCheck applies AI technology to help their customers, including leading Fortune 500 companies, accelerate and automate contract negotiations. 

It provides functionality for all levels of contract drafting and review, ranging from ordinary course commercial contracts to complex, high-stakes agreements. In addition to improving the accuracy and consistency of contract review and revision, the platform can integrate with existing legal operations infrastructure to minimise the bandwidth and time required to approve and execute legal documents and also provide the metrics needed to optimise performance, finSMEs.com reported.

Facebook forms key oversight board with NLSIU V-C as member

May 7: National Law School of India University vice chancellor Sudhir Krishnaswamy is among the first 20 members of the Oversight Board announced by Facebook on Wednesday to handle content takedown disputes on the platform.

As reported by The Economic Times, born in 1975 in Bengaluru, Krishnaswamy is a BA LLB graduate from the National Law School of India University and also a Rhodes Scholar who obtained his D. Phil from the University of Oxford. 

Last year, Sudhir Krishnaswamy became the youngest vice-chancellor of the National Law School of India University in Bengaluru. An expert on India’s constitutional law and a civil society activist, he’s previously worked in the PM’s Committee on Infrastructure and the Kasturirangan Committee on Governance of Bangalore. He is also the co-founder of the Centre for Law and Policy Research (CLPR).

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg had first spoken about the board in late 2018. 

As reported by The Mint, the board will function over and above Facebook’s current content moderation systems. It will come into play once the company’s artificial intelligence algorithms and human moderators have acted on a piece of content. Its decisions will be binding and Facebook has publicly committed that it will abide by the board’s rulings. The board can overturn Facebook’s decisions and will try to take cases that affect a wide number of people. It will be looking at disputes about posts, pages, profiles, groups and even advertisements. Its decisions will influence Facebook’s overall content policies as well.

Facebook has set up a $130 million trust to provide for the Oversight Board’s expenses. However, the board will operate independent of the social media company. The members of the board have been picked from around the world and contract with it directly, and cannot be removed by Facebook. The trust itself cannot be revoked either. The new board will also have to select 20 more members and will appoint five-member panels to make decisions on cases taken up by the board. Facebook has the power to send a “limited” number of cases to the board, which it doesn’t have the power to ignore.

The four co-chairs of the board are former Denmark prime minister Helle Thorning- Schmidt, former US federal circuit judge Michael McConnell, Columbia Law School professor Jamal Greene and Catalina Botero-Marino, former special rapporteur for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States.

Anyone can approach the board, of which Krishnaswamy is a member. So, both Facebook and its users can submit cases. Users can submit disputes on a separate consumer-facing website, but the board expects many cases to be put in front of it. It will set up panels to decide the cases it hears and try to take up those that impact a wide number of reported issues. Even if a case is not directly addressed doesn’t mean it won’t be addressed through a decision on another one.

The board will not be involved in cases concerning government takedown requests. For those, Facebook will continue to adhere to a country’s laws. That said, the decisions of the board will impact Facebook’s overall content sharing policies. This means things such as political advertisements can be affected by the board’s decisions. The board will only look at content shared on Instagram and Facebook for now, but the social media company did not rule out the possibility of the board operating over its other platforms in future.

https://www.livemint.com/technology/tech-news/new-board-set-to-mould-facebook-content-policies-11588869671483.html

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/company/corporate-trends/meet-the-indian-on-facebooks-supreme-court-board/sudhir-krishnaswamy/slideshow/75621423.cms

WeWork’s former chief Adam Neumann sues SoftBank

May 5: Adam Neumann, a co-founder of WeWork, sued SoftBank on Monday, accusing it of breaching a contract by withdrawing an offer to buy up to $3 billion in WeWork stock from him and other shareholders.

SoftBank, a Japanese conglomerate that has invested in many fast-growing but unprofitable start-ups, included the stock offer in a bailout that saved WeWork from financial collapse last year. 

Neumann’s lawsuit, filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery, contends that SoftBank and one of its investment funds “reneged on their promise to pay for the benefits they had already received” when they withdrew last month, The New York Times reported.

SoftBank, which gained effective control of WeWork in the rescue, previously said it walked away from the stock-purchase offer because certain provisions of the deal had not been met. But Neumann’s lawsuit asserts that SoftBank “was secretly taking actions to undermine” the deal.

Robert Townsend, SoftBank’s chief legal officer, said in a statement that the company “will vigorously defend itself against these meritless claims.”

SoftBank invested billions of dollars in WeWork when Neumann, a charismatic entrepreneur who won the backing of prominent investors and banks, was its chief executive. Neumann, facing criticism of his leadership, stepped down as chief executive last year as WeWork unsuccessfully tried to sell stock in an initial public offering.

Under the takeover agreement, Neumann stood to receive cash payments totalling $185 million and would have sold nearly $1 billion of his WeWork shares to SoftBank. SoftBank also gave him a $425 million loan to repay credit lines with banks that had been secured by WeWork stock.

SoftBank committed to invest and loan billions more dollars in WeWork as part of the rescue, but it is not clear how much of that money the company has received. 

The coronavirus pandemic has taken a big toll on WeWork, because the company’s business model requires it to pack workers into its shared office spaces. Most white-collar workers in big cities around the world have been working from home for several weeks, leaving WeWork’s offices largely empty.

Falling billion-dollar deals over coronavirus spur court fights

New York, May 1: A deal is a deal, except for a growing number of companies that agreed to buy assets before the Covid-19 pandemic sent markets plunging. 

Panicked executives already have launched a handful of legal battles that could blow up billions of dollars’ worth merger and acquisition agreements. And litigators predict at least a dozen more limping deals will crash land in courts over the next few months, Bloomberg reported. 

Among the high-profile transactions that have become feuds are Mirae Asset Global Investments Co’s $5.8-billion purchase of a US luxury hotel portfolio from Anbang Insurance Group, SoftBank Group’s $3-billion acquisition of We Cos. stock, and Sycamore Partners’ $1.1-billion deal for a controlling stake in L Brands, owner of the Victoria’s Secret lingerie chain. 

“The cases are just the tip of the iceberg,” Larry Hamermesh, a University of Pennsylvania law professor who specialises in Delaware corporate law, told Bloomberg. “There’s going to be a lot more deals that just get quietly renegotiated and never wind up in court.”  

Already, half a dozen cases of virus-related challenges to transactions are before judges in Delaware Chancery Court, records show. The state is the corporate home to more than half of US public companies and more than 60% of Fortune 500 firms.  

The main reason some big deals are ending up in court is that the value of assets companies agreed to buy have plummeted since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. 

With shutdowns of most retail businesses including stores, movie theatres and restaurants, the US economy will contract a record 37% in the second quarter and have its worst recession since World War II, Bloomberg Industries estimates. More than 26 million Americans filed unemployment claims after losing their jobs.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-29/exiting-billion-dollar-deals-over-virus-spurs-big-court-fights