NEW DELHI: The new company law proposes to remove the time limit for claiming 
dividend. The Companies Bill 2008 -- recently cleared by the Cabinet and to be 
placed before Parliament soon -- has removed the seven-year ceiling up to which 
unclaimed dividend remains safe in the government's kitty. This means investors 
can claim their dividend even 10 years after declaration of dividend once the 
new Bill gets the approval of Parliament. 

Unclaimed dividend of investors is transferred to the Investor Education and 
Protection Fund (IEPF). The fund, which is maintained by the ministry of 
corporate affairs, allows claims only for seven years from the date of 
declaration of dividend. 

Officials in the ministry of corporate affairs say that the new law proposes to 
remove the time limit. This would mean that the rights of the investors to 
claim their unpaid dividend amounts credited to IEPF do not pass away. "The 
existing provisions on investor education and protection have been recast to 
ensure that the claim of an investor over a dividend not claimed for more than 
seven years is not extinguished," an official in the ministry said. The idea, 
aimed at a safeguarding the interests of minority shareholders, would require 
the government to make statutory changes in the administration of IEPF. 

The new company law puts premium on the protection of investors rights. The 
ministry of corporate affairs is also known to have opposed the finance 
ministry's stand that investor protection being the primary responsibility of 
market regulator Sebi, the investor protection fund should reside with the 
latter. Rejecting the finance ministry stand, the corporate affairs ministry 
had contended that investor protection was related to the corporate governance 
initiatives of the government and was necessary for safeguarding the interests 
of investors. 

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/Economy/Policy/New_law_for_removing_time_limit_on_dividend_claim/articleshow/3483326.cms

Credit is a system whereby a person who can't pay gets another person who can't 
pay to guarantee that he can pay. 
 - Charles Dickens 


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