Acceptance of Deposits by Companies under Companies Act, 2013

Complete practical guide covering Sections 73, 74, 75, 76, 76A, Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules, 2014 and DPT-3 reporting framework.

1. Bird Eye View of Deposit Law

Chapter V of the Companies Act, 2013 regulates acceptance, repayment and reporting of deposits by companies. The purpose is to protect depositors and prevent unauthorised collection of money by companies.

QuestionSimple AnswerRelevant Provision
What is deposit?Any receipt of money by company unless specifically excluded.Section 2(31), Rule 2(1)(c)
Who can accept deposit from members?Private Company and Public Company, subject to conditions.Section 73
Who can accept deposit from public?Only Eligible Public Company.Section 76
What is annual reporting?DPT-3 is filed for deposits and specified non-deposit transactions.Rule 16 and Rule 16A
What if company defaults?NCLT remedy, penalty, prosecution and possible personal liability.Sections 74, 75 and 76A
Teaching line: Deposit law is not only about actual deposits. It is also about identifying exempted receipts and reporting them correctly in DPT-3.

2. Act and Rules Mapping

ProvisionSubjectPractical Use
Section 2(31)Meaning of DepositStarting point for classification of receipt.
Section 73Deposits from MembersApplicable to private and public companies accepting deposits from members.
Section 74Old DepositsDeposits accepted before commencement of Companies Act, 2013.
Section 75Fraudulent AcceptancePersonal liability where deposits were accepted with fraudulent intent.
Section 76Public DepositsApplicable to Eligible Public Companies.
Section 76APenaltyPenalty for violation of Section 73 or Section 76.
Rule 2(1)(c)Exclusions from DepositMost important rule to decide whether receipt is deposit or not.
Rule 6Creation of SecuritySecurity and trustee for depositors.
Rule 16 and 16ADPT-3Annual reporting of deposits and non-deposit transactions.

3. Meaning of Deposit

Deposit includes any receipt of money by way of deposit, loan or in any other form by a company, but does not include such categories of amounts as may be prescribed.

Simple Formula: Money received by company is deposit unless specifically excluded under Rule 2(1)(c).
DepositMoney accepted by company with obligation to repay, generally with or without interest.
LoanLoan is also covered in the wide definition, unless it is specifically exempted.
AdvanceBusiness advance is generally not deposit if it is genuine and adjusted according to law.
Practical TestAlways check whether the receipt falls under any exclusion of Rule 2(1)(c).

4. Transactions Not Treated as Deposits

Rule 2(1)(c) provides various exclusions. The following table explains them in practical form.

Sl. No.HeadSub-HeadsExplanation
1Government ReceiptsCentral Government, State Government, Local Authority, Statutory AuthorityNot treated as deposit.
2Foreign ReceiptsForeign Government, Foreign Bank, Foreign Company, Foreign Citizen, Foreign InvestorNot deposit, subject to FEMA compliance.
3Banking BorrowingsBank Loan, SBI, Scheduled Bank, Co-operative BankLoans from regulated banking institutions are excluded.
4Institutional BorrowingsPFI, Regional Financial Institution, Insurance CompanyInstitutional finance is not treated as deposit.
5RBI InstrumentsCommercial Paper and similar instrumentsExcluded if issued according to RBI guidelines.
6Inter-Corporate LoanLoan from another companyLoan from company to company is not deposit.
7Securities MoneyShare Application Money, Advance towards Allotment, Securities SubscriptionAllot within 60 days. If not allotted, refund within next 15 days.
8Director Related MoneyDirector Loan, Relative of Director Loan in Private CompanyDeclaration required that money is not borrowed from others.
9Debentures and BondsSecured Debentures, CCD, Listed NCDExcluded subject to prescribed conditions.
10Employee Security DepositNon-interest bearing employee security depositShould not exceed annual salary.
11Trust MoneyNon-interest bearing amount held in trustMoney held in fiduciary capacity is excluded.
12Business AdvancesGoods, Services, Property, Security Deposit, Long-Term Project, Warranty, MaintenanceGenuine business advances are excluded if adjusted according to law.
13Promoter LoanLoan brought by promoters due to bank/FI conditionExemption continues only till bank/FI loan is repaid.
14Nidhi CompanyAmounts accepted as per Nidhi RulesSeparate Nidhi framework applies.
15Special Regulated ReceiptsChit, CIS, Startup Convertible Note, AIF, VCF, REIT, InvIT, Mutual FundExcluded due to separate regulatory framework or specific exemption.

When Exempted Receipts May Become Deposit

ReceiptImportant ConditionIf Condition Fails
Share Application MoneyAllot within 60 days or refund within next 15 days.May become deposit.
Customer AdvanceGenerally adjust against goods/services within prescribed period.May become deposit.
Director LoanDeclaration from director is required.Risk of deposit treatment.
Promoter LoanMust be pursuant to bank/FI stipulation.Exemption may not apply.

5. Who Can Accept Deposits?

Type of CompanyDeposits from MembersDeposits from Public
Private CompanyPermittedNot Permitted
Public CompanyPermittedNot Permitted
Eligible Public CompanyPermittedPermitted

Practical Understanding

SituationApplicable ProvisionAnswer
Private company accepting deposits from shareholdersSection 73Allowed subject to conditions and exemptions.
Public company accepting deposits from shareholdersSection 73Allowed subject to full compliance.
Eligible public company accepting deposits from publicSection 76Allowed subject to stricter compliance.
Private company accepting deposits from publicNot permittedNot allowed.
Ordinary public company accepting deposits from publicNot permittedOnly eligible public company can do this.

Eligible Public Company Criteria

CriteriaRequirement
Net Worth₹100 crore or more
ORTurnover ₹500 crore or more

6. Acceptance of Deposits from Members under Section 73

Section 73 permits companies to accept deposits from members subject to prescribed conditions. The intention is that members should receive sufficient disclosures and the company should maintain repayment discipline.

Sl. No.ConditionPurpose
1Approval of members in general meetingMembers approve deposit proposal.
2Issue of circular to membersDisclosure of financial position, credit rating, depositors, outstanding deposits and other information.
3Filing of circular with ROCFiling before issuing the circular.
4Deposit Repayment Reserve Account20% of deposits maturing in next financial year to be kept by 30 April.
5No default in repaymentCompany should not have defaulted in deposit repayment or interest payment.
6Security, if anyIf secured, charge is created. If not secured, mention unsecured deposit.

7. Private Company Exemptions

Private companies may get relaxation from Section 73(2)(a) to (e), subject to prescribed conditions.

CategoryConditionBenefit
Capital and reserves based exemptionMoney from members does not exceed 100% of paid-up share capital, free reserves and securities premium.Exemption from certain Section 73(2) conditions.
Startup companyRecognised startup for five years from incorporation.Relaxation from certain deposit conditions.
Closely held private companyNot associate/subsidiary; borrowings within prescribed limits; no default in repayment of borrowings.Relaxation from certain deposit conditions.
Important: Exemption from certain Section 73 conditions does not automatically mean exemption from DPT-3 reporting.

8. Public Deposits under Section 76

Section 76 permits only eligible public companies to accept deposits from persons other than members. Public deposits are subject to stricter compliance because money is collected from a wider group of persons.

RequirementExplanation
Eligible public companyNet worth ₹100 crore or more, or turnover ₹500 crore or more.
Compliance with Section 73Section 76 company must also comply with Section 73 conditions.
Credit ratingRating from recognised credit rating agency is mandatory.
Annual ratingRating must be maintained during tenure of deposits.
Security and chargeFor secured public deposits, charge must be created on assets.
Public advertisementPublic invitation requires proper disclosure and advertisement.

9. Protection of Depositors

The Act protects depositors through repayment reserve, security, trustee mechanism, NCLT remedy and penal provisions.

Deposit Repayment Reserve Account20% of deposits maturing during the following financial year to be kept by 30 April in scheduled bank.
Security for DepositsCharge may be created on eligible movable or immovable assets.
Trustee for DepositorsSecurity is created in favour of trustee to safeguard depositors.
NCLT RemedyDepositor can apply to NCLT if company fails to repay deposit or interest.

DRRA Example

If deposits of ₹50 lakh are maturing during next financial year, the company must keep ₹10 lakh in Deposit Repayment Reserve Account by 30 April.

10. Repayment and Default

Every deposit must be repaid with interest according to the terms agreed between company and depositor. Failure to repay attracts serious consequences.

TopicExplanation
Repayment obligationPrincipal and interest must be repaid on due date.
NCLT remedyDepositor may approach NCLT for repayment, interest and compensation.
Old depositsSection 74 deals with deposits accepted before Companies Act, 2013.
Fraudulent depositsSection 75 imposes personal liability where deposits were accepted with fraudulent intent.

11. DPT-3 Compliance Framework

DPT-3 is not only for actual deposits. It is also used to report certain outstanding receipts of money which are not considered deposits.

Purpose in DPT-3When to Select
Return of DepositsWhen company has accepted deposits.
Particulars of Transactions not considered as DepositWhen company has only exempted receipts such as director loan, inter-corporate loan, share application money etc.
Return of Deposits and Particulars of Transactions not considered as DepositWhen company has both deposits and exempted receipts.
One Time ReturnHistorical return introduced for outstanding money/loans from 01.04.2014 to 31.03.2019.

DPT-3 Due Date

Reporting DateInformation is reported as on 31 March.
Filing Due DateGenerally 30 June every year.

12. Penalties and Punishments

DefaultProvisionConsequence
Failure to repay old depositsSection 74Company fine ₹1 crore to ₹10 crore. Officer imprisonment up to 7 years and fine ₹25 lakh to ₹2 crore.
Fraudulent acceptance of depositsSection 75Unlimited personal liability of responsible officers.
Contravention of Section 73 or Section 76Section 76ACompany fine minimum ₹1 crore or twice deposit amount, whichever is lower, up to ₹10 crore.
Officer in default under Section 76ASection 76AImprisonment up to 7 years and fine ₹25 lakh to ₹2 crore.
Wilful fraudSection 447Fraud action may apply.

13. Practical Examples

TransactionDeposit StatusPractical NoteDPT-3
Director gives loan to private companyNot depositDeclaration required from director.Generally reportable as not considered deposit.
Company receives loan from another companyNot depositInter-corporate loan is excluded.Generally reportable.
Share application money pending beyond 60 plus 15 daysMay become depositTrack allotment and refund timeline.Careful classification required.
Customer advance for goodsNot depositShould be adjusted against supply within prescribed period.May be reportable if outstanding.
Private company accepts money from outsiders as depositNot permittedPrivate company cannot accept public deposits.Violation risk.
Eligible public company accepts public depositsPermittedSection 76 compliance required.Report as deposit.
Final teaching formula: First identify the receipt, then check Rule 2(1)(c), then check company eligibility, then apply Section 73 or Section 76, then file DPT-3 where applicable.
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