LEGAL ADVISORY

Corporate law encompasses many aspects of businesses and regulates how stakeholders can act within their company, which makes solid corporate legal advisory essential for any business. It is important for corporations to understand the liability and ownership held by different stakeholders in your company. Corporate law is important to understand because it can affect the way that your company grows and changes. When looking at corporate law, it is important to recognize that litigation can occur. When this happens, it is important to have a trusted advisor to help you through this process. We are committed to resolve our clients' problems and provide timely advice that fits in your personal timeframe. The time and efforts saved by our practice will undoubtedly improve your Company's operations and enhance its capacity to respond to unexpected matters swiftly.

When assisting clients, it is most often because their business is changing and developing. In the process of change it is always important to have someone that you can trust and we hope to be your firm of choice. This is why we offer our clients the option to create dedicated services, tailored to their needs. We render following services.

  • Preparing Legal Opinion / Legal Position Paper on issues pertaining to Company, Labour, Industrial, environment, commercial, taxation, human resource, foreign exchange and all other applicable corporate laws.
  • Incorporation and sale of readymade companies (including provision of registered office and secretarial services)
  • Full range administration support and company liquidation
  • Provision of changes in company's legal status at the respective authorities
  • Company's Shared Capital distribution, increase and reduction
  • Agreements governing the relationships between related parties, shareholder agreements
  • Provision of legal support by the negotiation with trading partners and preparation of corresponding legal documentation
  • Preparation of documents relating to Annual General Meetings and other executive meetings
  • Corporate governance and management rules
STATUTORY REPRESENTATION

What is statutory representation, and how does it affect my business?

Statutory representation refers to the mandate imposed by states requiring all corporations and companies to use a state registered professional, to receive legal correspondence on their behalf.

Business owners are free to act as their own registered professional for purposes of statutory representation. However, the main reason the vast majority of companies hire outside consultants is because they understand the dire consequences of not promptly responding to service of process documentation. State governments have a reputation for sternly enforcing correspondence deadlines; courts will rarely waive penalties for a failure to respond, regardless of the reason a business may have for the delay.

What are registered professional statutory representation duties?

Despite the variation in state specific regulations concerning what a registered agent is authorized to do, the common official requirements include accepting tax notices, annual report forms, business license renewals, and other service of process.

Whether you are running a small local company or a national corporation with offices in multiple states, you need adequate statutory representation.

To safeguard your corporate legal interests, let SRA be your registered agent of choice for statutory representation. Appear before NCLT - Oppression, Mismanagement, Directorial and Shareholders remedies, compounding of contraventions under the provisions of Compliance Act 1956 and such other issues come under the jurisdiction of National Company Law Tribunal.

  • Appear before Regional Directors Offices - Certain administrative decisions, approval of contracts between interested directors come under the jurisdiction of RDs Offices
  • Appear before SEBI & Stock Exchanges - for variety of compliances under SEBI Act and compliance of Listing agreements
  • Appear before MCA obtaining approvals relating to place of profit and such other issues
  • Appear before RBI for compounding contraventions under FEMA regulations
  • Appear before ROCs and Official Liquidators Office
  • Appear before Customs Authority & Excise
  • Registrar of Companies, Registrar of Trademarks, Registrar of Firms, Societies and Chits, Official Liquidator and such other quasi judicial bodies according to the needs.