What is Section 108 e-voting Under the Companies Act 2013?
Section 108 e-voting under Section 108 of the Companies Act, 2013 is the digital democracy provision — Section 108 empowers the Central Government to prescribe classes of companies that must provide e-voting facility to members. Rule 20: every company having 1,000+ members must provide e-voting for all resolutions at general meetings. Listed companies must mandatorily provide remote e-voting (voting from anywhere before the meeting).
E-voting agencies: NSDL (National Securities Depository Limited) and CDSL (Central Depository Services Limited) are the main e-voting platforms. Scrutinizer (CS in Practice/Advocate/CA) appointed to oversee the process. E-voting window: minimum 3 days, typically opens 3 days before GM and closes 1 day before. Results declared within 48 hours of GM.
This guide covers Section 108 e-voting comprehensively — legal requirements, applicability, procedures, examples, MCA forms, penalties, amendment history, 1956 vs 2013 comparison, judicial interpretations, and compliance checklists. Updated with all MCA notifications up to March 2026.
Rules: Companies (Management and Administration) Rules, 2014
Last Amended: MCA Notifications up to March 2026
Who Must Comply with Section 108 e-voting?
| Company Type | Applicable? | Conditions / Exemptions |
|---|---|---|
| Private Limited | Yes | G.S.R. 464(E) relaxations available |
| Public Limited | Yes — Full | Strictest compliance, no exemptions |
| OPC | Yes, relaxed | 1 BM per half-year, no AGM, simplified accounts |
| Section 8 (NGO) | Yes | Specific exemptions via CG notification |
| Listed Company | Yes + SEBI LODR | Enhanced dual compliance required |
| Small Company | Yes, exempted | Capital ≤ Rs. 4 Cr AND Turnover ≤ Rs. 40 Cr — MGT-7A, 2 BMs/year |
| Government Company | Yes, modified | 51%+ govt shareholding; CAG audit; Sec 462 notifications |
| Startup (DPIIT) | Yes, concessions | Relaxations up to 10 years from recognition |
Section 108 e-voting — Detailed Legal Analysis
Section 108 — Core Requirements
Substantive obligation: Section 108 establishes the legal framework for Section 108 e-voting — covering what must be done, how to do it, what records to maintain, and consequences of non-compliance. Must be read with Companies (Management and Administration) Rules, 2014 for detailed procedures, forms, and timelines.
Key compliance steps: (a) Board resolution with proper minutes, attendance, and voting records, (b) Shareholder approval through ordinary or special resolution where required — 21 clear days notice for general meeting, (c) Professional certification by CS/CA/CMA where prescribed, (d) MCA form filing on V3 portal within statutory deadline (typically 15-30 days) with DSC, (e) Statutory register update within 7-15 days, (f) Stakeholder notification as prescribed by the section.
Private company exemptions: G.S.R. 464(E) dated 05.06.2015 (as amended) provides significant relaxations. Small companies (Section 2(85)) get further concessions. OPCs have simplified procedures. But a subsidiary of a public company gets NO exemptions — it is treated as a public company under Section 2(71).
Listed company additions: SEBI LODR regulations impose overlapping and often stricter requirements. Where the Companies Act and SEBI requirements differ, the stricter standard applies. Stock exchange intimation is typically required within 24 hours of Board decisions. Quarterly compliance reports must be filed with stock exchanges.
Rules and Regulatory Framework
The Companies (Management and Administration) Rules, 2014 prescribe detailed procedures, forms, timelines, and documentation. Non-compliance with rules attracts same penalties. All forms filed on MCA V3 portal (mca.gov.in) with DSC. Professional certification (CS/CA/CMA) required where specified. Late filing: additional fees 2x to 12x. G.S.R. 464(E) exemptions for private companies. Over 100 MCA circulars since 2014 provide guidance.
Practical Examples — Section 108 e-voting
Example 1 — Small Company Compliance
Scenario: ABC Pvt Ltd (Small Company — capital Rs. 1 Cr, turnover Rs. 20 Cr, Faridabad) complying with Section 108.
Process: Board meeting with 2 directors (quorum) → Pass resolution with proper minutes → Prepare documents and certifications → File MCA form on V3 portal within deadline → Update statutory registers → Reflect in next MGT-7A. As Small Company: 2 Board meetings/year, simplified annual return, no cash flow statement, no auditor rotation.
Example 2 — Listed Company Enhanced Compliance
Scenario: MegaCorp Ltd (BSE/NSE listed, Rs. 500 Cr turnover) — full Section 108 compliance PLUS SEBI LODR. Must have functioning audit committee (Section 177), NRC (Section 178), stakeholders committee, vigil mechanism. Quarterly compliance reports to stock exchanges. Continuous disclosure obligations. Insider trading restrictions during compliance events.
Example 3 — Non-Compliance Consequences
Scenario: XYZ Ltd fails to comply with Section 108 for 2 consecutive years.
Consequences: ROC issues show cause under Section 454 → Company/officers reply within 30 days → Adjudication: penalty Rs. 1L-25L on company + Rs. 50,000-5L per officer → If annual filings also missed 3 years → director disqualification 5 years under Section 164(2) across ALL companies → ROC may initiate strike-off under Section 248.
MCA Forms Required
| Form | Purpose | Deadline | Certification |
|---|---|---|---|
| MGT-14 | Filing resolutions with ROC | Within 30 days | CS / Director |
| AOC-4 | Filing financial statements | 30 days of AGM | Director / CS |
| MGT-7/MGT-7A | Annual return | 60 days of AGM | CS / Director |
| DIR-12 | Director appointment/change | Within 30 days | CS / Director |
Penalties for Non-Compliance
| Violation | Company Penalty | Officer Penalty | Section |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-compliance with Section 108 | Rs. 1L-25L | Rs. 50,000-5L per officer | Section 108 |
| Late filing of MCA form | Additional fees 2x-12x | Personal penalty | Fee Rules |
| False information / statement | Rs. 1L-10L | Imprisonment up to 6 months + fine | Sec 448 |
| Fraud | Rs. 1L to 3x amount | Imprisonment 6 months-10 years | Sec 447 |
| 3-year non-filing | Strike-off (Sec 248) | Director disqualification 5 years | Sec 164(2) |
Compliance Calendar
Event-based: Board resolution → Shareholder approval (if needed) → MCA form (15-30 days) → Register update (7-15 days) → Stakeholder notice.
Annual: AOC-4 (30 days AGM) → MGT-7 (60 days AGM) → ADT-1 (15 days AGM) → DIR-3 KYC (Sep 30) → DPT-3 (Jun 30). Board meetings: min 4/year (120-day max gap). AGM: within 6 months of FY end.
Judicial Interpretations
Supreme Court: Section 108 compliance is mandatory, not directory. Penalties upheld as reasonable. Directors deemed aware of all Board matters.
NCLT: Strict deadlines — one-day delays penalized. No inherent right to condonation. Constructive notice applies to ROC filings.
Compliance Checklist
| # | Action | Timeline | Responsible | ☐ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Verify applicability and exemptions | At event | CS / Director | ☐ |
| 2 | Board resolution with minutes | Before event | Board / CS | ☐ |
| 3 | Shareholder approval if required | Per timeline | CS | ☐ |
| 4 | File MCA form on V3 with DSC | 15-30 days | Signatory | ☐ |
| 5 | Update registers and notify stakeholders | 7-15 days | CS | ☐ |
| 6 | Maintain records (8 years minimum) | Ongoing | CS / Admin | ☐ |