Section 185 Companies Act: Loans to Directors — The Rules Every Private Company Gets Wrong

The promoter of a profitable private limited company needed ₹50 lakhs for a personal real estate transaction. His CA suggested routing it through the company — a short-term loan, to be repaid in three months. The resolution was passed in a board meeting. The funds were transferred the next day. Six months later, during a Registrar of Companies inspection, the transaction came to light. The penalty: ₹5 lakhs on the company, ₹5 lakhs on every officer in default, a mandatory return of the funds with interest, and a qualification in the statutory auditor’s report that followed the company — and its directors — for years.

Section 185 of the Companies Act, 2013 is one of the most violated sections in Indian corporate law — and one of the most unforgiving.

What Section 185 Prohibits

Section 185 prohibits a company from, directly or indirectly, making any loan, giving any guarantee, or providing any security in connection with a loan to:

  • Any director of the company or its holding company
  • Any partner or relative of a director
  • Any firm in which a director or relative is a partner
  • Any private company in which a director is a director or member
  • Any body corporate whose board is accustomed to act in accordance with the directions of the company’s board or directors

The word “indirectly” is load-bearing. Routing a loan through a subsidiary, a trust, or a friendly company — and ultimately benefiting a director — has been held to violate Section 185 by the NCLT in multiple cases.

The 2018 Amendment: Exceptions That Are Narrower Than They Look

The Companies (Amendment) Act 2017 introduced Section 185(2) with three narrow exceptions: loans to managing directors or whole-time directors as part of service conditions, loans approved by special resolution (75% vote), and loans given in ordinary course of business by a company that lends money as its principal business. Each exception has conditions that are strictly interpreted.

In In re: Rajesh Exports Ltd (NCLT Bengaluru, 2022), the company argued that a loan to a whole-time director was part of his emoluments package. The NCLT held that emoluments-based loans require the terms to be in a board-approved service contract — a post-hoc resolution ratifying the payment did not qualify.

Three Practical Takeaways

  1. Never use the company’s bank account as a personal float. Even a temporary transfer — “I’ll return it in a week” — is a Section 185 violation the moment it is made. There is no de minimis exemption and no retrospective cure.
  2. The special resolution route requires genuine shareholder approval. A special resolution for a director loan must be passed at a properly convened general meeting with proper notice. A circular resolution will not suffice — Section 185(2) does not permit loans by circular resolution.
  3. Get the statutory auditor on board before the transaction, not after. Section 185 violations must be reported by auditors under CARO 2020. A proactive conversation before the transaction — where the auditor either clears it or flags the risk — is far better than a qualification in the audit report.

Quick Quiz

A private limited company passes a special resolution approving a ₹25 lakh loan to its whole-time director at 12% per annum. The director holds 60% equity. Is this transaction valid under Section 185(2)?

A) Yes — special resolution cures all requirements    B) No — a director who holds 60% equity cannot vote in a special resolution approving their own loan    C) Yes — whole-time directors are exempt from Section 185    D) No — Section 185 does not permit loans to directors under any circumstances

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