Representation before NCLT
When corporate disputes escalate, compliance lapses arise, or restructuring becomes necessary, businesses often find themselves standing before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT).
Representation before NCLT isn’t just about showing up — it requires strong drafting, legal strategy, documentation, and expert presentation.
From shareholder disputes to insolvency, mergers, oppression & mismanagement, or winding-up matters, NCLT handles some of the most crucial corporate cases.
Many companies struggle with petitions, deadlines, hearings, and procedural laws, leading to delays or adverse orders.
At Aarthika, we ensure seamless representation — from preparing petitions to arguing matters and guiding clients throughout the tribunal process.
Let’s break it down in an easy, practical, business-friendly way.
Documents Required
- Board Resolution authorizing representation
- Petition/ application draft
- Affidavits & supporting documents
- MOA, AOA, LLP Agreement (as applicable)
- Financial statements
- Proof of facts (emails, notices, minutes, agreements)
- List of creditors/ shareholders (for specific matters)
- Power of Attorney (Vakalatnama)
- Acknowledgement of statutory filings
FAQs
NCLT is a quasi-judicial body handling corporate disputes, compliance matters, insolvency, mergers, and restructuring cases under the Companies Act & IBC.
Because NCLT cases require precise drafting, strong legal interpretation, evidence presentation, and procedural accuracy.
Oppression & mismanagement, mergers & amalgamation, insolvency (IBC), revival, winding up, shareholder disputes, and ROC-related issues.
No. Representation must be through an authorized professional such as a Company Secretary, Advocate, or Chartered Accountant.
Yes. Appeals can be filed before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT).
By preparing petitions, drafting replies, attending hearings, ensuring compliance, and providing complete end-to-end representation.