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Form 31 is the prescribed application for compounding of an offence committed under the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008, filed under Section 39 of the Act read with Rule 41 of the LLP Rules 2009. Compounding is a statutory mechanism that allows an LLP, its partners, designated partners, or other officers in default to voluntarily admit a non-compliance and settle it by paying a compounding fee instead of facing protracted criminal prosecution before a court of law.
Depending on the maximum amount of fine prescribed for the offence, Form 31 is filed either before the Regional Director (where maximum fine does not exceed ₹5 lakh) or before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) (where maximum fine exceeds ₹5 lakh). Our secretarial practice services cover the full lifecycle — offence diagnostic, voluntary disclosure framing, mitigation note, Form 31 drafting and filing, board / partner resolution, RD or NCLT representation, payment of compounding fee, certified order procurement, and post-compounding records and master-data refresh.
Compounding application before the Regional Director where the maximum fine prescribed for the offence does not exceed ₹5 lakh — most common LLP procedural defaults route.
Compounding application before the National Company Law Tribunal where the maximum fine prescribed for the offence exceeds ₹5 lakh — typically reserved for higher-stake violations.
LLP discovers a past non-compliance and proactively files Form 31 to compound before any RoC notice or prosecution is initiated — typically attracting lower compounding fees.
Compounding initiated after receipt of a show-cause notice from the RoC or RD — typically the most common trigger, with mitigation framing and timely Form 31 response.
Compounding application filed even after launch of prosecution — to abate criminal proceedings against the LLP / designated partners by way of statutory settlement.
Single compounding application bundling multiple defaults — annual filing lapses, partner-change non-disclosures, agreement non-filing — for streamlined disposal.
Master section enabling compounding of any offence under the LLP Act 2008 punishable with fine only, by the Regional Director or NCLT depending on threshold.
Prescribed e-form for filing a compounding application — capturing offence particulars, period of default, mitigation, and compounding fee offer.
Where maximum fine ≤ ₹5 lakh, the compounding authority is the Regional Director; where it exceeds ₹5 lakh, jurisdiction shifts to the NCLT.
Compounding fee may extend up to the maximum amount of fine prescribed for the offence — quantum determined by the authority based on facts.
Only offences punishable with fine only (or fine and imprisonment in some cases) are compoundable; offences punishable with imprisonment only are not.
An offence cannot ordinarily be compounded again within three years from the first compounding of a similar offence — repeat defaults face full prosecution.
Once compounded and the fee is paid, no further prosecution can be launched for the same offence — full statutory closure of the default.
Voluntary, pre-notice compounding is typically viewed favourably by the authority and tends to attract lower compounding fees than post-notice cases.
Comprehensive review of LLP filings, registers, and records to identify compoundable offences, their period, and the LLP / partners liable, with strategy mapping.
Forum-of-jurisdiction analysis based on maximum fine prescribed — RD route (≤ ₹5L) or NCLT route (> ₹5L) — with procedural roadmap.
Drafting of detailed mitigation note covering reasons for default, corrective steps already taken, and grounds for sympathetic compounding fee determination.
End-to-end drafting and online filing of Form 31 with all attachments — affidavits, partner resolutions, compliance evidence, and DSC affixation.
Drafting of substantive reply to show-cause notice from RoC / RD, with admission, mitigation, and compounding offer in lieu of full prosecution.
Representation before the Regional Director during compounding hearings — oral arguments, mitigation submissions, and fee negotiation.
Drafting of NCLT compounding petition, evidence affidavit, and oral advocacy before the Tribunal in higher-threshold cases (max fine > ₹5L).
Coordination of compounding fee payment in accordance with the RD / NCLT order, with challan, fee receipt, and acknowledgement collation.
Strategic bundling of multiple compoundable defaults into a single Form 31 application for streamlined disposal and consolidated order.
Procurement of certified copy of compounding order, RoC closure intimation, master-data refresh, and statutory-records update.
Where prosecution is already pending, coordination with court for withdrawal / abatement based on the compounding order obtained from RD / NCLT.
Post-order corrective filings — backdated annual returns, agreement filings, partner-change disclosures — to fully cure the underlying defaults.
RoC or RD has issued a show-cause notice for non-compliance under the LLP Act, calling for substantive reply and offering compounding as an option.
Long-standing non-filing of Form 8 and Form 11 has accumulated over years, requiring compounding to clean up the slate before further compliance.
Original LLP Agreement or supplementary agreements were never filed in Form LLP-3, leading to multi-year defaults that need compounding.
Past partner appointments, cessations, or designation changes were never reported via Form LLP-4 and now require compounding alongside backdated filings.
Criminal prosecution has been launched against the LLP and designated partners and a compounding order is needed to abate the proceedings.
LLP is preparing for an acquisition, fundraise, or strategic exit and historic compliance gaps need to be cleaned up to pass due diligence.
Internal compliance audit has surfaced past defaults — voluntary, pre-emptive compounding is preferred to avoid future RoC action and higher fees.
LLP wishes to apply for strike-off but historic defaults block the path — compounding is the prerequisite to complete closure under Form 24.
Compliance audit to identify compoundable defaults, forum determination (RD / NCLT), fee estimation, and overall litigation strategy.
Drafting of mitigation note, partner resolution, affidavit, and Form 31 with all annexures, capturing facts, defaults, and grounds for sympathetic view.
Online filing of Form 31, RD / NCLT hearing attendance, oral submissions, fee negotiation, and tracking till order issuance.
Payment of compounding fee per the order, certified-copy procurement, and intimation to RoC / court for prosecution closure where applicable.
Backdated regulatory filings, master-data refresh, register updates, and full audit-trail file handover to complete the closure of historic defaults.
Partner with our secretarial-practice specialists for end-to-end Section 39 compounding — diagnostic, mitigation, Form 31 filing, RD / NCLT representation, fee payment, and post-compounding cleanup in FY 2026–27.
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