NEW DELHI (India CSR): Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is not just a moral expectation—it is a legal obligation for many companies under Indian law. Vishnupriya Hotels and Resorts Private Limited faced this reality when it failed to meet CSR compliance requirements over three consecutive years. The result? A penalty of Rs 1.59 crore imposed by the Registrar of Companies (ROC), later reduced to Rs 32.72 lakh after an appeal.
The case underlines a serious gap in governance and shows how CSR compliance, when neglected, can become a financial and legal burden. For company directors, here are five crucial lessons to prevent such costly consequences.
1. CSR Compliance Begins at the Top
CSR compliance isn’t just the responsibility of CSR officers or legal teams—it begins in the boardroom. In this case, Vishnupriya Hotels failed to adopt a CSR policy and did not form a CSR committee for three years, which clearly violates Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013.
Every director must be aware of whether the company meets CSR applicability criteria and ensure all legal steps—policy adoption, committee formation, and implementation—are fulfilled.
Lesson: CSR compliance must be monitored and enforced by the company’s board—not left unattended.
2. Unspent CSR Funds Invite Financial Penalties
CSR compliance mandates that eligible companies spend at least 2% of their average net profits on approved CSR activities. Vishnupriya Hotels failed to utilize ₹68.2 lakh over FY 2020-21 to 2022-23. Under CSR rules, such unspent funds must either be spent within the year or transferred to specified government funds within a defined timeframe.
Because this wasn’t done, the company was penalized over ₹1.36 crore just for this lapse.
Lesson: Delayed or unspent CSR funds reflect poor CSR compliance and attract significant penalties.
3. Board Reports Must Reflect Accurate CSR Disclosures
An important aspect of CSR compliance is proper reporting. Companies are required to disclose CSR activities and spending in their board reports. Vishnupriya Hotels failed to do this for three consecutive years, which led to additional penalties amounting to ₹13.5 lakh.
This violation shows that even if a company has not undertaken CSR activities, directors must ensure the reasons are clearly disclosed.
Lesson: Transparent reporting is a core part of CSR compliance and protects companies from further scrutiny.
4. Delays Must Be Justified with Documented Actions
While the company attributed its CSR non-compliance to COVID-19 disruptions, relief was only partially granted. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs considered their corrective actions—such as late adoption of a CSR policy and eventual fund transfer—before reducing the penalties.
ALSO READ | MCA Reduces Vishnupriya Hotels and Resorts Private Limited’s CSR Penalty from Rs 1.59 Cr to Rs 32.72 Lakh
This indicates that simply citing external factors is not enough. CSR compliance requires visible and timely action, even in crisis situations.
Lesson: Regulatory bodies recognize challenges—but only if sincere efforts toward CSR compliance are evident and documented.
5. Directors Are Personally Liable for CSR Compliance Lapses
One of the most serious consequences of CSR non-compliance is that directors can be personally penalized. In this case, Mr. Ajith Padival and Mrs. Chitra Padival were each fined Rs 1.36 lakh, separate from the company’s penalty.
This reinforces the legal view that directors play a direct role in ensuring CSR compliance and cannot escape accountability by claiming ignorance.
Lesson: CSR compliance is a shared, individual responsibility. Directors must stay informed and proactive.
Final Thoughts: CSR Compliance Is Legal, Not Optional
The Vishnupriya Hotels case is not about how well a company fixed a problem—it’s about how costly CSR compliance failures can be. Reduced fines may ease the financial burden, but the reputational risk and legal implications remain.
For directors and company leadership, CSR compliance must be integrated into governance frameworks, monitored regularly, and executed with diligence. Non-compliance not only leads to penalties but also damages stakeholder trust.
(India CSR)