Your Father's Forgotten Shares Could Be Worth ₹10 Lakhs Today
Every year, thousands of families discover that their deceased parents or grandparents owned shares worth lakhs — shares that have been silently transferred to the government's IEPF kitty. The good news? You can still claim every single share.
The Patna Family That Recovered ₹18 Lakhs From IEPF
Mr. Arun Kumar's father, a retired bank officer from Patna, had purchased shares of BHEL, SBI, and Indian Oil during the 1990s. After his passing in 2018, the family had no idea about these investments. The dividend cheques kept returning to the companies. By 2022, all shares — now worth ₹18.4 Lakhs — were silently transferred to IEPF.
When the family finally discovered old share certificates in a bank locker in 2024, they tried filing claims themselves. Both attempts were rejected — once for signature mismatch (the father's signature had changed over decades) and once for incomplete transmission documentation.
That's when they approached KMFSL. Our team completed the transmission across three companies, handled the succession certificate process, and filed airtight IEPF-5 claims. Result: ₹18.4 Lakhs credited to Mr. Arun Kumar's demat account within 4 months.
* Client name changed for privacy. Case details verified from our records.
Why Recovering a Deceased Person's Shares Is Incredibly Complex
Unlike claiming a bank FD or insurance policy, recovering shares involves multiple government bodies, legal procedures, and strict documentation — and one mistake restarts the clock.
Challenge 1: Dual Process Required
You can't directly file an IEPF claim. First, shares must be transmitted to the legal heir's name, THEN the IEPF claim can be filed. Most people don't know this and waste months.
Challenge 2: Multiple Legal Documents
Succession Certificate from court, NOC from every legal heir, transmission request to each RTA separately — the paperwork is overwhelming for families already dealing with loss.
Challenge 3: Name & Signature Issues
Old share records may have the deceased's maiden name, abbreviated initials, or a signature from 30 years ago. Each mismatch needs a separate affidavit or gazette notification.
Challenge 4: Company May Not Exist Anymore
Companies merge, demerge, or get acquired. Finding the correct successor company and its current Nodal Officer requires deep industry knowledge.
The Legal Roadmap: From Discovery to Recovery
Here's the exact sequence of steps that our legal team follows. This process is based on the Indian Succession Act, 1925 and the Companies Act, 2013 (Section 124), updated with the latest MCA circulars of 2025.
Establish Legal Heir Status
1-3 MonthsOption A: Legal Heir Certificate
Issued by Tehsildar / SDM / Revenue Officer
- ✓ Faster to obtain (2-4 weeks)
- ✓ Lower cost (~₹500-2,000)
- ✓ Suitable for claims up to ₹5 Lakhs
- ✗ May not be accepted for high-value claims
Option B: Succession Certificate
Issued by Civil Court under Indian Succession Act
- ✓ Legally strongest document
- ✓ Accepted universally for all amounts
- ✗ Takes 2-6 months through court
- ✗ Costs ₹5,000-50,000+ (court fees + stamp duty)
Transmission of Shares
1-2 MonthsBefore filing IEPF claim, shares must be legally transmitted to the heir's name. This involves:
| Document | Details | Where to Get |
|---|---|---|
| Death Certificate | Original or attested copy | Municipal Corporation |
| Succession Certificate | Court-issued, mentioning securities | Civil Court/District Court |
| Transmission Request Form | Specific to each RTA | KFin / Link Intime |
| NOC from Co-Heirs | Notarized, from all legal heirs | Notary Public |
| Affidavit of Indemnity | On ₹100 stamp paper | Notary Public |
| Claimant's KYC | PAN, Aadhaar, CML, Cancelled Cheque | Self / DP |
File IEPF Claim (Form IEPF-5)
3-6 MonthsOnly after transmission is complete can you file the IEPF-5 claim. This is filed on the MCA V3 portal with these additional documents specific to deceased shareholder claims:
Form IEPF-5
Filed as "Legal Heir"
Indemnity Bond
On ₹100 Stamp Paper
Advance Receipt
With Revenue Stamp
Tricky Scenarios We Handle Daily
🌏 NRI Legal Heirs
Children living abroad can recover parent's shares through Power of Attorney (POA) executed at the Indian Embassy or Consulate. We handle end-to-end remote processing — our NRI clients never need to travel to India.
👨👩👧👦 Multiple Legal Heirs Disagreeing
When siblings can't agree, we help execute a Family Settlement Deed that clearly divides the shares. This registered document satisfies both the RTA and IEPF Authority requirements.
📄 No Share Certificates Found
Even without physical certificates, shares can be traced through RTA records, company annual returns, and IEPF database. We've recovered shares that families didn't even know existed.
⚖️ High-Value Claims Requiring NCLT
For claims above ₹10 Lakhs where companies are non-cooperative, we escalate to National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under Section 125 of the Companies Act, 2013.
Why 3,000+ Families Chose KMFSL for Deceased Heir Claims
Zero Upfront Fee
We work on success-based fees. You pay only when shares are credited to your demat account. No recovery = no charge.
In-House Legal Team
Dedicated lawyers handle succession certificates, court filings, affidavits, and NCLT matters — all under one roof.
25+ Years Track Record
We've navigated company mergers, demergers, and name changes spanning four decades. Our database covers 5,000+ companies.
NRI Remote Service
Complete processing via WhatsApp, email, and courier. NRI clients across 15 countries have recovered assets without visiting India.
Discovered Your Parent's Old Shares?
Don't attempt the complex legal process alone. One documentation error can delay recovery by 6+ months. Our legal team ensures first-attempt approval.
Expert Answers: Most-Asked Questions
Can legal heirs claim shares from IEPF after the shareholder's death?
Absolutely yes. The process requires two stages: first transmission (transferring ownership to legal heir's name), then IEPF-5 filing. You'll need the Death Certificate, Succession Certificate, NOC from co-heirs, and the claimant's complete KYC. The entire process takes 6-12 months when done correctly.
What's the difference between Succession Certificate and Legal Heir Certificate?
A Legal Heir Certificate is issued by the Tehsildar/SDM — it's faster and cheaper but may not be accepted for high-value claims. A Succession Certificate is issued by the Civil Court under Section 372 of Indian Succession Act, 1925 — it's legally the strongest document and is universally accepted. For IEPF claims above ₹5 Lakhs, we always recommend the Succession Certificate.
How long does the complete recovery process take?
6-12 months total: Succession/Legal Heir Certificate (1-3 months) + Transmission (1-2 months) + IEPF claim filing & approval (3-6 months). With KMFSL's parallel processing approach, we often bring this down to 4-5 months by starting multiple steps simultaneously.
Can NRI legal heirs recover these shares?
Yes. NRI heirs need a Power of Attorney (POA) executed at the Indian Embassy/Consulate in their country of residence. The POA holder in India then handles all documentation, court appearances, and RTA/IEPF submissions. An NRE or NRO account is required for receiving the share credit. KMFSL has served NRI clients across USA, UK, UAE, Canada, Australia, and Singapore.
What if there are multiple legal heirs who disagree?
All heirs must provide a notarized No Objection Certificate (NOC) for one heir to file the claim. If there's disagreement, a Family Settlement Deed (registered under Section 17 of Registration Act, 1908) can legally divide the shares. Without mutual consent, the matter may need court intervention. We help mediate and draft legally binding settlement deeds.