SCI (2024.02.12) in Greater Noida Industrial Development Authority Vs. Prabhjit Singh Soni and Anr. [Civil Appeal Nos. 7590-7591 of 2023] held that;
That the Form in which a claim is to be submitted under the CIRP Regulations 2016 is directory and not mandatory. What is important is, the claim must be supported by proof.
That the RP is under a statutory obligation to collate the data obtained from (a) the claim(s) made before it and (b) information gathered from the records including those maintained by the CD.
In consequence, even if a claim submitted by a creditor against the CD is in a Form not as specified in the CIRP Regulations, 2016, the same has to be given due consideration by the IRP or the RP,
A fortiori, if a claim is submitted by an operational creditor claiming itself as a financial creditor, the claim would have to be accorded due consideration in the category to which it belongs provided it is verifiable.
in our view, though commercial wisdom of the COC in approving a resolution plan may not be justiciable in exercise of the power of judicial review, the Adjudicating Authority can always take notice of any shortcoming in the resolution plan in terms of the parameters specified in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC coupled with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations 2016. If any such shortcoming appears in the resolution plan, it may send the resolution plan back to the COC for re-submission after satisfying the parameters so laid down.
The inherent power has not been conferred upon the court; it is a power inherent in the Court by virtue of its duty to do justice between the parties before it.”
That a Tribunal or a Court is invested with such ancillary or incidental powers as may be necessary to discharge its functions effectively for the purpose of doing justice between the parties and, in absence of a statutory prohibition, in an appropriate case, it can recall its order in exercise of such ancillary or incidental powers
It was observed that there may be other grounds for recall of a judgment one of them being where fraud is played on the Court in obtaining a judgment.
Excerpts of the order;
# 1. These appeals under Section 62 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 20161 are directed against the judgment and order2 of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi3 passed in Company Appeal (AT) (Ins.) No. 867 of 2021 and I.A. No. 2315 of 2021, whereby the appellant’s appeal against the order of the National Company Law Tribunal, New Delhi4 dated 05.04.2021 has been dismissed.
# 2. By the order dated 05.04.2021, NCLT had dismissed two applications filed by the appellant under Section 60(5) of the IBC, namely:
(a) I.A. No.1380/ 2021, inter alia, to recall the order dated 04.08.2020 passed by NCLT in I.A. No. 2201 (PB)/2020 in Company Petition No. (IB)-272 (ND)/ 2019; and
(b) I.A. No.344/ 2021, inter alia, questioning the decision of the Resolution Professional (hereinafter referred to as the RP) in treating the appellant as an operational creditor and not informing the appellant about the meetings of the Committee of Creditors5.
# Factual Background
# 3. The appellant being a statutory authority constituted under Section 3 of the U.P. Industrial Area Development Act, 19766 acquired land for setting up an urban and industrial township. On 28.10.2010, one of the plots of land acquired by it, namely, Plot No. 01-C, Sector 16C, Greater Noida, District Gautam Budh Nagar, U.P., was allotted, by way of lease for 90 years, to M/s. JNC Construction (P) Ltd (the Corporate Debtor7) for a residential project, by charging premium, payable in instalments starting from 29.10.2012 up to 29.04.2020, after initial moratorium of 24 months, albeit subject to payment of interest as well as penal interest, while reserving right to cancel the lease and resume the demised land, subject to certain conditions. The CD committed default in payment of instalments and was served with demand cum pre-cancellation notice.
# 4. A Company Petition No. (IB) 272 (PB)/ 2019 was filed against the CD for initiating Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process8, which was admitted on 30.05.2019. Consequent thereto, claims were invited through a public announcement.
# 5. Pursuant to the public notice, in the month of January 2020, appellant submitted a claim of Rs. 43,40,31,951, being unpaid instalments payable towards premium for the lease. The claim was set up by the appellant as a financial creditor of the CD.
# 6. However, the RP treated the appellant as an operational creditor and, vide e-mail dated 04.02.2020, requested the appellant to submit its claim in Form B, as an operational creditor of the CD.
# 7. The appellant did not submit its claim afresh as an operational creditor. In the meantime, the COC approved a plan which was presented to the Adjudicating Authority (NCLT) for approval. The NCLT vide order dated 04.08.2020 approved the same.
# 8. On getting information through letter dated 24.09.2020 that the plan has been finalised and approved, on 06.10.2020 the appellant filed I.A. No.344 of 2021 questioning, inter alia, the resolution plan, the decision of the RP to treat the appellant as an operational creditor, and all actions in pursuance thereof. Another I.A. No.1380/2021 was filed on 15.03.2021 seeking, inter alia, recall of the order dated 04.08.2020.
# 9. In the two applications referred to above, the appellant pleaded, inter alia, that, —
(a) there was gross error on part of the RP in treating the appellant as an operational creditor, particularly, when it had no adjudicatory power under Regulation 13 of The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (Insolvency Resolution Process for Corporate Persons) Regulations, 20169;
(b) the resolution plan erroneously states that appellant did not submit a claim when, in fact, it was submitted;
(c) appellant being owner of the land with statutory charge over assets of the CD ought to have been given top priority for its dues as a secured creditor;
(d) no opportunity of hearing was given to the appellant by the COC, and the entire process right up to the approval of the plan by the Adjudicating Authority was ex parte.
NCLT’s Order
# 10. The NCLT, vide order dated 5.4.2021, rejected the aforesaid applications, inter alia, on the ground that, despite lapse of seven months between the date of filing its claim in January, 2020 and the date of approval of the plan in August 2020, the appellant took no steps against the RP for not taking a decision on its claim, even though it was aware about initiation of the CIRP, and now it is not permissible to take a decision on the claim application of the appellant as the CIRP is complete consequent to approval of the plan.
Appeal before NCLAT
# 11. Aggrieved with the order of the NCLT, the appellant filed an appeal before the NCLAT, inter alia, on the following grounds:
(i) The appellant was a financial creditor and, therefore, ought to have been a member of the COC. On account of absence of the appellant in the COC, the approval of the resolution plan by the COC and, thereafter, by the NCLT is rendered invalid;
(ii) By virtue of Sections 1310, 13A11 and 1412 of the 1976 Act, the appellant had a charge over the assets of the CD and was therefore a secured creditor within the meaning of Section 3(30)13 read with Section 3(31)14 of the IBC, yet the resolution plan does not treat the appellant as a secured creditor;
(iii) The appellant had submitted its claim with proof, yet the appellant was shown as one who submitted no claim. Additionally, the appellant was neither informed of the meetings of the COC nor adequate amount, commensurate to its status as a secured creditor and owner of the land with statutory rights, was allocated to it in the resolution plan, which is violative of the provisions of Section 30(2)15 of the IBC; and
(iv) The NCLT failed to address and appreciate the grounds taken in the correct perspective.
Findings of NCLAT
# 12. The appeal preferred by the appellant was dismissed by observing, inter alia,
(i) the materials on record reflect that the RP had informed the appellant vide e-mail dated 04.02.2020 about its status as an Operational Creditor and to submit its claim in Form ‘B’, yet the appellant chose not to file its claim;
(ii) in New Okhla Development Authority vs. Anand Sonbhadra16, it was held that disbursement is an indispensable requirement to constitute a financial debt within the meaning of Section 5(8)17 of the IBC and, that too, the disbursement must be from a creditor to a debtor, and as the lease executed by the appellant was not a financial lease or capital lease, the appellant does not qualify as a financial creditor;
(iii) the resolution plan was approved by the Adjudicating Authority on 04.08.2020, and the successful resolution applicant (SRA) seeking implementation of the plan informed the appellant vide letter dated 24.09.2020 about the plan, yet I.A. No.344/ 2021 was not filed before 06.10.2020 and I.A. No. 1380/2021, seeking recall, was filed only on 15.03.2021, which shows that the appellant had not been diligent in pursuing its right, if any, therefore the challenge, post approval of the resolution plan, is liable to be rejected; and
(iv) there appears no material irregularity in the approval of the Resolution Plan, particularly, when the commercial wisdom of the COC is not justiciable.
# 13. We have heard Sri Ravindra Kumar, learned senior counsel, for the appellant; Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi, learned senior counsel, for respondent no.2 (Resolution Applicant); and Sri V.M. Kannan for respondent no.1 (Resolution Professional).
Submissions on behalf of the appellant
# 14. The learned counsel for the appellant, inter alia, submitted:
(a) There is no dispute that appellant had submitted its claim with proof on 30.01.2020 as a financial creditor having security interest over the assets of the CD. Even if the appellant was not a financial creditor, the resolution plan ought to have noticed its claim as a secured creditor whereas the order of approval dated 4.8.2020 describes the appellant as one who did not submit its claim.
(b) The meetings of the COC were not notified to the appellant to enable its participation. In absence thereof, the resolution plan stood vitiated.
(c) At the time of approving the resolution plan, the adjudicating authority failed to consider whether the plan had made provisions commensurate to appellant’s claim, and the statutory charge which the appellant enjoyed over the assets of the CD. Not only that, it overlooked the ownership and statutory rights of the appellant over the land and thereby failed to consider whether the plan was feasible and viable. In absence of such consideration, the order of approval stood vitiated.
(d) The finding that there had been a delay on part of the appellant in pursuing its remedies is misconceived, particularly when it was established on record that I.A. No.344/ 2021 was filed promptly on 6.10.2020 upon getting information on 24.09.2020 from the monitoring agency regarding approval of the plan. Likewise, I.A. No.1380/ 2021 was filed immediately on 15.03.2021 when suspension of the period of limitation for any suit, appeal, application or proceeding, imposed between 15.03.2020 and 14.03.2021, was lifted in terms of this Court’s order dated 8.03.2021 in RE: Cognizance For Extension of Limitation18.
Submissions on behalf of the respondents
# 15. Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi, leading the arguments on behalf of the respondents, submitted that the issue as to whether dues payable to an Industrial Area Development Authority, like the appellant, towards lease/ allotment premium / rental, would be a financial debt or not is no longer res integra, as it stands settled by a decision of this Court in Anand Sonbhadra (supra), wherein it has been held that it is not a financial debt. Therefore, the appellant had no voting right in the COC. And since the appellant pressed its case only on the ground that it is a financial creditor, its challenge to the order of approval had no basis. More so, when the commercial wisdom of the COC is not justiciable. Further, once the resolution plan, which makes a provision for the appellant, is approved by the Adjudicating Authority, it cannot be questioned through a recall application.
Analysis
# 16. Before we proceed to test the correctness of the impugned order against the weight of rival submissions, it would be useful to have a look at the statutory provisions of the IBC and the Regulations framed thereunder with reference to the corporate insolvency resolution process.
# 17. As per the provisions of the IBC, on admission of a petition, and declaration of a moratorium under Section 13, a public announcement is made inviting claims against the CD by a specified date. The manner in which a public announcement is to be made and claims are to be submitted, is described in the CIRP Regulations 2016.
# 18. Regulation 719 of CIRP Regulations, 2016 deals with submission of a claim by a person who claims himself to be an operational creditor. Such claim is to be submitted in Form B specified in the Schedule. Whereas Regulation 820 deals with submission of a claim by a person who claims himself to be a financial creditor. Such a claim is to be submitted in Form C. Regulations 8-A, 9 and 9-A deal with other classes of creditors with which we are not concerned here.
# 19. Regulation 1221 mandates submission of proof of the claim by the date specified. Whereas, Regulation 1322 speaks of verification of claims by the interim resolution professional (IRP) or the RP, as the case may be. Regulation 1423 provides for determination of amount of claim where the amount claimed is not precise.
# 20. The use of the words “a person claiming to be an operational creditor” in the opening part of Regulation 7, and the words “a person claiming to be a financial creditor” in Regulation 8, indicate that the category in which the claim is submitted is based on the own understanding of the claimant. Thus, there could be a situation where the claimant, in good faith, may place itself in a category to which it does not belong. However, what is important is, the claim so submitted must be with proof. As to what could form proof of the debt/ claim is delineated in sub-regulation (2) of Regulations 7 and 8 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016.
# 21. Once a claim is submitted with proof under any of the Regulations (i.e., Regulations 7, 8, 8-A, 9 and 9-A), the IRP or the RP, as the case may be, as per Regulation 13, has to verify the claim, as on the insolvency commencement date, and thereupon maintain a list of creditors containing names of creditors along with the amount claimed by them, the amount of their claims admitted and the security interest, if any, in respect of such claims, and update it in terms of Regulation 12 A24.
# 22. As it could be noticed from the CIRP Regulations, 2016, on submission of a claim with proof, the IRP or the RP, as the case may be, has to verify the claim and prepare a list of creditors containing names of creditors along with the amount claimed by them and security interest, if any, the logical conclusion derivable from the provisions analysed above would be that the Form in which a claim is to be submitted under the CIRP Regulations 2016 is directory and not mandatory. What is important is, the claim must be supported by proof.
# 23. On collation of claims received against the CD, the IRP has to constitute a COC. As per Section 21 (2) of the IBC, subject to other provisions of Section 21, the COC must comprise all financial creditors of a CD. Under Section 22 of the IBC, the COC appoints an RP in its first meeting. It may, however, resolve to appoint the IRP as the RP, subject to confirmation by the Board.
# 24. The RP has many important duties. Some of the duties which an RP has to perform, under Section 25 of the IBC, are to: (a) take immediate custody and control of all the assets of the CD, including the business records of the CD; (b) maintain an updated list of claims; (c) convene and attend all meetings of the COC; (d) prepare information memorandum in accordance with Section 29 read with Regulation 36 of the CIRP Regulations 201625; (e) invite prospective resolution applicants to submit a resolution plan or plans; and (f) present all resolution plans at the meetings of the COC.
# 25. The meetings of the COC are to be conducted by the RP. Sub section (3) of Section 2426, inter alia, provides that the RP shall give notice of each meeting of the COC to the operational creditors or their representative(s) if the amount of their aggregate dues is not less than ten percent of the debt. Regulation 19 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016 further mandates the RP to ensure that notice of the meeting is given to every participant. “Participant” is defined in Regulation 2 (l) of the CIRP Regulations 2016 as a person who is entitled to attend a meeting of the COC under Section 24 of the IBC or any other person authorised by the COC to attend the meeting.
# 26. Based on the information memorandum, when a resolution plan is submitted by a resolution applicant, eligible under Section 29-A of the IBC, the RP is under an obligation to examine whether the resolution plan(s) received by him conform(s) to the conditions referred to in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC as elaborated in Regulations 3727 and 3827A of the CIRP Regulations 2016.
# 27. The resolution plan that conforms to the conditions referred to in sub-section (2) of Section 30 is to be presented by the RP to the COC for its approval. Thereafter, under sub-section (4) of Section 3028, the COC may approve the plan after considering its feasibility and viability, the manner of distribution proposed, which may take into account the order of priority amongst creditors as laid down in sub-section (1) of Section 53, including the priority and value of security interest of a secured creditor and such other requirements as may be specified by the Board.
# 28. Once the plan is approved by the COC, the RP has to submit it for approval of the Adjudicating Authority. As per sub-section (1) of Section 3129 of the IBC, if the Adjudicating Authority is satisfied that the resolution plan as approved by the COC under sub-section (4) of Section 30 meets the requirements of sub-section (2) of Section 30, it has to approve the resolution plan. On its approval, the plan becomes binding on the CD and its employees, members, creditors, including the Central Government, any State Government or any local authority to whom a debt in respect of the payment of dues arising under any law for the time being in force, such as authorities to whom statutory dues are owed, guarantors and other stakeholders involved in the resolution plan. But where the Adjudicating Authority is satisfied that the resolution plan does not conform to the requirements referred to in sub-section (1), it may, in exercise of power under sub-section (2) of Section 31, by an order, reject the resolution plan.
# 29. Explaining the scheme of the CIRP under the IBC, in Ghanashyam Mishra & Sons (P) Ltd. vs. Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Co. Ltd.30, a three-Judge Bench of this Court observed that one of the principal objects of the IBC is to provide for revival of the CD and to make it a going concern. The RP on commencement of CIRP is required to issue a publication inviting claims from all the stakeholders; thereafter, on basis of claims received, the RP is required to collate the information and submit necessary details in the information memorandum; the resolution applicant(s) submit their plan(s) on the basis of the details provided in the information memorandum; the resolution plan(s) undergo deep scrutiny by RP as well as COC; in the negotiations that may be held between COC and the resolution applicant, various modifications may be made so as to ensure that while paying part of the dues of financial creditors as well as operational creditors and other stakeholders, the CD is revived and is made an on-going concern; after COC approves the plan, the adjudicating authority is required to arrive at a subjective satisfaction that the plan conforms to the requirements as are provided in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of IBC; and only thereafter, the adjudicating authority can grant its approval to the plan.
# 30. What is clear from the provisions of the IBC and the Regulations noticed above is, that the RP is under a statutory obligation to collate the data obtained from (a) the claim(s) made before it and (b) information gathered from the records including those maintained by the CD. The data so collated forms part of the information memorandum. Based on that information, the resolution applicant(s) submit(s) plan. In consequence, even if a claim submitted by a creditor against the CD is in a Form not as specified in the CIRP Regulations, 2016, the same has to be given due consideration by the IRP or the RP, as the case may be, if it is otherwise verifiable, either from the proof submitted by the creditor or from the records maintained by the CD. A fortiori, if a claim is submitted by an operational creditor claiming itself as a financial creditor, the claim would have to be accorded due consideration in the category to which it belongs provided it is verifiable.
# 31. On submission of the plan by a resolution applicant, the RP examines it to confirm whether it meets the requirements of sub-section (2) of Section 30 and, if it conforms to the conditions referred to therein, present the plan to the COC for its approval. After the plan is presented to the COC for its approval, the COC, under sub-section (4) of Section 30, has to consider its feasibility and viability, the manner of distribution proposed, including the priority and value of the security interest of a secured creditor and such other requirements as may be specified by the Board. Once that exercise is over, the plan is submitted for approval of the Adjudicating Authority, which must, under sub-section (1) of Section 31, satisfy itself as to whether the plan approved by COC under sub-section (4) of Section 30 meets the requirements as referred to in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of IBC.
# 32. In Jaypee Kensington Boulevard Apartments Welfare Association vs. NBCC (India) Ltd.,31 a three-Judge Bench of this Court had occasion to examine the scope of judicial review exercisable by: (a) the Adjudicating Authority, under Section 31 (1), over a resolution plan approved by the COC; and (b) the Appellate Authority exercising its power under Section 32 read with Section 61 (3) of the IBC. After examining the relevant provisions of the IBC and the Regulations framed thereunder, and upon a survey of various judicial pronouncements on the subject, the scope of judicial review was summarised as follows:
“108. To put in a nutshell, the adjudicating authority has limited jurisdiction in the matter of approval of a resolution plan, which is well-defined and circumscribed by Sections 30(2) and 31 of the Code read with the parameters delineated by this Court in the decisions above-referred. The jurisdiction of the appellate authority is also circumscribed by the limited grounds of appeal provided in Section 61 of the Code. In the adjudicatory process concerning a resolution plan under IBC, there is no scope for interference with the commercial aspects of the decision of the CoC; and there is no scope for substituting any commercial term of the resolution plan approved by the CoC. Within its limited jurisdiction, if the adjudicating authority or the appellate authority, as the case may be, would find any shortcoming in the resolution plan vis-à-vis the specified parameters, it would only send the resolution plan back to the Committee of Creditors, for re-submission after satisfying the parameters delineated by the Code and exposited by this Court.
(Emphasis supplied)
# 33. In light of the analysis of the provisions of the IBC and the Regulations framed thereunder, in our view, though commercial wisdom of the COC in approving a resolution plan may not be justiciable in exercise of the power of judicial review, the Adjudicating Authority can always take notice of any shortcoming in the resolution plan in terms of the parameters specified in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC coupled with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations 2016. If any such shortcoming appears in the resolution plan, it may send the resolution plan back to the COC for re-submission after satisfying the parameters so laid down. Likewise, the appellate authority can also interfere upon noticing any shortcoming in the resolution plan while exercising its powers under Section 3232 read with Section 61 (3)33 of the IBC.
# 34. In the instant case, a perusal of the approval order dated 04.08.2020 would reveal that the resolution plan put forth by the resolution applicant refers to the appellant as a creditor who had not submitted its claim. Further, the dues shown payable to the appellant are Rs. 13,47,40,819/- when, according to the appellant, its claim was for Rs. 43,40,31,951/- Not only that, the amount proposed to be paid is just Rs.1,34,74,082/-, that too, payable by conversion of dues into square feet of area to be completed and payment to be made, on square feet basis, at the time of registration of each of the units.
# 35. However, what is important is that neither NCLT nor NCLAT rejected the assertion of the appellant that on 30.01.2020, in response to the public announcement, the appellant had submitted with proof a claim of Rs.43,40,31,951/- before the RP, being the amount payable to it by the CD towards unpaid premium including interest payable thereon for the lease/allotment of land owned by the appellant.
# 36. According to the appellant, the resolution plan fails to take into account the following: (a) the appellant had submitted its claim with proof for Rs. 43,40,31,951/- ; (b) the appellant had a statutory charge over the assets of the CD; (c) the entire land over which the project has been conceived is owned by the appellant; (d) a notice to cancel the lease for non-payment of dues had already been served on the CD; and (e) without approval of the appellant, the plan was not feasible. Further, according to the appellant, the plan did not conform to the conditions referred to in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC read with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations 2016; and that the entire process of preparing the resolution plan and approving the same had been ex parte, thereby seriously prejudicing the interest of the appellant. It is the case of the appellant that neither NCLT nor NCLAT accorded due consideration to the above aspects while rejecting the application/ appeal of the appellant.
# 37. Per contra, on behalf of the respondents, it was urged that,- (a) the appellant had pressed its case only on the ground that it was a financial creditor, once this plea is found unsustainable, no relief can be granted to the appellant, as commercial wisdom of the COC is not justiciable; (b) NCLT has no power to recall its order of approval, the remedy for the appellant was to file an appeal within the time provided by the statute; and (c) there has been inordinate delay on the part of the appellant in questioning the order of approval.
# 38. At this stage, we may put on record that the appellant had set up its claim as a financial creditor. However, the appellant was found to be an operational creditor. Though a challenge to this finding has been laid but, during the course of arguments, the learned counsel for the appellant failed to demonstrate as to how could the appellant be considered a financial creditor. In view thereof, taking notice of the decision in Anand Sonbhadra (supra), we do not propose to deal with the submission that the appellant was a financial creditor.
# 39. Upon consideration of the rival submissions, following issues arise for our consideration in this appeal:
(i) Whether in exercise of powers under sub-section (5) of Section 60, the Adjudicating Authority (i.e., NCLT) can recall an order of approval passed under sub-section (1) of Section 31 of the IBC?.
(ii) Whether the application for recall of the order was barred by time?
(iii) Whether the resolution plan put forth by the resolution applicant did not meet the requirements of sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC read with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016?
(iv) As to what relief, if any, the appellant is entitled to?
Recall Application is maintainable.
# 40. Section 60 of the IBC specifies that the Adjudicating Authority in relation to insolvency resolution and liquidation for corporate persons including corporate debtors and personal guarantors thereof shall be the NCLT having territorial jurisdiction over the place where the registered office of the corporate person is located. Sub-section (5) of Section 60 provides that notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other law for the time being in force, the NCLT shall have jurisdiction to entertain or dispose of: (a) any application or proceeding by or against the corporate debtor or corporate person; (b) any claim made by or against the corporate debtor or corporate person, including claims by or against any of its subsidiaries situated in India; and (c) any question of priorities or any question of law or facts, arising out of or in relation to the insolvency resolution or liquidation proceedings of the corporate debtor or corporate person under the IBC.
# 41. The NCLT has been constituted by the Central Government in exercise of power under Section 408 of the Companies Act, 2013. Section 408 of the Companies Act is in following terms:
“The Central Government shall, by notification, constitute with effect from such date as may be specified therein, a tribunal to be known as the National Company Law Tribunal consisting of a President and such number of judicial and technical members as the Central Government may deem necessary, to be appointed by it by notification to exercise and discharge such powers and functions as are, or may be, conferred on it by or under this Act or any other law for the time being in force.”
# 42. Rule 11 of the National Company Law Tribunal Rules, 2016, framed under Section 469 of the Companies Act 2013, which is in pari materia with Section 15134 of Code of Civil Procedure, 190835, preserve the inherent powers of the Tribunal in the following terms:
“Nothing in these rules shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect the inherent powers of the Tribunal to make such orders as may be necessary for meeting the ends of justice or to prevent abuse of the process of the Tribunal.”
# 43. In Manohar Lal Chopra vs. Rai Bahadur Rao Raja Seth Hiralal35 a four-Judge Bench of this Court in the context of powers vested in the Court, while interpreting Section 151 CPC, observed:
“23… The Section itself says that nothing in the Code shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect the inherent power of the Court to make orders necessary for the ends of justice. In the face of such a clear statement, it is not possible to hold that the provisions of the Code control the inherent power by limiting it or otherwise affecting it. The inherent power has not been conferred upon the court; it is a power inherent in the Court by virtue of its duty to do justice between the parties before it.” (Emphasis supplied)
# 44. In Grindlays Bank Ltd. vs. Central Govt. Industrial Tribunal36 a question arose whether Central Government Industrial Tribunal has power to recall/ set aside an ex parte award when the party aggrieved had been prevented from appearing by a sufficient cause. Holding that such power inheres in a Tribunal, this Court observed:
“6. We are of the opinion that the Tribunal had the power to pass the impugned order if it thought fit in the interest of justice. It is true that there is no express provision in the Act or the rules framed thereunder giving the Tribunal jurisdiction to do so. But it is a well-known rule of statutory construction that a Tribunal or body should be considered to be endowed with such ancillary or incidental powers as are necessary to discharge its functions effectively for the purpose of doing justice between the parties. In a case of this nature, we are of the view that the Tribunal should be considered as invested with such incidental or ancillary powers unless there is any indication in the statute to the contrary. We do not find any such statutory prohibition. On the other hand, there are indications to the contrary.”
(Emphasis Supplied)
In addition to above, recognising the difference between a procedural review and a review on merits, it was observed:
13…………The expression “review” is used in the two distinct senses, namely (1) a procedural review which is either inherent or implied in a court or Tribunal to set aside a palpably erroneous order passed under a misapprehension by it, and (2) a review on merits when the error sought to be corrected is one of law and is apparent on the face of the record. …………. Obviously when a review is sought due to a procedural defect, the inadvertent error committed by the Tribunal must be corrected ex debito justitiae to prevent the abuse of its process, and such power inheres in every court or Tribunal.”
# 45. In State of Punjab vs. Davinder Pal Singh Bhullar37, while considering the bar imposed on a Court by Section 362 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 on review of a judgment or final order disposing of a case, it was observed:
“46. If a judgment has been pronounced without jurisdiction or in violation of principles of natural justice or where the order has been pronounced without giving an opportunity of being heard to a party affected by it or where an order was obtained by abuse of the process of court which would really amount to its being without jurisdiction, inherent powers can be exercised to recall such order for the reason that in such an eventuality the order becomes a nullity and the provisions of Section 362 CrPC would not operate. In such an eventuality, the judgment is manifestly contrary to the audi alteram partem rule of natural justice. The power of recall is different from the power of altering/reviewing the judgment. However, the party seeking recall/alteration has to establish that it was not at fault.”
# 46. The above passage was cited and approved by a three-Judge Bench of this Court in New India Assurance Co. Ltd. vs. Krishna Kumar Pandey38.
# 47. In Budhia Swain vs. Gopinath Deb39, after considering a number of decisions, a two-Judge Bench of this Court observed:
“8. In our opinion a tribunal or a court may recall an order earlier made by it if
(i) the proceedings culminating into an order suffer from the inherent lack of jurisdiction and such lack of jurisdiction is patent,
(ii) there exists fraud or collusion in obtaining the judgment,
(iii) there has been a mistake of the court prejudicing a party, or
(iv) a judgment was rendered in ignorance of the fact that a necessary party had not been served at all or had died and the estate was not represented.
The power to recall a judgment will not be exercised when the ground for reopening the proceedings or vacating the judgment was available to be pleaded in the original action but was not done or where a proper remedy in some other proceeding such as by way of appeal or revision was available but was not availed. The right to seek vacation of a judgment may be lost by waiver, estoppel or acquiescence.”
# 48. The law which emerges from the decisions above is that a Tribunal or a Court is invested with such ancillary or incidental powers as may be necessary to discharge its functions effectively for the purpose of doing justice between the parties and, in absence of a statutory prohibition, in an appropriate case, it can recall its order in exercise of such ancillary or incidental powers.
# 49. In a recent decision (i.e., Union Bank of India vs. Dinakar T. Vekatasubramanian & Ors.), a five-member Full Bench of NCLAT held that though the power to review is not conferred upon the Tribunal but power to recall its judgment is inherent in the Tribunal and is preserved by Rule 11 of the NCLT Rules, 2016. It was held that power of recall of a judgment can be exercised when any procedural error is committed in delivering the earlier judgment; for example, necessary party has not been served or necessary party was not before the Tribunal when judgment was delivered adverse to a party. It was observed that there may be other grounds for recall of a judgment one of them being where fraud is played on the Court in obtaining a judgment. This decision of NCLAT was upheld by a two-Judge Bench of this Court vide order dated 31.07.2023 in Civil Appeal No.4620 of 2023 (Union Bank of India vs. Financial Creditors of M/s Amtek Auto Ltd. & Ors.).
# 50. In light of the discussion above, what emerges is, a Court or a Tribunal, in absence of any provision to the contrary, has inherent power to recall an order to secure the ends of justice and/or to prevent abuse of the process of the Court. Neither the IBC nor the Regulations framed thereunder, in any way, prohibit, exercise of such inherent power. Rather, Section 60(5)(c) of the IBC, which opens with a non-obstante clause, empowers the NCLT (the Adjudicating Authority) to entertain or dispose of any question of priorities or any question of law or facts, arising out of or in relation to the insolvency resolution or liquidation proceedings of the corporate debtor or corporate person under the IBC. Further, Rule 11 of the NCLT Rules, 2016 preserves the inherent power of the Tribunal. Therefore, even in absence of a specific provision empowering the Tribunal to recall its order, the Tribunal has power to recall its order. However, such power is to be exercised sparingly, and not as a tool to re-hear the matter. Ordinarily, an application for recall of an order is maintainable on limited grounds, inter alia, where (a) the order is without jurisdiction; (b) the party aggrieved with the order is not served with notice of the proceedings in which the order under recall has been passed; and (c) the order has been obtained by misrepresentation of facts or by playing fraud upon the Court /Tribunal resulting in gross failure of justice.
# 51. In the case on hand, the recall application was filed by claiming that,-
(a) the appellant was not informed of the meetings of the COC;
(b) the proceedings up to the stage of approval of the resolution plan by the Adjudicating Authority were ex parte;
(c) the RP misrepresented that the appellant had submitted no claim when, otherwise, a claim was submitted of an amount higher than what was shown outstanding towards the appellant; and
(d) there was gross mistake on part of the Adjudicating Authority in approving the plan which did not fulfil the conditions laid down in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC.
# 52. In our view, the grounds taken qualify as valid grounds on which a recall of the order of approval dated 04.08.2020 could be sought. We thus hold that the recall application was maintainable notwithstanding that an appeal lay before the NCLAT against the order of approval passed by the Adjudicating Authority.
The Recall Application was not barred by time.
# 53. As regards the plea that the recall application was barred by time, suffice it to say that I.A. No.344/ 2021 was filed on 6.10.2020 upon getting information on 24.09.2020 from the monitoring agency regarding approval of the plan. Likewise, I.A. No.1380/ 2021 was filed on 15.03.2021 immediately when suspension of the period of limitation for any suit, appeal, application or proceeding, between 15.03.2020 and 14.03.2021, was lifted in terms of this Court’s order dated 8.03.2021 in RE: Cognizance For Extension of Limitation (supra). We, therefore, find no substance in the plea that the applications were barred by limitation.
The Resolution Plan did not meet the requirements of Section 30 (2) of the IBC read with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016
# 54. In our view the resolution plan did not meet the requirements of Section 30(2) of the IBC read with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016 for the following reasons:
a. The resolution plan disclosed that the appellant did not submit its claim, when the unrebutted case of the appellant had been that it had submitted its claim with proof on 30.01.2020 for a sum of Rs.43,40,31,951/- No doubt, the record indicates that the appellant was advised to submit its claim in Form B (meant for operational creditor) in place of Form C (meant of financial creditor). But, assuming the appellant did not heed the advice, once the claim was submitted with proof, it could not have been overlooked merely because it was in a different Form. As already discussed above, in our view the Form in which a claim is to be submitted is directory. What is necessary is that the claim must have support from proof. Here, the resolution plan fails not only in acknowledging the claim made but also in mentioning the correct figure of the amount due and payable. According to the resolution plan, the amount outstanding was Rs. 13,47,40,819/- whereas, according to the appellant, the amount due and for which claim was made was Rs. 43,40,31,951/- This omission or error, as the case may be, in our view, materially affected the resolution plan as it was a vital information on which there ought to have been application of mind. Withholding the information adversely affected the interest of the appellant because, firstly, it affected its right of being served notice of the meeting of the COC, available under Section 24 (3) (c) of the IBC to an operational creditor with aggregate dues of not less than ten percent of the debt and, secondly, in the proposed plan, outlay for the appellant got reduced, being a percentage of the dues payable. In our view, for the reasons above, the resolution plan stood vitiated. However, neither NCLT nor NCLAT addressed itself on the aforesaid aspects which render their orders vulnerable and amenable to judicial review.
b. The resolution plan did not specifically place the appellant in the category of a secured creditor even though, by virtue of Section 13-A of the 1976 Act, in respect of the amount payable to it, a charge was created on the assets of the CD. As per Regulation 37 of the CIRP Regulations 2016, a resolution plan must provide for the measures, as may be necessary, for insolvency resolution of the CD for maximization of value of its assets, including, but not limited to, satisfaction or modification of any security interest. Further, as per Explanation 1, distribution under clause (b) of sub-section (2) of Section 30 must be fair and equitable to each class of creditors. Non-placement of the appellant in the class of secured creditors did affect its interest. However, neither NCLT nor NCLAT noticed this anomaly in the plan, which vitiates their order.
c. Under Regulation 38 (3) of the CIRP Regulations, 2016, a resolution plan must, inter alia, demonstrate that (a) it is feasible and viable; and (b) it has provisions for approvals required and the time-line for the same. In the instant case, the plan conceived utilisation of land owned by the appellant. Ordinarily, feasibility and viability of a plan are economic decisions best left to the commercial wisdom of the COC. However, where the plan envisages use of land not owned by the CD but by a third party, such as the appellant, which is a statutory body, bound by its own rules and regulations having statutory flavour, there has to be a closer examination of the plan’s feasibility. Here, on the part of the CD there were defaults in payment of instalments which, allegedly, resulted in raising of demand and issuance of pre-cancellation notice. In these circumstances, whether the resolution plan envisages necessary approvals of the statutory authority is an important aspect on which feasibility of the plan depends. Unfortunately, the order of approval does not envisage such approvals. But neither NCLT nor NCLAT dealt with those aspects.
Relief
# 55. As we have found that neither NCLT nor NCLAT while deciding the application /appeal of the appellant took note of the fact that,- (a) the appellant had not been served notice of the meeting of the COC; (b) the entire proceedings up to the stage of approval of the resolution plan were ex parte to the appellant; (c) the appellant had submitted its claim, and was a secured creditor by operation of law, yet the resolution plan projected the appellant as one who did not submit its claim; and (d) the resolution plan did not meet all the parameters laid down in sub-section (2) of Section 30 of the IBC read with Regulations 37 and 38 of the CIRP Regulations, 2016, we are of the considered view that the appeals of the appellant are entitled to be allowed and are accordingly allowed. The impugned order dated 24.11.2022 is set aside. The order dated 04.08.2020 passed by the NCLT approving the resolution plan is set aside. The resolution plan shall be sent back to the COC for re-submission after satisfying the parameters set out by the Code as exposited above. There shall be no order as to costs.
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