Business Standard

APPELLATE TRIBUNAL STAYS NCLT ORDER ALLOWING PROMOTER TO BID FOR MBL

- VEENA MANI

An appellate tribunal has stayed the order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) allowing the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture to bid for his insolvent company. It also stayed the resolution plan for the company. The Kolkata Bench of the NCLT had allowed the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture, Anjanee Kumar Lakhotia, to place a resolution plan for the company. Lakhotia is also a corporate guarantor of MBL Infrastruc­ture. The NCLT had said that his guarantee had not been invoked and, hence, Lakhotia was eligible to bid. Punjab National Bank, one of the creditors to MBL Infrastruc­ture, had appealed against the NCLT order. The bank contended that though the corporate guarantee had not been invoked, Lakhotia was the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture. The Kolkata Bench of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal issued an interim order stating that the final resolution plan for MBL Infrastruc­ture would not be approved till it made its final ruling. VEENA MANI reports

An appellate tribunal has stayed the order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) allowing the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture to bid for his insolvent company. It also stayed the resolution plan for the company.

The Kolkata bench of the NCLT had allowed the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture, Anjanee Kumar Lakhotia, to place a resolution plan for the company. Lakhotia is also a corporate guarantor for MBL Infrastruc­ture. The NCLT had said that his guarantee had not been invoked and hence Lakhotia was eligible to bid.

Punjab National Bank (PNB), one of the creditors to MBL Infrastruc­ture, had appealed against the NCLT order. The bank contended that even though the corporate guarantee had not been invoked, Lakhotia was the promoter of MBL Infrastruc­ture.

The Kolkata bench of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal issued an interim order stating that the final resolution plan for MBL Infrastruc­ture would not be approved till it made its final ruling.

“Merely because there is a default by a borrower in repayment of a borrowed amount to a creditor does not render the borrower or its guarantor dishonest. Every act of default cannot be equated with malfeasanc­e,” the Kolkata bench of the NCLT had stated.

The NCLT had ruled that the Ordinance barring promoters of companies whose debts were overdue by a year from bidding for these companies in insolvency proceeding­s could not be applicable to all promoters. It observed that the guarantor whose guarantee had not been invoked could not be clubbed with those prohibited from bidding.

The NCLT ruled that the Ordinance about the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code did not bar every promoter and guarantor from bidding for insolvent companies.

The order will have repercussi­ons on ongoing cases where promoters and guarantors have bid for companies undergoing insolvency resolution. The promoters of Essar Steel and Bhushan Steel have shown an interest in bidding for their companies.

Lakhotia’s resolution plan for MBL Infrastruc­ture was found to be in compliance with the rules under the IBC by the resolution profession­al. However, the government had by then amended the IBC through an Ordinance barring promoters of companies with non-performing assets of more than one year, wilful and dubious defaulters or those associated with them from bidding for the insolvent companies.

After the Ordinance, the committee of creditors found that Lakhotia was not eligible to bid for MBL Infrastruc­ture.

Lakhotia contended the decision by the committee did not reflect the correct interpreta­tion of the Ordinance. He said he could not be barred from bidding as one year had not lapsed from the date MBL Infrastruc­ture’s dues were declared NPAs. He also said that the creditors did not invoke the guarantee executed by him nor was any demand made by the lenders to make any payments as a guarantor.

Members of the committee were not clear about the implicatio­ns of various clauses of the Ordinance and sought an interpreta­tion by the tribunal in this case.

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