Business Standard

L&T moves NCLT against Bhushan Steel resolution

Wants its dues to be paid first; more such cases likely to disrupt IBC proceeding­s

- VEENA MANI, JYOTI MUKUL & DEV CHATTERJEE

Larsen & Toubro ( L&T) on Thursday moved the National Company Law Tribunal’s (NCLT’s) Delhi Bench against the Bhushan Steel resolution process. Tata Steel had on Wednesday announced it had emerged the highest bidder for the Delhi-based steel company, beating Sajjan Jindal-promoted JSW Steel.

L&T alleged that Bhushan Steel, undergoing corporate resolution, had defaulted on payment of ~9.62 billion for constructi­on of its Angul factory in Odisha. Under the procedure set by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), L&T had claimed the amount by filing a prescribed form with the resolution profession­al (RP) Vijay Kumar Iyer of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu in August 2017.

This is the second insolvency case where Tata Steel had emerged the highest bidder, but the process has been questioned in the NCLT. Tata Steel and the UK-based Liberty House are locked in another legal dispute over Bhushan Power & Steel, which also came up for hearing on Thursday.

The L&T case, however, is just the tip of the iceberg. Lawyers expect operationa­l creditors will be moving the tribunal to recover their dues from other companies as well. Unsecured creditors of Binani Cement, Bhushan Power & Steel and Essar Steel are planning to move the tribunal as they have been left out of the process and no communicat­ion has been sent to them about their dues.

The present resolution plan is one-sided and favours only the lenders. The non-financial creditors, therefore, plan to take legal action, said a lawyer. In the case of Binani Cement, for instance, UltraTech had, in fact, made an offer to pay 100 per cent dues of non-financial creditors. But the offer by Dalmia Bharat, ultimately declared the highest bidder, took care of only one non-financial creditor, IDBI Bank, while leaving the rest out in the cold. Binani Cement has 3,000 small- and medium-sized creditors/suppliers seeking legal advice to move the tribunal against the resolution plan.

During a hearing on Thursday, L&T argued it should not be treated as an operationa­l creditor of Bhushan Steel. The company’s counsel said the company should get status of a secured creditor. The NCLT ordered Bhushan Steel to submit a reply via its RP. The next date of hearing has been set for March 23.

The Neeraj Singhal-promoted Bhushan Steel had received resolution plans from JSW Steel and employees of Bhushan Steel. The Odisha-based company operates a 5.6 million tonne capacity plant and is a high-margin flat product business that caters to the domestic as well as the auto export market. As on March 31, 2017, Bhushan Steel had a debt of ~481 billion. In its petition, L&T said the plant and machinery supplied by it to Bhushan Steel were “a property attached to the earth” under Section 3 of the Transfer of Property Act, and, hence, these would come under the ambit of immoveable property.

Since “works evaluated at ~9.62 billion remained outstandin­g from the respondent (Bhushan Steel) due to its non-performanc­e of the contract and the machines stand embedded into the earth, the applicant (L&T) has a charge to the extent of the unpaid amount”. L&T argued that it was a secured creditor under the IBC.

“Though the Code protects the rights of secured creditors, giving them priority over others, and also giving them primacy in decision-making through voting, it is providing unfair treatment to non-financial creditors. It is expected they will move the tribunal like L&T,” said a Mumbai-based lawyer.

“The intention of saving stressed assets through the resolution plan is to provide relief to these companies after their debt is reduced. But if non-financial creditors are not treated fairly, they are bound to challenge the resolution plan. We see that happening in the weeks to come,” said a bidder. It was important to get non-financial creditors on board for carrying on the production of stressed assets, he added.

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