Business Standard

NCLT to get a boost with more staff, Benches

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI

The government is ramping up the capacity of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) Benches to boost decision-making and reduce delays.

It is setting up dedicated Benches for insolvency and bankruptcy cases and add 40 new positions for NCLT, said Injeti Srinivas, secretary, corporate affairs ministry to Parliament standing committee on finance.

“When the NCLT was set up, IBC was never in the picture. It was only set up as a company law court. The IBC has now sort of dominated,” Srinivas said.

Because of the increase in IBC cases, which are getting primacy at the NCLT, company cases are getting badly delayed.

The government is also planning to set up specialise­d Benches for competitio­n law to reduce the burden on the appellate tribunal, which is referred to on all matters from company law and IBC to competitio­n law and the national financial reporting authority.

The ministry has finalised recruitmen­t rules for NCLT Benches. The total sanctioned strength for regular staff in NCLT is 320. Around 725 people are engaged on outsource mode in NCLT. Separately, three to four law clerks have been engaged for each Bench.

“In the NCLT, of 63 staff, 48 are in position...now that the recruitmen­t rules are ready, we are very hopeful that in six months or so all the regular staff will be in position,” Srinivas said.

Since inception, close to 62,000 cases came to the NCLT. These include the ones transferre­d from board of industrial and financial reconstruc­tion and high courts.

Of these, more than 40,000 cases were disposed and 21,500 were pending. The government estimates the number of cases being referred to the NCLT is rising at 10 per cent. The load is expected to go up, as more stressed companies knock on the doors of the Tribunal.

The ministry is also planning to increase the threshold for cases referred through the IBC to the tribunal from the current limit of ~1 lakh. “The law permits us to go up to ~1 crore, but of course, a lower threshold actually has a deeper impact on behaviour because there is fear of being pulled into the IBC process. But of course, this is being revisited,” Srinivas said.

For speedy disposal, the government on March 15 constitute­d another Bench of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal at Chennai to hear the appeals against the orders of NCLT Benches.

It will have jurisdicti­on of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Lakshadwee­p, and Puducherry.

“WHEN THE NCLT WAS SET UP, IBC WAS NEVER IN THE PICTURE. IT WAS ONLY SET UP AS A COMPANY LAW COURT. THE IBC HAS NOW SORT OF DOMINATED”

INJETI SRINIVAS, Secretary, corporate affairs ministry

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