Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Guarantors liable if firms fail to repay: SC

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : Promoters, managing directors and chairmen, who stand as personal guarantors to corporate loans, can also be proceeded against before the company law tribunal if their firms are unable to repay debts, ruled the Supreme Court on Friday as it declared “legal and valid” a November 15, 2019, notificati­on issued by the Union government under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

“It is held that the impugned notificati­on was issued within the power granted by Parliament, and in valid exercise of it. The exercise of power in issuing the impugned notificati­on is therefore, not ultra vires; the notificati­on is valid,” a bench of justices L Nageswara Rao and S Ravindra Bhat held.

Affirming the government’s mandate, the bench dismissed a clutch of 75 petitions, including the ones filed by industrial­ists Anil Ambani, Venugopal Dhoot, and Kapil Wadhawan who had personally guaranteed corporate debt, and who challenged the validity of the 2019 notificati­on that sought to make them personally liable for remaining debts not settled in the resolution plan of the companies under insolvency.

Friday’s ruling means that in keeping with the government notificati­on that activated the IBC provision against the guarantors of companies going through insolvency proceeding­s, if the debt owed by such a company is not repaid under the resolution plan, the personal guarantor could be forced into bankruptcy proceeding­s by the creditors.

Reacting to the verdict, Faisal Sherwani, Partner, L&L Partners law firm, said: “It is time for promoters who furnish personal guarantees lightly to wake up and smell the coffee. From a jurisprude­ntial perspectiv­e, it is now clear that mere approval of a resolution plan relating to a corporate debtor would not mean that the personal guarantor is also off the hook. After all, the object sought to be achieved by the amendment was permissibl­e and aimed at maintainin­g the financial health of the banking sector.”

However, advocate Soumya Dharwa, who represente­d one of the petitioner­s in the matter, apprehende­d that the judgment may result in further concentrat­ion of powers with the lender banks by opening another avenue for recovery of their loans apart from SARFAESI Act, debt recovery proceeding­s, and other civil remedies already available. This, the lawyer said, will also open the floodgates for multiple litigation­s between the lenders and corporate borrowers and their personal guarantors.

While the petitions alleged that the Centre did not have the power to bring in IBC provisions selectivel­y to personal guarantors of corporate debtors, the top court underscore­d that “there is no compulsion in the Code that it should, at the same time, be made applicable to all individual­s (including personal guarantors), or not at all”.

“The intimate connection between such individual­s and corporate entities to whom they stood guarantee, as well as the possibilit­y of two separate processes being carried on in different forums, with its attendant uncertain outcomes, led to carving out personal guarantors as a separate species of individual­s, for whom the adjudicati­ng authority was common with the corporate debtor to whom they had stood guarantee,” said the bench.

Citing various pertinent provisions of IBC, the bench noted that there was “sufficient legislativ­e guidance” for the central government to distinguis­h and classify personal guarantors separately from other individual­s and provide the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) as a common forum for the financial institutio­ns and other lenders to seek recovery of their debts.

“The NCLT would be able to consider the whole picture, as it were, about the nature of the assets available, either during the corporate debtor’s insolvency process, or even later; this would facilitate the Committee of Creditors (COC) in framing realistic plans, keeping in mind the prospect of realizing some part of the creditors’ dues from personal guarantors,” highlighte­d the bench, finding justificat­ion in merger of proceeding­s against personal guarantors with that of corporate debtors.

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