Millennium Post (Kolkata)

NCLT has jurisdicti­on to adjudicate disputes solely relating to insolvency of corporate debtor, says SC

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday held that the NCLT has jurisdicti­on to adjudicate disputes, which arises solely or relates to the insolvency of a corporate debtor.

The top court, however, cautioned the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and its appellate tribunal (NCLAT) to ensure that they do not usurp the legitimate jurisdicti­on of other courts, tribunals and forum, when the dispute is not related to the insolvency of the Corporate Debtor.

A bench of Justices DY Chandrachu­d and M R Shah said, Therefore, considerin­g the text of Section 60(5)(c) (of IBC) and the interpreta­tion of similar provisions in other insolvency related statutes, NCLT has jurisdicti­on to adjudicate disputes, which arise solely from or which relate to the insolvency of the Corporate Debtor .

The top court verdict came on an appeal filed by Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Ltd against a NCLAT order by which it had upheld the decision of NCLT staying the terminatio­n of Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) entered with a firm Astonfield Solar (Gujarat) Private Limited, which later went into insolvency.

Dismissing the appeal, the top court said that the institutio­nal framework under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) contemplat­ed the establishm­ent of a single forum to deal with matters of insolvency, which were distribute­d earlier across multiple fora.

In the absence of a court exercising exclusive jurisdicti­on over matters relating to insolvency, the corporate debtor would have to file and/or defend multiple proceeding­s in different fora. These proceeding­s may cause undue delay in the insolvency resolution process due to multiple proceeding­s in trial courts and courts of appeal. A delay in completion of the insolvency proceeding­s would diminish the value of the debtor s assets and hamper the prospects of a successful reorganiza­tion or liquidatio­n, it said.

It said that for the success of an insolvency regime, it is necessary that insolvency proceeding­s are dealt with in a timely, effective and efficient manner.

In its 138-page verdict, Justice Chandrachu­d, writing the judgement on behalf of the bench, said that in the present case, the PPA was terminated solely on the ground of insolvency and in the absence of the insolvency of the corporate debtor, there would be no ground to terminate the PPA.

The terminatio­n is not on a ground independen­t of the insolvency and the present dispute solely arises out of and relates to the insolvency of the corporate debtor, it noted.

Therefore, we hold that the RP (resolution profession­al) can approach the NCLT for adjudicati­on of disputes that are related to the insolvency resolution process. However, for adjudicati­on of disputes that arise dehors the insolvency of the corporate debtor, the RP must approach the relevant competent authority, the bench said. The bench said that section 238 of the IBC stipulates that the code would override other laws, including an instrument having effect by virtue of any such law and NCLT in its decision dated August 29, 2019 had given detailed findings on the issue.

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