Lawyers

  • Meghnath Navlani

    Sr.Associate

    B.Com. LL.B,

    meghnath@astrealegal.com

    Expertise Banking, Debt Recovery,Capital Market, Corporate Finance, Banking Regulation.

02-01-17-452340646The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) has recently ruled that the Limitation Act, 1963 is not applicable to the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC). In effect, the NCLAT has held that debts that were otherwise not recoverable due to being time-barred can now be the basis for initiating insolvency proceedings. This is a stark change from the earlier position and paves the way for the initiation of multiple insolvency proceedings on debts which could earlier not be recovered.

The case also dealt with other interesting issues which are generally applicable to structures involving the issuance of convertible and non-convertible debentures.

FACTS:

The judgment in Neelkanth Township & Construction Pvt. Ltd. v. Urban Infrastructure Trustees Ltd. was pursuant to an appeal filed by a corporate debtor (Neelkanth Township & Construction Pvt. Ltd.) against the order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) allowing commencement of insolvency proceedings on the action of the financial creditor (Urban Infrastructure Trustees Ltd.).

The financial creditor had subscribed to optionally convertible debentures (OCD) issued by the corporate debtor. OCDs carried nil or 1% p.a. interest rate and matured in years 2011, 2012, and 2013.

The order of the NCLT was challenged by the corporate debtor, amongst others, on the following grounds:

  1. Given that the debentures matured in years 2011, 2012 and 2013, the petition for initiation of the corporate insolvency resolution process filed in year 2017 is time-barred.
  2. The application of the financial creditor before NCLT was not complete as it did not contain the document prescribed under Section 7(3)(a) of the IBC;
  3. The financial creditor is an investor and not a financial Creditor as defined under the IBC.

JUDGMENT:

The NCLAT held that that in the absence of any provision in IBC, the Limitation Act, 1963 would not apply to initiation of the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process. The NCLAT further observed:

If there is a debt which includes interest and there is default of debt and having continuous course of action, the argument that the claim of money by Respondent is barred by Limitation cannot be accepted.

This suggests that NCLAT treated the cause of action arising from non-payment of debt which includes interest as a continuing one. Thereby holding that the limitation period could not have expired.

Compliance with Section 7(3)(a) of the IBC:

Section 7(3)(a) provides:

(3) The financial creditor shall, along with the application furnish (a) a record of the default recorded with the information utility or such other record or evidence of default as may be specified;

The Insolvency & Bankruptcy Board of India (Board) has not specified any other record or evidence of default which may be furnished. Further, as there was no record of default recorded with the information utility, it was contended that the application filed was incomplete. However, the NCLAT rejected the argument, holding that a procedural requirement could not frustrate the substantive provision of law. Failure of the Board to frame regulations could not lead to an inability of the adjudicating authority to deal with the application for initiation of the insolvency resolution process.

The NCLAT also referred to Rule 41 of the Insolvency & Bankruptcy (Application to Adjudicating Authority) Rules, 2016 whereby a financial creditor is required to make an application by prescribed form  1. Part V of the said form prescribes the particulars that need to be provided as part of the application. The NCLAT ruled that in absence any regulation framed by the Board, the evidence of default, records and documents prescribed under Part V of the Form  1 will be sufficient to determine default of debt under Section 7 of the IBC. Regulation 8 of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (Insolvency Resolution Process for Corporate Persons) Regulations, 2016 was also relied upon to substantiate the documents and records the financial creditor could rely upon to prove a claim.

Meaning of Financial Creditor:

As a financial creditor is one to whom a financial debt is owed, an issue arose regarding the meaning of financial debt. Financial debt is defined under Section 5(8) of IBC as:

(8) “Financial debt” means a debt along with interest, if any, which is disbursed against the consideration for the time value of money and includes”

  1. c) any amount raised under any note purchase facility or the issue of bonds, notes, debentures, loan stock or any similar instrument; (Emphasis supplied)

It was argued by the corporate debtor that considering that the interest rate on the OCDs was 0 or 1%, they were not issued against consideration for the time value of money. In fact, the subscriber to the OCDs was an investor in the company and not a financial creditor. However, the NCLAT held that section 5(8) (c) makes it clear that a debenture comes within the meaning of financial debt. Thus, in the present case, the amounts owed on maturity of debentures would be a financial debt.

COMMENT:

The ruling of NCLAT holds that debenture comes within the meaning of financial debt, irrespective of the applicable interest rate is useful for the industry. OCDs with nil or negligible interest rates were on various occasions used in structures such that the holder of the instrument would benefit from being in the position of a creditor till such time that the OCDs were converted into equity. This judgment now confirms that such structures would not imply that the subscriber to the OCDs would get the colour of an equity shareholder before its conversion. Further, the ruling in the context of the fulfilment of the requirement of Section 7(3) (a) of IBC is also welcome. It reflects the NCLAT approach of ensuring the due working of the IBC.

Under the Companies Act, of 1956, a winding-up petition was considered maintainable only against a legally recoverable debt. Accordingly, a winding-up could not be ordered where the recovery of the debt was barred by limitation. However, the current stand of NCLAT seems to completely change the position. This ruling effectively allows parties to initiate insolvency proceedings based on old debts that could not be recovered due to the expiry of the limitation period. This could open the floodgates for petitions under the IBC. Further, the NCLAT has not referred to Section 433 of the Companies Act, 2013 in its judgment. Section 433 provides that the Limitation Act, 1963 applies to proceedings before NCLT and NCLAT. Thus, parties should be cautious before relying on this judgment of NCLAT. Ideally, parties should continue initiating insolvency proceedings within the limitation period for the recovery of the original debt.