LEGAL UPDATE | IBC | NCLAT
DECISION IN ESSAR STEEL INSOLVENCY PROCEEDINGS
The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) has recently on 4 July 2019 laid down important principles on the corporate insolvency resolution process in Standard Chartered Bank v Satish Kumar Gupta which related to the insolvency proceedings of Essar Steel India Limited (Corporate Debtor) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC).
The Committee of Creditors of the Corporate Debtor approved the
resolution plan that was submitted by Arcelor Mittal India Private
Limited and this resolution plan was also approved by the National
Company Law Tribunal, Ahmedabad (NCLT) with certain modifications. This was challenged by some operational creditors, employees and the Government.
In its decision, NCLAT laid down the following principles:
- Once the debt secured by a guarantee is paid pursuant to payments to
the lenders under a resolution plan, the guarantee ceases to have
effect.
- In this case, the successful resolution applicant had left it
to the Committee of Creditors to decide the distribution of payments
pursuant to the resolution plan to the various creditors. NCLAT held
that this was not in consonance with Section 30 of the IBC read with
Regulation 38 of the IBBI (Insolvency Resolution Process for Corporate
Persons) Regulations, 2016. The Committee of Creditors cannot decide the
distribution of payments to the various creditors pursuant to a
resolution plan and such distribution must be decided by the resolution
applicant alone. The only role of the Committee of Creditors is to
decide on the viability and feasibility of the resolution plan and
whether the resolution applicant is ineligible under Section 29A of the
IBC. Further, the Committee of Creditors cannot delegate these powers to
a sub-committee as was done in this case.
- There was a huge disparity in the distribution of amounts under
the resolution plan to the various stakeholders. The financial
creditors had been given up to approximately 91% of the amounts
outstanding from the Corporate Debtor and the operational creditors had
in most cases not been allotted any amount. This was contrary to the IBC
and the principles laid down by the Supreme Court. All stakeholders
under the IBC including the financial creditors and the operational
creditors must be treated equitably in the distribution of amounts
pursuant to a resolution plan. The manner of distribution of amounts to
the financial creditors and operational creditors must be done based on
the following formula:
Amount offered in the resolution plan x 100 = % due to each creditor*
Total amount due to creditors*
*includes both financial creditors and operational creditors
Based on this formula it was held that the financial creditors and operational creditors were each entitled to 60.7% of the outstanding dues.
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