Companies are generally incorporated with the motive of profit earning but
some times, due to financial constraint or other reasons, situations may arise
where surviving of entity becomes difficult. Rescuing such sinking companies or
exiting ruined businesses has been a pain for investors for decades. To resolve
the problem of such corporate distress, Government of India has enacted
the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016(IBC), which is the most significant
pieces of legislation in the bankruptcy law of India. IBC has created a lot of
excitement and anxiety in the industry, as it throws both opportunity as well as
challenges.
Insolvency, in respect to the Company, is a situation when a Company becomes
incapable of recompensing its debts in the ordinary course of business, or
it becomes incapable of disbursing his debts as they become due. Any
creditor can approach before the tribunal (National Company Law Tribunal, NCLT)
with the appropriate application against such company. Bankruptcy is a concept
which is like a voluntary surrender.[1]In this case, the company voluntarily
goes to the Court and officially declares that it is unable to pay any further
debts.
The IBC has changed the regime from ‘Debtor-in-Possession’ to
‘Creditor-in-Control’.[2]Under the IBC, any creditor, beinga financial
creditor, an operational creditor or a corporate debtor through Corporate
applicant or any authorized member, a person who has the controlling capacity
over the financial affairs of the corporate debtor, who owed Rs100,000/- or more
can file an insolvency petition against a defaulting company.[3]According to
the latest amendment the home buyers can also initiate Corporate Insolvency
Process against builder or developer as they have been included in definition of
‘financial debt’.[4]A ten days demand notice has to be given to the corporate
debtor by such creditors before approaching the NCLT. However, an operational
creditor can directly approach the NCLT if the corporate debtor does not repay
the outstanding dues or fails to show any existing difference. If this is
accepted by the tribunal, moratorium will be declared and the corporate
insolvency resolution process (CIRP) will start.
The spirit of IBC: Resolution or Liquidation?
When a company is in state of insolvency, its creditors will have two options
i.e. either recovery or resolution. In other words, when insolvency proceedings
commence against a company, there are two possible outcomes i.e. the sale of the
existing business as a going concern (known as Insolvency Resolution) or the
sale of the assets of the company (Known as Liquidation). The IBC is a single
consolidated law which provides provisions for both; insolvency resolution and
liquidation.
Before putting step towards resolution or liquidation, one question needs to be
answered: whether it would be possible for a revived company to earn enough in
future to pay off all its creditors? If the answer is affirmative, then
creditors should opt for resolution and not for liquidation. According to the
Chairperson of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI), M. S. Sahoo, the
soul of the Code is to keep the firm alive by balancing the interest of all
stakeholders for which a successful resolution is needed.[5]
The general motto is- "Law should provide a reasonable opportunity for
rehabilitation of a business before a decision is taken to liquidate it so that
it can be restored to productivity and become competitive".
Thus the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was enacted to strike a balance between
Resolution and liquidation. Creditors of a sinking company should first explore
the option to revive the potentially viable company. Where revival or resolution
is not feasible, then they should go for liquidation. In case, a business
attains resolution, the creditors will have the option to recover their dues
from future earning of the company. In the contrary, liquidation is the drastic
solution. Liquidation brings the life of a firm to an end. It destroys
organizational capital and renders resources idle till their reallocation to
alternate uses. Further, it is inequitable as it considers the claims of a set
of stakeholders only if there is any surplus left after satisfying the claims of
a prior set of stakeholders fully. The code therefore does not allow liquidation
of a firm directly. It allows liquidation only after the process fails to yield
resolution.[6]
Revival of the stressed company may be the primary objective of the Code, but
official data show that more companies have gone for liquidation in the new
regime so far than the resolution as lenders have failed to endorse any viable
plan for their revival. According to the data available on the IBBI website,
till the end of June 2018, total 1547 applications for the Insolvency Resolution
were filed out of which 977 applications have been admitted into resolution
process. Data further reveals that till 30thJune 2018, total 136 companies
yielded liquidations while only 34 companies achieved resolution.[7]
Liquidation in the first meeting of CoC:
It is observed that many companies have been struggling for survival for years,
even much before the implementation of IBC. These companies are almost ‘dead’
and the chances of revival are very rare. In such cases liquidation is the only
way to recover the money. Here an important question which arises is that"Can
the Creditors decide to liquidate the company in the first meeting of CoC?"
Answer to the above question is in affirmative. In highly stressed business, if
it appears that the company will not be able to achieve any resolution in 180
days or the extended 270 days, liquidation can be only option to realise the
money trapped. According to Section 33, where the resolution professional at any
time during the CIRP but before confirmation of a resolution plan, submits to
the tribunal the decision of the committee of creditors to liquidate the company
by the requisite majority, the tribunal may pass a liquidation order against
such company.[8]The tribunal has passed liquidation order at initial stage in
many cases such as VIP Finvest Consultancy Private Limited v. Bhupen
Electronics[9],Chivas Trading Private Limited v. Abhayam Trading
Limited[10],C.A. Rajendra K. Bhuta v. Best Deal TV Pvt. Ltd[11]etc.,on the
ground that there was no hope for revival, and the creditors were not willing to
spend their hard earned money to recover the drowned money.
Permission for withdrawal of Application even after Admission:
The adjudicating authorities witnessed many cases where parties arrived at any
compromise or settlement after the admission of the resolution application.
Therefore, in order to meet out the motive of the Code, legislature introduced a
new provision to enable the Corporate Debtor to settle the claim even after
admission of application and revive itself.
Now the adjudicating authority may allow to withdraw the application admitted
under section 7 or section 9 or section 10, if the 90% of voting share of
Committee of creditors give consent for withdrawal.[12]This also indicates the
intention of the legislature to give chance to rehabilitate the corporate
debtor. Before this amendment, application could be withdrawn only before
admission and not after the admission.[13]The same was held by the National
Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) in the case of Sabari Inn Vs. Rameesh
Associated P. Ltd[14], Prowess International vs Parker Hannifin India P.
Ltd[15], Lokhandwala Kataria Construction Pvt Ltd vs Nisus Finance[16].
Interestingly, in the case of Kapil Gupta vs. Indiabulls Housing Finance
Ltd.,[17]NCLAT held that application cannot be withdrawn after admission, even
if settlement has been reached between the parties.
Reduction in voting share for approval of Resolution Plan:
In furtherance to maximizing the possibility of resolution, maximizing the value
of assets locked up in NPAs and protecting the interest of various Creditors,
legislature has reduced the share of votes required for approving a resolution
plan by the committee of creditors from 75% to 66 %. Now Committee of Creditors
may approve any feasible or viable resolution plan by a vote of not less than
66% of voting share of the financial creditors. This reduction in voting share
will make it easier for the CoC to go ahead with a plan even if there is a
difference of opinion among bankers.
Section 29A: Contradicting the Spirit
Section 29A lays down some ineligibility criteria for resolution
applicant.According to this Section, persons who had contributed to the
downfall of the corporate debtor or were unsuitable to run the company because
of their antecedents whether directly or indirectly are ineligible to submit
resolution plan.[18]By introduction of this provision,the procedure has become
more complex as the resolution professional or the liquidator is given the
additional responsibility to determine the eligibility of the applicants.[19]
In addition to the procedural obstacles, it is imperative to note that the
disqualifications enshrined in this section have the potential to hinder several
innocent applicants who may be deemed ineligible due to mere technicalities and
trivialities. The ambit of the section is so wide that ineligibility have become
common, making liquidation not merely a possibility but also a probability.[20]
The intention behind insertion of Section 29A has been made clear by the
legislature[21]stating that the person who with his misconduct, contributed to
defaults of corporate or are undesirable may misuse this situation due to lack
of prohibition or restrictions to participate in the resolution or liquidation
process, and gain or regain the control of the Corporate Debtor.It means,
legislature intended to checkmate sly, unscrupulous promoters who are trying to
buy back their assets paying a fraction of what they originally owed lenders.
All they have to do is to place relatively higher bids (than other bidders) for
their assets. And if they bid successfully, they regain control of their assets,
and also get all debt waived off.
The provision is no doubt with good intention, but it is on the basis of basic
assumption that the Corporate Debtor has defaulted because of the
misappropriation and diversion of funds by management. Legislature probably has
in mind the defaulters like. Vijay Malya, Neerav Modi or the cases like Satyam,
Kingfisher, Sahara etc. where the promoters or directors were in default but
surely there may not be same situation in all the cases.[22]
In a market driven
economy, failure of business can be for various external factors like change in
market conditions, change in technology, economic meltdown, poor demand,
scarcity of funds, bona fide management decisions and many others;
misappropriation is only one of them.
For example, introduction of mobile phone has wiped out the business of wrist
watch, alarm clock and camera industry and has affected many other sectors
adversely, for no fault of theirs. Failure of company like Nokia cannot be
attributed to misappropriation at all. Many industries had to be closed down
because of orders of Supreme Court due to environment and other concerns. All
these cannot be attributed to misappropriation alone. Many Public Sector
Undertakings, including BSNL, MTNL, Air India, are incurring huge losses. It can
never be considered that losses are due to misappropriation or diversion of
funds.
It is justified to exclude where there was misappropriation of funds or where
management is clearly incompetent, in other cases, the Corporate Debtor himself
is the best judge to decide the policy to revive or rehabilitate the company, as
they know all ins and outs of the company. It is not expected from an outsider
to have through knowledge of the issues and challenges faced by the company.
The Code was designed to find the best possible way out for an ailing entity. It
was meant to be more inclusive in approach and there was definitely no intention
to avoid promoters from submitting resolution plans. It appears that the
consequence of this section extends way beyond what it originally intended to
accomplish.Thus, blanket ban on the existing promoters to participate in
resolution plan is not at all correct. Issues of each Corporate Debtor have to
be considered on case to case basis and then to decide whether or not to allow
the Corporate Debtor in the insolvency resolution process.
Conclusion:
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 is enacted with the intention to revive
the sinking companies and this Code shall make a definite difference in the
overall ease of doing business in the country. The Code also aims at giving the
power to the creditor in case of default by the debtor which is exactly opposite
to the earlier acts and laws. This Code is still evolving and various new
provisions have been inserted by way of amendment. The amendments are expected
to further strengthen the insolvency Resolution framework and produce better
outcomes in terms of resolution as opposed to liquidation. However, there are
some provisions which are contrary to the spirit of the Code and blanket
application of such provisions may defeat the very purpose of the Code.
[1]Abhinav Pandey, The Insolvency And Bankruptcy Process In India,Available
athttps://blog.ipleaders.in/insolvency-bankruptcy-process-india/
[2]Shivam Goel, The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016: Problems &
Challenges, Imperial Journal of Interdisciplinary Research (IJIR) Vol-3,
Issue-5, 2017 ISSN: 2454-1362,
[3]Section 4 of theInsolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016
[4]Explanation to Section 5(8)(c) of theInsolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016
[5]Indronil Roychowdhury, Insolvency & bankruptcy: Focus on resolution and not
liquidation, says IBBI chief MSSahoo, Financial Express, Avaialble
athttps://www.financialexpress.com/industry/banking-finance/insolvency-bankruptcy-focus-on-resolution-and-not-liquidation-says-ibbi-chief-ms-sahoo/1200219/
[6]Resolution: The soul of IBC, Mr. M.S. Sahoo,Available
athttp://www.ibbi.gov.in/Article%20Resolution%20The%20Soul%20of%20IBC%20in%20IBBI%20Newsletter%20October-December%202017.pdf
[7]The Quarterly Newsletter of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India,
Available athttp://www.ibbi.gov.in/Newsletter_IBBI_April_jun2018.pdf
[8]Section 33 (2)
[9]MANU/NC/0042/2017
[10]MANU/NC/1673/2017
[11]MANU/NC/2275/2018
[12]Section 12 A
[13]Rule 8 of Insolvency and Bankruptcy( Application to Adjudicating Authority)
Rules, 2016
[14](2018) 91 taxmann.com 70 (NCLAT)
[15](2017) 85 taxmann.com 187 (NCLAT)
[16](2018) 91 taxmann.com 207 (NCLAT)
[17](2018) 145 SCL 167
[18]Richa Saraf & Sikha Bansal, Ineligibility Criteria U/S 29A of IBC: A Net
Too Wide,Available
athttps://www.livelaw.in/ineligibility-criteria-u-s-29a-ibc-net-wide/
[19]Varun Khandelwal,Section 29A of the Insolvency Code: A Critique of its
Impact & Recent Developments, India Corp Law, Available
athttps://indiacorplaw.in/2018/05/section-29a-insolvency-code-critique-impact-recent-developments.html
[20]Ibid
[21]Para 2 of statement of objects and Reasons appended to Amendment Bill 2017
[22]Taxmann’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016, June 2018
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