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Home Case Index All Cases Insolvency and Bankruptcy Insolvency and Bankruptcy + Tri Insolvency and Bankruptcy - 2024 (9) TMI Tri This

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2024 (9) TMI 323 - Tri - Insolvency and Bankruptcy


Issues Involved:

1. Whether the respondent is a Financial Service Provider (FSP) and thus excluded from being a Corporate Person under Section 3(7) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016.
2. Whether the present application for the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) of the applicant is maintainable.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Financial Service Provider Status:

The primary issue revolves around whether the respondent, M/s Asmitha Microfin Ltd, is a Financial Service Provider (FSP) and thus excluded from the definition of a Corporate Person under Section 3(7) of the IBC, 2016. The Tribunal examined Section 3(7) and Section 3(17) of the IBC, which define a Corporate Person and a Financial Service Provider, respectively. The Tribunal also referred to Section 227, which empowers the Central Government to notify financial service providers for insolvency and liquidation proceedings.

The petitioner was registered as a Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) and thus was a Financial Service Provider. However, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had canceled its Certificate of Registration (COR) and directed the petitioner to dispose of its financial assets and bring them below 50% of the total assets within three years from the date of cancellation.

2. Maintainability of CIRP Application:

The maintainability of the CIRP application hinges on whether the petitioner ceased to be an FSP after the cancellation of its COR by the RBI. The Tribunal noted that the petitioner was an FSP at the time of lending by financial creditors and at the time of default. The balance sheet of the petitioner revealed that its asset size was Rs.400.08 crores, with financial assets constituting Rs.398.69 crores. The Tribunal observed that the petitioner had written off its financial assets instead of recovering them, which was seen as an attempt to fall outside the purview of Section 277 of the Code.

The Tribunal also considered the objections raised by financial creditors such as SIDBI, PNB, SBI, and Kotak Mahindra Bank. These creditors argued that the petitioner continued to be an NBFC and thus an FSP, and the CIRP could not be initiated against it. They contended that the petitioner had not complied with the RBI's directions to dispose of its financial assets and bring them below 50%.

Judgment:

The Tribunal concluded that the petitioner was an FSP on the date of credit facilities sanctioned by financial creditors and on the date of default. The petitioner continued to be regulated by the RBI, and its act of writing off financial assets did not comply with the RBI's directions. Consequently, the Tribunal held that the petitioner was excluded from the definition of a Corporate Person under Section 3(7) of the IBC, 2016, and the CIRP application was not maintainable.

Conclusion:

The Tribunal dismissed the petition, stating that the respondent was a Financial Service Provider and thus excluded from the definition of a Corporate Person under the IBC. The CIRP application was deemed not maintainable, and the petition was dismissed without costs.

 

 

 

 

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