Home Case Index All Cases Insolvency and Bankruptcy Insolvency and Bankruptcy + HC Insolvency and Bankruptcy - 2021 (7) TMI HC This
Forgot password New User/ Regiser ⇒ Register to get Live Demo
2021 (7) TMI 593 - HC - Insolvency and BankruptcyMaintainability of writ petition - petitions are filed on the premise that the appeals and stay petitions are not being taken up by the NCLAT - effective alternative remedy of appeal under Section 61 of I&B Code - HELD THAT:- As observed by the Apex Court in M/S. INNOVENTIVE INDUSTRIES LTD. VERSUS ICICI BANK & ANR. [2017 (9) TMI 58 - SUPREME COURT] the IBC, 2016 is a Single Unified Umbrella Code, covering the entire gamut of the law relating to insolvency resolution of corporate persons and others in a time bound manner. The code provides a three-tier mechanism namely, (i) the NCLT, which is the adjudicating authority (ii) the NCLAT, which is the appellate authority (iii) the Supreme Court, which is the final authority, for dealing with all issues that may arise in relation to the re-organisation and insolvency resolution of corporate persons. An order passed by the NCLT is appealable to the NCLAT under Section 61 of the Code and the orders of the NCLAT are amenable to the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under Section 62. One of the issues that arose for consideration before the Division Bench in SULOCHANA GUPTA VERSUS RBG ENTERPRISES (P.) LTD. [2021 (1) TMI 240 - KERALA HIGH COURT], was the maintainability of the writ petition under Article 226 against an order of the NCLT. The Division Bench, after elaborate survey of precedents, answered the issue by holding that the writ petition to be not maintainable. In view of the exposition of the Honourable Supreme Court regarding the objective of the Code and the authoritative pronouncement of the Division Bench, the writ petitions are dismissed.
|