Upholding Statutory Procedure Over Premature Judicial Intervention: New Standard in Personal Insolvency Proceedings

Upholding Statutory Procedure Over Premature Judicial Intervention: New Standard in Personal Insolvency Proceedings

Introduction

This commentary examines the Supreme Court of India’s decision in the case Bank of Baroda v. Farooq Ali Khan (2025 INSC 253). The focal point of this controversy revolved around whether the High Court acted within its powers under Article 226 of the Constitution of India to interdict personal insolvency proceedings initiated under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (“IBC”) prior to submission of the resolution professional’s report. The appellant, Bank of Baroda, commenced proceedings against the respondent, Mr. Farooq Ali Khan, for personal insolvency, claiming outstanding debts that arose from a guarantee the respondent had executed. The High Court halted these proceedings on the premise that the respondent’s personal guarantee liability had supposedly been waived.

The Supreme Court ultimately set aside the High Court’s order, clarifying the importance of allowing the statutory process under the IBC to run its course before courts exercise extraordinary judicial review powers. The decision underscores the Court’s determination to preserve the distinct phases that the IBC mandates for addressing and resolving personal insolvency disputes.

Summary of the Judgment

The Supreme Court’s judgment centers on the interplay between the High Court’s writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution and the special statutory mechanism instituted under the IBC for personal insolvency cases. Here is a concise summary:

  • The respondent was a personal guarantor for multiple loans extended to Associate Décor Limited, the corporate debtor. Due to non-payment, the bank invoked the personal guarantee.
  • An application under Section 95(1) of the IBC was filed before the Adjudicating Authority (the National Company Law Tribunal – “NCLT”), which appointed a resolution professional and asked that professional to submit a report under Section 99 of the IBC.
  • The respondent then approached the High Court under Article 226, contending that his liability was waived and the personal guarantee was void. The High Court agreed and effectively quashed the personal insolvency proceedings.
  • The Supreme Court overruled the High Court, confirming that the High Court ought not to have interfered at this preliminary stage. The Court reinstated the proceedings before the Adjudicating Authority from the point where the resolution professional had been directed to submit a report.

Analysis

Precedents Cited

The Supreme Court’s decision leans significantly on the interpretation of Sections 95 to 100 of the IBC, as clarified in Dilip B. Jiwrajka v. Union of India (2024) 5 SCC 435. Drawing from Jiwrajka, the Court underscored:

  • The appointment of a resolution professional and their submission of a report are preliminary steps devoid of judicial adjudication.
  • Meaningful judicial scrutiny by the Adjudicating Authority only commences after the resolution professional furnishes the report under Section 99.
  • The High Court’s power of judicial review remains intact but must be exercised with caution, especially where a specialized tribunal is statutorily empowered to decide questions of law and fact.

Additional precedents discussed include Thansingh Nathmal v. Superintendent of Taxes, Dhubri, United Bank of India v. Satyawati Tondon, and Commissioner of Income Tax v. Chhabil Dass Agarwal, which reiterate that where statutes provide specialized adjudicatory frameworks, High Courts ordinarily refrain from intervening prematurely.

Legal Reasoning

The Court’s central rationale lies in the procedural construct of the IBC. In the Supreme Court’s analysis:

  1. No Judicial Determination at the Threshold: At the stage of Sections 95 to 99, the Adjudicating Authority’s task is administrative in nature (i.e., appointing the resolution professional and enabling fact-gathering). It is only after the resolution professional submits a report that the tribunal renders a judicial verdict on admission or rejection of the insolvency application.
  2. Role of the Resolution Professional: Under Section 99, the resolution professional has a statutory duty to verify repayment, confirm or dispute the existence of the debt, and compile the supporting evidence. The resolution professional’s report then advises the Adjudicating Authority on whether an application should be admitted or rejected.
  3. Preserving the IBC Mechanism: By intervening prematurely, the High Court effectively dismissed the step-by-step process under the IBC and jumped straight to a factual determination regarding whether the personal guarantee was waived. The Supreme Court held that such fact-heavy disputes must first be assessed under the specialized procedure spelled out in the IBC.
  4. Limits of Writ Jurisdiction: While Article 226 is broad, it does not license High Courts to displace decisions entrusted to specialized tribunals. The Court found it particularly objectionable that the High Court forestalled statutory procedures by directly assessing the maintainability of the application instead of deferring to the Adjudicating Authority’s domain.

Impact

This decision clarifies that High Courts need to be especially circumspect when asked to intervene in proceedings governed by the IBC. The IBC seeks to balance creditor and debtor interests through a prescribed sequencing of events. When a High Court interjects before the resolution professional even completes the preliminary review, it disrupts the statutory balance. Hence, future litigants and counsel should be mindful of the principle that factual determinations, such as the existence of a debt or the validity of loan agreements, must be tested first under the IBC’s procedures. This will minimize conflicting decisions and preserve the uniformity of the insolvency framework.

Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Personal Guarantor: An individual who assures repayment of a corporate borrower’s debt if the corporate debtor itself fails. If the debtor company enters insolvency, the guarantor’s personal assets can become part of the insolvency resolution if the guarantee was validly given and invoked.
  • Resolution Professional (RP): An independent professional appointed by the Adjudicating Authority to assess the debtor’s financial state, verify claims, and compile evidence regarding debts. The RP’s report advises whether the petition for insolvency should be admitted or dismissed.
  • Judicial Function vs. Administrative Function: Under the IBC, the Adjudicating Authority initially performs an administrative function—merely appointing the RP—before moving into a judicial or quasi-judicial mode when deciding on admission or rejection of the insolvency application.
  • High Court’s Power of Judicial Review: Article 226 of the Constitution authorizes High Courts to block or correct unfair or unconstitutional actions. Yet, constitutional courts often exercise self-restraint where a specialized statutory authority is specifically empowered to conduct a legal and factual examination in the first instance.

Conclusion

The Supreme Court’s judgment in Bank of Baroda v. Farooq Ali Khan is significant for reasserting the principle that specialized procedures under the IBC should be respected by constitutional courts unless there is a compelling justification to step in. By setting aside the High Court’s decision, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the importance of enabling the resolution professional to fulfill their statutory role and allowing the Adjudicating Authority to render a merit-based decision after comprehensively evaluating the facts.

This ruling underscores that questions about the validity or waiver of a personal guarantee form part of the factual and legal matrix the resolution professional and the Adjudicating Authority have been specifically created to address. Ultimately, the Supreme Court’s guidance preserves the integrity and structure of personal insolvency proceedings under the IBC, ensuring that courts prioritize adherence to specialized statutory mandates over premature interference.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court Of India

Judge(s)

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE MANOJ MISRA

Advocates

CYRIL AMARCHAND MANGALDAS AOR

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