Supreme Court Holds Corporate Guarantees as IBC
In a landmark judgment that fortifies lender protections under India's , the has ruled that liabilities arising from corporate guarantees executed by a corporate debtor unequivocally qualify as " " under Section 5(8). Delivered on , in State & Ors. v. & Anr. (Civil Appeal No. 8527 of 2022), a bench comprising Justices P.S. Narasimha and Alok Aradhe set aside orders of the and . These tribunals had previously derecognized a (SBI)-led consortium as financial creditors in the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) of .
The decision reinstates claims worth over ₹3,628 crore by the consortium—comprising SBI, , , , , and —based on guarantees furnished by RITL for group loans to and . Directing the Resolution Professional (RP) to reconstitute the Committee of Creditors (CoC) and proceed with CIRP, the ruling dismantles technical barriers like insufficient stamping, non-disclosure in financial statements, and alleged improper verification, branding lower tribunal findings as " ." This verdict promises to streamline insolvency resolutions, enhancing predictability for financial institutions grappling with non-performing assets (NPAs).
Factual Background
The dispute traces back to a intricate web of intra-group financing within the Reliance group, emblematic of challenges in corporate distress scenarios. In 2017, RITL executed corporate guarantees on in favor of a Security Trustee for rupee loans totaling ₹6,015 crore to RCOM and ₹735 crore to RTL, advanced by the SBI-led consortium. These guarantees secured obligations involving disbursement against the , bearing interest.
Separately, Doha Bank had extended a USD 250 million External Commercial Borrowing (ECB) to RITL in . Following defaults, CIRP commenced against RITL on , before the . The Security Trustee invoked the guarantees, prompting the consortium to file claims as financial creditors. Doha Bank contested these, alleging the guarantees were "suspicious," executed amid financial stress (RITL's account tagged NPA from ), inadequately stamped under the , undisclosed in RITL's 2016-17 and 2017-18 financials, and unverifiable due to non-production before NCLT.
Tribunal Proceedings and Challenges
Both NCLT and NCLAT upheld Doha's objections, stripping the consortium of financial creditor status and directing CoC reconstitution without them. The tribunals deemed the guarantees invalid on grounds of timing (post-NPA, during distress), non-reflection in financial statements (breaching disclosure norms, potentially ), insufficient stamping, and lack of proof/verification by the RP. NCLAT particularly flagged the documents' "non-existence" initially and suspected fraud/preference under IBC .
The consortium appealed, arguing that Section 5(8) IBC encompasses guarantee liabilities for interest-bearing borrowings, with execution acknowledged by RITL, stamps per Delhi rates (as documents held in New Delhi), and verification conducted by RP at the Trustee's office. They emphasized restructuring under 's Master Circular predated final NPA classification.
Supreme Court's Key Holdings
Addressing three pivotal issues, the bench unequivocally held: “The corporate guarantees executed by the corporate debtor (RITL) constitute ‘ ’ within the meaning of . The appellants (SBI-led banks) are entitled to be recognized as financial creditors... The rejection of claims of the appellants, by the NCLT and NCLAT are legally unsustainable. The impugned orders suffer from perversity and warrant interference by this court.”
The Court reaffirmed that
includes
"any liability in respect of a guarantee for... money borrowed against the payment of interest,"
underscoring the guarantor's
with the principal borrower.
“A liability arising from the corporate guarantee squarely falls within the ambit of
as defined under
… a guarantor incurs a
with that of a principal borrower and such liability is enforceable in law.”
Analysis of Critical Issues
Classification : The ruling cements guarantees as , aligning with IBC's creditor hierarchy and time-value-of-money . It rejects narrow interpretations, prioritizing substantive economic reality over form.
Stamping Objections : Dismissing Maharashtra Stamp Act applicability (documents executed/produced in Delhi), the bench invoked the Constitution Bench in , holding: “Non stamping or improper stamping does not result in the instrument becoming invalid… The non-payment of stamp duty is accurately characterized as a curable defect.” Stamp laws, being fiscal, cannot eclipse IBC's substantive rights.
Timing and Suspicion : Guarantees predated formal NPA declaration amid -sanctioned restructuring; retrospective NPA tagging post-failure doesn't vitiate. Financial stress alone doesn't imply fraud—execution was "clearly established" via RITL communications.
Disclosure and Verification : Non-disclosure is a debtor lapse, not extinguishing creditor claims. RP's inspection validated documents; appellate-stage production suffices. NCLAT's "no verification" finding was " ."
Under , the SC interfered in concurrent findings due to "glaring and manifest" errors, reinforcing its oversight role.
Directions and Relief Granted
The appeals succeeded fully: NCLT/NCLAT orders quashed; consortium recognized as financial creditors; RP mandated to reconstitute CoC inclusively and advance CIRP lawfully. This halts prolonged litigation, refocusing on resolution timelines.
Implications for Insolvency Practitioners
For lenders, this is a boon—guarantees now ironclad triggers, diminishing technical defenses. Banks must document restructurings meticulously, but gain leverage in group insolvencies. Resolution Professionals face heightened scrutiny on claim verification; proactive inspections are imperative to avert "perversity" accusations.
Lawyers advising corporates should caution on intra-group guarantees during distress, probing related-party transaction approvals ( ) to preempt Section 66 IBC avoidance. Litigators can pivot from procedural nitpicks to merits, streamlining Adjudicating Authority dockets.
Broader Ramifications for Corporate India
Amid India's distressed asset surge (NPAs linger despite IBC's 70%+ recovery uptick), this precedent bolsters banking sector confidence, potentially accelerating resolutions in conglomerates like Reliance ADAG. It harmonizes IBC primacy over ancillary laws (e.g., Stamp Acts), advancing the Code's creditor-driven ethos.
Yet, lingering queries persist: Could such guarantees invite avoidance if proven preferential? Reliance's history (fund diversions alleged) underscores governance imperatives—regulators like / may intensify intra-group scrutiny. Globally, with ECB pressures and 2026 hedging costs, fortified domestic frameworks attract FDI.
This aligns with SC's IBC oeuvre ( , ), prioritizing value maximization over equity dilution via technicalities.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court's exposition elevates corporate guarantees from contested instruments to bedrock financial debts under IBC, eviscerating procedural chicanery. By reinstating the SBI consortium and mandating CoC revival, it signals judicial commitment to IBC's transformative mandate: timely, creditor-centric resolutions. Legal professionals must recalibrate strategies, embracing this clarity to navigate India's evolving insolvency landscape with renewed vigor.