The
‘equitable treatment of similarly placed creditors’ is a well-established
principle in insolvency laws. The legislative guide of the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law (“
UNCITRAL”) clearly states that “
The insolvency law should specify that all similarly ranked
creditors, regardless of whether they are domestic or foreign creditors, are to
be treated equally with respect to the submission and processing of their
claims.
”[1]
The terms ‘financial debt’ and
‘financial creditors’ have been defined in Part II of the Insolvency and
Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (the “Code”), whereas the term ‘secured creditor’
and ‘security interest’ have been defined in Part I of the Code. Does this mean
that the legislature intended to make a clear distinction between a ‘financial
creditor’ and a ‘secured creditor’. While a ‘financial creditor’ in most of the
cases would be a ‘secured creditor’, the question whether a ‘secured creditor’
is also a financial creditor has lead to a legal conundrum in the recent times.
To understand this legal
conundrum, it is suitable to take note of the relevant statutory provisions
under the Code. The Code defines the terms ‘corporate debtor’, ‘creditor’ and
‘debt’ respectively, as follows:
‘corporate
debtor’ means a corporate person who owes a debt to any person;
‘creditor’
means any person to whom a debt is owed and includes a financial creditor, an
operational creditor, a secured creditor, an unsecured creditor and a
decree-holder;
‘debt’
means a liability or obligation in respect of a claim which is due from any
person and includes a financial debt and operational debt;
The Code defines the terms ‘claim’ as
follows:
‘claim’
means
(a)
a right to payment, whether or not such
right is reduced to judgment, fixed, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable,
secured or unsecured;
(b)
right to remedy for breach of contract under
any law for the time being in force, if such breach gives rise to a right to
payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, fixed, matured,
unmatured, disputed, undisputed, secured or unsecured;
The Code defines the terms ‘secured
creditors’ and ‘security interest’ respectively as follows:
‘secured
creditor’ means a creditor in favour of whom security interest is created;
‘security
interest’ means right, title or interest or a claim to property, created in
favour of, or provided for a secured creditor by a transaction which secures
payment or performance of an obligation and includes mortgage, charge,
hypothecation, assignment and encumbrance or any other agreement or arrangement
securing payment or performance of any obligation of any person:
Provided
that security interest shall not include a performance guarantee;
The Code defines the terms 'financial
creditor’ and ‘financial debt’ respectively as follows:
‘financial
creditor’ means any person to whom a financial debt is owed and includes a
person to whom such debt has been legally assigned or transferred to;
‘financial debt’ means a debt
along with interest, if any, which is disbursed against the consideration for
the time value of money and includes –
(a)
money borrowed against the payment of
interest;
(b)
any amount raised by acceptance under
any acceptance credit facility or its de-materialised equivalent;
(c)
any amount raised pursuant to any note
purchase facility or the issue of bonds, notes, debentures, loan stock or any
similar instrument;
(d)
the amount of any liability in respect
of any lease or hire purchase contract which is deemed as a finance or capital
lease under the Indian Accounting Standards or such other accounting standards
as may be prescribed;
(e)
receivables sold or discounted other
than any receivables sold on non-recourse basis;
(f)
any amount raised under any other
transaction, including any forward sale or purchase agreement, having the
commercial effect of a borrowing;
Explanation. -For the purposes of this sub-clause,
(i)
any amount raised from an allottee
under a real estate project shall be deemed to be an amount having the
commercial effect of a borrowing; and
(ii)
the expressions, “allottee” and “real
estate project” shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in
clauses (d) and (zn) of section 2 of the Real Estate (Regulation and
Development) Act, 2016 (16 of 2016);
(g)
any derivative transaction entered into
in connection with protection against or benefit from fluctuation in any rate
or price and for calculating the value of any derivative transaction, only the
market value of such transaction shall be taken into account;
(h)
any counter-indemnity obligation in
respect of a guarantee, indemnity, bond, documentary letter of credit or any
other instrument issued by a bank or financial institution;
(i)
the amount of any liability in respect
of any of the guarantee or indemnity for any of the items referred to in
sub-clause (a) to (h) of this clause;
The Code defines the terms ‘secured
creditor’ and ‘financial creditor’ separately. While the term ‘financial
creditor’ has been defined as
“any person to whom a financial debt is owed
and includes a person to whom such debt has been legally assigned or
transferred to”
, the term ‘secured creditor’ has been defined as
“a
creditor in favour of whom security interest is created”
. Further, the
definition of the term ‘creditor’ in the Code recognizes both ‘financial
creditor’ as well as ‘secured creditor’, as the term ‘creditor’ is defined as
meaning “
any person to whom a debt is owed and includes a financial
creditor, an operational creditor, a secured creditor, an unsecured creditor
and a decree-holder”.
From the above, it is not clear whether a secured
creditor would also qualify as a financial creditor of a corporate debtor and
vice
versa.
Therefore, it is important to look at
the judicial pronouncements in order to ascertain the yardsticks that have been
employed to determine whether a creditor who is a financial creditor can also
be a secured creditor and vice versa.
In
Swiss Ribbons Private Limited vs.
Union of India
[2]
, the Hon’ble Supreme Court
observed that:
“23. A
perusal of the definition of ‘financial creditor’ and ‘financial debt’ makes it
clear that
a financial debt is a debt together with interest, if any, which
is disbursed against the consideration for time value of money.
It may
further be money that is borrowed or raised in any of the manners prescribed in
Section 5(8) or otherwise, as Section 5(8) is an inclusive definition. On the
other hand, an ‘operational debt’ would include a claim in respect of the
provision of goods or services, including employment, or a debt in respect of
payment of dues arising under any law and payable to the Government or any
local authority.”[Emphasis Supplied]
In
Anuj Jain vs
. Axis Bank
Limited and Ors.,
[3]
the Hon’ble
Supreme Court observed that:
“39.3.
The most important feature, as this Court has said, is that a financial
creditor is, from the very beginning, involved in assessing the viability of
the corporate debtor who can, and indeed, engage in restructuring of the loan
as well as reorganisation of the corporate debtor's business when there is
financial stress. Hence, a financial creditor is not only about in terrorem
clauses for repayment of dues; it has the unique parental and nursing roles
too. In short, the financial creditor is the one whose stakes are intrinsically
inter-woven with the well-being of the corporate debtor.”
“43.
Applying the aforementioned fundamental principles to the definition occurring
in Section 5(8) of the Code, we have not an iota of doubt that for a debt to
become 'financial debt' for the purpose of Part II of the Code, the basic
elements are that it ought to be a disbursal against the consideration for time
value of money. It may include any of the methods for raising money or
incurring liability by the modes prescribed in Sub-clauses (a) to (f) of
Section 5(8); it may also include any derivative transaction or
counter-indemnity obligation as per Sub-clauses (g) and (h) of Section 5(8);
and it may also be the amount of any liability in respect of any of the
guarantee or indemnity for any of the items referred to in Sub-clauses (a) to
(h).
The requirement of existence of a debt, which is disbursed against the
consideration for the time value of money, in our view, remains an essential
part even in respect of any of the transactions/dealings stated in Sub-clauses
(a) to (i) of Section 5(8), even if it is not necessarily stated therein. In
any case, the definition, by its very frame, cannot be read so expansive,
rather infinitely wide, that the root requirements of 'disbursement' against
'the consideration for the time value of money' could be forsaken in the manner
that any transaction could stand alone to become a financial debt.
In other
words, any of the transactions stated in the said Sub-clauses (a) to (i) of
Section 5(8) would be falling within the ambit of 'financial debt' only if it
carries the essential elements stated in the principal Clause or at least has
the features which could be traced to such essential elements in the principal
clause.” [Emphasis Supplied]
“44.
As noticed, the root requirement for a creditor to become financial creditor
for the purpose of Part II of the Code, there must be a financial debt which is
owed to that person. He may be the principal creditor to whom the financial
debt is owed or he may be an assignee in terms of extended meaning of this
definition but, and nevertheless, the requirement of existence of a debt being
owed is not forsaken.”
From the above understanding as
expounded by the Hon’ble Supreme Court, it is clear that for a creditor to be a
financial creditor, there has to be an essential element of disbursal, and that
too against the consideration for time value of money. Also, such disbursal
needs to be found in the genesis of any debt before it may be treated as
'financial debt' within the meaning of Section 5(8) of the Code.
In
Anuj Jain vs. Axis Bank
Limited and Ors.,
[4]
case the Hon’ble Supreme
Court while dealing with the definition of ‘secured creditor’ observed that:
“46.1 A
“secured creditor” in terms of Section 3(30) means a creditor in whose favour a
security interest is created; and “security interest”, in terms of Section
3(31), means a right, title or interest or claim of property created in favour
of or provided for a secured creditor by a transaction which secures payment
for the purpose of an obligation and it includes, amongst others, a mortgage.
Thus, any mortgage created in favour of a creditor leads to a security interest
being created and thereby, the creditor becomes a secured creditor.”
The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the
instant case also analyzed the distinction between secured creditors who are
directly engaged in advancing credit to the corporate debtor as against the
secured creditors who are indirect creditors for having extended any loan or
facility to a third party but had taken a security from the corporate debtor.
While drawing a distinction between a financial creditor and a secured creditor
the court observed the following:
“47.1.
Keeping the objectives of the Code in view, the position and role of a person
having only security interest over the assets of the corporate debtor could
easily be contrasted with the role of a financial creditor because the former
shall have only the interest of realising the value of its security (there
being no other stakes involved and least any stake in the corporate debtor's
growth or equitable liquidation) while the latter would, apart from looking at
safeguards of its own interests, would also and simultaneously be interested in
rejuvenation, revival and growth of the corporate debtor.”[Emphasis supplied]
The Hon’ble Supreme Court further
observed that:
“47.2
Therefore,
we have no hesitation in saying that a person having only security interest
over the assets of corporate debtor (like the instant third party securities),
even if falling within the description of 'secured creditor' by virtue of
collateral security extended by the corporate debtor, would nevertheless stand
outside the sect of 'financial creditors' as per the definitions contained in
Sub-sections (7) and (8) of Section 5 of the Code
.” [Emphasis supplied]
“50.4.
We may usefully elaborate a little. On a contextual reading of the expositions
in Essar Steel and Swiss Ribbons, it is but clear that the Court had examined
the status of direct secured creditor of the corporate debtor and there had not
been any occasion to examine the features related with an indirect secured
creditor, who is neither involved in assessing the viability of the corporate
debtor nor in lending finances to the corporate debtor for setting up the
business. As noticed, the prime, rather only, area of interest of such indirect
secured creditor is in recovery of its debt and not in reorganization of the
corporate debtor's business.
Thus understood, it is absolutely clear that
the class of secured creditors indicated by this Court in Essar Steel and Swiss
Ribbons, as being subsumed in financial creditors, is only that of such secured
creditors who are directly engaged in advancing credit to the corporate debtor
and not the indirect creditors who had extended any loan or facility to a third
party but had taken a security from the corporate debtor, whose resolution is
under consideration.”
[Emphasis supplied]
From the above observations of the
Hon’ble Supreme Court, the following can be inferred in relation to a secured
creditor who can also be considered as a financial creditor of the Corporate
Debtor and thus a ‘secured financial creditor’:
(a)
The debt should have been disbursed
against the consideration for the time value of money.
(b)
The debt should have been extended to
the Corporate Debtor.
(c)
The debt should have been secured by a
security interest, in favour of the secured creditor by any person.