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NCLAT Gives 30 Days More To Sterling Biotech Promoters To Settle Dues

Promoters of the company include the absconding Nitin Jayantilal Sandesara and Chetankumar Jayantilal Sandesara.

A petri dish in a laboratory.(Photographer: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg News)
A petri dish in a laboratory.(Photographer: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg News)

The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal has granted 30 days more to the promoters of Sterling Biotech Ltd. to settle dues of creditors, failing which liquidation process of the company will start.

A three-member bench headed by Chairperson Justice SJ Mukhopadhaya also said the Enforcement Directorate will probe and ascertain whether the money paid by the promoters is not from proceeds of crime.

The promoters of the company include absconding Nitin Jayantilal Sandesara and Chetankumar Jayantilal Sandesara.

Clarifying its earlier order dated Aug. 28, the NCLAT said if settlement under Section 12A is not given effect within a period of 30 days from the date of this order, in such case its order would be cancelled and order of liquidation dated May 8 passed by the National Company Law Tribunal shall stand restored.

"In view of the aforesaid position, we have allowed 'Resolution Professional' to continue till the process is completed under Section 12A for a period of another 30 days," NCLAT said.

"In case the amount is not paid within 30 days as observed above and order of liquidation is restored, the Liquidator appointed by Adjudicating Authority will continue," the said.

The appellate tribunal also said it has allowed 'Promoters' or 'Shareholders' and or 'Directors' to pay the dues in their "individual capacity from their respective account which should not be 'proceeds of crime".

"We direct them to disclose source of the funds to Enforcement Directorate and 'Resolution Professional' before such payment," it said.

The NCLAT order came over an application moved by the liquidator Mamta Binani seeking clarification of the order dated Aug. 28.

"We allow the ED to find out whether the said amount is being paid in the individual capacity of the 'Promoters' or 'Shareholders' or 'Directors' and not from the proceeds of crime," the NCLAT further said.

On Aug. 28 order, the NCLAT had set aside the NCLT order to liquidate Sterling Biotech, and directed that the management should be handed over to its promoters if the dues of creditors are settled.

The NCLAT had said it will not come in the way of the individuals such as promoters and directors, if they pay back to the creditors in their individual capacity, and not from proceeds of crime.

Earlier, on May 8 Mumbai-bench of the National Company Law Tribunal had rejected Sterling's plea filed under section 12A of IBC to bring the company, which is facing a debt of around Rs 9,000 crore, out of insolvency proceedings.

The NCLT had also raised questions over the manner in which lenders of Sterling Biotech had agreed to settle their claims with the absconding promoters.

Section 12A of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code allows a corporate debtor to settle its defaults and get the company out of insolvency proceedings after settling the claims of lenders after getting 90 percent votes of the Committee of Creditors.