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Reid & Taylor Case: NCLT Accepts Rs 2 Crore As Deposit From CFM ARC

Mumbai NCLT accepted a Rs 2 crore demand draft as earnest money deposit from CFM Asset Reconstruction Company for Reid and Taylor.

A customer browses men’s suits at a store. (Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg)
A customer browses men’s suits at a store. (Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg)

The National Company Law Tribunal on Thursday accepted a Rs 2 crore demand draft as earnest money deposit from CFM Asset Reconstruction Company for the ailing Reid & Taylor, and has given them two weeks to submit a resolution plan.

The Mumbai NCLT bench headed by Bhaskara Pantula Mohanand and V Nallasenapathy said CFM ARC Chief Executive Officer SV Shah can deposit the balance EMD of Rs 3 crore while submitting the resolution plan in two weeks.

Shah has sought four weeks to complete the due diligence, the bench said.

The bench further said it will consider a relaxation of another week in case the progress report of the resolution plan is satisfactory. CFM ARC will be considered the sole bidder.

The bench also said that if CFM ARC wants SP Growth Partners to be a part of a consortium, it will purely be an internal arrangement along with the Employees Welfare Association of RTIL.

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Earlier on Jan. 15, SP Growth Partners, an investor in bankrupt apparel brand Reid & Taylor, expressed its inability to deposit the earnest money and brought in new investor CFM ARC as a co-applicant to invest in reviving RTIL.

CFM ARC, which is valued over Rs 100 crore and an asset under management worth over Rs 1,200 crore, appeared as a co-applicant of Hong Kong-based investor SPGP, along with the Employees Welfare Association of RTIL.

The bench, while dismissing SPGP's bid, asked CFM ARC to file a separate application in this regard.

NCLT had asked Shah to deposit a Rs 2 crore demand draft for EMD within 48 hours.

The bench also reprimanded Agarwal and said he painted a "rosy picture of his net worth, wasted the courts time and also misrepresented facts", which amounts to contempt of court, for which he can be tried.

RTIL, owned by the Kasliwal family-run S Kumar Group, owes over Rs 4,100 crore to lenders.

The committee of creditors includes Finquest Financial Solution, which is the largest with close to Rs 800 crore of claims, Union Bank of India, Punjab National Bank,IL&FS Financial Services, IDBI Bank and L&T Finance etc, who had voted for liquidation on December 14, 2018.

Edelweiss ARC had taken the company to NCLT in March 2018. Besides, Arcil and JM Financial ARC also have exposure to RTIL.