M. Suresh Kumar Reddy Vs Canara Bank and Ors.

Legal Updates on IBC- By NCLT Lawyer in Supreme Court, Delhi

M. Suresh Kumar Reddy Vs Canara Bank and Ors.

Date Of Article : 05/11/2023

 

Supreme Court reiterates that once NCLT is satisfied that default has occurred, there is hardly a discretion left with NCLT to refuse admission of the CIRP application u/s 7 IBC.

Supreme Court further clarified  that by the order in review that the decision in the case of Vidarbha Industries  was in the setting of facts of the case before this Court. 

Hence, the decision in the case of Vidarbha Industries  cannot be read and understood as taking a view which is contrary to the view taken in the cases of Innoventive Industries and E.S. Krishnamurthy . The view taken in the case of Innoventive Industries   still holds good. 

Vicarious liability of Non Executive Chairman-138 NI Act.

Legal Updates on Criminal Law – By Criminal Lawyer in High Court, Hyderabad

Vicarious liability of Non Executive Chairman-138 NI Act.

Date Of Article : 04/18/2023

 

Creeping up an escalating liability to Chairpersons of large conglomerates/companies for cheques issued in day-to-day affairs of the business of a company would unfairly and unnecessarily expand the provisions of vicarious liability under the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Act – Yashovardhan Birla Vs. Cecil Webber Engineering Ltd. & Ors
Insurance Contracts.-Latest Judgment

Legal Updates on Commercial Laws: By Commercial Law Expert

Insurance Contracts.-Latest Judgment

Date Of Article : 04/13/2023

 

Honourable Supreme Court of India has held that an Exclusion Clause in a contract of insurance puts an onus as well as the burden lies with the insurer when reliance is made on such a clause. This is for the reason that insurance contracts are special contracts premised on the notion of good faith. It is not a leverage or a safeguard for the insurer, but is meant to be pressed into service on a contingency, being a contract of speculation. An insurance contract by its very nature mandates disclosure of all material facts by both parties. 14. An exclusion clause has to be understood on the touch-stone of the doctrine of reading down in the light of the underlining object and intendment of the contract. It can never be understood to mean to be in conflict with the main purpose for which the contract is entered. A party, who relies upon it, shall not be the one who committed an act of fraud, coercion or mis-representation, particularly when the contract along with the exclusion clause is introduced by it. Such a clause has to be understood on the prism of the main contract.
Order Passed Under S. 36 Of Arbitration Act Not Appealable Under S. 13 Of Commercial Courts Act

Legal Updates on Commercial Laws: By Commercial Law Expert

Order Passed Under S. 36 Of Arbitration Act Not Appealable Under S. 13 Of Commercial Courts Act

Date Of Article : 03/29/2023


Section 36 of the A&C Act, an arbitral award is required to be enforced in accordance with the provisions of CPC, in the same manner as if it were a decree of the Court. In view of Section 13(1A) of the Commercial Courts Act, against a judgment or order of the Commercial Court or the Commercial Division of the High Court, an appeal would lie to the High Court’s Commercial Appellate Division. However, as per the proviso to Section 13(1A), an appeal shall lie only from such orders that are specifically enumerated under Order XLIII of the CPC, as amended by the Commercial Courts Act and Section 37 of the A&C Act. Further, Section 13(2) of the Commercial Courts Act expressly proscribes an appeal against any order or decree of a Commercial Division or Commercial Court, other than in accordance with the provisions of the Commercial Courts Act
Sec-124 cannot be read in a manner as to defeat the right of the party to defend his independent right to invoke Section 57,

Legal Updates on Intellectual Property – By Intellectual Property Law Expert

Sec-124 cannot be read in a manner as to defeat the right of the party to defend his independent right to invoke Section 57,

Date Of Article : 04/29/2023

 

The Single Bench of the Delhi High Court in the case of Anubhav Jain vs Satish Kumar Jain & Anr. consisting of Justice C. Hari Shankar held that the right conferred on the Defendant in an infringement suit, to move the Court for rectification of the register of marks is a right independent of other rights available under the Act for the same purpose. It has, therefore, to be treated as available in addition to the right available and conferred by Section 57 of the Trademarks Act, 1999 (hereinafter referred to as “the Act”). It could not be read as the only right available, in abrogation of Section 57 of the Act
KEY FEATURES OF COMPETITION ACT(AMENDMENT) 2023

 
Redeemable preference shares without fixed tenure are part of paid-up capital, a component of net worth, not a liability

Legal Updates on Company law – By Company law Expert

Redeemable preference shares without fixed tenure are part of paid-up capital, a component of net worth, not a liability

Date Of Article : 04/26/2023


HIGH COURT OF DELHI in Teq Green Power XIII (P.) Ltd. v.REMC Ltd has held that when preference shares issued by the issuer are redeemable only on the option of the issuer and there is no tenure attached to the shares and further under Section 2(57) of the Companies Act the definition of net worth uses the expression paid-up share capital which is defined under Section 2(64) of the Companies Act to mean that the paid up share capital is the aggregate amount of money credited as paid up capital and is equivalent to the amount received as paid up capital in respect of shares issued including the amount credited as paid up capital in respect of shares of the company and further Section 43 of the Companies Act states that the share capital of a company limited by shares includes equity share capital and preference share capital which means that the expression includes both preference share capital as well as equity share capital of the company and hence the redeemable preference shares without fixed tenure are part of paid up capital and a component of networth.
Arbitration agreement in an unstamped instrument which is liable to a Stamp duty is not enforceable

Legal Updates on Dispute Resolution – By Arbitration Lawyer

Arbitration agreement in an unstamped instrument which is liable to a Stamp duty is not enforceable

Date Of Article : 04/29/2023


Honorable Supreme Court in N. N. Global Mercantile (P.) Ltd. v .Indo Unique Flame Ltd has held that a) An Arbitration Agreement, within the meaning of Section 7 of the Act, which attracts stamp duty and which is not stamped or insufficiently stamped, cannot be acted upon, in view of Section 35 of the Stamp Act, unless following impounding and payment of the requisite duty, necessary certificate is provided under Section 42 of the Stamp Act. b) Further, the provisions of Sections 33 and the bar under Section 35 of the Stamp Act, applicable to instruments chargeable to stamp duty under Section 3 read with the Schedule to the Stamp Act, would render the Arbitration Agreement contained in such instrument as being non-existent in law unless the instrument is validated under the Stamp Act.
Loan Sanctioned to a Suspended Director and backed by a Corporate Guarantee is a Financial Debt of Corporate Debtor u/s 5(8) of IBC

Legal Updates on IBC- By NCLT Lawyer in High Court, Mumbai

Loan Sanctioned to a Suspended Director and backed by a Corporate Guarantee is a Financial Debt of Corporate Debtor u/s 5(8) of IBC

Date Of Article : 04/25/2023


Honourable NCLAT IN AVJ Heights Apartment Owners Association v. India Infoline Finance Ltd has held that Loan sanctioned to a Suspended Director and backed by the Corporate Guarantee accompanied by board resolution guaranteeing/mortgaging of Corporate Debtor is a valid financial debt and hence admissible u/s 5(8) of IBC. Honourable NCLAT held that in the present instance, financial creditor had sanctioned loan facilities in favour of appellant-suspended director of corporate debtor and wherein corporate debtor had given a corporate guarantee and Thereafter, corporate debtor was admitted into CIRP and Resolution Professional(RP) was appointed and invited claims . Honble NCLAT and NCLT held that board resolution had been passed guaranteeing/mortgaging of property belonging to the Corporate Debtor by the Corporate Debtor himself and hence the loan provided to Suspended Director is admissible as a claim against the Corporate Debtor.
Nature of Financial Transactions need to be investigated. Mere Debt and Default is NOT sufficient to admit Corporate Debtor in to CIRP

Legal Updates on IBC- By NCLT Lawyer

Nature of Financial Transactions need to be investigated. Mere Debt and Default is NOT sufficient to admit Corporate Debtor in to CIRP

Date Of Article : 04/10/2023


Honourable NCLAT in Ocean Deity Investment Holdings Ltd. v. Suraksha Asset Reconstruction Ltd has held that merely because there was a debt and default, it could not be construed that a section 7 application was required to be admitted; Honourable NCLAT has also held that the Adjudicating Authority ought to have examined nature of financial transactions before admitting section 7 application against corporate debtor.
Cardinal principles around 313 Cr.P.C

Legal Updates on Criminal Law – By Criminal Lawyer in High Court, Hyderabad

cardinal principles around 313 Cr.P.C

Date Of Article : 04/25/2023


The fundamental guidelines for making a statement under Section 313 of the Criminal Procedure Code are outlined by the Honourable Supreme Court in Premchand v. State of Maharashtra at Paragraph 15. “a. Section 313, Cr. P.C. [clause (b) of sub-section 1] is a valuable safeguard in the trial process for the accused to establish his innocence; b. Section 313, which is intended to ensure a direct dialogue between the court and the accused, casts a mandatory duty on the court to question the accused generally on the case for the purpose of enabling him to personally explain any circumstances appearing in the evidence against him; c. when questioned, the accused may not admit his involvement at all and choose to flatly deny or outrightly repudiate whatever is put to him by the court; d. the accused may even admit or own incriminating circumstances adduced against him to adopt legally recognized defenses; e. an accused can make a statement without fear of being cross-examined by the prosecution or the latter having any right to cross-examine him; f. the explanations that an accused may furnish cannot be considered in isolation but have to be considered in conjunction with the evidence adduced by the prosecution, and, therefore, no conviction can be premised solely on the basis of the section 313 statement(s); g. statements of the accused in course of examination under Section 313, since not on oath, do not constitute evidence under Section 3 of the Evidence Act, yet the answers given are relevant for finding the truth and examining the veracity of the prosecution case; h. the statement(s) of the accused cannot be dissected to rely on the inculpatory part and ignore the exculpatory part and has/have to be read in whole, inter alia, to test the authenticity of the exculpatory nature of admission; and i. If the accused takes a defense and proffers any alternate version of events or interpretation, the court has to carefully analyze and consider his statements; j. any failure to consider the accused’s explanation of incriminating circumstances in a given case may vitiate the trial and/or endanger the conviction.”
Principles of Natural Justice NOT applicable prior to filing of FIR.

Legal Updates on Criminal Law – By Criminal Lawyer in High Court, Hyderabad

Principles of Natural Justice NOT applicable prior to filing of FIR.

Date Of Article : 04/11/2023


Honourable Supreme Court in State Bank of India vs Rajesh Agarwal and connected cases has held that a) At the outset, we clarify that principles of natural justice are not applicable at the stage of reporting a criminal offence, which is a consistent position of law adopted by this Court. b) In Union of India v. W N Chadha, a two-judge bench of this Court held that that providing an opportunity of hearing to the accused in every criminal case before taking any action against them would “frustrate the proceedings, obstruct the taking of prompt action as law demands, defeat the ends of justice and make the provisions of law relating to the investigation lifeless, absurd, and self-defeating.” c) Again, a two-judge bench of this Court in Anju Chaudhary v. State of UP has reiterated that the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 does not provide for right of hearing before the registration of an FIR”
Adjudication pursuant to invocation of Section 31 of Specific Relied Act Arbitrable:

Legal Updates on Civil Law- By Civil Lawyer in High Court, Hyderabad

Adjudication pursuant to invocation of Section 31 of Specific Relied Act Arbitrable:

Date Of Article : 04/29/2023


Honourable Supreme Court in M/s. Asian Avenues Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Sri Syed Shoukat Hussain [Civil Appeal No. 2927 of 2023] has held that it is impossible to hold that an action instituted under Section 31 of Specific Relief for cancellation of an instrument is an action in rem and held that per decision of Honourable Supreme Court in Deccan Paper Mills Company Limited vs Regency Mahavir Properties and Others that an action instituted under Section 31 of Specific Relief Act for cancellation of an instrument is NOT an action in rem and hence the said dispute is Arbitrable by an Arbitrator/Arbitration Tribunal as the case may be.
In Suit For Possession, Prior Possession Becomes Relevant When Both Parties Fail To Establish Title : Supreme Court

 
319 Cr.P.C - Power to proceed against other persons appearing to be guilty of offence.

PMLA - JURISDICTION TO TRY MONEY LAUNDERING

Section 29-A continue to permeate section 31(1)(f) which is applicable during the liquidation process

Banks Order classifying as Wilful Defaulter quashed for non compliance with Clause 3B of RBI Circular.

Doctrine of Contra- Proferentem

Stranger cannot be permitted to file an appeal in any proceedings unless he satisfies the Court that he falls with the category of aggrieved persons.

Prosecution under Section 70 of IBC can only be initiated by IBBI or Central Government or person Authorised by Central Government.

Resolution Professional entitled to continue prosecution of Suspended Directors of Corporate Debtor for Avoidance Transactions even after conclusion of CIRP.

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973; Section 397

Attachment By Tax Department subsequent to a Mortgage Favouring Secured Creditors does create any vested right

HCs can’t interfere with CCI’s probe unless there is an abuse of process and it appears a mala fide investigation

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 ; Section 313

Senior Citizens Act: The clause to maintain settlee or transferree in the Gift Deed is Mandatory to cancel the Gift Deed

Delhi HC quashes proceedings since Pre-Notice Consultation was mandatory for Demandsabove Rs. 50 Lakhs

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