SC Rules Homebuyers' Societies Cannot Intervene in Developer Insolvency
The Supreme Court on Thursday delivered a significant judgment, stating that homebuyers' societies and Resident Welfare Associations (RWAs) ordinarily cannot intervene in the insolvency proceedings of a developer company. This ruling clarifies the procedural rights and limitations under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) of 2016.
Clarifying Locus Standi
A bench led by justices JB Pardiwala and R Mahadevan upheld the insolvency proceedings concerning Takshashila Heights India Private Ltd. They emphasized that the IBC is primarily a tool for revival of the corporate debtor, not an instrument for expedited recovery. If revival is not the objective, alternative legal avenues remain available.
The court affirmed the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal's (NCLAT) decision to reject the intervention application by Elegna Co-operative Housing and Commercial Society Ltd, a homebuyer society. The primary ground was the society's lack of locus standi to intervene in the company's appeal.
Individual Rights vs. Association Status
The IBC, as a self-contained code, confers participatory rights only to statutorily defined categories. A financial creditor, under Section 5(7), must be a person to whom a financial debt is owed. While the code's explanation to Section 5(8)(f) deems individual allottees as financial creditors, this status does not automatically extend to their societies or associations.
A society is a distinct legal entity separate from its members. Unless the society itself has advanced funds, executed allotment agreements, or received allotments, it cannot claim financial creditor status. The right to initiate or participate in Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) stems from debt transactions and the statute, not from associative or representational interests.
Preventing Process Abuse
Allowing such interventions would improperly broaden the statutory definition of "financial creditor," potentially infringing upon individual allottees' rights and creating an extra-statutory layer of representation. The court cautioned that this could enable errant corporate debtors to obstruct and delay insolvency proceedings under the guise of collective interests, an abuse previously highlighted in the Pioneer Urban Land case.
Proceedings under Section 7 of the IBC are bipartite at the admission stage, involving only the financial creditor and the corporate debtor. Unrelated third parties, including other creditors, do not possess an independent right of audience at this initial phase, a principle consistently affirmed by the Supreme Court.
Real Estate Sector Implications
The court noted that collective representation of homebuyers is statutorily regulated and typically arises only after the admission of CIRP through an authorized representative mechanism. The IBC does not permit ad hoc or self-appointed representation at the pre-admission or appellate stages. For real estate allottees, applications under Section 7 must be filed jointly by a prescribed number of allottees.
The bench concluded that the Elegna Society was neither a financial nor an operational creditor and was formed for maintenance purposes, not insolvency representation. It was not a party to the financial transaction central to the Section 7 application. Therefore, it held no statutory right of appeal, validating the NCLAT's stance on the absence of locus standi. Permitting such intervention would undermine the expeditious insolvency framework envisioned under the Code.