The Supreme Court has sought response from the government on a petition challenging the validity of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2020 that introduced a threshold of at least 10% of homebuyers in a project or 100 of the total allottees for initiating insolvency proceedings against the real estate developer.
A Bench led by Justice RF Nariman issued notice to the ministries of finance, law and corporate affairs on a petition filed by the Association of Karvy Investors, challenging the recent Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2020 on the ground that it is “manifestly arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution”.
The apex court also asked parties to maintain a status quo with regard to the pending applications filed by homebuyers with the NCLT for initiating insolvency proceedings against developers.
The new law says that homebuyers looking to take a developer to an insolvency court will have to ensure that a minimum of 100 or 10% of the total allottees of a project were part of a joint petition seeking initiation of insolvency proceedings against the builder.
Challenging Sections 3 & 10 of the Act, counsel Srijan Sinha argued said that the new law was in violation of Articles 14 (equality before law) of the Constitution as it had rendered buyers, who are financial creditors, remediless and also subjected them to discrimination by putting a pre-condition in the form of a minimum number of allottees of a particular project required for filing an application under Section 7 of the IBC for initiation of the IRP. #casansaar (Source - Financial Express)
|