“We have considered the submissions of various parties. We admit the appeal and the respondents are directed to file their reply by September 15, 2021 and, thereafter, the rejoinder, if any, be filed by September 17, 2021,” said the NCLAT.
“Let the matter be listed ‘for hearing’ on September 20, 2021,” added a two-member bench comprising Justice J K Jain and A K Mishra.
Earlier on June 9, the Mumbai bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) approved Rs 2,962 crore takeover bid by Twin Star Technologies for the 13 companies of the debt-ridden Videocon group.
However, the NCLT order was stayed by the appellate tribunal on July 19 over the petitions filed by two dissatisfied creditors of the Videocon Group –
and IFCI Ltd and had directed to maintain “status quo ante”.
Earlier this week, on September 7, the NCLAT has extended the stay till September 20, the next date of hearing in the issue.
Dhoot, in its plea filed before the NCLAT has requested to set aside the order passed by the Mumbai bench of the NCLT and to direct the lenders to consider Rs 31,789 crore settlement plan submitted by him under section 12 of the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC).
In the petition, Dhoot has questioned the role played by the Resolution Professional and said that he should have mentioned the foreign oil and gas assets of Videocon Group in the Information memorandum (Tender Form) to all the bidders and hence no valuation was considered.
He had also requested NCLT’s order approving Twin Star Technologies’ resolution plan to be cancelled and a fresh resolution plan to be considered with Oil and Consumer Durable assets.
During the hearing, which took place on September 10, all parties opposed Dhoot’s claims.
“Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Senior Counsel for Resolution Applicant (Twin Star), has stated the Appellant (Dhoot) drove the company to zero and whose proposal under 12A of the Code was rejected by a very high majority of CoC. Their proposal was for repayment in 15-20 years,” the NCLAT order said.
While the CoC stated that Twin Star’s proposal was approved with 95 per cent majority and said few financial creditors and the guarantors and shareholders are approaching for nullifying the approved Resolution Plan.
Under Section 12A of the IBC, the tribunal can permit withdrawal of an ongoing insolvency process against a company subject to certain conditions. Such application is filed by the company with the approval of 90 per cent voting share of the committee of creditors.
Videocon Industries and its 12 group companies had a total admitted claims of Rs 64,838.63 crore.
Earlier, In its 47-page-long judgement, NCLT while approving Twin Star Technologies’ Rs 2,962.02 crore-bid had observed creditors of debt-ridden Videocon Industries Ltd will be taking nearly 96 per cent haircut on their loans and the bidder is “paying almost nothing”.
The NCLT had observed that the resolution plan is giving 99.28 per cent to the operational creditors, which it sarcastically hinted to be as a “Hair cut or Tonsure, Total Shave”.