The Supreme Court on Friday stayed an order
appointing state-owned NBCC as the project management consultant to complete
debt-ridden realty firm Supertech Ltd's 16 housing projects at nearly Rs 9,500
crore cost.
A bench comprising Chief Justice Sanjiv Khanna and
Justices Sanjay Kumar and K V Viswanathan heard two appeals against the NCLAT
order and expressed concern for home buyers.
The bench issued notices to the parties on the
appeals and stayed the NCLAT order that appointed NBCC to take over the Supertech
projects.
The bench said it would examine whether the NCLAT
followed the procedure under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code while
appointing the NBCC as a project management consultant to complete the housing
projects.
The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT)
on December 12, 2024 asked the National Buildings Construction Corporation
(NBCC), a PSU under the union Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, to
complete 16 housing projects, comprising 49,748 homes in Uttar Pradesh,
Uttarakhand, Haryana and Karnataka.
Around 27,000 home buyers await receiving homes in
these projects.
The NCLAT judgement came after the October 1, 2014
order of the top court that allowed the insolvency appellate tribunal to
examine and decide a proposal of the NBCC seeking to complete stalled housing
projects.
The CJI asked the parties concerned to file their
their responses in writing with regard to plans about the completion of stalled
housing projects sans the NBCC.
The bench asked the resolution professional to
perform its functions as per law in the meantime and posted the hearing in the
April 1 week.
We respect the decision of Supreme Court to stay the
NCLAT order which allowed NBCC to take over Supertech's projects arbitrarily
without respecting the interests of other stakeholders like land authorities
and lenders. We welcome the Supreme Court's instructions of inviting other
companies to propose a solution which takes care of all stakeholders along with
homebuyers. As promoters, we want a solution for all stakeholders including
homebuyers, bankers and land authorities, said R K Arora, the chairman of
Supertech group, in a statement.
The NCLAT had directed the NBCC to "start the
process of award of work before March 31, 2025" and award of contract
within a month thereafter and the construction was ordered to start from May 1,
2025 for the 16 projects.
It also ordered the "constitution of an apex
court committee and project-wise court committee" for each project.
In each project-wise court committee, the NBCC was
asked by NCLAT to nominate one member.
The NBCC seeks to complete the projects, launched in
the National Capital Region, Dehradun and Bengaluru but the completion of the
residential units took a hit owing to the financial crisis faced by the realty
major, leading to insolvency proceedings beginning 2021.
The NBCC, before the NCLAT, submitted terms of
reference for undertaking the pending projects of Supertech Ltd.
The public sector enterprise proposed to complete
the 16 projects in three phases.
Under Phase 1, it proposed to complete Eco-Village-2
(Greater Noida), Romano (Noida), Capetown (Noida), Czar suites (Greater Noida),
Eco-village-3 (Greater Noida), Sports Village (Greater Noida) and Eco-citi
(Noida).
Under Phase-2, the NBCC as per its application
before NCLAT proposed to undertake Northeye (Noida), Upcountry (Yamuna
Expressway), Eco-village-1 (Greater Noida), Meerut Sports City (Meerut) and
Green Village (Meerut).
For Phase 3, the NBCC proposed to undertake Hilltown
(Gurugram), Aravile (Gurugram), Rivercrest (Rudrapur), Doon Square (Dehradun)
and Micasa (Bengaluru).
The NCLAT had asked the 27,000 homebuyers and other
stakeholders to submit objections, if any, to NBCC's proposal to complete the
stalled projects.
On May 11, 2023, the top court allowed a
"project-wise resolution" process for Supertech Ltd and allowed
construction of all other projects by the developer under the supervision of an
interim resolution professional (IRP).
The Union Bank of India initiated insolvency
proceedings against the realty firm under Section 7 of the Insolvency and
Bankruptcy Code on March 20, 2021, claiming over Rs 431 core as on January 31,
2021, along with accrued interest.