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Supreme Court Holds Section 7 IBC Cannot Be Defeated by Informal Restructuring; Debenture Trust Deed Modification Must Follow Contractual Procedure

Supreme Court Holds Section 7 IBC Cannot Be Defeated by Informal Restructuring; Debenture Trust Deed Modification Must Follow Contractual Procedure

Case Name: Catalyst Trusteeship Ltd. v. Ecstasy Realty Pvt. Ltd.
Citation: 2026 INSC 186
Date of Judgment/Order: 24 February 2026
Bench: Hon’ble Mr. Justice Sanjay Kumar and Hon’ble Mr. Justice K. Vinod Chandran

Held: The Supreme Court held that an application under Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 cannot be defeated on the basis of informal restructuring discussions with one debenture holder when the Debenture Trust Deed (DTD) prescribes a specific written procedure for modification requiring approval of the debenture holders; in the absence of compliance with the contractual mechanism for amendment, there was no valid moratorium or restructuring in law, and once financial debt and default were established, the NCLT was bound to admit the application.

Summary: The appellant, acting as debenture trustee, sought initiation of corporate insolvency resolution process against the respondent company under Section 7 IBC for default in repayment of ₹600 crore raised through secured non-convertible debentures under a Debenture Trust Deed executed in March 2018; the respondent resisted admission contending that restructuring discussions with one debenture holder (ECL Finance Ltd.) had resulted in an 18-month moratorium and modification of repayment terms, and both the NCLT and NCLAT dismissed the Section 7 petition holding that restructuring and moratorium negated default; the Supreme Court examined the DTD, particularly clauses governing modification, waiver and special resolutions, and found that any amendment required prior written approval of debenture holders through the prescribed meeting and voting mechanism and execution of written documents; no such procedure was followed, no special resolution was passed, and no written modification existed; correspondence relied upon by the respondent was unilateral and did not bind other debenture holders, nor could estoppel or legitimate expectation override explicit contractual terms; reiterating the principle laid down in Innoventive Industries that for Section 7 admission the Adjudicating Authority must only be satisfied of existence of financial debt and default, and that pre-existing disputes are irrelevant in Section 7 proceedings, the Court held that the findings of the NCLT and NCLAT were perverse and contrary to law.

Decision: The appeal was allowed; the orders of the NCLT dated 03.02.2023 and the NCLAT dated 16.04.2025 were set aside; Company Petition (IB) 922/MB/C-I/2022 was restored to the file of the NCLT, Mumbai Bench-I, with a direction that it be admitted under Section 7 by separate order and further proceedings be initiated in accordance with law; adverse remarks made against the debenture trustee were set aside.

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