Sunday, March 24, 2013

Union of India Ors. Vs. Debts Recovery Tribunal Bar Association ANR




AdvocateKhoj
Thanks Advocate KHOJ


Thanks Ajay Kumar Khemka,Bangaluru


Union of India & Ors. Vs. Debts Recovery Tribunal Bar Association & ANR.
[Civil Appeal Nos.617-618 of 2013 arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 22808-22809 of 2010]

O R D E R

1. Leave granted.

2. These appeals arise out of judgment dated 18th September 2008 in CWP No. 11742 of 2007, and order dated 21st August 2009 in Review Application 161 of 2009, rendered by the High Court of Punjab & Haryana, whereby certain directions relating to provision for adequate space for the smooth functioning of the Debts Recovery Tribunals (for short "the DRTs") at Chandigarh, have been issued. The circumstances that have led to the filing of these appeals are succinctly stated below.

3. A Bench of the DRT was established at Chandigarh by the Union of India (for short "the UOI"), vide notification dated 24th March 2000, in a rented building. Subsequently, a second Bench of the DRT was established, which was supposed to function from another premises. However, both the Benches continued to function from the same premises where the earlier Bench was functioning. By a communication dated 20th July, 2007, the UOI directed that the second Bench would function from the premises acquired for it. Thereupon, the respondent Bar Association made a representation to the Presiding Officers of both the Benches, requesting them to inter alia, continue to function from the premises from where the first DRT was functioning. However, in light of the aforesaid communication issued by the UOI, the request of the Bar Association was not acceded to.

4. Aggrieved, the Bar Association filed a Civil Writ Petition in the High Court of Punjab & Haryana, seeking directions to the UOI, to inter alia provide adequate accommodation for the functioning of both the DRTs; and to frame Rules for recruitment/appointment of the Presiding Officer & the Recovery Officers. In light of the assurance on behalf of the UOI that adequate space would be taken on lease for the smooth functioning of both the Benches at the same place, and that further, land was also being acquired for housing the DRTs, the writ petition was disposed of with a direction that the construction of the building shall be completed within three years from the date of its order. However, the High Court did not examine the other issues referred to above on the ground that they were unrelated to the inadequacy of office space needed by the DRTs.

5. Having failed to get the said order reviewed, the UOI is before us in these appeals. In order to appreciate the issue involved in the matter before us, it would be useful to have a bird's eye view of the constitution of DRTs and their functioning.

6. Prior to the promulgation of the Recovery of Debts Due to Banking and Financial Institutions Act, 1993 (for short "the RDDBFI Act"), all banks and financial institutions were required to file their recovery cases in the form of suits before the civil courts, on the basis of their territorial and pecuniary jurisdictions. Due to delays in the disposal of such suits by civil courts on account of heavy dockets, the recovery of loans and enforcement of securities suffered. Thus, an urgent need was felt to work out a suitable mechanism through which, the dues of the banks and financial institutions could be realized expeditiously. This led to the establishment of DRTs and the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunals (for short "DRATs") under the RDDBFI Act for expeditious adjudication and recovery of debts due to banks and financial institutions.

7. As per the information available, there are all in all 33 DRTs established in the entire country out of which Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Chandigarh and Ahmedabad have two or more DRTs each. However, there are only five DRATs, established in Allahabad, Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai, each covering multiple DRTs of a particular geographical zone. As a result, DRATs are overburdened and are also facing an acute shortage of infrastructure and staff.

8. Given the poor state of affairs as highlighted by the Bar Association, we were constrained to take cognizance and hence, vide order dated 15th November 2010, directed the learned Addl. Solicitor General to file an affidavit suggesting measures for improving the working of the said Tribunals. Subsequently, on 7th April 2011, this Court appointed Mr. Rajeeve Mehra, Senior Advocate, as amicus curiae to assist the Court. Consequently, having considered the views of all DRTs, DRATs as well as the Bar Associations, the learned Addl. Solicitor General and the learned amicus curiae have filed their responses, highlighting the core issues and respective suggestions to address the same. In light of the above, the UOI was directed to place on record their response on the issues so raised, in particular, on the criteria being adopted for appointment of the members, Recovery Officers etc. In pursuance thereof, the UOI has filed status reports, indicating the measures agreed upon by the Government to address the aforementioned issues. Before we proceed to list the same, it would be helpful to discuss the core issues in respect of which the suggestions have been made.
9. At present, DRTs and DRATs suffer from severe infrastructural constraints. Most of the DRTs are being run from rented premises and face acute shortage of space, exorbitant rents, limitations on non- renewal/extension of leases etc. It has been brought to our notice that where the DRTs have been allotted space of about 5000 sq. ft., the actual requirement is not less than 7,500 sq. ft. Similarly, the learned amicus curiae brought to the fore several other issues plaguing the smooth functioning of the Tribunals, the most significant being: that there is a need to increase the number of DRATs in the country to reduce the workload of the existing DRATs; that many serving Recovery Officers lack a judicial background or are appointed on deputation from those very banks or financial institutions which are filing recovery cases in DRTs, thereby raising serious questions about their independence, impartiality and fairness; that the time taken in filling up vacancies for the posts of senior officials of DRTs and DRATs is extremely long; and that the presence of modern and technological systems of administration continues to be elusive in the administration of justice in as much as many DRTs and DRATs do not even have websites or computerized systems. Suggestions made by the learned Addl. Solicitor General and learned amicus curiae S. Issue Suggestions of the Suggestions of the No learned Addl. learned amicus Solicitor General curiae

1. Premises & All DRTs and DRATs Concurring Physical should be housed in Infrastructure suitable buildings. Pending construction of these buildings, the Tribunals should be housed in rented premises having an area of at least 8000 sq.ft. where suitable space for records, etc. and amenities for the officers of the court, staff, litigants and lawyers should be provided.
2. Increase in A DRAT must be Number of established in each DRTs/DRATs state where there --- is a DRT or multiple DRTs. DRATs may be established in the city where the concerned High Court of a State is located.

3. Appointment of Qualifications for Appointment of Recovery Officers Recovery Officers Recovery Officers should include at by way of the very least, a deputation from basic degree in law. Government If possible, Departments/Ministr judicial officers or ies, Banks and advocates with five Financial years standing at Institutions should the Bar may be be discontinued. Appointed as Instead, the person Recovery Officers. appointed must be a person of a judicial background, preferably a judicial officer of the rank below the designation of Addl. District and Sessions Judge on deputation, and should be given the same facilities and perks he/she enjoys in the parent cadre.

4. Vacancies and A select list of
a. For posts other Status of Senior candidates should be than Presiding Officers of maintained to fill Officers and DRTs/DRATs the vacancies. The Recovery Officers, selections should be on-going process of made within a fixed sourcing time frame. Staff/officers on deputation should be discontinued, and permanent cadres should be established.
b. The post of Presiding Officers, Registrars and Recovery Officers should be filled up from the state cadre of Judicial Officers through deputations and rotations so that these posts do not remain vacant.
c. Judicial officers must be provided the same facilities and perks as they enjoy in their parent cadres. Further, residential accommodation must be necessarily earmarked for Presiding Officers.
5. Information DRTs and DRATs must Concurring Technology and have a website. Computerisation Possibility of publication of notices and auctions on the website should be explored, keeping necessary safeguards in mind. The National Informatics Centre should be called upon to prepare appropriate software for computerization of processes in the DRTs, from filing to disposal, so that the time taken for disposal is reduced.
10. We are pleased to note the positive and forthcoming response of the UOI to the suggestions of the learned Addl. Solicitor General and the learned amicus curiae. Having taken note of the urgent need to address the abject conditions prevailing in the Tribunals, the UOI, has agreed to: i. Provide adequate infrastructure to DRTs/DRATs on the following basis:
a. If sufficient space as per requirement is available in the Government building, then space from the concerned department will be allotted on a permanent basis.
b. If space is not available in the Government building but sufficient space is available in public sector undertakings' buildings, then the DRTs/DRATs may move to the same on a permanent lease/rental basis.
c. If (a) and (b) are not possible, then suitable land may be purchased for construction of a building, or a suitably constructed building may be purchased from public authorities. This may be completed in a phased manner. In the mean time, DRTs and DRATs may continue at their present locations or hire alternative suitable space as per norms.

d. Further, on the basis of a spot study conducted by the Department of Financial Services on 11th December 2011, the existing space authorization of 5000 sq. ft. for DRTs and 3600 sq. ft. for DRATs was examined. In light of the study and requirements of additional facilities, the same has been increased to 7200 sq. ft. and 4500 sq. ft. respectively.

In case more than one DRT is accommodated in one building, space would be saved for common facilities such as bar room, consultation chamber, reception, canteen, washrooms, etc. In such a case, the space requirements for the second and third DRT (if located in the same building) may be around 6000 sq. ft. and 5500 sq. ft. respectively.

e. Preference is to be given to buildings where parking facility is provided either within the building premises or in the vicinity.
ii. Consider the feasibility of establishing more DRTs/DRATs and redefining the jurisdiction of some DRTs on the basis of data showing pendency of cases and existing workload of all the DRTs and DRATs.

iii. Fill all anticipated vacancies for the posts of senior officers, as and when they arise, with candidates who have already been selected according to the stipulated rules.

iv. Extend the facility of General Pool of Accommodation of the type entitled to Group A officers upto April 2013 to the Presiding Officers. In the meantime, the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Urban Development will examine all issues to finalise modalities for either buying or construction of flats/houses for use of the members of the Tribunals. Further, in case this proposal does not materialize, then the possibility of hiring accommodation shall be considered at the appropriate stage. v. Implement the "e-DRT Project" to automate and improve DRT services by building IT systems as expeditiously as possible. vi. Carry out the recruitment of Recovery Officers by promotion, failing which, by deputation, in accordance with the eligibility criteria as defined in the recruitment rules of each DRT. Keeping in mind the profile of the post of a Recovery Officer, it may not be possible to appoint judicial officers of a rank below that of an Additional District and Sessions Judge, as suggested by the learned amicus curiae.

However, the UOI shall give preference to only those candidates who either have legal experience or hold a degree in law. Further, with respect to improving the selection procedure of Recovery Officers, the Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC), provided for in the recruitment rules, shall be expanded to include the Presiding Officer of any DRT as a member of the DPC to take part in the selection of the Recovery Officers. At the same time, the level of representation of the Reserve Bank of India in the DPC will also be raised from the rank of Deputy Legal Advisor to Joint Legal Advisor, RBI. vii. Hold regular training programmes for Recovery Officers/Assistant Registrars/Registrars to give them minimum working knowledge of the procedures followed in DRTs, the provisions of the RDDBFI Act, the SARFAESI Act, the Rules made there under, and the provisions of Schedules II and III of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

11. We are confident that the aforementioned measures proposed by the UOI, shall go a long way in improving the administration of justice in these Tribunals. We are in agreement with these proposals and hope that they will be implemented efficiently and expeditiously by the concerned authorities. Having said that, it is necessary that the exercise undertaken by this Court must reach its logical end sans any delays and glitches or any other hindrances in the implementation of these suggestions. To this effect, we issue the following directions:

i. All the aforementioned proposals and measures agreed upon by the UOI in response to the suggestions made by the learned amicus curiae and the Addl. Solicitor General shall be implemented expeditiously within a suitable time frame. In the event that the UOI or the concerned authority fails to comply with the aforesaid assurances, it will be open to the learned amicus curiae to bring the same to this Court's notice for appropriate directions.

ii. Further, we believe that the High Courts are empowered to exercise their jurisdiction of superintendence under Article 227 of the Constitution of India in order to oversee the functioning of the DRTs and DRATs. Section 18 of the RDDBFI Act leaves no scope for doubt in this behalf. It reads thus:

18. Bar of Jurisdiction.-On and from the appointed day, no court or other authority shall have, or be entitled to exercise, any jurisdiction, powers or authority (except the Supreme Court, and a High Court exercising jurisdiction under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution) in relation to the matters specified in section 17. Article 227 of the Constitution stipulates that every High Court shall have superintendence over all courts and tribunals throughout the territories interrelation to which it exercises jurisdiction.

This power of superintendence also extends to the administrative functioning of these courts and tribunals [Shalini Shyam Shetty & Anr. Vs. Rajendra Shankar Patil[1]]. Hence, in light of the above, we expect that all the High Courts shall keep a close watch on the functioning of DRTs and DRAT, which fall within their respective jurisdictions. The High Courts shall ensure a smooth, efficient and transparent working of the said Tribunals. We are confident that through the timely and appropriate superintendence of the High Courts, the Tribunals shall adhere to the rigour of appropriate standards indispensable to the fair and efficient administration of justice.

12. Before parting, we place on record our deep appreciation for the able assistance rendered to us by Mr. Sidharth Luthra, the learned Addl. Solicitor General, Mr. Rajeeve Mehra, the learned amicus curiae and Mr. Arjun Kapoor, Law Clerk-cum-Research Assistant.

13. These appeals stand disposed of in the above terms.
.................................J. (D.K. JAIN)
.................................J. (H.L. DATTU)
NEW DELHI,
JANUARY 22, 2013



Saturday, March 23, 2013

Can we have an affluent promoter and a sick company? - NO,



S. MURLIDHARAN B L : 23 MAR  2013

The other day, Finance Minister P. Chidambaram made no secret of his displeasure at the indulgence shown to wilful defaulters. These are people who have the capacity to repay, or are guilty of diverting loans for personal gain, or for purposes other than the ones stated in the loan applications.
The financial system indulges them through endless corporate debt restructuring. Canara Bank is wringing its hands helplessly after Deloitte reportedly admitted its inability to trace the loan of Rs 400 crore it extended to a Hyderabad-based media group. It is now knocking at the doors of the Debt Recovery Tribunal.
The media group’s dues to the Indian banking system are in the region of Rs 5,000 crore. Its promoter’s dalliance with cricket by sponsoring an IPL team is well known.
The rumour mill has it that the bulk of the money owed by the group has found its way into cricket investments, apart from investments in fancy cars. Another cricket aficionado and liquor baron, too, owes our banking system a whopping Rs 7,000 crore. For too long has the system winked at the shenanigans of wilful defaulters, sometimes going to the extent of converting the outstandings into equity at exaggerated valuations.
The Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985, made industrial sickness fashionable by extending several concessions to sick companies, including stay of coercive legal proceedings against their assets. There were many instances of contrived or feigned sickness, with the BIFR unable to tell between what was genuine and what wasn’t.
The indulgence to wilful defaulters has, predictably, spawned a slew of jokes. Such aphorisms as “you borrow in lakhs, you are in trouble with the bank; borrow in crores, the bank is in trouble with you” have become the stuff of folklore. Levity aside, the truth is the lot of the financial system is not hopeless; but only if it bestirs itself and goes for the jugular of the defaulters.

BENAMI, HAWALA


There is a view that promoters can take shelter behind limited liability. This is not entirely true because the financiers invariably take a personal guarantee from the promoters, be they individuals or corporates. Such personal guarantees should be invoked without the slightest hesitation. The institution of benami, of course, makes things difficult for financiers in India. The money trail is also often lost in the dizzying maze of shell companies acting as a buffer. Add the hawala route and the repertoire of tricks at the disposal of the wily defaulters is complete.
A frontal attack on benami brooks no delay. Vested interests have been scuttling it since 1988, when Rajiv Gandhi made bold to fashion a law that sent fear down their spines with confiscation staring them in the face. Inter-corporate loans need to be regulated more strictly.
(The author is a Delhi-based chartered accountant.)
(This article was published on March 22

Of affluent promoters, sick companies?



ET :Mythili Bhusnurmath | Mar 22,2013 09:27 PM IST


In truth such instances are fewer than in the past

‘We cannot have an affluent promoter and a sick company,’ warned the Finance Minister, P Chidambaram, speaking to media persons after a meeting with the heads of state-run banks in the capital on Monday. The reference, presumably, was to the Vijay Mallya owned Kingfisher Airlines.

Unfortunately, such veiled threats to corporate biggies are like water off a duck’s back! The fact is affluent promoters and sick companies have long been part of the coporate firmament in India. Speak to bankers, especially those in state-owned banks, and they will regale you with a long list of companies belonging to the Modis, the Ruias, the Essars, the MA Chidambaram group (SPIC), to mention just a few, that have been run to the ground by promoters and then nursed with taxpayer money. Kingfisher Airlines is only the most recent. The company was given kid-glove treatment by a consortium of banks, led by State Bank of India, before they finally called it a day.

Why do banks, that have no compunction in going after ordinary borrowers like you or I, turn Shrinking Violets when it comes to large corporate borrowers? The answer is simple: political clout of the corporates.

The silver lining is that, unlike in the past, such instances are less frequent than before thanks, in part, to media attention.The public furore seen over sops given to Kingfisher Airlines was noticeably absent in the past. And, hopefully, marks the beginning of the end of favoured treatment for a favoured few!.

Writ jurisdiction ousted vis-a vis orders of recovery tribunals- yet again!!




  • Nishith Desai Associates


Introduction
The Supreme Court in the recent judgment of T. P. Vishnu Kumar v. Canara Bank P.N. Road, Tiruppur and Ors1. reiterated the principle that when specific remedy is made available to a party, invocation of writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India is not permissible in matters of recovery of debts. 
Writ jurisdiction of the Court cannot be invoked to test the validity/correctness of every interim order passed by the Debt Recovery Tribunal (“DRT”) under the provisions of the Recovery of Debts due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 1993 (“Act”).
Factual Matrix
The present case arises from an appeal against the Madras High Court (“Mad HC”) Division Bench judgment2 wherein the appeals against Single Bench judgment were allowed on the ground of availability of alternate remedy under Section 20 of the Act.
Canara Bank (“Respondent Bank”) had filed application before the DRT for recovery of amounts of INR 29, 68,161.93/- with interest @ 17% per annum with respect to Open Cash Credit facilities granted to T. P. Vishnu Kumar (“Appellant”) herein. 

These amounts were granted on the mortgage of other immovable properties and guarantee given by other partners of the partnership firm formed along with the Appellant herein. 
The debts were acknowledged by the Appellant however over a period of time the accounts maintained with the Respondent Bank became irregular and monies were not received leading to issuance of notices. 

The Appellant filed its response and submitted their inability to file detailed written statement in the absence of non-production of accounts by Respondent Bank.

 The Appellant filed separate interim applications seeking production of entire accounts and other relevant documentation.

 All the interim applications were dismissed by DRT.
In furtherance thereof, the Appellant filed writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution before Single Bench of Mad HC for issuance of writ of mandamus directing Canara Bank to produce statement of accounts. 
The Appellant contended that merits of the matter should be decided in a trial and same cannot be dealt with at the interim stage.

 Further, such applications cannot be admitted without entire documents being submitted as the same were absolutely necessary for filing detailed written statement. 
The Respondent Bank contended that the Tribunal is permitted to make such orders and give directions on discovery and production as it deems fit. 

The Single Bench held that non-furnishing of documents amounted to prejudice against the Petitioner and allowed the writ petition directing the Respondent Bank to submit the documents.
The said decision was appealed by Respondent Bank before Division Bench as despite alternate remedy prevailing under the Act writ jurisdiction was invoked. The appeal was allowed leading to the present petition before the Supreme Court.
Issue
The only issue to be determined before the SC was whether existence of alternate remedy barred invoking the jurisdiction of the civil court.
Judgment and Analysis
The SC held that writ petitions cannot be filed in case of recovery of dues unless there exists any statutory violation or proceedings are conducted in an arbitrary, unreasonable and unfair manner. 
If the Act itself provides for a mechanism or an alternate remedy, writ jurisdiction of the High Court cannot be invoked as the same would defeat the very objective of enacting a separate statute and establishing a specialized Tribunal.
The purpose of the Act was ensuring speedy recovery of bank dues. Due to severe delay in adjudicating and disposing such cases, banks and financial institutions like any other litigants were subjected to go through a process of pursuing the cases for recovery through civil courts for unduly long periods, leading to the trapping of crores of rupees in litigation proceedings, which the banks could not re-advance, leading to enactment of the Act and DRT to assure expeditious recovery proceedings and speedy adjudication of matters concerning debt recovery of banks.
The Tiwari Committee which recommended the constitution of a Special Tribunal for recovery of debts due to banks and financial institutions stated in its report that the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tribunal must relate not only in regard to the adjudication of the liability but also in regard to the execution proceedings.
Section 17 of the Act provides that the DRT shall have jurisdiction to “entertain and decide applications from banks and financial institutions for recovery of debts due to such banks and financial institutions and Section 18 of the Act clearly bars the jurisdiction of other authorities and courts except the Supreme Court and High Courts under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution. It is a settled law that any provision ousting the jurisdiction of civil court must be strictly construed3.
The Tribunals and the Appellate Tribunals established to bring about special procedural mechanism for speedy recovery of the dues of banks and financial institutions have also made provision for ensuring that defaulting borrowers are not able to invoke the jurisdiction of Civil Courts for frustrating the proceedings initiated by the banks and other financial institutions. 
The SC in Allahabad Bank vs. Canara Bank & Anr4. held that the Act confers exclusive jurisdiction on the Tribunal.

 That being the position, the parties have to agitate their grievances only before the said forum, DRT and not before this Court under Article 226 of the Constitution or any other forum.
Further, the said law was reiterated again in Punjab National Bank vs. O. C. Krishnan & Ors5. , wherein the SC held that “the Act was enacted with a view to provide a special procedure for recovery of debts due to the banks and the financial institutions.
 There is a hierarchy of appeal provided in the Act, itself namely, filing of an appeal under Section 20 and this fast-track procedure cannot be allowed to be derailed either by taking recourse to proceedings under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution or by filing a civil suit, which is expressly barred. 
Even though a provision under an Act cannot expressly oust the jurisdiction of the court under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution, nevertheless, when there is an alternative remedy available, judicial prudence demands that the Court refrains from exercising its jurisdiction under the said constitutional provisions.”
The Supreme Court in Kohinoor Creations and Ors. v.Syndicate Bank6 held that all matters within the purview of the Act are to be dealt by the specialized tribunal, DRT and Appellate Tribunal constituted only for this purpose and no other body or forum can deal with these disputes. 

The bar of civil court thus applies to all such matters which may be taken cognizance of by the DRT.
Not only in relation to the applicability of the Act and approaching DRT, the SC in United Bank of India vs Satyawathi Tondon and Ors7. observed that it is a matter of serious concern that despite repeated pronouncements, the High Court’s continue to ignore the availability of statutory remedies under the DRT and Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (“SARFAESI Act”) and exercise jurisdiction under Article 226 for passing orders which have serious adverse impact on the right of banks and other financial institutions to recover their dues.
It is surprising to note that the Mad HC in the past has itself ruled against approaching civil courts; invoking writ jurisdiction in case of recovery of debts by banks8 however had allowed it in the present case. 
The present judgment is one more attempt to clarifying the law and creating awareness among the litigants in relation to recovery of dues from banks and financial institutions.
Failing to nip the bud of frivolous invocation of writ remedy under Article 226 and 227, in this case resulted in a delay of more than five years. 
If justice delayed is justice denied, then justice has certainly been denied to Canara Bank despite SC’s proverbial rap on Mad HC’s (single bench) knuckles.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Mallya takes a dig at SBI, asks what about loan recovery from others




PTI









First Post :20 Mar 2013 :Mumbai: 
What about loan recovery from those other than Kingfisher?, wondered its promoter Vijay Mallyawhile taking a dig at bank chiefs in his tweet for their “constant speak” to media on getting back dues from the grounded airline.
“I seriously wonder what motivates the bank chairmen to constantly speak to the media on loan recovery fromKingfisher Airlines. What about others?” Mallya tweeted.
“We are blazing all guns and taking all steps to recovery (of Kingfisher loans),” Pratip Chaudhuri, Chairman of SBI, the lead lender to Kingfisher, had said yesterday. Posing a question on why Kingfisher should not be given a chance to resume operations, Mallya tweeted back: “SBI Chairman — All guns blazing on Kingfisher loan recovery. All my guns blazing on restart/rehabilitation. Why should v b denied a chance? (sic).”
PTI
Kingfisher Airlines owes a whopping Rs 7,500 crore to a consortium of 17 public banks, mostly state-run banks. It is grounded since last October and its licence also expired on December 31, 2012.
Chaudhuri’s assertion on loan recovery from Kingfisher also coincided with Finance Minister P Chidambaram asking banks to take firm steps to recover loans from wilful defaulters. “The country cannot afford to have affluent promoters and sick companies,” Chidambaram had said yesterday after meeting heads of PSU banks and financial institutions in New Delhi.
PTI

























Monday, March 18, 2013

இலங்கை தமிழர் பிரச்னையை தீர்க்க பிரதமருக்கு வக்கீல்கள் தந்தி

tamil news, tamil news paper, tamil newspaper, tamil evening news paper
Thamizh Murasu :18 March 2013

காஞ்சிபுரம்: தமிழ்நாடு மற்றும் புதுவை மாநில வழக்கறிஞர்கள் சங்கங்களின் கூட்டமைப்பின் செயற்குழு உறுப்பினர்கள் கூட்டம் காஞ்சிபுரத்தில் நேற்று நடந்தது.

தலைவர் பரமசிவம் தலைமை தாங்கினார். செயலாளர் ரகுநாதன், பொருளாளர் மணி முன்னிலை வகித்தனர். காஞ்சிபுரம் பார் அசோசியேஷன் தலைவர் கார்த்திகேயன் வரவேற்றார். இதில் நிறைவேற்றப்பட்ட தீர்மானங்கள்: வழக்கறிஞர்கள் சேம நலநிதியை ரூ. 5.25 லட்சமாக உயர்த்திய தமிழக முதல்வருக்கு நன்றி. புதுவை வழக்கறிஞர்களுக்கும் இதுபோல் நிதி கிடைக்க செய்யவேண்டும்.


வழக்கறிஞர்களுக்கு எதிராக பொய் வழக்கு போடும் போலீசாரை தவிர்க்கும் வகையில் உயர்நீதி மன்ற உத்தரவின் அடிப்படையில் மாவட்ட அளவில் அமைதிக்குழு அமைக்க வேண்டும். இலங்கை தமிழர் பிரச்னையில் தமிழர்களுக்கு ஆதரவாக தீர்மானங்கள் கொண்டுவர வலியுறுத்தி பிரதமர், வெளியுறவுத் துறை அமைச்சருக்கு தந்தி அனுப்ப வேண்டும். நீதிமன்றங்களில் காலி பணியிடங்களை நிரப்பி உள்கட்டமைப்பு வசதிகளை நிறைவேற்ற வேண்டும். இவ்வாறு தீர்மானங்கள் நிறைவேற்றினர். இதில், பார் கவுன்சில் உறுப்பினர்கள் ரங்கநாதன், கதிரவன், துணைத் தலைவர் ராம்குமார் கலந்து கொண்டனர். நிர்வாக குழு உறுப்பினர் எழிலரசன் நன்றி கூறினார்.

SBI taking all steps to recover money from Kingfisher





NEW DELHI: The lead banker to Kingfisher Airlines today said it is taking all steps to recover the loan provided to the grounded carrier.

"We are blazing all guns and taking all steps to recovery (of Kingfisher loans)," SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri said here after the meeting of the Finance Minister with the heads of PSU banks and financial institutions.

"There is a core group. They are assessing what are securities what can be disposed of quickly then they are put on auction... That is how it goes," he said.

Earlier in the day, Finance Minister P Chidambaramasked the banks to take firm steps to recover loans saying that the country cannot afford to have "affluent promoters and sick companies".

"We cannot have an affluent promoter and a sick company. Promoters must bring in money...," Chidambaram had said.

The consortium of 17 banks, led by SBI, has an outstanding of over Rs 7,000 crore from the carrier but has shares of listed entities like United Spirits as collaterals which should realise Rs 500 crore. That apart, they have the brand Kingfisher as a security.

Additionally, the consortium has a residual right over the securities held by Srei Infrastructure Finance which comes to Rs 500 crore. Srei bought this from ICICI Bank in April last year.

SBI has the maximum exposure, over Rs 1,600 crore, in the Vijay Mallya-led airline, followed by PNB (with Rs 800 crore, IDBIat Rs 800 crore, Bank of India at Rs 650 crore and Bank of Baroda has Rs 550 crore.

On Finance Minister's direction on bad loans recovery, Chaudhuri said: "We are taking all steps to recover our NPAs and make the situation better.

"Wherever they can't pay full amount at least part recovery is made so that these are upgraded and the accounts on CDR that process are being expedited."