Nanda Takawane And Ors vs The State Of Maharashtra Thr. G. P. And … on 7 July, 2026

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    Bombay High Court

    Nanda Takawane And Ors vs The State Of Maharashtra Thr. G. P. And … on 7 July, 2026

    Author: Bharati Dangre

    Bench: Bharati Dangre

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         IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
                 CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                WRIT PETITION NO.3057 OF 2026
                           WITH
             INTERIM APPLICATION NO. 3999 OF 2026
                                      IN
                  WRIT PETITION NO. 3057 OF 2026
    Nanda Takwane and Ors                     ..   Petitioners
                    Versus
    The State of Maharashtra Through GP .. Respondents
    and Ors
                                 WITH
                 WRIT PETITION NO. 13469 OF 2025
                                 WITH
              INTERIM APPLICATION NO. 2290 OF 2026
                                   IN
                 WRIT PETITION NO. 13469 OF 2025
    Nanda Takwane                             ..   Petitioners
                    Versus
    Sub-Registrar Co-operative Society &      ..   Respondents
    Ors
    Adv. Shyam Kapadia a/w Pranav Avhad, Darshna Naval, Khusi
    Bagaria, Nimisha Nagpal, Shamant Sathiya, i/b Darshna Naval for
    the petitioner in WP No. 3057 of 2026 and for the Applicant in IA
    No. 3999 of 2026.
    Adv. Anushka Singh i/b Neel Kothari for the petitioner in W.P. No.
    13469 of 2025.
    Adv. Veerdhaval Kakade i/b Sambhaji Jagtap for Respondent No.2
    and 4 in W.P. No. 3057 of 2026.
    Adv. Kishore Patil i/b Sidheshwar N. Biradar a/w Omhari B. Fawade
    for Respondent No.3 in W.P. No. 13469 of 2025.
    Mr. O.A. Chandurkar, Addl. G.P. a/w K.B. Thorat 'B' Panel Advocate
    for State in W.P. No. 3057 of 2026.
    Mr. O.A. Chandurkar, Addl. G.P. a/w Ms. P.N. Diwan, AGP for State
    in WP No. 13469 of 2025.
    
    
    Ashish
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                        CORAM: BHARATI DANGRE &
                               MANJUSHA DESHPANDE, JJ.
                        RESERVED ON : 17th JUNE, 2026
                        PRONOUNCED ON: 7th JULY, 2026
    
    JUDGMENT (PER BHARATI DANGRE J):

    1. Writ Petition No.13469 of 2025, filed by Nanda Takwane,
    raises a challenge to the order dated 02/05/2022 passed by the Deputy
    Registrar, Cooperative Societies, Pune, under Section 101 of the
    Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act, 1960 (for short ‘the Act’),
    along with the order dated 28/12/2023 passed by the District
    Collector under Section 156 of the Act, for executing the order of
    02/05/2022 through the Tahsildar Office, Daund. The Respondent
    No.2, the Deputy Registrar, had decreed the claim of Seva Vikas Co-
    operative Bank, presently under liquidation, for recovery of an
    amount exceeding Rs. Ten Crore against the Petitioner.

    SPONSORED

    The Petition also raises a challenge to the impugned notices
    addressed to the Petitioner by the Tahsildar seeking to attach the
    subject property set out in the schedule exhibited at Exhibit-A,
    situated in Gat No. 394/3/B, with an approximate area of 02 H 00R,
    along with the constructive area of RCC structure and a
    Mangalkaryalay admeasuring 26,444 sq. ft.

    The Petition, therefore, seeks quashing of the impugned
    orders/notices as according to the Petitioner, the entire action initiated
    against her is in violation of the protection granted in form of
    moratorium under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (for
    short, ‘the Code’) and in particularly under Section 95 and 96 thereof.

    
    
    
    Ashish
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    In the second Writ Petition No. 3057 of 2026, filed by four
    Petitioners, the challenge is raised to the order dated 19/06/2019,
    once again passed by the Deputy Registrar of Cooperative Societies,
    and the further orders dated 31/05/2022 and 1/06/2022 passed by the
    District Magistrate under Section 156 of the Act read with Rule 107
    of Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Rule, 1961. A challenge is
    also raised to the impugned notices issued by the Tahsildar Office
    seeking possession of the mortgaged properties against the dues
    purportedly payable under the Order passed under Section 101 of the
    MCS Act. Even in this case, the Petitioners objected to the
    proceedings by invoking the protection in form of a moratorium
    granted under Section 96 of the IBC.

    In this case, the Petitioners had availed financial facility from
    Shriram Nagari Sahakari Patsanstha Maryadit, Pune, for business
    expansion, and according to the Petitioners, their company,
    Siddheshwar Industries Pvt. Ltd. (“SIPL”) is a private limited
    company primarily engaged in the business of auto components and
    has manufacturing operations at Pimpri and Chakan. While availing
    the financial facilities, the Petitioners, along with the co-borrowers,
    also executed mortgaged deeds, and certain properties were offered
    as collateral security by the Petitioners and the co-borrowers in
    different combinations.

    2. In the first Petition, where Nanda Takwane is the sole
    Petitioner, she stood as a personal guarantor for the loan availed by
    Siddheshwar Industries Pvt. Ltd. (SIPL) from Seva Vikas
    Cooperative Bank Limited and, by executing personal guarantee(s)
    on 26/11/2014, and 14/03/2017, the personal property was mortgaged

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    for securing the repayment of the loan facility extended by the
    financier.

    3. The common factor in both the Petitions is the initiation of
    corporate insolvency proceedings against Siddheshwar Industries Pvt.
    Ltd. (SIPL) by order dated 14/05/2018 passed by the National
    Company Law Tribunal, Mumbai Bench (“NCLT”), under the
    Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. The Order dated 14/04/2019,
    admitted the Petition filed by one Gandhar Oil Refinery (India) Ltd.,
    as the corporate debtor, Siddheshwar Industries Pvt. Ltd., defaulted in
    making payment of Rs. 15,91,266/- as on 30/09/2017, along with
    interest at the rate of 24 % as stipulated in the invoices for the supply
    of hydraulic oil, machine lubricant, mineral oil, and other products.

    By the order passed by the NCLT on 14/05/2018, the Petition
    was admitted and a moratorium under Section 14 was imposed,
    thereby, prohibiting the institution of suits, or continuation of pending
    suits or proceedings against the corporate debtor, including execution
    of any judgment, decree, or order in any Court of law, or tribunal,
    arbitration panel, or any other authority, or any action to foreclose,
    recover, or enforce any security interest created by the corporate
    debtor in respect of its property, including action under Securitization
    and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security
    Interest Act, 2002
    .

    The order of moratorium was directed to have effect from
    14/05/2018 till completion of the corporate insolvency resolution
    process or until the NCLT approved the Resolution Plan under sub-
    section (1) of Section 31 of IBC or pass an order of liquidation of
    corporate debtor under Section 33.

    
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    Admittedly, subsequent to the CIRP order, the Board of
    Directors of the Corporate Debtor stood suspended.

    4. The State Bank of India, another creditor preferred an
    application under Section 95 of the IBC in the form of Company
    Petition (IB) No. 958 of 2022 on 30/04/2022 against Smt. Nanda
    Takwane, the personal guarantor of Siddheshwar Industries Pvt. Ltd.,
    and on 6/01/2023, by pressing into service the deed of guarantee
    executed by her, and the proceedings were initiated in her capacity as
    personal guarantor of the corporate debtor.

    In the wake of the filing of the application under Section 95, it
    is the claim of the Petitioner that the interim moratorium, as
    contemplated under Section 96, commenced on the date of the
    application, in relation to all the debts, and during the interim
    moratorium period there was an embargo on: (i) any legal action or
    proceeding pending in respect of any debt; and (ii) on the creditors of
    the debtors in initiating any legal action or proceedings in respect of
    any debt.

    It is in the wake of the aforesaid provision, in the form of a
    moratorium being imposed, we are informed that the proceedings
    have progressed substantially and a Resolution Professional has been
    appointed, who has even filed a report under the IBC before the
    NCLT.

    5. As far as the second Writ Petition, in which Nanda Takwane,
    along with 4 others, availed the loan facility from Respondent No.2,
    Shriram Nagari Sahakari Pathsanstha Maryadit, as the Petitioners, in
    their individual capacities, along with the co-borrowers, has executed

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    mortgaged deeds by mortgaging various properties situated in
    different Gat numbers from Pargaon, Taluka Daund, District- Pune,
    and in the wake of the CIRP proceedings being initiated against SIPL
    by invoking the provisions of the IBC and the Petition having been
    admitted, relying upon the application preferred under Section 95 by
    the State Bank of India (the financial creditor) against the Petitioners
    it is urged that no action can be taken as they are also the guarantors
    of the corporate debtor.

    6. Drawing advantage of the said application resulting into
    imposition of interim moratorium under Section 96, it is the claim of
    the Petitioners that, pursuant to the imposition of moratorium and
    appointment of the Resolution Professional, who has filed its report
    before the NCLT, the proceedings initiated under the Maharashtra
    Co-operative Societies Act, 1960
    , in the wake of the recovery
    certificate under Section 101, to be followed by the process being
    initiated by the District Magistrate in pursuance of Section 156 of the
    Act, cannot continue once the corporate debtor, SIPL, with which the
    Petitioners are associated, is undergoing CIRP under the Code, and
    particularly when the proceedings under Section 95 of the Code are
    initiated against the Petitioners in their individual capacities.

    7. In support of the relief in the Petition, the counsel for the
    Petitioners by referring to the scheme of IBC and by relying upon the
    decision of the Apex Court in Dilip Jiwrajka vs. Union of India and
    ors1 would submit that the filing of an application under Section 95
    automatically results into the imposition of interim moratorium under
    Section 96, from the date of the application, and it is urged that the

    1 (2024) 5 SCC 435

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    filing of the application under Section 94 or 95 trigger the interim
    moratorium, which ceases to have effect on the date of the admission
    of the application (under section 100).

    Relying upon Section 96 of IBC it is urged before us that the
    impact of the interim moratorium imposed is, an embargo being
    created upon continuation of any legal action or proceeding in respect
    of any ‘debt’, as it is deemed to have been stayed and there is a
    complete prohibition in the creditors or the debtors initiating any
    legal action or proceedings in respect thereof.

    Reliance is also placed upon the decision of this Court in case
    of Mr. Ajeet Madhukar Mulay vs. Abhyudaya Co-operative Bank
    Limited & Ors
    (Commercial Arbitration Petition No. 843 of 2024)
    as well as another decision of this Court in case of Tata Capital
    Limited vs. Geeta Pasi and Ors2
    .

    In support of the Petition based on the effect of the imposition
    of interim moratorium, it is also pointed out to us that the IBC
    (Amendment) Act 2025, presented through Bill No. 107 of 2025, has
    now proposed to insert a new sub-section (4) to Section 96 of the
    Code, providing that the provisions therein shall not apply where an
    application is initiated in insolvency resolution process in respect of a
    personal guarantor to a corporate debtor, filed by a creditor or the
    debtor itself and the counsel for the Petitioners would vehemently
    urge that the interpretation of Section 96 and the effect of interim
    moratorium must be construed in light of the amendment, which is
    sought to be introduced in Section 96 of the Code.

    
    
    2 2024 2 SCC Online Bom 1897
    
    Ashish
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    8. As against the submission advanced on behalf of the
    Petitioners, the learned counsel representing the two lenders, who
    have secured recovery certificate under section 101 of the
    Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act, 1960 and subsequently
    adopted the follow up action under Section 156 of the Act, would rely
    upon a significant decision of this Court in case of Rozina Firoz
    Hajiani & Ors vs. Union of India, through Ministry of Corporate
    Affairs (WP (L) No. 5157 of 2026) where, an attempt to seek resort
    to the provisions of IBC, 2016 to frustrate the claim of secured
    creditors and auction purchasers from proceeding, in accordance with
    law, was highly deprecated by the Division Bench, while
    pronouncing its verdict on 18/03/2026. By relying upon the said
    decision, it is submitted that in the facts of the case, it is held that the
    interim moratorium imposed under Section 96 of the IBC initiated
    against the personal guarantor would not apply to the Defendant
    No.1, the principal borrower in the suit against whom no proceedings
    have been initiated against IBC and the suit was directed to remain
    stayed only against Defendant Nos.2 to 4 as moratorium orders were
    imperative, as no proceedings were initiated against the principal
    borrower.

    9. The principle laid down in the aforesaid decision is invoked by
    the learned counsel Mr. Sidheshwar Biradar appearing for
    Respondent No.3, as he would submit that by no stretch of
    imagination can the provisions of the Code and specifically in form
    of moratorium shall be invoked to defeat the otherwise lawful and
    legal remedy already availed by the financier/ lenders by taking resort
    to the provisions of the Maharashtra Cooperative Societies Act.

    
    
    Ashish
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    Reliance is also placed by him upon the decision of the Apex Court in
    case of State Bank of India vs. V. Ramakrishnan and Anr 3, holding
    that moratorium under Section 14 is inapplicable to a personal
    guarantor of corporate debtor before and after its amendment in the
    year 2018. It is urged that with the clarificatory amendment being
    introduced in IBC in the year 2018, vide insertion of Section 3(b),
    making it evidently clear that moratorium under Section 14 shall not
    apply to a surety in a contract of guarantee for corporate debtor, it
    was however held that the amendment being clarificatory can operate
    retrospectively, by holding that the interpretation of the provision was
    always like this since its enactment and conclusively it was held that
    SARFAESI proceedings against personal guarantor of corporate
    debtor can continue under SARFAESI Act, even though a
    moratorium may be in force against a corporate debtor under Section
    14
    of the IBC.

    Reliance is also placed upon the decision of the learned Single
    Judge in case of IL & FS Financial Services Limited vs. Serveall
    Constructions Pvt Ltd4
    , where the law laid down in Geeta Passi
    (supra), and Dilip Jiwrajka (supra) received consideration and it was
    held that the interim moratorium imposed under Section 96 of the
    IBC initiated for Defendant Nos.3 and 4, who are personal guarantors
    would not apply to the Defendant No.1, the principal borrower
    against whom no proceedings have been initiated under IBC.

    10. In light of the rival contentions advanced, we would refer to
    the provisions of the IBC, as they are pressed into service for stalling
    the action initiated by the lenders-banks/patsanstha either against the
    3 (2018) 17 SCC 394
    4 2026 SCC Online Bom 2460

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    guarantors of the corporate debtor or the borrowers, who along with
    the co-borrowers had mortgaged their properties as a security for the
    loan facility availed.

    The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, which has
    consolidated and amended the laws relating to insolvency resolution
    of corporate persons, partnership firms and individuals in a time
    bound manner for maximization of value of its assets to promote
    entrepreneurship, and balance the interest of all stakeholders, apply to
    the companies, partnerships and proprietary firm as well as the
    personal guarantors to corporate debtors as well as individual in
    relation to their insolvency, liquidation, or bankruptcy. The IBC has
    defined ‘creditor’ in Section 3 (10) as below:-

    “(10) ‘creditor’ means any person to whom a debt is owed and includes a
    financial creditor, an operational creditor, a secured creditor, an unsecured
    creditor and a decree-holder;”

    Debt is defined in Section 3 (11) as below:-

    “(11) ‘debt’ means a liability or obligation in respect of a claim which is due
    from any person and includes a financial debt and operational debt;”

    11. Chapter II of the Code has set out the corporate insolvency
    resolution process, which permits the initiation of process by a
    financial creditor, an operational creditor or the corporate debtor
    itself, when it commits a default and the said chapter comprise of
    declaration of moratorium and public announcement, on admission of
    the application filed before the adjudicatory authority under Section 7
    or Section 9 or Section 10 and Section 14 will cover a moratorium
    prohibiting all of the following:-

    “(a) the institution of suits or continuation of pending suits or proceedings
    against the corporate debtor including execution of any judgment, decree or
    order in any court of law, tribunal, arbitration

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    panel or other authority;

    (b) transferring, encumbering, alienating or disposing of by the corporate debtor
    any of its assets or any legal right or beneficial interest therein;

    (c) any action to foreclose, recover or enforce any security interest created by the
    corporate debtor in respect of its property including any action under the
    Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of
    Security Interest Act, 2002
    (54 of 2002);

    (d) the recovery of any property by an owner or lessor where such property is
    occupied by or in the possession of the corporate debtor.”

    12. Another provision for moratorium in form of ‘interim
    moratorium’ is found to be in Chapter III, when a debtor, who
    commits a default or the creditor, may apply either personally or
    through a resolution professional to the adjudicating authority, for
    initiating the insolvency resolution process by submitting an
    application.

    This action result in imposition of moratorium under Section
    96
    which provides for the following:-

    “96. Interim moratorium- (1) When an application is filed under section 94 or
    section 95-

    (a) an interim-moratorium shall commence on the date of the application in
    relation to all the debts and shall cease to have effect on the date of admission of
    such application; and

    (b) during the interim-moratorium period-

    (i) any legal action or proceeding pending in respect of any debt shall be deemed
    to have been stayed; and

    (ii) the creditors of the debtor shall not initiate any legal action or proceedings
    in respect of any debt.”

    13. Clause 2 and Clause 3 of Section 96 reads thus:-

    ‘(2) Where the application has been made in relation to a firm, the interim-
    moratorium under sub-section (1) shall operate against all the partners of the
    firm as on the date of the application.

    (3) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall not apply to such transactions as may
    be notified by the Central Government in consultation with any financial sector
    regulator.”

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    14. By the amending Act of 2026, the following clause is inserted
    but the effective date of the same is not yet notified and the said
    clause is thus:-

    ‘(4) the provisions of this section shall not apply where an application is filed for
    initiating an insolvency resolution process in respect of a personal guarantor to
    a corporate debtor.’

    15. The very said chapter further contain provision for admission
    or rejection of the application and Section 101 prescribe that when
    the application is admitted under Section 100, a moratorium shall
    commence in relation to all the debts and shall cease to have effect at
    the end of the period of one hundred and eighty days beginning with
    the date of admission of the application or on the date on which the
    Adjudicating Authority passes an order on the repayment plan under
    Section 114, whichever is earlier. Sub-section (2) of Section 101
    deserve the reproduction and we reproduce the same:-

    ‘(2) During the moratorium period–

    (a) any pending legal action or proceeding in respect of any debt shall be
    deemed to have been stayed;

    (b) the creditors shall not initiate any legal action or legal proceedings in
    respect of any debt; and

    (c) the debtor shall not transfer, alienate, encumber or dispose of any of his
    assets or his legal rights or beneficial interest therein;’

    16. It is this interim moratorium under Section 96, which is pressed
    into service to halt or assert the continuation of proceedings initiated
    against the Petitioners by invoking the provisions of the Maharashtra
    Co-operative Societies Act, 1960
    , as there was a default in repayment
    of the facility advanced. In terms of the registered mortgaged deed,
    which was executed, by the borrowers/guarantors, it is the claim of
    the Bank that it is entitled to realise the amount due and payable to it
    from the proceeds that would be collected by sale of such property,

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    on its attachment. Pursuant to the recovery certificate being obtained,
    demand notices were issued in respect of the mortgaged property and
    it is urged that this process was initiated prior to the date of filing of
    Section 95 proceedings by the State Bank of India before the NCLT
    and the liability of the borrower/guarantor was already crystallized.

    17. It is urged before us by Mr. Sidheshwar Biradar that there is an
    outstanding amount of Rs. 20,00,00,000 (Twenty Crores) recoverable
    from the Petitioners as well as the surety which is public money and
    the Respondent No.3 has already undergone liquidation process and it
    is necessary to recover the said amount by selling the mortgaged
    property.

    The basic premise on which the relief in WP No. 13469 of
    2025 is opposed is that the Petitioner Nanda Takwane as well as the
    Directors of SIPL always showed their willingness to pay outstanding
    amount under the OTS scheme and even after filing of the Writ
    Petition they approached the bank for accepting OTS proposal, but by
    filing the proceedings in form of the present Petition they are seeking
    stay of the recovery proceedings though the certificate issued under
    Section 101 of the Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act is never
    subjected to challenge and therefore this attempt to project the
    moratorium amounts to abuse of process of law and the Petition
    deserves rejection with heavy cost. It is urged that the submission
    advanced by the Petitioner is an attempt to misuse the jurisdiction of
    this Court.

    In WP No. 3057 of 2026, Mr. Veerdhaval Kakade appearing for
    Shriram Nagari Sahakari Pathsanstha and its Recovery Officer have
    some how similar stand as adopted by advanced by Mr. Biradar, as

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    he would submit that the Respondent no.2 has initiated proceedings
    under Section 101 of the Cooperative Societies Act, and the recovery
    certificate was issued as early as on 19/06/2019 against the Petitioner
    and the Co-borrowers and this order was never challenged by them.
    Thereafter, Respondent No.2, initiated execution proceedings before
    the District Collector, Pune, by invoking Section 156 and the District
    Magistrate passed order on 31/05/2022, and thereafter on 1/06/2022
    appointed the Tahsildar, Daund to execute the recovery certificate and
    take possession of the secured assets.

    In regards to the defence of interim moratorium under Section
    96
    of IBC, it is submitted that the insolvency proceedings under
    Section 95 are initiated against the Petitioner by SBI, being the
    personal guarantor of the corporate debtor namely Siddheshwar
    Industries Pvt. Ltd., but the co-borrowers in the loan transactions are
    not party to the insolvency proceeding and it is categorically asserted
    that Shriram Nagari Sahakari Pathsanstha has no transactions with
    the corporate debtor namely SIPL and the loan transactions between
    the Petitioners and the Pathsanstha are independent transaction,
    which has no relationship with corporate debtor. In addition, it is also
    urged that blanket moratorium cannot be extended to the present
    execution proceedings and he would place reliance upon the decision
    of the Apex Court in case of Saranga Anilkumar Aggarwal vs.
    Bhavesh Dhirajlal Shet and ors5.

    He would pose a question as to whether the benefit of
    moratorium can also be availed by the co-borrowers, who are not
    party to the insolvency proceedings and it is his specific submission

    5 (2025) 4 SCC 629

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    that the liability of borrower and co-borrower is co-extensive/co-
    terminus in respect of the debt but the moratorium under Section 96
    of IBC is not co-extensive and therefore the benefit of the interim
    moratorium cannot be extended to co-borrowers/co-judgment debtor
    in execution proceedings when no such proceedings are initiated
    under IBC against them.

    By relying upon Section 128 of the Indian Contract Act, he
    would submit that a Surety’s liability is co-extensive with the
    principal debtor, and it is not affected by the borrowers insolvency
    proceedings. He would place reliance upon the decision in case of IL
    & FS Financial Services Limited vs. Serveall Constructions Pvt Ltd

    (supra).

    In such circumstances, it is sought to be urged that the
    Respondent No.2, has secured assets of co-borrowers, who are not
    party to the insolvency proceedings and therefore, there is no
    question of depletion of the assets of the debtors in the insolvency
    proceedings, if that is to be considered as the object in imposing
    interim moratorium.

    18. In light of the scheme involved under Section 14 and Section
    96
    moratorium, it is worth to note that an interim moratorium
    imposed upon an application being filed under Section 94 by a
    debtor, who commits a default, to the adjudicating authority for
    initiation of insolvency resolution process or when the creditor has
    filed an application to the adjudicating authority for initiation of
    insolvency process, from the date of filing of such application, an
    interim moratorium shall commence in relation to ‘all the debts’ and
    this shall continue till the date of admission of such application.

    
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    During this interim moratorium, legal action or proceedings in
    respect of such debts shall deem to have been stayed and even the
    creditors of the debtor are forbidden from initiating any legal action
    or proceedings in respect of the debt.

    While the validity of the said provision was tested in Dilip
    Jiwrajka (supra), the triggering of interim moratorium under Section
    96
    , was considered, to be on the submission of application under
    Section 94 or Section 95. While clarifying the purpose of interim
    moratorium, being to restrain the initiation or continuation of legal
    action or proceedings against the debt, the Apex Court emphasized on
    the words ‘in respect of any debt’ and also contra-distinguished the
    said provision from the provision for moratorium contained in
    Section 14 in relation to CIRP in Part II and we deem it appropriate
    to reproduce the relevant observations :-

    “57. Section 96, as its marginal note indicates, deals with an “interim-
    moratorium”. In terms of Section 96, the interim moratorium takes effect on the
    date of the application. In other words, the very submission of an application
    under Section 94 or Section 95 triggers the interim moratorium which then
    ceases to have effect on the date of the admission of the application (under
    Section 100). The consequences which flow from an interim moratorium are
    specified in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 96. The impact of the interim-
    moratorium under Section 96 is that a legal action or proceeding pending in
    respect of any debt is deemed to have been stayed and the creditors or the
    debtors shall not initiate any legal action or proceedings in respect of any debt.
    The crucial words which are used both in clause (b)(i) and clause (b)(ii) of sub-
    section (1) of Section 96 are “in respect of any debt”. These words indicate that
    the interim-moratorium which is intended to operate by the legislature is
    primarily in respect of a debt as opposed to a debtor. Clause (b) of sub-section
    (1) indicates that the purpose of the interim-moratorium is to restrain the
    initiation or the continuation of legal action or proceedings against the debt.

    58. This must be contra-distinguished from the provisions for moratorium which
    are contained in Section 14 in relation to the CIRP under Part II. Section 14(1)

    (a) provides that on the insolvency commencement date, the institution of suits or
    continuation of pending suits or proceedings against the corporate debtor,
    including proceedings in execution shall stand prohibited by an order of the
    adjudicating authority. Clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 14 empowers the
    adjudicating authority to declare a moratorium restraining the transfer,
    encumbrance, alienation or disposal by the corporate debtor of any of its assets

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    or any legal right or beneficial interest therein. Significantly, the moratorium
    under Section 14 operates on the order passed by an adjudicating authority. The
    purpose of the moratorium under Section 96 is protective. The object of the
    moratorium is to insulate the corporate debtor from the institution of legal
    actions or the continuation of legal actions or proceedings in respect of the
    debt.”

    19. In light of the authoritative guidance to the aforesaid effect,
    when the interim moratorium contemplated under Section 96 is
    applicable in relation to all ‘debts’ and the term ‘debt’ being defined
    under the IBC to cover a liability or obligation in respect of a claim,
    which is due from ‘any person’ and that it shall include a financial
    debt and operational debt, the interim moratorium which shall operate
    qua ‘all the debts’ , is a provision intended to freeze legal
    proceedings. As debt is a liability or obligation, apart from the
    borrower, even a person who is a guarantor/surety is also covered
    because the protection is not available against a particular debtor or
    guarantor, but it is a protective mechanism intended to freeze the
    legal action or proceedings pending in respect of the ‘debt’ and the
    creditor of the debtor is prohibited from initiating any legal action or
    proceedings in respect of the debt. The imposition of moratorium is
    in relation to debt and not the debtor and this protection is available
    to the debtor as well as its guarantor and when a moratorium is qua
    the debt, it is equally applicable to the Guarantor as well as the
    Debtor/ Borrower. The definition of the term ‘debt’ also offers a
    clarity, as it is defined to be a liability or obligation in respect of a
    claim which is due from ‘any person’, which therefore diminishes the
    line between the persons from whom the debt is due and it may be a
    borrower or a guarantor. As per Section 126 of the Contract Act,
    1872, ‘a contract of guarantee’ is a contract to perform the promise or

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    discharge the liability of a third person in case of his default and the
    person giving the guarantee, referred to as ‘surety’, gives the
    guarantee on default of the ‘principal debtor’.

    20. In Tata Capital Limited Vs. Geeta Passi & Ors. (supra), the
    learned Single Judge of this Court was confronted with an identical
    situation, when it was sought to be argued that considering a debt,
    which remains unpaid, the creditor could move the Court against the
    principal borrower and the surety/guarantor for recovery of the debt
    as the liability of surety/guarantor is co-extensive with that of the
    principal borrower and creditor may choose to proceed against the
    guarantor alone for recovery of debt, without suing principal
    borrower, in the backdrop of the scope of ‘debt’ in such a scenario
    and the following observation of the learned Single Judge is relevant
    to note :-

    “9. A “debt”, is defined in Section 3(11) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code
    to mean a liability or obligation in respect of a claim which is due from any
    person and includes a financial debt and operational debt. It is material to note
    that Section 3(11) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code when it defines
    “debt”, states it to be a liability or obligation in respect of a claim which is due
    from “any person”. The very use of the expression “any person”,would mean
    that no distinction can be drawn on the basis of, from whom the debt is due, a
    principal borrower or a guarantor. Section 96 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy
    Code, also uses the expression “all the debts”, in clause (a) of sub-section (1)
    and “any debt”, in sub-clauses (i) and (ii) of clause (b) of sub-section (1). When
    Section 96 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, speaks of a moratorium in
    respect of “any debt”, the same would mean the entire debt, irrespective from
    whom it is due.”

    Clarifying that the protection mandate of Section 96 of IBC is
    in respect of ‘debt’, on facts it is held that when the NCLT granted a
    moratorium under Section 96 of IBC in favour of Mr.Kapoor, the
    principal borrower being the proprietor of SMC and Mrs Pavan
    Kappor, being the guarantor, it was held that it will have to be
    construed as a moratorium in respect of the entire ‘debt’ and the

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    claim cannot make distinction between a ‘debt’ vis-a-vis the principal
    debtor or other parties thereto as guarantors or even considering their
    co-extensive liability and it is categorically held thus :-

    “The ‘debt’ for the purpose of the moratorium, cannot be severed into the ‘debt’
    of the principal borrower or for that matter of one of the guarantors on the one
    hand, and the debt of the other guarantors, in this case the legal heirs of original
    Respondent 4, Mr B.L. Passi.”

    Thus, it was held that the ‘debt’ is ‘debt’ for all the purpose and
    it is a ‘debt’ in its entirety and it is not permissible to distinguish
    between the debt of a principal borrower and that of the guarantor.

    21. The aforesaid pronouncement from the learned Single Judge
    was followed by another Single Judge in Mr.Ajeet Madhukar Mulay
    (supra), where a challenge was raised to the Arbitration Award
    alongwith the orders passed in the applications filed by the
    petitioners, who stood as guarantors for the financial assistance
    availed by one M/s Nirmangold Alloys Private Limited and M/s
    Nirmangold Plasttech Private Limited.

    When there was default in repayment, the credit facility
    accounts of the company were classified as NPA and notices were
    issued to the principal borrower and the guarantors, which were not
    complied with, giving rise to a dispute filed under Section 84 of
    Multi-State Co-operative Societies Act, 2002. Similarly, the
    arbitration proceedings were invoked by the disputant bank, seeking
    recovery of the outstanding amount and during the pendency of the
    arbitration proceedings, applications were filed under Section 94 of
    the IBC and the Arbitrator held that since the moratorium had
    commenced, the arbitration cannot proceed.

    The said order, being a subject matter of the Arbitration
    Petition, it was noted that the principal borrowers, M/s Nirmangold

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    Plasttech Private Limited and M/s Nirmangold Alloys Private
    Limited were admitted to insolvency and undergoing corporate
    insolvency process under the IBC and the two of the guarantors
    claimed benefit of the interim moratorium under Section 96 of IBC
    premised on filing of applications under Section 94 of IBC for
    personal insolvency. It was urged that as per the provisions of IBC,
    the filing of application under Section 94 triggers an interim
    moratorium in relation to ‘all the debts’ from the date of filing of the
    application and during the interim moratorium, any legal action or
    proceedings in respect of any debt shall be deemed to have been
    stayed. This submission was accepted by the learned Arbitrator, who
    stayed the arbitration proceedings qua the two guarantors, but
    continued the proceedings against the other guarantors. By placing
    reliance upon the decision in the case of Tata Capital Limited Vs.
    Geeta Passi & Ors.
    (supra) and in the light of the observations in
    Dilip Jiwrajka (supra), the learned Single Judge held thus :-

    “67(a) The continuation of the arbitration proceedings against the
    Petitioners despite the stay of “debt” under Section 96 of IB Code on the
    applications filed by the other guarantors disregards the binding judicial
    pronouncement of Hon’ble Apex Court and this Court and is violative of
    fundamental policy of Indian law under Section 34(2)(b)(ii) of Arbitration Act.”

    22. The applicability of triggering of moratorium, as contemplated
    in Section 96, received a further clarification by Delhi High Court in
    Axis Trustee Services Ltd. Vs. Brij Bhushan Singal & Anr. 6, when
    the following clarification was recorded :-

    “34. Before the insolvency applications were filed against defendant
    No.1, counsel for the defendants had also contended that the interim moratorium
    in respect of one of the co-guarantors would also apply to the other co-
    guarantor for the same debt as the liability of both the co-guarantors arise from
    the same debt. Reliance is placed on the words “any debt” occurring in section
    96(1)(b)
    of the IBC. Though I need not delve into this submission in view of the
    fact that insolvency proceedings have subsequently been filed against defendant
    6 2022 SCC OnLine Del 3634

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    No.1, however, since I have heard counsels for the parties extensively on this
    issue, I propose to address the same.

    35. In my view, the language of section 96(1) of the IBC cannot be
    stretched so as to include all co-guarantors within the ambit of the interim
    moratorium. The reference to “all the debts” in section 96(1)(a) has to be in
    respect of all debts of a particular debtor. This is clear from the language used
    in section 96(1)(b)(ii) to the effect that “the creditors of the debtor shall not
    initiate any legal action or proceedings in respect of any debt”. Therefore, the
    effect of the interim moratorium is only in respect of the debts of a particular
    debtor. By no stretch of imagination can it be said to include other independent
    guarantors in respect of the same debt of a corporate debtor. Merely because an
    interim moratorium under section 96 is operable in respect of one of the co-
    guarantors, the same would not apply to the other go-guarantor(s).”

    23. The counsel for the Respondents would place heavy reliance
    upon the decision of the learned Single Judge in Rozina Firoz
    Hajiani (supra) and we have carefully perused the finding rendered
    in the said judgment, which necessarily has to be appreciated against
    the facts of the case and the court taking note of a disturbing trend, in
    regards to the manner in which the chronic defaulters were resorting
    to the provisions of IBC, 2016 to frustrate secured creditors and
    auction purchasers from proceeding, in accordance with law, under
    the provisions of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial
    Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002
    (for short,
    “the Securitisation Act“).

    Specifically noting that the borrowers/guarantors act as fence
    sitters and do not take any steps when the secured creditors proceed
    under section 13(2) and take any further consequential steps, till the
    culmination of the process and the auction purchasers coming into
    picture. Noting that at the stage, when the auction sale is conducted
    and the auction purchaser comes into picture and in some cases, even
    when the sale certificate is issued and the physical possession is
    about to be handed over, the original borrowers/guarantors initiate

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    collusive proceedings under Section 94 or 95 of IBC, triggering a
    moratorium under Section 96, by approaching the NCLT. As a result,
    the whole process comes to a standstill and such
    borrowers/guarantors, who are defaulters, wear a cloak of immunity
    under the garb of moratorium triggered under Section 96 of IBC. In
    such a scenario, the secured creditor and/or the auction purchaser are
    left with no other option, than to approach the NCLT and at times the
    proceedings are carried to NCLAT and then to the Supreme Court,
    but in this full process, the interest of the auction purchaser is
    completely frustrated, despite having parted with consideration in
    terms of the bid amount.

    It is in this premise, when the facts before the Court revealed
    that the bank took steps for realisation of its unpaid dues and time to
    time conducted the auction and when it issued the tenth auction
    notice, scheduling the date for auction, the borrowers and guarantors
    approached the DRT, by filing securitisation application, which was
    after more than seven years when the notice was served on the
    borrowers and guarantors under Section 13(2) of the Securitisation
    Act. In the auction conducted, the petitioners were found to be the
    successful bidders and deposited the entire amount and sale
    certificate was issued in their favour, which was also registered and
    they were put in physical possession.

    At this crucial stage, the personal guarantor filed an application
    under Section 94 of IBC and claimed the umbrage of the moratorium
    under Section 96 and this fact being brought to the notice of DRT, the
    Tribunal refused to proceed in the wake, by observing that there was
    a moratorium imposed.

    
    
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    24. It is in these grave circumstances, the Court observed that Debt
    Recovery Tribunal was not justified in stalling the proceedings and it
    should have taken note of sequence of events, including one
    important fact that the NCLT, Mumbai excluded the secured assets
    from moratorium, but ignoring this, the DRT passed one line order,
    restraining the bank from taking any further steps till disposal of the
    interim application pending in the securitisation application. Noting
    that the whole exercise was purported to be a manifest misuse of
    provisions of law, and the Court in exercise of its writ jurisdiction
    pass an order to set right the obvious wrong, it was noted that the
    parties would continue to misuse the provisions of law to browbeat
    the subordinate tribunals like DRT and, therefore, it was found to be a
    case, where the High Court shall exercise its writ jurisdiction and the
    impugned order passed by the DRT was set aside, by directing that
    the bank need not await disposal of the interim application for taking
    further steps in pursuance of the auction sale and registration of sale
    certificate in favour of the petitioners. The Court Commissioner was
    directed to proceed in accordance with law in terms of the order
    passed by the competent authority under Section 14 of the
    Securitisation Act and take consequential steps.

    The law laid down in Rozina Firoz Hajiani (supra) will,
    therefore, have to be appreciated in the backdrop of the malicious
    attempt to use the proceedings to defeat the due course of law.
    Reliance placed upon the aforesaid judgment by the Respondents,
    therefore, do not lay down as a proposition of law that in every case,
    where an application is filed under Section 94 by the debtor or under
    Section 95 by the creditor to initiate insolvency resolution process, it

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    is an attempt to dislodge the claim of the creditor.

    25. The decision in the case of State Bank of India Vs. V.
    Ramakrishnan & Anr.
    (supra) upon which the reliance is placed by
    the Respondents, also revolve around Section 14 of the IBC, where it
    is held that the moratorium under Section 14 is inapplicable to a
    personal guarantor of corporate debtor and with clarity it is ruled that
    not only was Section 14 inapplicable to personal guarantor of
    corporate debtor prior to its amendment in 2018, but this position of
    law is confirmed by the clarificatory amendment through insertion of
    Section 3(b), which make it clear that moratorium under Section 14
    shall not apply to a surety in a contract of guarantee for corporate
    debtor. In fact, in the said decision, the Apex Court noted the
    distinction between moratorium under Section 96 alongwith Section
    101
    and the moratorium imposed under Section 14 and observed that
    Section 14 cannot possibly apply to a personal guarantor and when an
    application is filed under Part III, an interim moratorium or a
    moratorium is applicable in respect of ‘any debt’. Drawing A
    distinction, it is noted that it is a separate moratorium, applicable
    separately in the case of personal guarantors against whom
    insolvency resolution process may be initiated under Part III and the
    protection of the moratorium under these sections is far greater than
    that of Section 14 in that pending legal proceedings in respect of the
    debt and not the debtor are stayed.

    The difference in language of Sections 14 and 101 was set out
    for a reason, which was reflected in the following words :-

    “26.1 Section 14 refers only to debts due by corporate debtors, who are
    limited liability companies, and it is clear that in the vast majority of cases,
    personal guarantees are given by Directors who are in management of the
    companies. The object of the Code is not to allow such guarantors to escape

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    from an independent and co-extensive liability to pay off the entire outstanding
    debt, which is why Section 14 is not applied to them. However, insofar as firms
    and individuals are concerned, guarantees are given in respect of individual
    debts by persons who have unlimited liability to pay them. And such guarantors
    may be complete strangers to the debtor-often it could be a personal friend. It is
    for this reason that the moratorium mentioned in Section 101 would cover such
    persons, as such moratorium is in relation to the debt and not the debtor.”

    26. The decision in case of BRS Ventures Investments Limited Vs.
    SREI Infrastructure Finance Limited & Anr.
    7 does not take the case
    of the Respondents any further, as it laid down a proposition of law
    that a resolution plan of a corporate debtor approved by the
    adjudicating authority binds the corporate debtor, its employees,
    members, creditors, guarantors and other stake holders and, therefore,
    where a company furnishes a corporate guarantee for securing a loan
    taken by another company and if the CIRP of the corporate guarantor
    ends in a resolution plan, it will bind the creditor of the corporate
    debtor and the corporate guarantor’s liability may end in such a case
    by operation of law. But, such a resolution plan of the corporate
    guarantor will not affect the liability of the principal borrower to
    repay the loan amount to the creditor after deducting the amount
    recovered from the corporate guarantor or the amount paid by the
    resolution applicant on behalf of the corporate guarantor as per the
    resolution plan.

    27. The situation before us is, however, completely distinct than
    the one which is existed in BRS Ventures Investments Limited
    (supra). The Petitioners before us are the guarantors of the corporate
    debtor, Siddheshwar Industries Private Limited (“SIPL”), which is
    undergoing CIRP. Upon the State Bank of India filing separate
    applications under Section 95 against the personal guarantors of the

    7 (2025) 1 SCC 456

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    corporate debtor, SIPL, the interim moratorium has come into
    operation.

    Writ Petition No.3057 of 2026 is accompanied with the case
    status of all the applications filed by the State Bank of India against
    the four Petitioners, the guarantors, being impleaded as Respondents
    and this include Smt.Nanda Takawane, Vikas Takawane, Raviraj
    Takawane and Yuvraj Takawane, all being the personal guarantors to
    the corporate debtor, SIPL. We are informed that the said applications
    are pending before the NCLT and since it is in relation to the ‘debt’,
    which is due and payable by the corporate debtor, SIPL, and the
    Petitioners are the guarantors to the said transaction, upon the
    application being filed by the creditor (State Bank of India), on filing
    of the application, the interim moratorium is triggered in relation to
    all the debts and by virtue of clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section
    96
    of IBC, any legal action or proceedings pending in respect of the
    debt is deemed to be stayed and the creditors or the debtors are not
    allowed to initiate any legal action or proceedings in respect of such
    debt.

    In light of the aforesaid position clearly surfacing on record,
    we are not persuaded to accept the submission that the proceedings
    initiated under Section 101 of the Maharashtra Co-operative Societies
    Act, 1960, resulting into a recovery certificate being issued against
    the Petitioners, shall be allowed to proceed. However, when we have
    perused the list of the borrowers/co-borrowers furnished by
    Mr.Kakade, we find that the borrowers of Seva Vikas Co-operative
    Bank Limited are the four Petitioners, but the co-borrowers are
    distinct individuals. In the said transaction, once again the guarantors

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    are interchangeably the four Petitioners in Writ Petition No.3057 of
    2026, but the mortgaged property is the property of the co-borrowers.
    We must clarify that the moratorium imposed under Section 96 do
    apply to the debt which is due and payable to the corporate creditor
    by the corporate debtor, but if the mortgaged properties belong to the
    co-borrowers, who are not the guarantors of the corporate debtor i.e.
    SIPL, the moratorium will not impact these properties, if the
    properties exclusively belong to the co-borrowers. However, if the
    property is joint in the name of the co-borrowers and the Petitioners,
    who are the individual guarantors of the corporate debtor and though
    they happened to be the borrowers of Seva Vikas Co-operative Bank,
    such transactions shall not proceed.

    28. The conclusion drawn by us to the aforesaid effect restrict the
    moratorium only to the principal borrower and the guarantor of the
    corporate debtor and this provision in fact intended to cover the debt
    of a personal guarantor, if he was a personal guarantor to a corporate
    debtor, who is admitted to IBC proceedings and to do away with the
    said mischief, the Section 96 of IBC is amended to include a
    provision to the effect that the moratorium shall not apply, where an
    application is filed for initiating an insolvency resolution process in
    respect of a personal guarantor to a corporate debtor, but since this
    provision has not yet come into force, we must issue a declaration
    sought by the Petitioners and as long as the moratorium continue to
    be in force, the Respondents, the officials from the Co-Operative
    Department and the Recovery Officer of Shree Ram Nagari Sahakari
    Patsanstha and Seva Vikas Bank Limited shall stay their hands of and
    shall not take steps for recovery of the amount due and payable,

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    though the recovery certificate is secured by them. But we clarify that
    this prevention is applicable only to the Petitioners and their
    properties only.

    The Writ Petitions are made absolute in the aforesaid terms.
    In light of the aforesaid pronouncement, the Interim
    Application seeking stay of the further notices stands disposed of.

    (MANJUSHA DESHPANDE, J.)                      (BHARATI DANGRE, J.)
    
    
    
    
    Ashish
     



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