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Sunday, July 19, 2026

Once a Resolution Plan is approved under Section 31 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, all claims stand frozen in the manner provided therein and every claim not incorporated in the Plan stands extinguished. Operational creditors whose disputed claims had not crystallised into quantified liabilities by the effective date of the Resolution Plan cannot continue civil suits or arbitration proceedings for recovery of such pre-CIRP dues. The approved Resolution Plan must be read as a whole, giving full effect to the "clean slate" doctrine, thereby enabling the Successful Resolution Applicant to take over the Corporate Debtor free from past liabilities not preserved by the Plan.

 

2026 INSC 717

M/s Tata Steel Ltd. v. Varsha & Anr.

HEAD NOTES 

A. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Sections 30 & 31 — Approved Resolution Plan — Binding effect.

Held, once a Resolution Plan is approved under Section 31, it is final and binding upon the Corporate Debtor, Successful Resolution Applicant, creditors and all stakeholders. Claims not provided for in the Resolution Plan stand extinguished and cannot thereafter be enforced through civil suits, arbitration or other proceedings.


B. Operational Creditors — Pending Civil Suits and Arbitration — Effect of approval of Resolution Plan.

Held, civil suits and arbitral proceedings relating to pre-CIRP operational debts, which had not crystallised into quantified claims by the effective date of the Resolution Plan, automatically stand withdrawn, abated, extinguished or waived in accordance with the approved Resolution Plan.


C. Insolvency Resolution — "Clean Slate" Doctrine.

Held, the Successful Resolution Applicant must commence business on a "clean slate". Permitting unresolved or contingent claims to survive after approval of the Resolution Plan would defeat the very object of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code and create commercial uncertainty.


D. Operational Creditors — Notional admission of claim at ₹1 — Effect.

Held, where disputed operational claims were finally verified and admitted only at a quantified value of ₹1 in the Final List of Creditors, the creditors cannot subsequently pursue the original disputed amounts through independent proceedings after approval of the Resolution Plan.


E. Resolution Professional — Final List of Creditors — Finality.

Held, once the Final List of Creditors attains finality and remains unchallenged, the treatment of claims under the approved Resolution Plan becomes binding. Operational creditors cannot subsequently reopen the categorisation or valuation of their claims indirectly through civil or arbitral proceedings.


F. Commercial Wisdom of Committee of Creditors.

Held, allocation and treatment of operational creditors under a Resolution Plan form part of the commercial wisdom of the Committee of Creditors, which is ordinarily non-justiciable except on the limited grounds recognised under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.


G. Resolution Plan — Interpretation.

Held, a Resolution Plan must be read as an integrated commercial document. Individual clauses cannot be interpreted in isolation to preserve claims expressly extinguished elsewhere in the Plan. Harmonious construction must prevail.


H. MSMEs and Small Operational Creditors — Legislative Concern.

Held, although the existing statutory framework places operational creditors, including MSMEs and local bodies, at a significant disadvantage in insolvency distribution, any modification of the repayment mechanism lies within the legislative domain. The Court recommended consideration of the issue by the Law Commission and Legislature.


Analysis of Facts

Bhushan Steel Limited entered Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP).

Prior to commencement of CIRP, one operational creditor had instituted a civil recovery suit, while another had initiated multiple arbitration proceedings against the Corporate Debtor.

Both creditors submitted their claims before the Resolution Professional during CIRP. Since their claims were under adjudication elsewhere, they were admitted in the Final List of Creditors at a quantified value of ₹1 each.

The Committee of Creditors approved Tata Steel's Resolution Plan, which was subsequently sanctioned by the NCLT.

Despite approval of the Resolution Plan, the operational creditors continued their civil suit and arbitration proceedings. The High Courts permitted continuation of those proceedings.

The Successful Resolution Applicant challenged those orders before the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court held that the approved Resolution Plan extinguished all unresolved pre-CIRP claims except to the extent expressly recognised therein. Since the operational creditors' claims stood finally quantified at ₹1 each and the Resolution Plan had attained finality, continuation of the pending civil and arbitral proceedings was impermissible. The appeals were accordingly allowed and the proceedings dismissed.


Analysis of Law

The Supreme Court laid down the following principles:

  1. Approval of a Resolution Plan under Section 31 freezes all claims against the Corporate Debtor.

  2. Claims not incorporated in the Resolution Plan stand extinguished.

  3. The "clean slate" principle protects the Successful Resolution Applicant from unforeseen liabilities after takeover.

  4. Operational creditors whose disputed claims are finally admitted only at a quantified value of ₹1 cannot subsequently enforce larger disputed claims.

  5. The Final List of Creditors, if unchallenged, attains finality and binds all stakeholders.

  6. The commercial wisdom of the Committee of Creditors regarding treatment of operational creditors is ordinarily immune from judicial interference.

  7. A Resolution Plan must be interpreted harmoniously as one integrated commercial document.

  8. Civil suits and arbitration proceedings relating to pre-resolution operational claims which remain uncrystallised at the effective date stand withdrawn, abated or extinguished in accordance with the approved Resolution Plan.

  9. While recognising hardships faced by MSMEs and small operational creditors under the present insolvency regime, any alteration of the statutory repayment framework is a matter for legislative intervention rather than judicial modification.


Ratio Decidendi

Once a Resolution Plan is approved under Section 31 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, all claims stand frozen in the manner provided therein and every claim not incorporated in the Plan stands extinguished. Operational creditors whose disputed claims had not crystallised into quantified liabilities by the effective date of the Resolution Plan cannot continue civil suits or arbitration proceedings for recovery of such pre-CIRP dues. The approved Resolution Plan must be read as a whole, giving full effect to the "clean slate" doctrine, thereby enabling the Successful Resolution Applicant to take over the Corporate Debtor free from past liabilities not preserved by the Plan.

A second appeal under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure cannot be entertained or decided without first formulating substantial question(s) of law, and any judgment rendered in violation of this mandatory requirement is liable to be set aside. Further, Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act applies only to documents which are compulsorily required by law to be attested. Since a registered sale deed is not such a document, neither Section 68 nor its proviso governs proof of its execution, and the proviso cannot be construed to create an independent rule regarding "specific denial" applicable to sale deeds.

 

2026 INSC 703

R. Veronica & Anr. v. Rudrayani Devaki (D) through LRs. & Ors.

HEAD NOTES 

A. Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 — Section 100 — Second Appeal — Formulation of substantial question of law — Mandatory.

Held, formulation of substantial question(s) of law is a mandatory pre-condition for entertaining and deciding a second appeal under Section 100 CPC. A judgment rendered without framing such question(s) is vitiated and liable to be set aside.


B. Second Appeal — Jurisdiction of High Court.

Held, the High Court must formulate the substantial question(s) of law before hearing the appeal and dispose of the appeal only on such question(s), except where additional substantial questions are recorded in accordance with the proviso to Section 100(5) CPC. Mere reference to grounds in the memorandum of appeal is insufficient compliance.


C. Indian Evidence Act, 1872 — Section 68 — Registered Sale Deed — Applicability.

Held, Section 68 applies only to documents which are required by law to be attested. A registered sale deed under Section 54 of the Transfer of Property Act is not a document required by law to be attested; therefore, Section 68 and its proviso have no application to proof of a sale deed.


D. Evidence Act — Proviso to Section 68 — Interpretation.

Held, the proviso to Section 68 merely carves out an exception relating to documents compulsorily required by law to be attested (other than Wills). It cannot be interpreted as creating an independent rule regarding "specific denial" applicable to all registered documents, including sale deeds.


E. Statutory Interpretation — Proviso — Scope.

Held, a proviso qualifies, explains or restricts the main provision and cannot enlarge or travel beyond its scope. The proviso to Section 68 must be read harmoniously with the main provision and cannot extend Section 68 to documents outside its ambit.


F. Sale Deed — Proof — Attesting witness.

Held, since attestation is not mandatory for a sale deed, examination of an attesting witness is not a statutory requirement for proving its execution merely because attesting witnesses happen to have signed the document.


G. High Court — Interpretation of Section 68 — Error of law.

Held, the High Court erred in holding that "specific denial" under the proviso to Section 68 must arise only through an independent suit, counterclaim or separate proceeding instituted by the executant. Such interpretation finds no support either in Section 68 or in settled principles governing proof of documents.


H. Remand — Fresh disposal of Second Appeal.

Held, where the High Court decides a second appeal without complying with the mandatory requirements of Section 100 CPC and proceeds on an erroneous interpretation of Section 68 of the Evidence Act, the appropriate course is to set aside the judgment and remit the matter for fresh hearing after framing substantial question(s) of law.


Analysis of Facts

The plaintiffs instituted a suit seeking declaration of title, recovery of possession of immovable property and cancellation of a subsequent sale deed executed by the original owner in favour of the defendants.

The plaintiffs claimed title through a registered sale deed executed in 1978. The defendants disputed the execution and genuineness of that sale deed and relied upon a later sale deed executed in 1996.

The Trial Court decreed the suit.

The First Appellate Court reversed the decree, principally holding that execution of the earlier sale deed had not been satisfactorily proved.

In second appeal, the High Court restored the Trial Court's decree. While doing so, it interpreted the proviso to Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act to hold that the requirement of proving execution through an attesting witness did not arise unless the executant had specifically challenged the document by instituting an independent proceeding.

The Supreme Court found two serious errors in the High Court's judgment: first, the High Court decided the second appeal without framing any substantial question of law under Section 100 CPC; secondly, it wrongly interpreted Section 68 of the Evidence Act as applicable to registered sale deeds. The matter was accordingly remitted to the High Court for fresh disposal.


Analysis of Law

The Supreme Court laid down the following principles:

  1. Formulation of substantial question(s) of law is mandatory before hearing and deciding a second appeal under Section 100 CPC.

  2. Failure to formulate such question(s) renders the judgment legally unsustainable.

  3. Section 68 of the Evidence Act applies only to documents which the law requires to be compulsorily attested.

  4. A sale deed under Section 54 of the Transfer of Property Act is not a compulsorily attested document.

  5. Consequently, Section 68 and its proviso have no application to proof of execution of a registered sale deed.

  6. The proviso to Section 68 cannot be interpreted independently so as to extend its operation beyond the main provision.

  7. A proviso merely qualifies or carves out an exception to the principal enactment and cannot enlarge its scope.

  8. The High Court's interpretation that "specific denial" must arise through an independent suit or counterclaim has no statutory basis.

  9. Where the High Court commits both procedural and substantive errors while deciding a second appeal, remand for fresh adjudication is the proper course.


Ratio Decidendi

A second appeal under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure cannot be entertained or decided without first formulating substantial question(s) of law, and any judgment rendered in violation of this mandatory requirement is liable to be set aside. Further, Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act applies only to documents which are compulsorily required by law to be attested. Since a registered sale deed is not such a document, neither Section 68 nor its proviso governs proof of its execution, and the proviso cannot be construed to create an independent rule regarding "specific denial" applicable to sale deeds.

A stipulation in an agreement to sell requiring refund of earnest money if the sale deed is not executed does not, by itself, confer upon the defaulting vendor an option to avoid performance or bar the remedy of specific performance. Under Section 23 of the Specific Relief Act, the Court must ascertain whether payment of money was intended as a substitute for contractual performance; absent such intention, the purchaser remains entitled to specific performance. Further, the High Court, while exercising jurisdiction under Section 100 CPC, cannot reappreciate evidence or disturb concurrent findings of fact regarding execution of the agreement, readiness and willingness, and rejection of the defence of fraud, unless such findings are shown to be perverse or unsupported by evidence.

 

2026 INSC 700

Jaspal Singh v. Ashwani Kumar

HEAD NOTES 

A. Specific Relief Act, 1963 — Section 23 — Agreement to Sell — Earnest money clause — Specific performance.

Held, a clause providing that the vendor shall refund the earnest money if the sale deed could not be executed does not by itself confer upon the vendor an option to avoid the contract. Unless the agreement clearly provides that payment of money is intended to be a substitute for performance, the purchaser remains entitled to seek specific performance.


B. Contract — Construction of agreement — Refund clause.

Held, the true test is whether the contract gives the defaulting party an election either to perform the contract or merely to pay money in lieu of performance. A clause requiring refund of earnest money merely secures performance and does not extinguish the remedy of specific performance.


C. Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 — Section 100 — Scope of Second Appeal.

Held, the High Court cannot reappreciate evidence or interfere with concurrent findings of fact unless such findings are shown to be perverse, based on no evidence, or arrived at by ignoring material evidence. The First Appellate Court remains the final court on facts.


D. Specific Performance — Readiness and willingness — Concurrent findings.

Held, where the Trial Court and the First Appellate Court concurrently hold that execution of the agreement and the purchaser's readiness and willingness stand proved, the High Court cannot reopen such findings in second appeal without recording perversity.


E. Fraud — Burden of proof.

Held, a plea that signatures were obtained on blank papers and subsequently converted into an agreement to sell must be strictly proved. Mere allegations or suspicion, unsupported by handwriting evidence or other convincing material, cannot displace a duly proved written agreement.


F. Agreement to Sell — Undivided share of co-owner.

Held, an undivided share of a co-owner in immovable property is a valid subject matter of transfer. Joint ownership of the property or non-joinder of the co-owner in the agreement does not render the transaction suspicious or unenforceable.


G. Extension of time — Effect.

Held, consensual extension of time for execution of the sale deed is consistent with the parties' continuing intention to complete the transaction and cannot, by itself, be treated as evidence that the agreement is sham or fictitious.


H. Specific Relief — Equitable relief.

Held, once a valid agreement, readiness and willingness of the purchaser, and absence of any legal bar are established, specific performance ought not to be refused on conjectures or circumstances inconsistent with concurrent findings of fact.


Analysis of Facts

The appellant entered into an Agreement to Sell dated 22 June 2003 with the respondent for purchase of the respondent's half share in immovable property for a consideration of ₹12.50 lakh and paid ₹9 lakh as earnest money.

The parties twice extended the time for execution of the sale deed. The appellant appeared before the Sub-Registrar on the stipulated dates, but the respondent failed to execute the sale deed.

The appellant instituted a suit for specific performance.

The respondent denied execution of the agreement and alleged that his signatures had been obtained on blank papers as security for a proposed travel arrangement and were subsequently converted into an Agreement to Sell.

The Trial Court accepted execution of the agreement but declined specific performance, holding that the agreement merely entitled the purchaser to refund of earnest money.

The First Appellate Court reversed the decree and granted specific performance.

The High Court, in second appeal, restored the Trial Court's decree by holding that the agreement did not contemplate specific performance and by drawing adverse inferences from surrounding circumstances.

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, restored the decree for specific performance and held that the High Court had exceeded its jurisdiction under Section 100 CPC by reappreciating concurrent findings of fact without recording perversity.


Analysis of Law

The Supreme Court laid down the following principles:

  1. Section 23 of the Specific Relief Act permits specific performance notwithstanding a clause providing for payment or refund of money upon breach.

  2. The decisive test is whether the contract confers an option to substitute payment for performance.

  3. A clause providing refund of earnest money ordinarily secures performance and does not create an option to rescind the contract.

  4. The First Appellate Court is the final court on facts.

  5. In a second appeal under Section 100 CPC, the High Court may interfere with concurrent findings only upon demonstrating perversity or substantial legal error.

  6. Allegations of fraud must be proved by cogent evidence and cannot rest upon suspicion or conjecture.

  7. Transfer of an undivided share by a co-owner is legally recognised and does not affect the validity of an agreement to sell.

  8. Mutually agreed extensions of time ordinarily reinforce the parties' intention to complete the sale rather than undermine the genuineness of the transaction.

  9. Once execution of the agreement, readiness and willingness, and absence of any legal impediment are established, specific performance should ordinarily follow.


Ratio Decidendi

A stipulation in an agreement to sell requiring refund of earnest money if the sale deed is not executed does not, by itself, confer upon the defaulting vendor an option to avoid performance or bar the remedy of specific performance. Under Section 23 of the Specific Relief Act, the Court must ascertain whether payment of money was intended as a substitute for contractual performance; absent such intention, the purchaser remains entitled to specific performance. Further, the High Court, while exercising jurisdiction under Section 100 CPC, cannot reappreciate evidence or disturb concurrent findings of fact regarding execution of the agreement, readiness and willingness, and rejection of the defence of fraud, unless such findings are shown to be perverse or unsupported by evidence.

Section 47 of the Persons with Disabilities Act, 1995 imposes a mandatory obligation upon every Government employer to continue in service an employee who acquires disability during service by providing an alternative post or, where necessary, a supernumerary post. This statutory protection is independent of whether the disability is attributable to service and cannot be defeated either by the employee's ignorance of the law or by a subsequent exemption notification operating prospectively. Where reinstatement has become impracticable owing to superannuation, the Court may substitute the relief with appropriate lump-sum monetary compensation to secure complete justice.

 

2026 INSC 689

Union of India & Ors. v. Bali Ram

HEAD NOTES 

A. Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 — Section 47 — Employee acquiring disability during service — Mandatory protection.

Held, Section 47 is mandatory. An employee who acquires disability during service cannot be removed or medically invalidated merely because he becomes unfit for the duties of his existing post. The employer is under a statutory obligation to accommodate him by providing an alternative post carrying the same pay and service benefits or, if necessary, by creating a supernumerary post until superannuation.


B. Writ Jurisdiction — Relief beyond pleadings — Exceptional circumstances.

Held, although ordinarily relief cannot be granted beyond pleadings and prayers, the High Court, in exercise of its equitable jurisdiction under Article 226, may mould appropriate relief where the record clearly establishes a statutory entitlement and denial of such relief would perpetuate injustice merely because of deficient pleadings or poor legal assistance.


C. Waiver — Statutory right — Essential ingredients.

Held, waiver is an intentional relinquishment of a known right. Mere silence, ignorance of law or acceptance of benefits does not constitute waiver. Waiver of rights created under a beneficial welfare legislation is not readily inferred and must be strictly proved.


D. Disability Act — Exemption Notification dated 10.09.2002 — Prospective operation.

Held, the notification exempting combatant personnel of Central Para Military Forces from Section 47 operates prospectively. It cannot retrospectively validate an order of medical invalidation passed before its issuance. Rights already accrued under Section 47 remain unaffected.


E. Beneficial Legislation — Liberal construction.

Held, the Persons with Disabilities Act is a beneficial social welfare legislation. Section 47 must receive a liberal interpretation advancing the object of protecting employees acquiring disability during service. Exemption notifications withdrawing statutory protection must be strictly construed.


F. Disability — Attributability to service — Irrelevant.

Held, Section 47 does not require that the disability should be attributable to or aggravated by service. The only relevant consideration is whether the employee acquired the disability during the course of service.


G. Government as Model Employer — Statutory obligation.

Held, a Government employer must proactively identify and provide suitable alternative employment to an employee acquiring disability during service. It cannot wait for the employee to seek accommodation or plead ignorance of statutory rights.


H. Relief — Reinstatement impracticable after superannuation — Monetary compensation.

Held, where reinstatement has become impossible because the employee has already attained the age of superannuation, the Court may mould the relief by awarding appropriate lump-sum compensation in lieu of reinstatement, back wages and consequential benefits so as to do complete justice.


Analysis of Facts

The respondent joined the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) as a Constable (Driver) in 1985 after being declared medically fit.

In 1996, he developed a serious ophthalmic disorder resulting in complete blindness in one eye and partial loss of vision in the other. The Medical Board declared him permanently incapacitated for further service in the CRPF, and he was medically invalidated from service on 11 March 1998.

His representations seeking disability benefits were rejected on the ground that the disability was neither attributable to nor aggravated by service.

The respondent approached the High Court seeking disability pension. Although he had not specifically invoked Section 47 of the Persons with Disabilities Act, the Single Judge held that his medical invalidation violated the statutory protection under Section 47 and directed reinstatement with consequential benefits. The Division Bench affirmed that decision.

The Union of India appealed before the Supreme Court contending, inter alia, that Section 47 was inapplicable, the respondent had waived his rights, and the subsequent exemption notification protecting CRPF from Section 47 defeated his claim.

The Supreme Court rejected all these contentions, upheld the respondent's statutory protection and, considering that he had already attained the age of superannuation, modified the relief by awarding lump-sum compensation of ₹1.25 crore in place of reinstatement.


Analysis of Law

The Supreme Court laid down the following principles:

  1. Section 47 creates a mandatory statutory obligation to retain an employee who acquires disability during service.

  2. If the employee becomes unsuitable for the existing post, the employer must offer an alternative post with identical pay and service benefits.

  3. If no suitable post is immediately available, a supernumerary post must be created until superannuation.

  4. The protection under Section 47 applies irrespective of whether the disability is attributable to service.

  5. Beneficial legislation protecting disabled employees must receive liberal construction.

  6. Waiver requires conscious abandonment of a known right; ignorance of statutory protection negatives waiver.

  7. High Courts exercising jurisdiction under Article 226 may, in exceptional circumstances, grant relief beyond the pleadings where the record unmistakably establishes legal entitlement and no prejudice is caused.

  8. The exemption notification issued under the proviso to Section 47 is prospective and cannot retrospectively validate an earlier illegal medical invalidation.

  9. Where reinstatement becomes impossible because of superannuation, courts may award appropriate monetary compensation in substitution of reinstatement and consequential benefits to achieve complete justice.


Ratio Decidendi

Section 47 of the Persons with Disabilities Act, 1995 imposes a mandatory obligation upon every Government employer to continue in service an employee who acquires disability during service by providing an alternative post or, where necessary, a supernumerary post. This statutory protection is independent of whether the disability is attributable to service and cannot be defeated either by the employee's ignorance of the law or by a subsequent exemption notification operating prospectively. Where reinstatement has become impracticable owing to superannuation, the Court may substitute the relief with appropriate lump-sum monetary compensation to secure complete justice.

Although Section 9 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 places the burden upon the proceedee to establish Indian citizenship, the Foreigners Tribunal remains under a mandatory obligation to conduct a fair, reasoned and independent adjudication. An ex parte declaration of foreigner status cannot rest merely on the absence of the proceedee but must be founded upon proper service of notice, disclosure of the grounds of reference, consideration of the State's evidence, application of mind and compliance with the constitutional requirements of fairness under Articles 14 and 21. Where these safeguards are absent, the proceedings are liable to be set aside and remitted for fresh adjudication.

 

2026 INSC 694

Sabitri Dey @ Swasthi Dey & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.

HEAD NOTES 

A. Foreigners Act, 1946 — Section 9 — Burden of Proof — Scope.

Held, although Section 9 places the burden upon the proceedee to establish that he or she is not a foreigner, such burden operates only within a lawful and fair adjudicatory process. The Tribunal cannot mechanically declare a person to be a foreigner merely because the proceedee failed to appear.


B. Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964 — Paragraph 3 — Ex parte Proceedings — Duty of Tribunal.

Held, even in ex parte proceedings, the Foreigners Tribunal remains under a duty to verify proper service of notice, examine the "main grounds" of the reference, consider the evidence produced by the State, apply its independent mind and render a reasoned opinion. Absence of the proceedee does not dispense with adjudication.


C. Natural Justice — Audi Alteram Partem — Proceedings before Foreigners Tribunal.

Held, proceedings declaring a person to be a foreigner entail grave civil consequences including detention, deportation and possible statelessness. Therefore, meaningful notice, disclosure of the grounds of reference and effective opportunity of hearing are indispensable requirements of fair procedure.


D. Constitution of India — Articles 14 & 21 — Protection available to foreigners.

Held, Articles 14 and 21 extend to "every person" and not merely citizens. Even a person whose citizenship is under inquiry is entitled to fair, just and reasonable procedure before being declared a foreigner.


E. High Court — Writ Jurisdiction — Appreciation of Evidence.

Held, where the Foreigners Tribunal has failed to conduct proper adjudication, the High Court should not ordinarily become the first forum to appreciate factual evidence. The statutory inquiry must be undertaken by the Tribunal itself.


F. Ex parte Orders — Categories of Cases — Remand.

Held, irrespective of whether (i) the proceedee never appeared, (ii) the High Court independently examined documents, or (iii) the proceedee initially appeared but later defaulted, fresh adjudication by the Tribunal is warranted where the earlier determination lacked meaningful adjudication. Such remand, however, is only a one-time opportunity subject to strict compliance by the proceedee.


G. Foreigners Tribunal — Quasi-Judicial Authority.

Held, the Tribunal is not a mere forwarding authority. It performs a quasi-judicial function requiring independent assessment of the State's evidence, the material produced by the proceedee, and recording of a concise statement of facts with reasons supporting its conclusion.


H. Citizenship Determination — Fair Procedure.

Held, while the State has a legitimate interest in identifying illegal migrants, determination of foreigner status must always conform to constitutional fairness, statutory safeguards and principles of natural justice. The statutory burden under Section 9 is not diluted, but its enforcement must occur through a fair adjudicatory process.


Analysis of Facts

A batch of appeals arose from orders of various Foreigners Tribunals and erstwhile Illegal Migrants (Determination) Tribunals in Assam declaring the appellants to be foreigners. In most cases, the opinions were rendered ex parte or had effectively become ex parte after the appellants failed to continue participating in the proceedings.

The Gauhati High Court affirmed those opinions. The principal grievance before the Supreme Court was that the declarations had been made without meaningful notice, adequate opportunity of hearing, or proper adjudication by the Tribunals.

The Supreme Court classified the cases into three groups:

  1. Cases where the proceedee never appeared despite service of notice.

  2. Cases where the High Court itself appreciated documentary evidence while affirming the Tribunal's order.

  3. Cases where the proceedee initially appeared but later defaulted, resulting in effectively ex parte proceedings.

Considering the serious consequences of a declaration of foreigner status, the Court set aside all the impugned opinions and remitted the matters to the respective Foreigners Tribunals for fresh adjudication under strict timelines and conditions.


Analysis of Law

The Supreme Court laid down the following principles:

  1. Section 9 of the Foreigners Act places the burden upon the proceedee but does not eliminate the Tribunal's obligation to conduct an independent adjudication.

  2. Paragraph 3 of the Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964 mandates:

    • proper service of notice,

    • disclosure of the main grounds,

    • reasonable opportunity to respond,

    • consideration of State evidence,

    • reasoned determination.

  3. Even in ex parte proceedings, the Tribunal must examine whether the State has produced sufficient material supporting the reference.

  4. The expressions "any person" in Article 14 and "no person" in Article 21 extend constitutional procedural protection even to persons whose citizenship is disputed.

  5. Natural justice remains applicable notwithstanding the statutory burden under Section 9.

  6. The High Court should not ordinarily undertake primary appreciation of evidence which the statute requires the Tribunal to evaluate.

  7. Remand was justified because the earlier proceedings lacked complete, meaningful and lawful adjudication.

  8. The remand does not dilute the statutory burden upon the proceedee and is granted only as a final opportunity subject to strict cooperation with the Tribunal.


Ratio Decidendi

Although Section 9 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 places the burden upon the proceedee to establish Indian citizenship, the Foreigners Tribunal remains under a mandatory obligation to conduct a fair, reasoned and independent adjudication. An ex parte declaration of foreigner status cannot rest merely on the absence of the proceedee but must be founded upon proper service of notice, disclosure of the grounds of reference, consideration of the State's evidence, application of mind and compliance with the constitutional requirements of fairness under Articles 14 and 21. Where these safeguards are absent, the proceedings are liable to be set aside and remitted for fresh adjudication.