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which had not crystallised into quantified claims by the effective date of the Resolution Plan, automatically stand withdrawn, abated, extinguished or waived in accordance with the approved Resolution Plan.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:
Approval of a Resolution Plan under Section 31 freezes all claims against the Corporate Debtor.
Claims not incorporated in the Resolution Plan stand extinguished.
The "clean slate" principle protects the Successful Resolution Applicant from unforeseen liabilities after takeover.
Operational creditors whose disputed claims are finally admitted only at a quantified value of ₹1 cannot subsequently enforce larger disputed claims.
The Final List of Creditors, if unchallenged, attains finality and binds all stakeholders.
The commercial wisdom of the Committee of Creditors regarding treatment of operational creditors is ordinarily immune from judicial interference.
A Resolution Plan must be interpreted harmoniously as one integrated commercial document.
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.
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.
