The company law appellate tribunal today asked Tata Steel if it will
clear the statutory dues like income tax and GST of Bhushan Steel, a
company it had acquired in the insolvency proceedings earlier this month.
The
National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), hearing appeals
against the acquisition filed by Bhushan Steel’s founding Singal family
and the firm’s operational creditor Larsen and Toubro, asked Tata Steel
to submit a statement of statutory dues of the company.
The two
member bench headed by NCLAT Chairman, Justice S J Mukhopadhaya also
asked the Resolution Professional, which oversaw the auction of Bhushan
Steel, to state how much would L&T get from Rs 532 crore offered to
all the operational creditors.
Bhushan Steel owed its lenders
about Rs 56,000 crore and was among the 12 big loan defaulters
identified by the Reserve Bank of India last year to undergo insolvency
under the new bankruptcy law. Tata Steel offered Rs 35,200 crore in cash
to acquire Bhushan Steel. It would pay another Rs 1,200 crore over next
12 months to creditors and convert the remaining debt owed to banks to
equity.
After the entire exercise, Tata would hold 75 per cent
stake and banks would get 12.27 per cent. Singal family would be left
with 2.5 per cent and the remaining 10 per cent would be public holding.
While L&T wants to recover its Rs 956 crore dues, Singal family has
made a Rs 28,592 crore counter-offer.
During the proceedings,
senior advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi opposed the Rs 28,592 crore offer
by Neeraj Singal. "This Rs 28,592 crore offer in 14 years is a spoiler,"
he said. Meanwhile, senior advocate S Ganesh appearing for Singal
submitted that Tata Steel was ineligible to bid for Bhushan Steel under
section 29 A of IBC.
The section mandates that a person convicted
for any offence punishable with imprisonment for two years or more is
ineligible for submitting a resolution plan. Tata Steel UK, a foreign
subsidiary of Tata Steel, was fined by an English Court in February
2018, he added.
The appellate tribunal has listed the matter on
July 3 for next hearing. Neeraj Singal and L&T had filed appeals
challenging May 15 order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT)
that had approved Tata Steel’s bid for Bhushan Steel.