THE PROVINCIAL INSOLVENCY ACT, 1920
(5 of 1920)
CONTENTS
2. Definitions.
Constitution and Powers of Courts
4. Power of Court to decide all questions arising in insolvency.
Proceedings from Act of Insolvency
To Discharge
8. Exemption of corporation, etc. from Insolvency,
proceedings.
9. Conditions on which creditor may petition.
10. Conditions on which debtor
may petition
11. Court to which petition shall
be presented.
15. Consolidation of petitions.
16. Power to change carriage of proceedings.
17. Continuance of proceedings on death of debtor.
18. Procedure for admission of petition.
19. Procedure on admission of petition,
20. Appointment of interim receiver.
21. Interim proceedings against debtor.
28. Effect of an order of adjudication.
28A. Insolvent's property to comprise certain capacity.
29. Stay of pending proceedings.
30. Publication of order of adjudication.
32. Power to arrest after adjudication.
34. Debts provable under the Act.
35. Power to annual adjudication of insolvency.
36. Power to cancel one of the concurrent orders of adjudication.
38. Composition and schemes of arrangement.
40. Power to re-adjudge debtor insolvent.
41. Discharge.
42. Cases in which Court must refuse an absolute discharge.
43. Adjudication to be annulled on failure to apply for discharge.
44. Effect of order of discharge.
ADMINISTRATION OF PROPERTY
45. Debt payable at a future time.
46. Mutual dealings and set-off.
48. Interest.
49. Mode of proof.
50. Disallowance and reduction of entries in schedule.
51. Restriction of rights of creditor under execution.
52. Duties of Courts executing decree as to property taken in
execution.
53. Avoidance of voluntary transfer.
54. Avoidance of preference in certain cases.
54A. By whom petitions for annulment may be made.
55. Protection of bona fide transactions.
57. Power to appoint Official Receivers.
58. Powers of Court if no receiver appointed.
59. Duties and powers of receiver.
59A. Power to require information regarding the insolvent’s property.
60. Special provisions in regard to immovable property.
63. Right of creditor who has not proved debt before declaration of a
dividend.
64. Final dividend.
66. Management by and allowance
to insolvent.
67. Right of insolvent to surplus.
68. Appeals to Court against Receiver.
Penalties
70. Procedure on charge under Section 69.
71. Criminal liability after discharge or composition.
72. Undercharged insolvent obtaining credit.
73. Disqualifications of insolvent.
75. Appeals.
76. Costs.
77. Courts to be auxiliary to each other.
78. Limitation.
80. Delegation of powers to Official Receivers.
81. Power of State Government to bar application of certain provisions
to certain Courts.
82. Savings.
83. Repeals
THE PROVINCIAL INSOLVENCY ACT, 1920
(5 of 1920)
An
Act to consolidate and amend the law relating to insolvency as administered by
Courts having jurisdiction outside the Presidency towns.
Whereas it is expedient to consolidate and
amend the law relating to insolvency as administered by Courts having
jurisdiction outside the Presidency-towns it is hereby enacted as follows:
(1) This
Act may be called the Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920.
(2) It extends to 1[the
whole of India except, 2[the territories
which, immediately before the 1st November, 1956, were comprised in Part B
States] and the Scheduled Districts.
1. Subs. by the A.O., 1950 for “all the
provinces of India, except”.
2. Subs. by the Adaptation of Laws (No.3)
Order, 1956, for “Part B States”.
2. Definitions. –
(1) In this Act, unless there is anything
repugnant in the subject or context, -
(a) “Creditor”
includes a decree-holder, “debt” includes a judgment-debt, and “debtor”
includes a judgment-debtor;
(b) “District court” means the Principal Civil Court of original
jurisdiction in any area outside the local limits for the time being of the
Presidency-towns.
(c) “Prescribed” means prescribed by rules made under this Act;
(d) “Property” includes any property over which or the profits of
which any person has a disposing power, which he may exercise for his own
benefit;
(e) “Secured creditor” means a person holding a mortgage, charge
or lien on the property of the debtor or any part thereof as a security for a
debt due to him from the debtor; and
(f) “Transfer of property” includes a transfer of any interest
in property and the creation of any charge upon property.
(2) Words and expressions used in this Act
and defined in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), and not
hereinbefore defined shall have the same meanings as those respectively
attributed to them by the said Code.
PART I
CONSTITUTION AND POWERS OF
COURT
3. Insolvency jurisdictions. -
(1) The District
Courts shall be the Courts having jurisdiction under this Act:
Provided that the State Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, invest any Court subordinate to a
District Court with jurisdiction in any class of cases, and any Court so
invested shall within the local limits of its jurisdiction have concurrent
jurisdiction with the District Court under this Act.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, a Court of Small Causes shall
be deemed to be subordinate to the District Court.
4. Power of Court to decide all questions arising in insolvency. -
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court shall have full
power to decide all questions whether of title or priority, or of any nature
whatsoever, and whether involving matters of law or of fact, which may arise in
any case of insolvency coming within the cognizance of the Court, or which the
Court may deem it expedient or necessary to decide for the purpose of doing
complete justice or making a complete distribution of property in any such
case.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Act and notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, every Such
decision shall be final and binding for all purposes as between, on the one
hand, the debtor and the debtor's estate and, on the other hand, all claimants
against him or it and all persons claiming through or under them or any of them.
(3) Where the Court does not deem it expedient or necessary to
decide any question of the nature referred to in sub-section (1), but has
reason to believe that the debtor has a saleable interest in any property, the
Court may without further inquiry sell such interest in such manner and subject
to such conditions as it may think fit.
5. General powers of Courts. -
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this
Act the Court, in regard to proceedings under this Act, shall have the same
powers and shall follow the same procedure as it has and follows in the
exercise of original civil jurisdiction.
(2) Subject as aforesaid, High Courts and District Courts, in
regard to proceedings under this Act in Courts subordinate to them, shall have
the same powers and shall follow the same procedure as they respectively have
and follow in regard to civil suit.
PART II
PROCEEDINGS FROM ACT OF
INSOLVENCY To DISCHARGE
Acts of Insolvency
6. Acts of insolvency. -
1[(1)
A debtor commits an act of insolvency in each of the following cases, namely:
(a) It in India or elsewhere, he makes a transfer of all or
substantially all his property to a third person for the benefit of his
creditors generally;
(b) It’, in India or elsewhere, he makes a transfer of his property
or of any part thereof with intent to defeat or delay his creditors;
(c) If
in India or elsewhere, he makes any transfer of his property, or of any part
thereof, which would, under this or any other enactment for the time being in
force, be void as a fraudulent preference if he were adjudged an insolvent;
(d) If with intent to defeat or delay his creditors, _
(i) He departs or remains out of the territories to which this
Act extends;
(ii) He departs from his dwelling-house or usual place of business
or otherwise absents himself;
(iii) He secludes himself so as to deprive his
creditors of the means of communicating with him;
(e) If any of his property has been sold in execution of the
decree of any Court for the payment of money,
(f) If
he petitions to be adjudged an insolvent under the provisions of this Act;
(g) If he gives notice to any of his creditors that he has
suspended, or that he is about to suspend, payment of his debt; or
(h) If he is imprisoned in execution of the decree of any Court
for the payment of money.
Explanation. -For the purposes of this section the act of an
agent may be the act of the principal.
2[(2) Without
prejudice to the provisions of Sub-section (1), a debtor commits an act of insolvency
if a creditor, who has obtained a decree or order against him for the payment
of money (being a decree or order which has become final and the execution
whereof has not been stayed), has served on him a notice (hereafter in this
section referred to as the insolvency notice) as provided in subsection (3) and
the debtor does not comply with that notice within the period specified
therein:
Provided that where a debtor makes
an application under sub-section (5) for setting aside an insolvency notice-
(a) In a case where such application is allowed by the District
Court, he shall not be deemed to have committed an act of insolvency under this
sub-section and
(b) In a case where such application is rejected by the District
Court, he shall be deemed to have committed an act of insolvency under this
sub-section on the date of rejection of the application or the expiry of the
period specified in the insolvency notice for its compliance, whichever is
later:
Provided further that no insolvency notice shall
be served on a debtor residing, whether permanently or temporarily, outside
India, unless the creditor obtained the leave of the District Court therefor.
(3) An insolvency notice under sub-section (2) shall-
(a) Be in the prescribed form;
(b) Be served in the prescribed mariner;
(c) Specify the amount due under the decree or order and require
the debtor to pay the same or to furnish security for the payment of such
amount to the satisfaction of the creditor or his agent;
(d) Specify for its compliance a period of not less than one
month after its service on the debtor or, if it is to be served on a debtor
residing, whether permanently or temporarily, outside India, such period (being
not less than one month) as may be specified by the order of the District Court
granting leave for the service of such notice;
(e) State
the consequences of noncompliance with the notice.
(4) No insolvency notice shall be deemed to by invalid be reason
only that the sum specified therein as the amount due under the decree or order
exceeds the amount actually due, unless the debtor, within the period specified
in the insolvency notice for its compliance, gives notice to the creditor that
the sum specified in the insolvency notice does not correctly represent the
amount due under the decree or order:
Provided that if the debtor does not give any
such notice as aforesaid, he shall be deemed to have complied with the
insolvency notice if within the period specified therein for its compliance, he
takes such steps as would have constituted a compliance with the insolvency
notice had the actual amount due been correctly specified therein.
(5) Any person served with an insolvency notice may, within the
period specified therein for its compliance, apply to the District Court to set
aside the insolvency notice on any of the following grounds, namely, -
(a) That he has a counter-claim or set-off against the creditor
which is equal to or is in excess of the amount due under the decree or order
and which he could not, under any law for the time being in force, prefer in
the suit or proceeding in which the decree or order was passed;
(b) That he is entitled to have the decree or order set aside
under any law providing, for the relief of indebtedness and that-
(i) He has made an application before the competent authority
under Such law for the setting aside of the decree or order; or
(ii) The time allowed for the making of such application has not
expired;
(c) That the decree or order is not executable under the
provisions of any law referred to in clause (b) on the date of application.]
1. Renumbered as sub-section (1) by Act
No. 28 of 1978.
2. Ins. By Act No.28 of l978.
7. Petition and adjudication. -Subject to the conditions specified in this Act, if
a debtor commits an act of insolvency, an insolvency petition may be presented
either by a creditor or by the debtor, and the Court may on such petition make
an order (hereinafter called an order of adjudication) adjudging him an
insolvency.
Explanation. -The presentation of a petition by the debtor shall
be deemed an act of insolvency within the meaning of this section, and on such
petition the Court may make an order of adjudication.
8. Exemption of corporation, etc. from insolvency proceedings. -No insolvency petition shall be presented
against any corporation or against any association or company registered under
any enactment for the time being in force.
9. Conditions on which creditor may petition.
-
(1) A creditor shall not be entitled to present an insolvency
petition against a debtor unless-
(a) The debt owing by the debtor to the creditor, or, if two or
more creditors join in the petition, the aggregate amount of debts owing to
such creditors, amounts to five hundred rupees, and
(b) The debt is a liquidated sum payable either immediately or at
some certain future time, and
(c) The act of insolvency on which the petition is grounded has
occurred within three months before the presentation of the petition:
Provided that where the said period of three
months referred to in clause (c) expires on a day when the Court is closed, the
insolvency petition may be presented on the day on which the Court re-opens.
(2) If the petitioning creditor is a secured creditor, he shall
in his petition either state that he is willing to relinquish his security for
the benefit of the creditors in the event of the debtor being adjudged
insolvent, or given all estimate of the value of the security in the latter
case, he may be admitted as a petitioning creditor to the extent of the balance
of the debt due to him after deducting the value so estimated in the same way
as if he were an unsecured creditor.
10. Conditions on which debtor tiny petitioner. –
(1) A debtor shall not be entitled to present an insolvency petition,
unless he is unable to pay his debts and-
(a) His
debts amount to five hundred rupees; or
(b) He is under arrest or imprisonment in execution of the decree
of any Court for the payment of money; or
(c) An order of attachment in execution of such a decree has been
made, and is subsisting, against his property.
(2) A debtor in respect of whom all order
of adjudication whether made under the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act, 1909 (3
of 1909), or under this Act has been annulled, owing to his failure to apply,
or to prosecute all application for his discharge, shall not be entitled to
present an insolvency petition without the leave of the Court by which the
order of adjudication was annulled.
Such Court shall not grant leave unless it is satisfied either that the
debtor was prevented by any reasonable cause from presenting prosecuting his
application, as the case may be, or that the petition is founded on facts
substantially different from those contained in the petition on which the order
of adjudication was made.
11. Court to which petition shall be presented. -Every insolvency petition shall be presented
to a Court having jurisdiction under this Act in any local area, in which the
debtor ordinarily resides or carries on business, or personally works for gain,
or if he has been arrested or imprisoned, where he is in custody:
Provided
that no objection as to the place of presentment shall be allowed by any Court
in the exercise of appellate or revision jurisdiction unless such objection was
taken in the Court by which the petition was heard at the earliest possible
opportunity, and unless there has been a consequent failure of justice.
12. Verification of petition. -Every insolvency petition shall be in writing and
shall be signed and verified in the manner prescribed by the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), for signing and verifying plaints.
(1) Every insolvency petition presented by a
debtor shall contain the following particulars, namely, -
(a) A
statement that the debtor is unable to pay his debts;
(b) The place where he ordinarily resides or carries on business
or personally works for gain, or, if he has been arrested or imprisoned, the
place where he is in Custody;
(c) The Court (if any) by whose order he has been arrested or
imprisoned, or by which an order has been made for the attachment of his
property, together with particulars of the decree in respect of which any such
order has been made;
(d) The amount and particulars of all pecuniary claims against
him, together with the names and residences of his creditors so far as they are
known to, or can by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence be
ascertained by him;
(e) The
amount and particulars of all his property, together with-
(i) As specification of the value of all such property not
consisting of money;
(ii) The place or places at which any such property is to be
found; and
(iii) A declaration of his willingness to place
at the disposal of the Court all such property save in so far as it includes
such particulars (not being his books of account) as are exempted by the Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), or by any other enactment for the time
being in force from liability to attachment and sale in execution of a decree;
(f) A statement whether the debtor has on any previous occasion
filed a petition to be adjudged an insolvent, and (where such a petition has
been filed)-
(i) If such petition has been dismissed, the reasons for such
dismissal, or
(ii) If the debtor has been adjudged an insolvent, concise
particulars of the insolvency, including a statement whether any previous
adjudication has been annulled and, if so, the grounds therefor.
(2) Every insolvency petition presented by a creditor or creditors
shall set forth the particulars regarding the debtor specified in clause (b) of
subsection (1), and shall also specify-
(a) The act of insolvency committed by such debtor, together with
the date of its commission; and
(b) The amount and particulars of his or their pecuniary claim or
claims against such debtor.
14. Withdrawal of petitions. -No, petition, whether presented by a
debtor or by a creditor, shall be withdrawn without the leave of the Court.
15. Consolidation of petitions. -Where two or more
insolvency petitions are presented against the same debtor, or where separate
petitions are presented against joint debtors, the Court may consolidate the
proceedings of any of them, on such terms as the Court thinks fit.
16. Power to change carriage of proceedings.
-Where the petitioner does not proceed with due diligence on his petition, the
Court may substitute as petitioner any other creditor to whom the debtor may be
indebted in the amount required by this Act in the case of a petitioning creditor.
17. Continuance of proceedings on death of debtor.
-If a debtor by or against whom an insolvency petition has been presented dies,
the proceedings in the matter shall. unless the Court otherwise orders, be
continued so far as may be necessary for the realization and distribution of
the property of the debtor.
18. Procedure for admission of petition.-The
procedure laid down in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), with
respect to the admission of plaints, shall so far as it is applicable, be
followed in the case of insolvency petitions.
19. Procedure on admission of petitioner.-
(1)
Where mi insolvency petition is
admitted, the Court shall make an order fixing a date for hearing the petition.
(2) Notice of the order under sub-section (1)
shall be given to creditors in Such manner as may be prescribed.
(3) Where the debtor is not the Petitioner, notice of the order
under sub-section (1) shall be served on him in the manner provided for the
service of summons.
20. Appointment of interim receiver.-The Court when making an order admitting the
petition may, and where the debtor is the Petitioner ordinarily shall, appoint
an receiver of the property of the debtor or of any part thereof and-may direct
him to take immediate possession thereof or of any part thereof, and the
interim receiver shall thereupon have such of the powers conferable on a
receiver appointed under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), as the
Court may direct. If an interim
receiver is not so appointed, the Court may take such appointment at any
subsequent time before adjudication, and the provisions of this section shall
apply accordingly.
21. Interim proceedings against debtor.-At the time of making an order admitting the
petition or any subsequent time before adjudication the Court may either of its
own motion or on application of any creditor make on or more of the following
orders, namely,-
(1) Order the debtor to give reasonable
security for his appearance until final orders are made upon the petition, and
direct, that in default of giving such security, he shall be detained in the
civil prison;
(2) Order the attachment by actual seizure of the whole or any of
the property in the possession or under the control of the debtor, other than
such particulars (not being his books of account) as are exempted by the Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), or by any other enactment for the time
being in force from liability to attachment and sale in execution of a decree;
(3) order a warrant to issue with or without bail for the arrest
of the debtor, and direct either that he be detained in the civil prison until
the disposal of the petition, or that he be released on such terms as to
security as may be reasonable and necessary:
Provided that an order under clause (2) or
clause (3) shall not be made unless the Court is satisfied that the debtor,
with intent to defeat or delay his creditors or to avoid any process of the
Court, -
(i) Has absconded or has departed from the local limits of the
jurisdiction of the Court, or is about to abscond or to depart from such
limits, or is remaining outside them, or
(ii) Has failed to disclose or has concealed, destroyed
transferred or removed from such limits, or is about to conceal, destroy
transfer or remove from such limits, any documents likely to be of use to his
creditors in the course of the hearing, or any part of his property other than
such particulars as aforesaid.
22. Duties of debtors. -The debtor- shall, on the making of an
order admitting the petition, produce all books of account, and shall at any
time thereafter give such inventories of his property, and such lists of his
creditors an6 debtors and of the debts due to and from them, respectively,
submit to such examination in respect of his property or his creditors, attend
at such times before the Court or receiver, execute such instruments, and
generally do all Such acts and things in relation to his property as may be
required by the Court or receiver, or as may be prescribed.
23. Release of debtor. -
(1) At the time of making an order admitting the petition or at
any subsequent time before adjudication, the Court may, if the debtor is under
arrest or imprisonment in execution of the decree of any Court for the payment
of money, order his release on such terms as to security as may be reasonable
and necessary.
(2) The Court may at any time order any
person who has been released under this section to be re-arrested and
recommitted to the custody from which he was released.
(3) At the time of making any order under this section, the Court
shall record in writing its reasons therefor.
24. Procedure at hearing.-
(1) On the day fixed for the hearing of the
petition, or on any subsequent day to which the hearing may be adjourned, the
Court shall require proof of the following matters, namely,-
(a) That the creditor or the debtor, as the case may be, is
entitled to present the petition;
Provided that, where the debtor is the
petitioner, he shall, for the purpose of proving his inability to pay his
debts, be required to furnish only such proof as to satisfy the Court that are
prim(i facie grounds for believing the same and the Court, if and when so
satisfied, shall not be bound to hear any further evidence thereon;
(b) That the debtor, if he does not appear on a petition
presented by a creditor, has been served with notice of the order admitting the
petition; and
(c) That
the debtor has committed the act of insolvency alleged against him.
(2) The Court shall also examine the debtor, if he is present, as
to his conduct dealings and property in the presence of such creditors as
appear at the hearing, and the creditors shall have the right to question the
debtor thereon.
(3) The Court shall, if sufficient cause is shown, grant time to
the debtor or to any creditor to produce any evidence, which appears to it to
be necessary for the proper disposal of the petition.
(4) A memorandum of the substance of the examination of the
debtor and of any other oral evidence given shall be made by the Judge, and
shall form part of the record of the case.
25. Dismissal of petition. -
(1) In the case of a petition presented by a
creditor, where the Court is not satisfied with the proof of his right to
present the petition or of the service on the debtor of notice of the order
admitting the petition, or of the alleged act of insolvency, or is satisfied by
the debtor that he is able to pay his debts, or that for any other sufficient
cause no order ought to be made, the Court shall dismiss the petition.
(2) In the case of a petition presented by a debtor, the Court
shall dismiss the petition if it is not satisfied of his right to present the
petition.
(1)
Where a petition presented by a
creditor is dismissed under sub-section (1) of Section 25, and the Court is
satisfied that the petition was frivolous or vexatious, the Court may, on the
application of the debtor, award against such creditor such amount, not
exceeding one thousand rupees, as it deems a reasonable compensation to the
debtor for the expense or injury occasioned to him by the petition and the
proceedings thereon, and such amount may be realized as if it were a fine,
(2) An award under this section shall bar any suit for
compensation in respect of such petition and the proceedings thereon.
Order of adjudication
27. Order of adjudication. -
(1) If the Court does not dismiss the
petition, it shall make an order of adjudication, and shall specify in such
order the period within which the debtor shall apply for his discharge.
(2) The Court may, if sufficient cause is shown, extend the
period within which the debtor shall apply for his discharge, and in that case
shall publish notice of the order in such manner as it thinks fit.
28. Effect of an order of adjudication.
-
(1)
On the making of an order of
adjudication, the insolvent shall aid to the utmost of his power in the
realization of his property and the distribution of the Proceeds among
his creditors.
(2) On the making of an order of, adjudication, the whole of the
Property of the insolvent shall vest in the Court or in a receiver as
hereinafter provided, and shall divisible among the creditors, and thereafter,
except as provided by this Act, no creditor to whom the insolvent is indebted
in respect of any debt provable under this Act, shall during the pendency of
the insolvency proceedings have any remedy against the property of the
insolvent in respect of the debt, or commerce any suit or other legal
proceedings, except with the leave of the Court and on such terms as the Court
may impose.
(3) For the purposes of sub-section (2), all goods being at the
date of the presentation of the petition on which the order is made, in the
possession, order or disposition of the insolvent in his trade or business, by
the consent and permission of the true owner, under such circumstances that he
is the reputed owner thereof, shall be deemed to be the property of the
insolvent.
(4) All property which is acquired by or devolves on the
insolvent after the date of an order of adjudication and before his discharge
shall forthwith vest in the Court of receiver, and the provisions of
sub-section (2) shall apply in respect thereof.
(5) The property of the insolvent for the purposes of this
section shall not include any property (not being books of account) which is
exempted by the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), or by any other
enactment for the time being in force from liability to attachment and sale in
execution of a decree.
(6) Nothing in this section shall affect the power of any secured
creditor to realize or otherwise deal with his security, in the same manner as
he would have been entitled to realize or deal with it if this section had not
been passed.
(7) An order of adjudication shall relate back to, and take
effect from the date of the presentation of the petition on which it is made.
28A.
Insolvent's property to comprise certain capacity. -The property of the insolvent shall
comprise and shall always be deemed to have comprised also the capacity to exercise
and to take proceedings for exercising all such powers in or over or in respect
Of property as might have been exercised by
the insolvent for his own benefit at the commencement of his insolvency or
before his discharge:
Provided
that nothing in this section shall affect any sale, mortgage or other transfer
of the property of the insolvency by a Court or receiver or the Collector
acting under section 60 made before the commencement of the Provincial
Insolvency (Amendment) Act, 1948 (25 of 1948), which has been the subject of a
final decision by a competent Court:
Provided further that the property of the
insolvent shall not be deemed by reason of anything contained in this section
to comprise his capacity referred to in this section in respect of any such
sale, mortgage or other transfer of property made in the State of Madras after
the 28th day of July, 1942, and before the commencement of the Provincial
Insolvency (Amendment) Act, 1948 (25 of 1948).
29.
Stay of pending proceedings.-Any
Court in which a suit or other proceeding is pending against him under this
Act, either stay the proceedings, or allow it to continue on such terms as such
Court may impose.
30. Publication of order of adjudication. -Notice of an order of adjudication stating the
name, address and description of the insolvent, the date of the adjudication,
the period within which the debtor shall apply for his discharge, and the Court
by which the adjudication is made, shall be published in the Official Gazette
and in such other manner as may be prescribed.
Proceedings consequent to an order of
adjudication
31. Protection order. -
(1)
Any insolvent in respect of whom an
order of adjudication has been made may apply to the Court for protection and
the Court may on such application make an order for the protection of the
insolvent from arrest or detention.
(2) A protection order may apply either to all the debts of the
debtor, or to any of them as the Court may think proper, and may commerce and
take effect at and for such time as the Court may direct, and may be revoked or
renewed as the Court may think fit. (3) A protection order shall protect the
insolvent from being arrested or detained in prison for any debt to which such
order applies, and any insolvent arrested or detained contrary to the terms of
such an order shall be entitled to his release:
Provided that no such order shall operate to
prejudice the rights of any creditor in the event of such order being revoked
or the adjudication annulled.
(4) Any creditor shall be entitled to appear and oppose the grant
of a protection order.
32. Power to arrest after adjudication.-At
any time after an order of adjudication has been made, the Court may, if it has
reason to believe on the application of any creditor or the receiver, that the
debtor has absconded or departed from the local limits of its jurisdiction with
intent to avoid any obligation which has been, or might be, imposed on him by
or under this Act, order a warrant to issue for his arrest, and on his
appearing or being brought before it, may, if satisfied that he was absconding
or had departed with such intent, order his release on such terms as to
security as may be reasonable or necessary, or if such security is not
furnished, direct that he shall be detained in the civil prison for a period
which may extend to three months.
33. Schedule of creditors.-
(1) When an order of adjudication has been
made under this Act, all persons alleging themselves to be creditors of the
insolvent in respect of debts provable under this Act shall tender proof of
their respective debts by producing evidence of the amount and particulars
thereof, and the Court shall, by order, determine the persons who have proved
themselves to be creditors of the insolvent in respect of such debts, and the
amount of such debts, respectively, and shall frame a schedule of such persons
and debts:
Provided that, if, in the opinion of the
Court, the value of any debt is incapable of being fairly estimated, the Court
may take an order to that effect, and thereupon the debts shall not be included
in the schedule.
(2) A
copy of every such schedule shall be pasted in the Court-house.
(3) Any creditor of the insolvent may, at
any time before the discharge of the insolvent, tender proof of his debt and
apply to the Court for dui order directing his name to be entered in the
schedule as a creditor in respect of any debt provable under this Act, and not
entered in the schedule, and the Court, after causing notice to be served on
the receiver and the other creditors who have proved their debts, and hearing
their objection (if any), shall comply with or reject the application.
34. Debts provable under the Act.-
(1)
Debts which have been excluded from
the schedule on the ground that their value is incapable of being fairly
estimated and demands in the nature of unliquidated damages arising otherwise
than by reason of a contract or a breach of trust shall not be provable under
this Act.
(2) Save as provided by subsection (1), all debts and liabilities,
present or future, certain or contingent, to which the debtor is subject when
he is adjudged an insolvent, or to which he may become subject before his
discharge by reason of any obligation incurred before the date of such
adjudication, shall be deemed to be debts provable under this Act.
Annulment of adjudication
35. Power
to annul adjudication of insolvency. -Where, in the petition of- the Court, a debtor-
ought not to have been adjudged insolvent or where it is proved to the satisfaction
of the Court that the debts of the insolvent have been paid in full, the Court
shall, on the application of the debtor, or of any other person interested, by
order in writing, annul the adjudication and the Court may, of its own motion
or on all application made by the receiver or any creditor, annul any
adjudication made on the petition of a debtor who was, by reason of the
provisions of sub-section (2) of Section 10, not entitled to present such
petition.
36. Power to cancel one of the concurrent orders of adjudication.
-If, in any case -An which an order of adjudication has been made, it shall be
proved to the Court by which such order was made that insolvency proceedings
are pending in another Court against the same debtor, and that the property of
the debtor can be more conveniently distributed by such other Court, the Court
may annul the adjudication or stay all proceedings thereon.
37. Proceedings on annulment. -
Where an adjudication is annulled,
all sales and dispositions of property and payments duly made, and all acts
therefor done, by the Court or receiver, shall be valid; but, subject as
aforesaid, the property of the debtor, who was adjudged insolvent, shall vest
in such person as the Court may appoint, or in default of any such appointment,
shall revert to the debtor to the extent of his right or interest therein on
such conditions (if any) as the Court may, by order in writing, declare.
(2)
Notice of every order annulling an
adjudication shall be published in the Official Gazette and in such other
manner, - as may be prescribed.
Compositions and scheme of arrangement
38. Compositions and schemes of arrangement. -
(1)
Where a debtor, after the making of an order of adjudication, submits a
proposal for a composition in satisfaction of his debts, or a proposal for a
scheme of arrangement of his affairs, the Court shall fix a date for the
consideration of the proposal, and shall issue a notice to all creditors in
such manner as may be prescribed.
(2) If, on the consideration of the proposal., a majority in
number and three-fourths in value of all the creditors whose debts are proved
and who are present in person or by pleader, resolve to accept the proposal,
the same shall be deemed to be duly accepted by the creditors.
(3) The debtor may at the meeting amend the terms of his proposal
if the amendment is, in the opinion of the Court, calculated to the benefit the
general 'body of creditors.
(4) Where the Court is of opinion, after hearing the report of the
receiver, if a receiver has been appointed, and after considering any
objections which may he made by or on behalf of any creditor, that the terms of
the proposal are riot reasonable or are not calculated to benefit the general
body of creditors, the Court shall refuse to approve the proposal.
(5) If Any facts are proved or, proof of which the Court would be
required either to refuse, suspend or attach conditions to the debtor's discharge,
the Court shall refuse to approve the proposal unless it provides reasonable
security for payment of not less than six annas in the rupee on all the
unsecured debts provable against the debtor's estate.
(6) No composition or scheme shall be approved by the Court which
does riot provide for the payment in priority to other debts of all debts
directed to be so paid in the distribution of the property of at insolvent.
(7) In any other case the Court may either approve or refuse to
approve the proposal.
39. Order of approval. -If the Court approves the proposal, the
terms shall be embodied in an order of the Court, and the order of
adjudication shall be annulled, ,and
the provisions of Section 37 shall apply, and the composition or scheme shall be
binding on all the creditors so far as relates to any debt due to them from the
debtor and provable under this Act.
40. Power to re-adjudge debtor insolvent.
-If default is made in the payment of any instalment due in pursuance of the
composition or scheme, or if it appears to the Court that the composition or
scheme cannot proceed without injustice or undue delay, or that the approval of
the Court was obtained by fraud, the Court may, if it thinks fit, re-adjudge
the debtor insolvent and annul the composition or scheme but Without prejudice
to the validity of any transfer or payment daily made or of anything duly done
under or in pursuance of the composition or scheme. When a debtor is re-adjudged insolvent under this section, all
debts provable in other respects which have been contracted before the date of
such re-adjudication shall be provable in the insolvency.
Discharge
41. Discharge.-
(1) A debtor may, at any time after the
order of adjudication and shall, within the period specified by the Court,
apply to the Court for an order of discharge, and the Court shall fix a day,
notice whereof shall be given in such manner as may be prescribed, for hearing
such application, and any objections which may be made thereto.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this section the Court may,
after considering the objections of any creditor and, where a receiver has been
appointed, the report of the receiver-
(a) Grant
or refuse all absolute order of discharge; or
(b) Suspend
the operation of the order for a specified time; or
(c) Grant and order of discharge subject to any conditions with
respect to any earnings or income which may afterwards become due to the
insolvent, or with respect to his after-acquired property.
42. Cases in which Court must refuse an absolute discharge. -
(1)
The Court shall refuse to grant an
absolute order of discharge under Section 41 on proof of any of the following
facts, namely, -
(a) That the insolvent's assets are not of a value equal to eight
annas in the rupee on the amount of his unsecured liabilities, unless he
satisfies the Court that the fact that the assets are not of a value equal to
eight annas in the rupee on the amount
of his unsecured liabilities has arisen from circumstances for which he cannot
justly be held responsible;
(b) That the insolvent has omitted to keep such hooks of account
as are usual and proper in the business carried on by him and as sufficiently
disclose his business transactions and financial position within the three
years immediately preceding his insolvency;
(c) That the insolvent has continued to trade after knowing
himself to be insolvent-
(d) That the insolvent has contracted any debts provable under
this Act without having at the time of contracting it any reasonable or
probable ground of expectation (the burden of proving which shall he on him)
that he would he able to pay it;
(e) That the insolvent has failed to account satisfactorily for
any loss of assets or for any deficiency of assets to meet his liabilities;
(f) That the insolvent has brought on, or contributed to, his
insolvency by rash and hazardous speculations, or by unjustifiable extravagance
in living, or by gambling, or by culpable neglect of his business affairs;
(g) That the insolvent has, within three months preceding the
date of the presentation of the petition, when unable to pay his debts as they
become due, given an undue preference to any of his creditors;
(h) That the insolvent has on any previous occasion been adjudged
an insolvent or made a composition or arrangement with his creditors;
(i) That the insolvent has concealed or removed his property or
any part thereof, or has been guilty of any other fraud or fraudulent breach of
trust.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the report of the receiver
shall be deemed to be evidence; and the Court may presume the correctness of
any statement contained therein.
(3) The powers of suspending, and of attaching conditions to, an
insolvent's discharge may be exercised concurrently.
43. Adjudication to be annulled on failure to apply for discharge.-
(1) If the debtor does
not appear on the day fixed for hearing his application for discharge or on
such subsequent day as the Court may direct, or if the debtor does not apply
for an order of discharge within the period specified by the Court, the Court
may annul the order of adjudication or make such other order as it may think
fit, and if the adjudication is so annulled, the provisions of Section 37 shall
apply.
(2) Where a debtor has been released from custody under the
provisions of this Act and the order of a adjudication is annulled under
sub-section (1), the Court may, if it thinks fit, re-commit the debtor to his
former custody, and the officer-iii-charge of the prison to whose custody such
debtor is so recommitted, shall receive such debtor into his custody according
to such recommitment, and thereupon all processes which were in force against
the person of such debtor at the time of such release as aforesaid shall be
deemed to be still in force against him as if no order of adjudication had been
made.
44. Effect of order of discharge.-
(1) An order of discharge shall not release the insolvent from-
(a) Any debt due to the Government;
(b) Any debt or liability incurred by means of any fraud or
fraudulent breach of trust to which he was a party;
(c) Any debt or liability in respect of which he has obtained
forbearance by any fraud to which he was a party; or
(d) Any liability under an order for maintenance made under
section 1[488 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898).]
(2) Save as otherwise provided by
sub-section (1), an order of discharge shall release the insolvent from all
debts provable under this Act.
(3) An order of discharge shall not release any person who, at
the date of the presentation of the petition, was a partner or co-trustee with
the insolvent, or was jointly bound or had made any joint contract with him or
any person who was surety for him.
1. Now see Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
PART III
ADMINISTRATION OF PROPERTY
Method of proof of debts
45. Debt payable at a future time. -A creditor may prove for a debt not payable when
the debtor is adjudged an insolvent as if it were payable presently, and may
receive dividends equally with the other creditors, deducting there form only a
rebate of interest at the rate of six per centum per annum computed from the
application of a dividend to the time when the debt would have become payable,
according to the terms on which it was contracted.
46. Mutual dealings and set-off. -Where there have been
mutual dealings between an insolvent and a creditor proving or claiming to
prove a debt under this Act, an account shall be taken of what is due from the
one party to the other in respect of such mutual dealings, and the sum due from
the one party shall be set off against any sum due from the other party, and
the balance of the account, and no more, shall be claimed or paid on either side
respectively.
47. Secured creditors. -
(1)
Where a secured creditor realizes
his security, he may prove for the balance due to him, after deducting the net
amount realized.
(2) Where a secured creditor relinquishes his security for the general
benefit of the creditors, be may prove for his whole debt.
(3) Where a secured creditor does not either realize or
relinquish his security, he shall, before being entitled to have his debt
entered in the schedule, state in his proof the particulars of his security,
and the value at which he assesses it, and shall be entitled to receive a
dividend only in respect of the balance due to him after deducting the value so
assessed.
(4) Where a security is so valued, the Court may at any time
before realization redeem it on payment to the creditor of the assessed value.
(5) Where a creditor, after having valued his security,
subsequently realizes it, the net amount realized shall be substituted for the
amount of any valuation previously made by the creditor, and shall be treated
in all respect as an amended valuation made by the creditor.
(6) Where a secured creditor does not comply with the provisions
of this section. he shall be excluded from all shares, in any dividend.
(1)
On any debt or sum certain whereon
interest is not reserved or agreed for, and which is overdue when the debtor is
adjudged all insolvent, and which is provable under this Act, the creditor may
pray for interest at a rate not exceeding six per centum per annum-
(a) If the debt or sum is payable by virtue of a written
instrument at a certain time, from the time when such debt or sum was payable
to the date of such adjudication; or
(b) If the debt or sum is payable otherwise, from the time when a
demand in writing has been made giving the debtor notice that interest will be
claimed from the date of the demand until the time of payment to the date of
such adjudication.
(2) Where a debt which has been proved under this Act includes
interest or any pecuniary consideration in lieu of interest, the interest or
consideration shall, for the purposes of dividend be calculated at a rate not
exceeding six per centum per annum, without prejudice to the right of a
creditor to receive out of the debtor's estate any higher rate of interest to
which he may be entitled after all the debts proved have been paid in full.
49. Mode of proof.
-
(1) A debt may be proved under this Act by
delivering or sending by post in a registered letter, to the Court an affidavit
verifying the debt.
(2) The affidavit shall contain or refer to a statement of
account showing the particulars of the debt, and shall specify the vouchers (if
any) by which the same can he substantiated.
The Court may at any time call for the production of the vouchers.
50. Disallowance and reduction of entries in schedule.
-
(1)
Where the receiver thinks that a
debt has been improperly entered in the schedule, the Court may, on the
application of the receiver and after notice to the creditor, and such inquiry
(if any) as the Court thinks necessary, expunge such entry or reduce the amount
of the debt.
(2) The Court may also, after like inquiry, expunge an entry or
reduce the amount of a debt upon the application of a creditor where no
receiver has been appointed, or where the receiver declines to interfere in the
matter or, in the case of a composition or scheme, upon the application of the
debtor.
Effect of insolvency on antecedent transactions
51. Restriction of rights of creditor under execution. -
(1) Where execution of a decree has been
issued against the property of a debtor, no person shall be entitled to the
benefit of the execution against the receiver except in respect of assets
realized in the course of the execution by sale or otherwise before the date of
the admission of the petition.
(2) Nothing in this section shall affect the rights of a secured
creditor in respect of the property against which the decree is executed.
(3) A person who in good faith purchases the property of a debtor
under a sale in execution shall in all cases acquire a good title to it against
the receiver.
52. Duties of Courts executing decree as to property taken in execution-Where
execution of a decree has been issued against any property of a debtor which is
saleable in execution and before the sale thereof notice is given to the Court
executing the decree that an insolvency petition by or against the debtor has
been admitted, the Court shall, on application, direct the property, if in the
possession of the Court, to be delivered to the receiver, but the costs of the
suit in which the decree was made and of the execution shall be a first charge
on the property so delivered, and the receiver may sell the property or an
adequate part thereof for the purpose of satisfying the charge.
53. Avoidance of voluntary transfer. -Any transfer of property
not being a transfer made before and in consideration of marriage or made in
favour or a purchaser or encumbrancer in good faith and for valuable
consideration shall, if the transferor is adjudged insolvent on a petition
presented within two years after the date of the transfer, be voidable as
against the receiver and may be annulled by the Court.
54. Avoidance of preference in certain cases.
-
(1) Every transfer of property, every
payment made, every obligation incurred, and every judicial proceeding take])
or suffered by any person unable to pay his debts as they become due from his
own money in favour of any creditor, with a view of giving that creditor a
preference over the other creditors, shall, if such person is adjudged
insolvent on a petition presented within three months after the date thereof,
be deemed fraudulent and void as against the receiver, and shall be annulled by
the Court.
(2) This section shall not affect. the rights of any person who
in good faith and for valuable consideration has acquired a title through or
under a creditor of the insolvent.
54A. By whom petitions for annulment may be made.-A petition for the annulment of any transfer
under Section 53, or of any transfer, payment, obligation or judicial
proceeding under Section 54, may be made by the receiver or, with the leave of
the Court, by any creditor who has proved his debt and who satisfies, the Court
that the receiver has been requested and this refused to make such petition.
55. Protection of bona fide transactions.-,Subject to the foregoing provisions of this Act
with respect to the effect of insolvency on an execution, and with respect to
the avoidance of certain transfers and preferences, nothing in this Act shall
invalidate in the case of an insolvency--
(a) Any
payment by the insolvent to any of his creditors;
(b) Any
payment or delivery to the insolvent;
(c) Any
transfer by the insolvent for valuable consideration; or
(d) Any
contract or dealing by or with the insolvent for valuable consideration;
Provided that any such transaction takes
place before the date of the order of adjudication, and that such person with
whom such transaction takes place has not at the time notice of the
presentation of any insolvency petition by or against the debtor.
Realization of property
(1)
The Court may, at the time of the order
of adjudication,. or at any time afterwards, appoint a receiver for the
property of the insolvent, and such property shall thereupon vest in such
receiver.
(2) Subject
to such condition as may be prescribed, the Court may-
(a) Require the receiver to give such security as it thinks fit
duly to account for what he shall receive in respect of' the property; and
(b) By general or special order, fix the amount to be paid as
remuneration for the
(3) Where the Court appoints a receiver, it may remove the person
in whose possession or custody any such property as aforesaid, is from the
possession or custody thereof :
Provided that nothing in that section shall
be deemed to authorize the Court to remove from the possession or custody of
property any person whom the insolvent has not a present right to remove.
(4) Where
a receiver appointed under this section-
(a) Fails to submit his accounts at such periods and in such
forms as the Court directs, or
(b) Fails
to pay the balance due from him thereon as the Court directs, or
(c) Occasions loss to the property by his wilful default or gross
negligence, the Court may direct his property to be attached and sold, and may
apply the proceeds to make good any balance found to be due form him or any loss
so occasioned by him.
(5)
The provisions of this section
shall apply, so far as may be, to interim receivers appointed under Section 20.
57. Power
to appoint Official Receivers.-
(1)
The State Government may appoint
such persons as it thinks fit (to be called “Official Receivers”) to be
receivers under this Act within such local limits as it may prescribe.
(2) Where any Official Receiver has been so appointed for the
local limits of the jurisdiction of any Court having jurisdiction under this Act,
he shall be the receiver for the purpose of every order appointing a receiver
or an interim receiver issued by any such Court, unless the Court for special
reasons otherwise, directs.
(3) Any sum payable under clause (b) of subsection (2) of Section
56 in respect of the services of an Official Receiver shall be credited to such
fund as the State Government may direct.
(4) Every Official Receiver shall receive such remuneration out
of the Said fund or otherwise as the State Government may fix in this behalf,
and no remuneration whatever beyond that so fixed shall be received by the
Official Receiver as such.
58. Powers of Court if no receiver appointed.
-Where no receiver is appointed, the Court shall have all the rights of, and
may exercise all the powers conferred on, a receiver under this Act.
59. Duties and powers of receiver. -Subject to the
provisions of this Act, the receiver shall, with all convenient speed, realize
the property of the debtor and distribute dividends among the creditors entitled
thereto, and for that purpose may-
(a) Sell
all or any part of the property of the insolvent;
(b) Give receipts for any money received by him; and may by leave
of the Court, do all or any of the following things, namely;
(c) Carry on the business of the insolvent so fir as may be
necessary for the beneficial winding up of the same;
(d) Institute, defend or continue any suit or other legal
proceeding relating to the property of the insolvent;
(e) Employ a pleader or other agent to take any proceedings or do
any business which may be sanctioned by the Court;
(f) Accept at the consideration for the sale of any property of
the insolvent a sum of money payable at a future time subject to such
stipulations as to security and otherwise as the Court thinks fit;
(g) Mortgage or pledge any part of the property of the insolvent
for the purpose of raising money for the payment of his debts;
(h) Refer any dispute to arbitration, and compromise all debts,
claims and liabilities, on such terms as may be agreed upon; and
(i) Divide in its existing form amongst the creditors, according
to its estimated value any property which, from its peculiar nature or other
special circumstances, cannot readily or advantageously be sold.
59A. Power to require information
regarding the insolvent's property.-
(1)
The Court, if specially empowered
in this behalf by all order of the State Government, or any officer of the
Court so empowered by a like order, may on the application of the receiver or
any creditor who has proved his debts, at any time after all order of
adjudication has been made, summons before it in the prescribed manner any
person known or suspected to have in his possession any property belonging to
the insolvent, or supposed to be indebted to the insolvent, or any person whom
the Court or such office, as the case may be, may deem capable of giving
information respecting the insolvent or his dealings or property, and the Court
or such officer may require any such person to produce any documents in his
custody or power relating to the insolvent or to his dealings or property.
(2) If any person so summoned, after having been tendered a
reasonable sum, refuses to come before the Court or such officer at the time
appointed, or refuses to produce any such document, having no lawful impediment
made known to and allowed by the Court or such officer, the Court or such
officer may, by warrant, cause him to be apprehended and brought up for
examination.
(3) The Court or such officer may examine any person so brought
before it or hill) concerning the insolvent, his dealings or property, and such
person may be represented by a legal practitioner.
60. Special provisions in regard to immovable property.-
(1) In
any local area in which a declaration has been made under Section 68 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), and is in force, no sale of
immovable property paying revenue to the Government or held or let for
agricultural purposes shall be made by the receiver; but, after the other
property of the insolvent has been realized, the Court shall ascertain-
(a) The amount required to satisfy the debts proved under this
Act after deducting the monies already
received;
(b) The
immovable property of the insolvent remaining unsold; and
(c) The encumbrances (if any) existing thereon; and shall forward
a statement to the Collector containing the particulars aforesaid; and
thereupon the Collector shall proceed to raise the amount so required by the
exercise of such of the powers conferred on him by paragraphs 2 to 10 of the
Third Schedule to the said Code as he thinks fit, and subject to the provisions
of those paragraphs so far as they are applicable, and shall hold at the
disposal of the Court all sums that may come to his hands by the exercise of
such powers.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall be deemed to affect any provisions
of any enactment for the time being in force prohibiting or restricting the
execution of decrees or orders against immovable property; and any such
provision shall be deemed to apply to the enforcement of an order of
adjudication made under this Act as if it were such a decree or order.
Distribution of property
61. Priority of debts.-
(1) In the distribution of the property of
the insolvent, there shall be paid in priority to all other debts-
(a) All
debts due to the Government or to any local authority; and
(b) All salary or wages, not exceeding twenty rupees in all, of
any clerk, servant or labourer in respect of services rendered to the insolvent
during four months before the date of the presentation of the petition.
(2) The debts specified in sub-section (1) shall rank equally
between themselves, and shall be paid in full, unless the property of the
insolvent is insufficient to meet them, in which case they shall abate in equal
proportions between themselves.
(3) Subject to the retention of such sums as may be necessary for
the expenses of administration or otherwise, the debts specified in subsection (1)
shall be discharged forthwith in so far as the property of the insolvent is
sufficient to meet them.
(4) In the case of partners, the partnership property shall be
applicable in the first instance in payment of the partnership debts, and the
separate property of each partner shall be applicable in the first instance in
payment of his separate debts. Where
there is a surplus of the separate property of the partners, it shall be dealt
with as part of the partnership property; and where there is a surplus of the
partnership property, it shall be dealt with as part of the respective separate
property in proportion to the rights and interests of each partner in the
partnership property.
(5) Subject to the provisions of this Act, all debts entered in
the schedule shall be paid ratably according to the amounts of such debts
respectively and without any preference.
(6) Where there is any surplus after payment of the foregoing
debts, it shall be applied in payment of interest from the date on which the
debtor is adjudged an insolvent at the rate of six per centum on all debts
entered in the schedule.
62. Calculation of dividends.-
(1)
In the calculation of dividends,
the receiver shall retain in his hands sufficient assets to meet-
(a) Debts provable under this Act and appearing, from the
insolvent’s statements or otherwise, to be due to persons resident in places so
distant that in the ordinary course of communication they have not had
sufficient time to tender their proof.
(b) Debts provable under this Act, the subject of claims not yet
determined;
(c) Disputed
proof or claims; and
(d) The expenses necessary for the administration of the estate
or otherwise.
(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (1), all money in
hand shall be distributed as dividends.
63. Right of creditor who has not proved debt before declaration of a
dividend.-Any creditor who has not proved his debt before the declaration of any
dividend or dividneds shall be entitled to be paid, out of any money for the time
being in the hands of the receiver, any dividend or dividends which he may have
failed to receive before that money is applied to the payment of any future
dividend or dividends; but he shall not be entitled
to disturb the distribution of any dividend declared before his debt was proved
by reason that he has not participated therein.
64. Final
dividend. -When the receiver has realized all the property
of the insolvent or so much thereof as can, in the opinion of the Court, be
realized without needlessly protracting the receivership, he shall declare a
final dividend; but before so doing, he shall give notice in manner prescribed
to the persons whose claims to be creditors have been notified but not proved,
that if they do not prove their claim within the time limited by the notice, he
will proceed to make a final dividend without regard to their claims. After the expiration of the time so limited,
or if the Court, on application by any such claimant, grants him further time
for establishing his claim, then on the expiration of such further time, the
property of the insolvent shall be divided among the creditors entered in the
schedule without regard to the claims of any other persons.
65. No suit for dividend.-No suit for a dividend shall lie against the receiver; but where the
receiver refuses to pay any dividend, the Court may, on the application of any
creditor who is entered in the schedule, order him to pay it, and also to pay
out of his own money interest thereon for the time that it is withheld, and the
costs of the application.
66. Management by and allowance to insolvent.-
(1)
The Court may appoint the insolvent
himself to superintend the management of the property of the insolvent or of
any part thereof or to carry on the trade (if any) of the insolvent for the
benefit of the creditors, and in any other respect to aid in administering the
property in such manner and on such terms as the Court may direct.
(2) The Court may, from time to time, make such allowance as it
may think just to the insolvent out of his property for the support of himself
and his family, or in consideration of his services if he is engaged in
winding-up his estate, but any such allowance may, at any time, be varied or
determined by the Court.
67. Right of insolvent to surplus.-The insolvent shall be entitled to any surplus
remaining after payment in full of his creditors with interest as provided by
this Act and of the expenses of the proceedings taken thereunder.
67A. Committee of Inspection.-
(1) The Court may, if it, thinks fit,
authorise the creditors who have proved their debts to appoint a committee of
inspection for the purpose of superintending the administration of the
insolvent's property by the receiver.
(2) The persons appointed to a committee of inspection shall be
creditors who have proved their debts or persons holding general powers of
attorney from such creditors.
(3) The committee of inspection shall have such powers of control
over the proceeding of the receiver as may be prescribed.
Appeal to Court against Receiver
68. Appeals to Court against Receiver. -If the insolvent or any of the creditors or any
other person is aggrieved by any act or decision of the receiver, he may apply to
the Court, and the Court may confirm, reverse or modify the act or decision
complained of, and make such order as it thinks just:
Provided that no application under this
section shall be entertained after the expiration of twenty-one days from the
date of the act or decision complained of.
PART IV
PENALTIES
69. Offences by debtors.-If a debtor, whether before or after the
making of an order of adjudication,--
(a) Wilfully fails to perform the duties
imposed on him by Section 22 or to deliver up possession of any part of his
property which is divisible among his creditors under this Act, and which is
for the time being in his possession or under his control to the Court or to
any person authorized by the Court to take possession of it, or
(b) Fraudulently with intent to conceal the state of his affairs
or to defeat the objects of this Act, -
(i) Has destroyed or otherwise wilfully prevented or purposely
withheld the production of any document relating to such of his affairs as are
subject to investigation under this Act, or
(ii) Has
kept or caused to be kept false books, or
(iii) Has made false entries in or withheld
entries from or wilfully altered or falsified any document relating to such of
his affairs as are subject to investigation under this Act, or
(c) Fraudulently within tention to diminish the sum to be divided
among his creditors or to give an undue preference to any of his creditors,.-
(i) Has
discharged or concealed any debt due to or from him, or
(ii)
Has made away, with,
charged, mortgaged or concealed any part of his property of any kind
whatsoever, he shall be punishable on conviction with imprisonment which may
extend to one year.
70.
Procedure on charge under Section 69.-Wliere
the Court is satisfied, after such preliminary inquiry, if any, as it thinks
necessary, that there is ground for inquiring into any offence referred to in
Section 69, and appearing to have been committed by the insolvent, the Court
may record a finding to that effect and make a complaint of the offence in
writing to a Magistrate of the first class having jurisdiction, and such
Magistrate shall deal with such complaint in the manner laid down in the 1[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898).]
1. Now the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973.
71. Criminal liability after discharge or composition. -Where an insolvent has been guilty of any of
the offences specified in Section 69, he shall not be exempt from being
proceeded against therefor by reason that he has obtained his discharge or that
a composition or scheme of arrangement has been accepted or approved.
72. Undercharged insolvent obtaining credit.-
(1)
An undischarged insolvent obtaining
credit to the extent of fifty rupees or upward from any person without
informing such person that he is an undischarged insolvent shall, on conviction
by a Magistrate, be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
six months, or with fine, or with both.
(2) Where the Court has reason to believe that an undischarged
insolvent has committed the offence referred to in sub-section (1), the Court,
after making any preliminary inquiry that may be necessary, may send the case
for trial to the nearest Magistrate of the first class, and may send the
accused in custody or take sufficient security for his appearance before such
Magistrate; and may bind over any person to appear and give evidence on such
trial.
73. Disqualifications of insolvent.-
(1)
Where a debtor is adjudged or re-adjudged
insolvent under this Act, he shall, subject to the provisions of this section,
be disqualified from-
(a) Being
appointed or acting as a Magistrate;
(b) Being elected to any office of any local authority where the
appointment to such office is by election or holding or exercising any such
office to which no salary is attached; and
(c) Being
elected or sitting or voting as member of any local authority.
(2) The disqualifications which an insolvent is subject to, under
this section shall be removed, and shall cease if-
(a) The
order of adjudication is annulled under Section 35, or
(b) he obtains from the Court an order of discharge, whether
absolute or conditional, with a certificate that his insolvency was caused by
misfortune without any misconduct on his part.
(3) The Court may grant or refuse such certificate as it thinks
fit, but any order of refusal shall be subject to appeal.
PART V
SUMMARY ADMINISTRATION
74. Summary administration.-When a petition is presented by or against
a debtor, if the Court is satisfied by affidavit or otherwise that the property
of the debtor is not likely to exceed in value of five hundred rupees, the
Court may make an order that the debtor's estate be administered in a summary
manner, and thereupon the provisions of this Act shall be, subject to the
following modifications, namely,-
(i) Unless the Court otherwise directs, no notice required under
this Act shall be published in the Official Gazette;
(ii) On the admission of a petition by a debtor, the property of
the debtor shall vest in the Court as a receiver;
(iii) At the hearing of the petition, the Court
shall inquire into the debts and assets of the debtor and determine the same by
order in writing, and it shall not be necessary to frame a schedule under the
provisions of Section 33;
(iv) The property of the debtor shall be realized with all
reasonable despatch and thereafter, when practicable, distributed in a single
dividend;
(v) The debtor shall apply for his discharge within six months
from the date of adjudication; and
(vi) Such other modifications as may be
prescribed with the view of saving expense and simplifying procedure:
Provided that the Court may at any time
direct that the ordinary procedure provided for in this Act shall be followed
in regard to the debtor's estate, and thereafter the Act shall have effect
accordingly.
PART VI
APPEALS
75. Appeals. -
(1)
The debtor, any creditor, the
receiver or any other person aggrieved by a decision come to or an order made
in the exercise of insolvency jurisdiction by a Court subordinate to a District
Court, may appeal to the District Court, and the order of the District Court
upon such appeal shall be final:
Provided that the High Court, for the
purposes of satisfying itself that an order made in any appeal decided by the
District Court was according to law, may call for the case and pass such order
with respect thereto as it thinks fit:
Provided further, that any such person aggrieved
by a decision of the District Court on appeal from a decision of a subordinate
Court under section (1) of Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5
of 1908).
(2) Any such person aggrieved by any decision or order of a
District Court as is specified in Schedule 1, or made otherwise than in appeal
from an order made by a Subordinate Court, may appeal to the High Court.
(3) Any such person aggrieved by any other
order made by a District Court otherwise than in appeal from an order made by a
subordinate Court may appeal to the High Court by leave of the District Court
or of the High Court.
(4) The periods of limitation for appeals to the District Court
and to the High Court under this section shall be thirty days and ninety days
respectively.
PART VII
MISCELLANEOUS
76. Costs.
-The costs of any proceedings under this Act, including the costs of
maintaining a debtor in the civil prison, shall, subject to any rules made
under this Act, be in the discretion of the Court in which the proceeding is
held.
77. Courts to be auxiliary to each other.
-All Courts having jurisdiction in insolvency and the Officers of such Courts,
respectively, shall severally act in aid of and be auxiliary to each other in
all matters of insolvency, and an order of a Court seeking aid, with a request
to another of the said Courts shall be deemed sufficient to enable the latter
Court to exercise, in regard to the matter directed by the order, such
jurisdiction as either of such Courts could exercise in regard to similar matter
within their respective jurisdictions.
78. Limitation.-
(1) The provisions of 1[Section
5 and 12 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908 (9 of 1908)], shall apply to
appeals and applications under this Act, and for the purpose of the said
Section 12, a decision under Section 4 shall be deemed to be a decree.
(2) Where an order of adjudication has been annulled under this
Act, in computing the period of limitation prescribed for any suit or application
for the execution of a decree or other than a suit or application--in respect
of which the leave of the Court was obtained under sub-section (2) of section
28 which might have been brought or made but for the making o” an order of
adjudication under this Act, the Period front e date of the order of
adjudication to the date of order of annulment it shall be excluded:
Provided that nothing in this section shall
apply to a suit or application in respect of a debt provable but not proved
under this Act.
1. Now
see the Limitation Act, 1963.
79. Power to make rules.-
(1) The High Court may, with the previous
sanction of the State Government, make rules for carrying into effect the
provisions of this Act.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing power, such rules may provide--
1[(a) The
form of the insolvency notice under clause (a), and the manner in which
such notice may be served under clause
(lb) of subsection (3) of Section 6;]
2(aa) For
the appointment and remuneration of receivers (other than Official Receivers),
the audit of the accounts of all receivers and the costs of such audit,
(b) For
ineetiiig3 of creditors,
(c) For the procedure to be followed where the
debtor is a firm,
(d) For the procedure to be followed in the case of estates, to
be administered in a summary manner, and
(e) For
any matter which is to be or may be prescribed.
(3) All rules made under this section shall be published in the
Official Gazette, and shall, on such publication, have effect as if enacted in
this Act.
1. Ins. by Act No. 28 of 1978.
2. Clause (a) relettered as clause (aa) by
Act No. 28 of 1978,.
80. Delegation of powers to Official Receivers.
-
(1) The High Court, with the like sanction,
may from time to time direct that, in any matters in respect of which
jurisdiction is given to the Court by this Act, the Official Receiver shall,
subject to the direction of the Court, have all or any of the following powers,
namely,-
(a) [Omitted.]
(b) To
frame Schedules and to admit or reject proofs of creditors;
(c) [Omitted.]
(d) [Omitted.]
(e) To
make internal orders in any case of urgency; and
(f) To
hear and determine any unopposed or ex-parte action.
(2) Subject to the appeal to the Court provided for by Section
68, any order made or act done by the Official Receiver in the exercise of the
said powers shall be deemed the order or act of the Court.
81. Power of State Government to bar application of certain provisions to
certain Courts.
-Any State Government may by notification in the Official Gazette, declare that
any of the provisions of this Act specified in Schedule II shall not apply to
insolvency proceedings, in any Court or Courts having, jurisdiction under this
Act in any part of the territories administered by such State Government,
82. Savings. -Nothing in this Act Shall-
(a) Affect
the Presidency-town Insolvency Act, 1901) (3 of 1909) or
(b) Apply to cases to which Chapter IV of the Dekkhan Agriculturists
Relief Act, 1879 (7 of 1879), is applicable.
83.
Repeals.--
(1) Omitted]
(2) Where in any
enactment or instrument in force at the date of the commencement of this Act,
reference is made to Chapter XX (Of Insolvent Judgment-debtors) of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1877 (10 of 1877), or the Code of Civil Procedure, 1882 (14 of
1882), or to any section of either of those Chapters, such reference shall, so
far as may be practicable, be construed as applying to this Act or to the
corresponding section thereof.
[See Section 7-5(2)]
Decisions and Order from which an appeal lies to
the High Court under Section 75(2)
Nature of decision or order
24 Decision
of questions of title, priority, etc. insolvency.
25 Order
of dismissing a petition.
26 Order
awarding compensation.
27 Order
of adjudication.
33 Order
regarding entries in the schedule.
35 Order
annulling adjudication.
37 Order declaring the conditions on which the debtor's property
shall revert to him on annulment of adjudication.
41 Order
on application for discharge.
50 Order
disallowing or reducing entries in the Schedule.
53 Order
annulling a voluntary transfer.
54 Decision that a transfer of property is a preference in
favour of a creditor.
SCHEDULE II
(See Section 81)
Provisions of the
Act application of which may be barred by State Governments
|
Provisions of the
Act |
Subject |
|
Section |
|
|
26 |
Award of
compensation |
|
28, sub-section
(3) |
Reputed Property
of an insolvent. |
|
34 |
Debts provable
under the Act. |
|
38, 39,
40 |
Compositions
and schemes or arrangements. |
|
42, sub-sections (1) and (2) |
obligation to refuse absolute discharge. |
|
45, 46, 47, 48 |
Method of proof of debt. |
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