Law4u - Made in India

What Criteria Must A Resolution Plan Meet For Approval?

Answer By law4u team

A resolution plan serves as a detailed proposal to revive and restructure the insolvent corporate debtor during the CIRP under the IBC. To safeguard the interests of all stakeholders and ensure the plan is effective and sustainable, the IBC mandates specific criteria that the plan must fulfill before being approved by the CoC and sanctioned by the NCLT.

Detailed Criteria for Approval of a Resolution Plan

Feasibility and Viability

The plan must demonstrate that the corporate debtor will be able to operate as a going concern post-implementation.

It should provide a clear financial model showing expected cash flows, profitability, and debt repayment capability.

Operational restructuring details must outline how the company will address previous inefficiencies.

Compliance with Applicable Laws

The plan must comply with all applicable laws, including corporate, tax, labour, environmental, and sector-specific regulations.

It should ensure protection of employee rights and fulfill statutory obligations.

Payment of Insolvency Resolution Process Costs

The plan must allocate funds to cover all costs and expenses incurred during the CIRP, including fees payable to the Interim Resolution Professional (IRP), Resolution Professional (RP), and other professionals.

Treatment of Operational Creditors

As per IBC amendments, operational creditors must receive treatment specified in the plan, either via full payment or as approved by the CoC.

The plan should not unfairly discriminate or exclude operational creditors without appropriate consideration.

Clearance of Statutory and Other Dues

Provisions must be made to clear or adequately provide for any statutory dues such as taxes, cess, or government fees.

No Contravention of Existing Laws

The plan must not violate any provisions of law currently in force.

Approval by Committee of Creditors (CoC)

The plan requires approval by at least 66% of the voting share of financial creditors.

The CoC evaluates the plan on commercial viability, fairness, and compliance with legal norms.

Fair and Equitable Treatment of All Stakeholders

The plan must ensure that the interests of all stakeholders, including secured and unsecured creditors, employees, and shareholders, are fairly balanced.

The distribution waterfall must follow the priority order prescribed in the IBC.

Management and Governance Post-Resolution

The plan should specify changes to the management or board of directors if applicable.

It should detail governance structures to ensure effective control and monitoring.

Submission Within Prescribed Timeline

The plan must be submitted within the CIRP timeline (usually 180 days, extendable by 90 days) to avoid mandatory liquidation.

No Conflict with Public Interest or Policy

The plan should not contravene public policy or harm public interest.

Legal Provisions Supporting These Criteria

  • Section 30(2) of the IBC outlines mandatory contents and conditions of a resolution plan.
  • Section 31 provides for NCLT approval and binding effect of the sanctioned plan.
  • Amendments to the IBC have strengthened protections for operational creditors and employee dues.

Example

A resolution applicant proposes a plan involving capital infusion, management restructuring, and operational improvements for a textile company. The plan complies with labour laws, clears insolvency costs, proposes a schedule for operational creditors’ payments, and is financially viable. The CoC approves the plan with 75% voting share. The NCLT sanctions the plan after confirming compliance with all criteria, enabling the company’s revival and creditor repayments.

Our Verified Advocates

Get expert legal advice instantly.

Advocate Ravi Prakash Rai

Advocate Ravi Prakash Rai

Breach of Contract, Cheque Bounce, Civil, Consumer Court, Corporate, Criminal, Cyber Crime, GST, Domestic Violence, Landlord & Tenant, Motor Accident, Recovery, Tax, Revenue, Anticipatory Bail

Get Advice
Advocate Yogesh Kaushik

Advocate Yogesh Kaushik

Criminal, Civil, Cheque Bounce, Family, Court Marriage, Divorce, Property, Domestic Violence, Breach of Contract, Consumer Court, Corporate, Motor Accident, Cyber Crime, Child Custody, Muslim Law, Succession Certificate, Anticipatory Bail

Get Advice
Advocate Mayuri Srivastava

Advocate Mayuri Srivastava

Anticipatory Bail,Arbitration,Breach of Contract,Cheque Bounce,Child Custody,Civil,Consumer Court,Court Marriage,Customs & Central Excise,Criminal,Cyber Crime,Divorce,Documentation,GST,Family,High Court,Labour & Service,Media and Entertainment,Motor Accident,Muslim Law,Patent,R.T.I,Succession Certificate,Wills Trusts,

Get Advice
Advocate Ashutosh Tripathi

Advocate Ashutosh Tripathi

Criminal, Cyber Crime, Labour & Service, Motor Accident, Insurance

Get Advice
Advocate Dinesh Sharma

Advocate Dinesh Sharma

Banking & Finance, Cheque Bounce, Civil, GST, Labour & Service, Tax

Get Advice
Advocate Mahadev Madhukar Jadhav

Advocate Mahadev Madhukar Jadhav

Banking & Finance, Bankruptcy & Insolvency, Civil, Revenue, Insurance, Labour & Service, High Court

Get Advice
Advocate Naginder Kumar

Advocate Naginder Kumar

Cheque Bounce, Criminal, Divorce, Documentation, Domestic Violence, Motor Accident

Get Advice
Advocate Pooja

Advocate Pooja

Anticipatory Bail,Armed Forces Tribunal,Bankruptcy & Insolvency,Banking & Finance,Breach of Contract,Cheque Bounce,Child Custody,Civil,Consumer Court,Corporate,Court Marriage,Criminal,Cyber Crime,Divorce,Documentation,Domestic Violence,Family,High Court,Insurance,Labour & Service,Landlord & Tenant,Medical Negligence,Motor Accident,Muslim Law,NCLT,Property,R.T.I,Recovery,RERA,Succession Certificate,Wills Trusts,Revenue,

Get Advice

Marriage and Divorce Laws Related Questions

Discover clear and detailed answers to common questions about Marriage and Divorce Laws. Learn about procedures and more in straightforward language.