In the case of Shankar Khandelwal v. Omkara Asset Reconstruction Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. (2026), the Supreme Court of India allowed the appeals and set aside the initiation of insolvency proceedings, ruling that the petition was barred by limitation and that a Resolution Professional (RP) does not have the authority to acknowledge a debt to extend the limitation period,.
Case Background
The appellant was a director of corporate debtors that defaulted on loans sanctioned in 2014. The loan accounts were classified as Non-Performing Assets (NPA) on December 6, 2016,. Following various assignments of the debt and a previous insolvency process that was eventually terminated, the secured financial creditor filed a fresh petition under Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) on September 23, 2024,.
The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) had previously held the petition was within limitation, arguing that the admission of the claim by the RP during the first insolvency process (on May 22, 2022) constituted a valid acknowledgment of debt.
Key Legal Issues and Findings
The Supreme Court addressed three central questions regarding the calculation of the limitation period:
- Reckoning the Date of Default: The Court reaffirmed that the right to file a Section 7 petition accrues on the date of default, which in this case was the date the accounts were declared as NPA: December 6, 2016,. Under Article 137 of the Limitation Act, the standard three-year period for filing would have expired on December 6, 2019,.
- Excluded Periods for Limitation: The Court identified several periods that must be excluded from the limitation calculation:
- The insolvency process of the original lender (DHFL) from December 3, 2019, to June 7, 2021.
- The Supreme Court’s suo motuCovid-19 extension from March 15, 2020, to February 28, 2022, plus an additional 90 days.
- The period during which the first insolvency process against the appellant was active (December 23, 2021, to July 29, 2024).
- Expiration of Limitation: After accounting for these exclusions, the Court calculated that only three days remained after the termination of the first insolvency process on July 29, 2024. Consequently, the limitation period expired on August 1, 2024. Since the petition was not filed until September 23, 2024, it was time-barred.
- RP’s Admission is Not an Acknowledgment: The Court ruled that the NCLAT erred in treating the RP’s admission of a claim as an “acknowledgment of liability” under Section 18 of the Limitation Act. The Court held that:
- An acknowledgment must be made by the party against whom the right is claimed or an authorized agent.
- An RP performs purely administrative and clerical tasks related to the collation of claims and does not possess adjudicatory powers or the authority to bind the corporate debtor through an acknowledgment of debt.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that the Section 7 petition was filed beyond the prescribed period of limitation. The orders of the NCLT and NCLAT were quashed and set aside, and the appeals were allowed.
2026 INSC 429
Shankar Khandelwal V. Omkara Asset Reconstruction Pvt. Ltd & Anr. (D.O.J.29.04.2026)




