In M. R. Vasumathi v. The Authorized Officer &Ors. the Supreme Court of India adjudicated a vital challenge concerning the strictness of mandatory timelines governing asset recovery under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI Act) and its accompanying Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002. The appellant, a legal heir of a deceased guarantor, challenged an auction sale executed by Indian Bank after her father’s mortgaged property was sold to satisfy an unpaid debt from 1984. Although the Debts Recovery Tribunal (DRT), Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal (DRAT), and the Madras High Court concurrently dismissed her challenges due to prolonged delay and indolence by the heirs, the Supreme Court partly allowed the appeal, completely setting aside the 2010 auction sale.
A Division Bench comprising Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Augustine George Masih ruled that the validity of an auction under the SARFAESI framework cannot be evaluated on broader equitable considerations or borrower default history, but must be strictly tested against the literal text of the rules. The Court held that Rule 9(4) of the SARFAESI Rules—requiring an auction purchaser to deposit the remaining 75% of the bid amount within fifteen days of sale confirmation or within an agreed extended window in writing—is an absolute sine qua non. Because the auction purchaser paid the balance late without a pre-existing written agreement for an extension, the entire process was declared a nullity. Invoking its extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 142 of the Constitution, the Court ordered a refund to the buyer with 7% interest and granted the appellant a one-time window to redeem the mortgage upon depositing the quantified debt with 5% interest.
1. Factual Matrix and Procedural History
- The Loan and Guaranty: In 1984, a sole proprietor named S. Murugesan obtained financial assistance from Indian Bank (the secured creditor). To secure this transaction, G. Ramanujam stood as a guarantor and mortgaged his personal immovable property. Following a payment default, the bank filed a civil suit, securing a preliminary recovery decree from the City Civil Court, Chennai, on September 10, 1997, for Rs.1,87,004.23 with 18% annual interest.
- Death and SARFAESI Recourse: The guarantor, G. Ramanujam, passed away on September 26, 2001. While intermediate settlement talks failed, the bank bypassed executing the decree in civil courts and instead issued a demand notice under Section 13(2) of the SARFAESI Act on September 8, 2009—nearly twelve years after the initial decree—claiming an escalated total liability of Rs.95,42,372.52.
- The Impugned Auction Timeline: The bank took symbolic possession of the property and issued a public sale notice on February 3, 2010. An auction was held on March 11, 2010, where Respondent No. 2 emerged as the successful bidder with a high bid of Rs.2,11,00,500. The purchaser deposited 25% of the amount using demand drafts split across March 10 and 11, 2010. However, the remaining 75% of the purchase price was paid only on March 31, 2010, despite the initial 15-day timeline expiring on March 26, 2010. The bank issued the sale certificate on April 10, 2010.
- The Multi-Tiered Dismissals: The guarantor’s legal heirs challenged the auction sale before the DRT, which dismissed the applications on December 30, 2010, noting that the completed sale rendered the notice challenge infructuous and that Section 5 of the Limitation Act was inapplicable to Section 17 SARFAESI petitions. The DRAT subsequently affirmed these orders. The appellant (daughter) and her brother moved separate writ petitions before the Madras High Court, which dismissed them on September 21, 2020, citing that the heirs had remained unacceptably indolent for over 4,500 days and that public money could not be held hostage by frivolous personal litigation. The appellant then moved the Supreme Court.
2. Core Legal Issues Formulated
The Supreme Court structured its analysis around two central inquiries:
- Whether SARFAESI recovery actions initiated in 2009 on the back of an unexecuted 1997 civil preliminary decree are legally barred by the principles of limitation.
- Whether an auction sale stands structurally vitiated if the successful bidder fails to pay the balance 75% consideration within fifteen days, absent a pre-recorded, multi-party written agreement extending the timeline.
3. Submissions on Behalf of the Parties
A. Arguments Appended by the Appellant (Vasumathi)
- Procedural and Valuation Frauds: Counsel contended that the bank acted in bad faith by inflating a Rs.1.92 lakh initial decreed debt to an extractive Rs.95.42 lakh demand. Furthermore, the bank allegedly violated Rule 8(5) of the SARFAESI Rules by obtaining a property valuation report through the original defaulting borrower rather than its own authorized officers.
- Fatal Rule 9 Breaches: The appellant emphasized that under Rule 9(4), the payment of the 75% balance beyond the sacrosanct 15-day limit on March 31, 2010, without any concurrent written contract for extension between all stakeholders made the entire sale a absolute nullity. It was also argued that since the asset’s value was over Rs.2.11 crore, selling the entire property instead of a minor portion to satisfy a Rs.95 lakh debt was excessively punitive.
B. Arguments Appended by the Secured Creditor and Auction Purchaser
- Contractual Extensions Permitted: The bank counter-argued that under the recovery framework, “debt” explicitly incorporates liabilities arising under a decree and its subsequently accrued interest. It stated that any variation in the payment timeline was fully within the bank’s administrative powers to waive or extend, and the transparent auction fetched an amount well above the reserve price of Rs.1.58 crore.
- Equitable Rights of a Bona Fide Buyer: The auction purchaser argued that as a bona fide buyer who paid the full Rs.2.11 crore in 2010, he had been unfairly kept away from enjoying the property due to sixteen years of endless litigation. Undoing a settled auction after a decade and a half would be catastrophic and ignore the concurrent findings of three consecutive forums.
4. Legal Analysis &Ratio Decidendi of the Court
The Supreme Court bypassed a final determination on the limitation issue, declaring it superfluous because the auction sale was fundamentally invalid on the second count of procedural non-compliance.
A. Rule 9 Requirements Are Mandatory, Not Ornamental
The Court clarified that the validation of a statutory property auction cannot be tested on general equitable considerations or the poor behavior of a debtor; it must stand or fall on whether the language of the rules was breached. The Court analyzed the text of unamended Rule 9(3), (4), and (5) of the SARFAESI Rules:
- Rule 9(3): Dictates that the purchaser shall immediately pay a deposit of 25% of the sale price, failing which the property shall forthwith be sold again.
- Rule 9(4): Directs that the balance 75% shall be paid on or before the fifteenth day of confirmation of sale, or within such extended period as may be agreed upon in writing between the parties.
- Rule 9(5): Expressly states that in default of payment within the period mentioned in sub-rule (4), the deposit shall be forfeited and the property resold.
The Bench, relying on Sri Siddeshwara Cooperative Bank Ltd. v. Ikbal (2013), held that these timelines go to the absolute root of the transaction. While the 15-day window under Rule 9(4) can be extended, it requires a “manifestation of mutual assent in writing” enacted between the required parties (the secured creditor, the borrower, and the auction purchaser) before the initial window closes.
B. The Total Absence of a Written Agreement
The record showed that the statutory outer timeline expired on March 26, 2010. The purchaser deposited the remaining 75% on March 31, 2010. The Court observed that there was absolutely no demonstrable material, formal application, or written instrument on record executed prior to March 26 that extended the payment timeline. The bank could not unilaterally regularize a statutory default under the guise of an unrecorded administrative waiver. Consequently, the non-adherence to the timeline constituted a material irregularity that struck at the core of the transaction, rendering the auction sale void in law.
5. Decretal Directions & Article 142 Relief Moulding
To balance the competing demands of justice and equity after a sixteen-year litigation delay, the Supreme Court invoked its extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 142 of the Constitution to issue a specific set of directions:
- Auction Set Aside: The civil appeal is allowed in part. The concurrent orders of the Madras High Court, the DRAT, and the DRT are set aside, and the underlying 2010 auction sale is formally quashed.
- Restitution to the Buyer: Because the auction purchaser was not personally responsible for the administrative irregularities, the bank is directed to refund his entire deposit amount along with 7% annual interest calculated from the respective 2010 dates of deposit up to the date of actual payment, to be executed within six weeks.
- One-Time Redemption Opportunity: The appellant is granted a one-time opportunity to redeem the mortgage and restore the secured asset to her family free of encumbrances. She must pay the bank the baseline Section 13(2) notice amount of 95,42,372.52 with 5% simple annual interest calculated from the initial notice issue date until the final payment date[cite: 17].
- Execution Timeline: The appellant has two weeks to contact the bank to get the final calculated figure, and the bank must give her a payment window of at least one month[cite: 17].
- Fresh Auction Default Clause: If the appellant fails to deposit the amount within the specified window, she will automatically forfeit all rights to the property[cite: 17]. On her default, the bank is authorized to put the asset up for a fresh public auction after eight weeks, utilizing a new valuation report from a government-empanelled valuer[cite: 17]. The parties shall bear their own costs[cite: 17].




