Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code: once a resolution plan is approved by the NCLT under Section 31 of the IBC, it is binding on all stakeholders, including operational creditors, and any claims not part of the resolution plan stand extinguished. This case concerns a dispute between Electro Steel Limited (appellant) and Ispat Carrier Private Limited (respondent). The respondent had filed claims totalling Rs. 1,59,09,214. before the West Bengal Micro, Small and Medium Facilitation Council (Facilitation Council) under the MSME Act, 200612. After conciliation failed, arbitration began.
Concurrently, the appellant faced insolvency proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC), initiated by its financial creditors in June 2017. A moratorium was declared, and an Interim Resolution Professional was appointed. During the moratorium, arbitral proceedings before the Facilitation Council were kept in abeyance.
On 29th March 2018, a resolution plan was submitted by Vedanta Limited, which settled all claims of operational creditors, including that of the respondent, at “nil value”. This resolution plan was approved by the NCLT on 17th April 2018, ending the moratorium. No appeal was preferred by the respondent against this approval.
Despite the resolution plan, the Facilitation Council resumed arbitral proceedings after the moratorium was lifted and passed an award on 6th July 2018, directing the appellant to pay Rs. 1,59,09,214 to the respondent. The appellant did not challenge this award under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act.
The respondent then initiated execution proceedings for the award. In these proceedings, the appellant filed an application contending that the arbitral award was a “nullity” and non-executable because the respondent’s claim had been settled at nil by the approved resolution plan. The Executing Court dismissed this application on 3rd March 2023, directing the appellant to comply with the award. The appellant challenged this dismissal before the Jharkhand High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution. The High Court rejected the appellant’s contention that the award was a nullity and dismissed the petition. This led to the appeal before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC): Specifically Sections 14 (moratorium), 30 (submission of resolution plan), 31 (approval of resolution plan and its binding nature), 61 (appeals), and 63 (jurisdiction of civil court).
Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 (MSME Act): Pertains to conciliation and arbitration proceedings.
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996: Sections 34 (setting aside an award), and 36 (enforcement of award).
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC): Section 47 (questions to be determined by the court executing the decree)12. and Order XXI (execution of decrees).
Judicial Precedents: Essar Steel India Ltd. v. Committee of Creditors. and Ghanshyam Mishra & Sons (P) Ltd. v. Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Co. Ltd.. were heavily relied upon, which established that once a resolution plan is approved, all claims not part of it stand extinguished. Other cases like Ajay Kumar RadheshyamGoenka and Sarwan Kumar Vs. Madam Lal Aggarwal were also cited.
Reasoning The Supreme Court primarily addressed whether an arbitral award could be challenged as a nullity in execution proceedings under Section 47 CPC, especially when the claim underlying the award was already extinguished by an approved IBC resolution plan.
The Court reiterated the well-established principle from Ghanshyam Mishra and Essar Steel India Ltd. that once a resolution plan is approved by the NCLT under Section 31 of the IBC, it is binding on all stakeholders, including operational creditors, and any claims not part of the resolution plan stand extinguished. The resolution plan in this case explicitly settled the respondent’s claim at “nil”.
The Court emphasised that the Facilitation Council lost its jurisdiction to proceed with arbitration once the moratorium was lifted and the resolution plan was approved, as the underlying claim itself ceased to exist. Therefore, the arbitral award passed subsequently was a “nullity” or non est (not in existence) in the eyes of the law, as it was based on an extinguished claim.
The Supreme Court clarified that an objection to the execution of an award based on its “nullity” (due to patent or inherent lack of jurisdiction) can be raised in execution proceedings under Section 47 CPC, even if no challenge under Section 34 of the Arbitration Act was filed12…. The High Court erred in holding that such a plea could not be entertained at the execution stage1830.
The Court found that the High Court misread and misinterpreted the resolution plan and failed to appreciate that the Facilitation Council lost jurisdiction to decide the respondent’s claim once it was settled at nil by the NCLT-approved resolution plan.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. The Court held that the order of the Jharkhand High Court dated 17th July 2023, and consequently the order of the Commercial Court/District Judge-1, Bokaro dated 3rd March 2023, which dismissed the appellant’s petition and directed compliance with the arbitral award, are hereby quashed and set aside. The Supreme Court concluded that, in view of the approved resolution plan by the NCLT, the claim of the respondent stood extinguished, and therefore, the arbitral award dated 6th July 2018, was incapable of being executed33. The Court declared that the Facilitation Council had lost jurisdiction to arbitrate the claim, rendering the award a nullity 3339.
Electrosteel Steel Limited (Now M/S Esl Steel Limited) V. Ispat Carrier Private Limited
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 525:(DoJ 21-04-2025)



