The case of M/S Nirmal Ujjwal Credit Co-operative Society Ltd. v. Ravi Sethia & Ors. (2026 INSC 338) clarifies the eligibility of a Multi-State Co-operative Society (MSCS) to act as a resolution applicant under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).
Factual Background
- The Parties: The appellant is an MSCS registered under the Multi-State Co-operative Societies Act, 2002, primarily involved in financial services like accepting deposits and advancing loans.
- The Bid: The appellant submitted a resolution plan for Morarji Textiles Ltd. (the Corporate Debtor).
- The Rejection: The Resolution Professional (RP) and later the NCLT and NCLAT declared the appellant ineligible. They ruled that the investment violated Section 64(d) of the 2002 Act, as the appellant was neither a subsidiary nor in the “same line of business” as the textile manufacturing corporate debtor.
Legal Dispute: “Same Line of Business”
The central issue was the interpretation of Section 64(d) of the 2002 Act (as amended in 2023), which restricts an MSCS from investing funds in other institutions unless they are a subsidiary or in the “same line of business”.
- Appellant’s Argument: They claimed to be in the same line of business because they operated a “textile unit” (Nirmal Textile) and their bye-laws permitted processing “agro-products,” which they argued included textiles.
- Respondents’ Argument: They contended that the appellant was predominantly a credit society. They highlighted that the corporate debtor manufactured industrial, man-made synthetic fibers (viscose), which was entirely different from the appellant’s incidental agro-processing of natural products.
Supreme Court’s Legal Analysis
Although the appellant sought to withdraw the appeal after it was heard, the Court chose to explain the legal principles due to the importance of the issue.
- Restrictive Standard: The Court noted that the phrase “same line of business” was introduced by Parliament to prevent the misuse of society funds and ensure “financial discipline”. It acts as a restrictive standard to stop the diversion of members’ deposits into unrelated or risky ventures.
- Threshold of Sameness: To qualify, there must be a “substantial or predominant, or closely related sameness” in core business activities. A remote or incidental connection is insufficient.
- Primacy of Bye-laws: The Court held that the determination must be made solely by examining the society’s bye-laws, which serve as its “decisive charter document”.
- Application to the Case:
- The appellant’s bye-laws showed it was primarily a financial service provider .
- The “agro-product” processing mentioned in its bye-laws was distinct from the industrial, chemical-based manufacturing of synthetic textiles undertaken by the corporate debtor .
- Therefore, the two entities were not in the same line of business .
Conclusion
The Supreme Court allowed the appellant to withdraw the appeal and dismissed it accordingly. However, it affirmed the findings of the lower tribunals that the appellant was legally ineligible to submit the resolution plan due to the statutory restrictions in the 2002 Act .
2026 INSC 338
Nirmal Ujjwal Credit Co-Operative Society Ltd. V. Ravi Sethia & Ors. (D.O.J. 09.04.2026)



