In State Bank of India & Ors. v. Doha Bank Q.P.S.C. & Anr. (2026), the Supreme Court of India ruled that corporate guarantees constitute a “financial debt” under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) and that technical defects, such as insufficient stamping, cannot be used to disqualify a creditor from the Committee of Creditors (CoC).
Case Background and Financial Dispute
The case involved a dispute between two sets of lenders over the insolvency proceedings of Reliance Infratel Limited (RITL), the Corporate Debtor (CD).
- The Appellants: A consortium of banks led by the State Bank of India (SBI Consortium) had extended loans of over ₹6,700 crores to RITL’s group entities, Reliance Communications Limited (RCOM) and Reliance Telecom Limited (RTL). These loans were secured by corporate guarantees executed by the CD in March 2017.
- The Respondents: Doha Bank, which had extended a foreign currency loan to the CD, challenged the validity of the SBI Consortium’s claims after the CD entered the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) in 2018.
Doha Bank argued that the guarantees were suspicious, undervalued, or fraudulent because they were executed when the CD was already facing severe financial constraints.
Procedural History
- NCLT and NCLAT: Both tribunals rejected the SBI Consortium’s claims. They held that the consortium lenders were not “financial creditors” because the guarantees were allegedly not properly disclosed in financial statements, were insufficiently stamped under the Maharashtra Stamp Act, and were not verified correctly by the Resolution Professional.
Key Legal Findings of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the lower tribunals’ orders, clarifying several critical points of insolvency law:
- Guarantees as Financial Debt: The Court reaffirmed that a liability arising from a corporate guarantee falls squarely within the definition of “financial debt” under Section 5(8) of the IBC. Since a guarantor’s liability is coextensive with that of the principal borrower, the appellants are entitled to be recognized as financial creditors.
- Validity of Execution: The Court found that the execution of the guarantees was “beyond any pale of doubt”. It noted that while the CD was in default, the guarantees were restructured and executed according to RBI circulars before the account was finalized as a Non-Performing Asset (NPA).
- Stamp Duty is a Curable Defect: The Court ruled that even if a document is insufficiently stamped, it does not become void or unenforceable. The Stamp Act is a fiscal measure to secure revenue, not a weapon for litigants to defeat an opponent’s cause. Furthermore, because the documents were executed in New Delhi and stamped there, the Maharashtra Stamp Act did not apply.
- Admissibility of Evidence at Appeal: The Court held that an appeal is a continuation of the original proceeding. Relevant documents, such as the original guarantees, could be produced at the appellate stage to prove the genuineness of a claim even if they were not produced before the NCLT.
Conclusion and Relief
The Supreme Court concluded that the findings of the NCLT and NCLAT were “perverse” and legally unsustainable.
The Court issued the following directions:
- Quashing of Orders: The judgments of the NCLAT and NCLT were quashed and set aside.
- Recognition of Creditors: The SBI Consortium is officially recognized as “financial creditors” of the Corporate Debtor.
- Reconstitution of CoC: The Resolution Professional is directed to reconstitute the Committee of Creditors to include the appellants and proceed with the insolvency process in accordance with the law.
2026 INSC 423
State Bank of India & Ors. V. Doha Bank Q.P.S.C. & Anr. (D.O.J. 28.04.2026)




