This judgment by the Supreme Court addresses a writ petition filed by National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL). The genesis of the petition stems from a large-scale commodity exchange platform scam involving NSEL, a company promoted by 63 Moons Technologies Limited, which holds 99.99% of its share capital. NSEL committed payment defaults and fraud amounting to approximately Rs. 5,600 Crores, impacting about 13,000 traders.
The NSEL had commenced operations in October 2008, after receiving an exemption notification from the Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952 (FCRA) for one-day duration forward contracts4. Trading involved members placing orders for buying/selling commodities, which were matched based on price and time. Disputes arose, and NSEL was issued a show cause notice in 2012 for alleged violation of its exemption6. In July 2013, NSEL was directed to settle existing contracts and then suspended its exchange operations, leading to Rs. 5,600 Crores in defaults by 24 trading members. An FIR was registered, and the Enforcement Directorate attached assets worth approximately Rs. 1,740.59 Crores under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA). Various suits were filed, and a Supreme Court Committee (SCC) was appointed in 2022 to consolidate proceedings and facilitate recovery for investors.
The judgment specifically considers the validity of two orders passed by this SCC on 10.08.2023 and 08.01.2024. These orders addressed two priority questions of law:
Whether Secured Creditors have priority of interest over assets attached under the provisions of PMLA, the Maharashtra Protection of Interests of Depositors (in Financial Establishments) Act, 1999 (MPID Act), the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI Act), and the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993 (RDB Act).
Whether properties of Judgment Debtors and Garnishees attached under the MPID Act would be available for the execution of decrees, considering the moratorium provision under Section 14 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC).
Law Involved
The judgment extensively deals with the interplay and overriding effects of several key Indian statutes:
Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA).
Maharashtra Protection of Interests of Depositors (in Financial Establishments) Act, 1999 (MPID Act).
Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI Act).
Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993 (RDB Act).
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC), specifically Section 14 (Moratorium).
Article 142 of the Constitution of India: This article grants the Supreme Court plenary powers to pass any decree or order necessary for doing complete justice in any cause or matter. The SCC was established under these powers.
Article 246 of the Constitution: Deals with the distribution of legislative powers between the Union and States. This is relevant for assessing the legislative competence of the MPID Act.
Article 254 of the Constitution: Addresses inconsistencies between laws made by Parliament and State Legislatures.
Reasoning
The Supreme Court’s reasoning centred on the powers of the SCC under Article 142 and the interpretation of the overriding clauses of the various Acts:
Article 142 Powers: The Court emphasised that the SCC was constituted under its plenary powers under Article 142 to achieve a holistic solution for the speedy recovery of outstanding amounts for the affected investors. These powers are extensive and designed to do complete justice, not being circumscribed or ignored by statutory provisions, particularly when existing laws are conflicting or inadequate to achieve the goal. The Court asserted its authority to iron out creases and balance equities.
Priority of Secured Creditors (Question i): The SCC’s order of 10.08.2023 concluded that properties of judgment debtors, if proven to be “proceeds of crime” attached under PMLA or MPID Act, would not grant secured creditors priority over them. The Court noted that Section 26E of SARFAESI Act and Section 31B of RDB Act, which generally give priority to secured creditors, would not override the special provisions of the MPID Act where assets are attached as a result of fraudulent activities and in the nature of “proceeds of crime”. The Court found the SCC’s order to be consistent with the legislative intent of the MPID Act to protect depositors and found no conflict that would subvert the State Legislature’s power to enact the MPID Act.
Availability of MPID-attached Properties despite IBC Moratorium (Question ii): The SCC’s order of 08.01.2024 held that properties attached under Section 4 of the MPID Act would remain available for the execution of decrees against Judgment Debtors, despite the moratorium under Section 14 of the IBC. The Court reasoned that the MPID Act was enacted to curb unscrupulous activities of financial establishments and that the attached properties, under MPID Act, would no longer be available as the properties of the corporate debtor for a resolution plan under IBC. The Court concluded that there was no inconsistency between the provisions contained in the MPID Act and the IBC concerning this matter, and the SCC’s order was upheld.
Holding
The Supreme Court dismissed the writ petition filed by NSEL.
The Court effectively upheld and vindicated both orders passed by the Supreme Court Committee on 10.08.2023 and 08.01.2024.
This means that secured creditors do not have priority over assets attached under PMLA and MPID Act when those assets are “proceeds of crime”.
Furthermore, properties attached under the MPID Act would remain available for execution of decrees, even in the face of a moratorium under Section 14 of the IBC.
The SCC’s framework for recovery for the NSEL scam victims, leveraging Article 142 powers, was therefore validated.
National Spot Exchange Limited V. Union Of India And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 694: (DoJ 15-05-2025)