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Homebuyers challenge IBC amendment dealing with minimum requirement to initiate insolvency against developer

Threshold of 100 homebuyers against ‘fundamental rights guaranteed in the Constitution,’ buyers said.

January 06, 2020 / 19:37 IST
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A group of homebuyers has moved the Supreme Court challenging the Insolvency and Bankruptcy (Amendment) Ordinance, 2019, that sets a minimum threshold of allottees for homebuyers to be able to initiate insolvency proceedings against a real estate developer, saying that it is against 'fundamental rights guaranteed in the Constitution' and against the objective of the IBC itself.

Homebuyers have said that in the absence of any public data being available, such a threshold is almost impossible to meet.

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In December, an ordinance was passed by the government to amend the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code under which a threshold of 100 buyers or 10 percent of homebuyers is required to take a real estate developer to an insolvency court.

"…Real Estate Allottees who are Financial Creditors under Section 5(8) of the IBC have been rendered remediless and have been subjected to absolute discrimination by putting a precondition/threshold in the form of minimum number of Allottees of a particular project required for filing an application for triggering the code under Section 7 of the IBC, which is not applicable to other financial creditors under IBC," the writ petition filed by 11 homebuyers has said.