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(i) As to whether any creditor including the Central Government, State
Government or any local authority is bound by the Resolution Plan once it
is approved by an adjudicating authority under sub-section (1) of Section
31 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (hereinafter referred to
as 'I&B Code')?
(ii) As to whether the amendment to Section 31 by Section 7 of Act 26 of
2019 is clarificatory/declaratory or substantive in nature?
(iii) As to whether after approval of resolution plan by the Adjudicating
Authority a creditor including the Central Government, State Government
or any local authority is entitled to initiate any proceedings for recovery of
any of the dues from the Corporate Debtor, which are not a part of the
Resolution Plan approved by the adjudicating authority?"
NEUTRAL CITATION
C/SCA/13056/2021 CAV JUDGMENT DATED: 30/11/2023
undefined
"For modern purposes a declaratory Act may be defined as an Act
to remove doubts existing as to the common law, or the meaning
or effect of any statute. Such Acts are usually held to be
retrospective. The usual reason for passing a declaratory Act is to
set aside what Parliament deems to have been a judicial error,
whether in the statement of the common law or in the
interpretation of statutes. Usually, if not invariably, such an Act
contains a preamble, and also the word 'declared' as well as the
word 'enacted'.
But the use of the words 'it is declared' is not conclusive that the
Act is declaratory for these words may, at times, be used to
introduce new rules of law and the Act in the latter case will only
be amending the law and will not necessarily be retrospective 14.
In determining, therefore, the nature of the Act, regard must be
had to the substance rather than to the form15. If a new Act is 'to
explain' an earlier Act, it would be without object unless construed
retrospective16. An explanatory Act is generally passed to supply
an obvious omission or to clear up doubts as to the meaning of the
previous Act. It is well settled that if a statute is curative or merely
declaratory of the previous law retrospective operation is generally
intended. The language 'shall be deemed always to have meant' or
'shall be deemed never to have included' is declaratory, and is in
plain terms retrospective. In the absence of clear words indicating
that the amending Act is declaratory, it would not be so construed
when the pre-amended provision was clear and unambiguous. An
amending Act may be purely clarificatory to clear a meaning of a
provision of the principal Act which was already implicit. A
clarificatory amendment of this nature will have retrospective
effect and, therefore, if the principal Act was existing law when the
constitution came into force, the amending Act also will be part of
the existing law.
The above statement of the law relating to the nature and effect of
a declaratory statute has been quoted with approval by the
Supreme Court from earlier editions of this book in a number of
cases.
"In Mithilesh Kumari v. Prem Bihari Khare, section 4 of the Benami
Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 was, it is submitted, wrongly
held to be an Act declaratory in nature for it was not passed to
clear any doubt existing as to the common law or the meaning or
effect of any statute. The conclusion, however, that section 4
applied also to past benami transactions may be supportable on
the language used in the section."