Understanding Original Applications (OA) Before DRT: A Banker’s Guide

Original Application (OA) before DRT – A Banker’s Playbook

  • OA = Bank’s primary recovery case under the RDB Act
  • 180-day disposal norm—adjournments won’t stall OA
  • Restructuring talks ≠ automatic pause of proceedings

Audience: Credit, Legal, and Recovery teams at banks/NBFCs.
Context: In the recent Delhi DRAT matter (YFC Pvt. Ltd. & Ors. vs Bank of Baroda & Ors.), the Appellate Tribunal declined to interfere with the DRT’s refusal to grant more time for restructuring and directed expeditious disposal of the OA. The takeaway for bankers: keep your OA moving and treat restructuring as a parallel track—not a brake.

What is an OA (Original Application)?

  • Purpose: Main recovery action filed by a bank/FI before the Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) under Section 19 of the RDB Act, 1993.
  • Reliefs: Recovery of dues with interest/costs; enforcement of security; ancillary directions (e.g., injunctions, disclosure).
  • Outcome: On success, DRT issues a Recovery Certificate (RC) executable by the Recovery Officer.
  • Timeline: Statutory norm—180 days for disposal (often exceeded, but used by tribunals as a guiding yardstick).

Key Lesson from the DRAT Case

  • Repeated requests for time due to “restructuring in progress” will not indefinitely delay an OA.
  • DRAT upheld DRT’s approach: fix final-argument dates, avoid endless adjournments, and decide OA expeditiously.
  • Borrowers may seek time for settlement/consent decree; tribunals may give a short window, but proceedings must advance.

OA Flow: From Filing to Recovery Certificate

Step Action & Banker’s Tip
1. Filing File OA with statement of claim, calculations, and document bundle. Tip: Include date-wise chart of events and sanction-cum-security matrix.
2. Admission & Notices DRT issues notice; ensure correct addresses/service. Tip: Use alternate service (email/WhatsApp/publication) if needed.
3. Evidence Affidavits, exhibits (sanctions, AODs, SOAs, NPA intimation, security docs). Tip: Keep interest workings error-free.
4. Interim Reliefs Seek injunctions on asset transfers, disclosure of assets, receiver in extreme cases. Tip: Show urgency & prima facie case.
5. Final Hearing Stick to dates; oppose adjournments without cause. Tip: Cite 180-day norm if delays are tactical.
6. Order & RC On decree, get Recovery Certificate. Tip: File execution promptly; track RO’s steps (attachment, auction).

Banker’s Playbook: Do This

  • Parallel tracks: Continue OA even if restructuring/OTS is being explored.
  • Time discipline: Request short, final dates for arguments; resist rolling adjournments.
  • Paper perfection: Keep authority/POA, board resolution, and consortium authorization in order.
  • Computation clarity: Lock interest rates, penal clauses, and SOA reconciliation up to last date.
  • Security trail: Title reports, registration proofs (CERSAI), valuation—attach summaries.

Avoid This

  • Letting “proposal under consideration” become a reason for months of adjournment.
  • Vague settlement talks without term sheets, upfront payments, or timelines.
  • Gaps in documentation (unsigned sanctions, missing AODs, absent KYC or facility-wise breakups).

If Restructuring is Live: How to Layer it on OA

  • Seek short indulgence only with clear milestones: e.g., “15 days to file consent terms/withdrawal” (as seen in the case).
  • Insist on part-payment, security enhancement, or third-party guarantee before granting time.
  • Put settlement on record as a consent decree wherever feasible to avoid fresh litigation.

OA Filing: Quick Checklist

  • Sanction letters, renewals, review notes, board/committee approvals.
  • Executed documents: loan agreements, DP notes, hypothecation/mortgage, guarantees.
  • Security & perfection: mortgages, CERSAI, ROC charges, insurance, valuation.
  • SOA with date-wise debit/credit, interest grid, NPA classification proof, recall/SARFAESI notices (if any).
  • Authority to file: POA/Authorization, consortium lead bank mandate, resolution.

Common Borrower Objections & Banker Responses

  • “We’re negotiating restructuring—give 3 months.”
    Response: Seek brief time only for consent terms; otherwise press for final hearing citing the 180-day norm.
  • “Calculation disputes.”
    Response: File reconciled SOA, working sheets, and offer to file a short rejoinder computation within days.
  • “Documents not served.”
    Response: Show acknowledgments/alternate service and request proceeding ex parte if wilful avoidance.

Mini-FAQ for Bankers

  • Does OA halt if restructuring talks start? No. OA continues; settlement can convert into consent decree.
  • Can we get interim protection? Yes, seek injunctions, disclosure of assets, and in fit cases appointment of a receiver.
  • How to deal with adjournment culture? Ask for short, final dates; record borrower delays; press the 180-day benchmark.

Note: This article is a banker-focused explainer based on a recent DRAT direction emphasizing timely disposal of OAs and limiting adjournments sought for loan restructuring. For case-specific strategy, consult your legal counsel.


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