Split Jurisdiction in Debt Recovery Cases: Why DRAT Prefers One Tribunal

Split Jurisdiction in Debt Recovery: Why DRAT Prefers One Forum

  • One case, two tribunals = split jurisdiction
  • Risk of conflicting orders & delay
  • DRAT pushes consolidation for consistency

New Delhi: In debt recovery disputes, split jurisdiction occurs when different parts of the same loan dispute (OA under the RDB Act, and SA/TSA under SARFAESI) end up before different DRTs. Appellate benches increasingly favour consolidation before a single tribunal to avoid contradictory directions and speed up disposal.

What is split jurisdiction?

  • OA (Original Application for recovery) proceeds in one DRT, while SA/TSA (challenges to SARFAESI actions) runs in another.
  • Happens due to asset location, branch location, or procedural transfers.
  • Outcome: parallel proceedings on the same borrower-bank dispute across forums.

Why it’s a problem

  • Conflicting orders: One DRT may stay a sale; another may allow recovery—creating deadlock.
  • Delay & cost: Parties shuttle between cities, multiplying dates and filings.
  • Forum shopping: Side may understate dues or choose venues tactically to change jurisdiction.

DRAT’s approach (plain language)

  • When connected cases involve the same parties and transactions, keep them in one DRT.
  • Notifications vesting large-value cases (e.g., ₹100 crore+) in a specific DRT apply to both OA and SARFAESI matters.
  • Understating dues to avoid jurisdiction can backfire; benches look at the real exposure across connected cases.

How split jurisdiction happens (examples)

Scenario What typically happens Preferred fix
OA in City A; SARFAESI SA in City B (asset location) Parallel hearings; risk of contradictory orders Transfer SA to the OA forum for consolidation
High-value matter split between two DRTs Threshold notifications ignored/misread Apply notification; move all to the designated DRT
Intentional understatement (₹99.5 cr vs actual ₹100+ cr) Attempt to change forum Recompute dues; treat connected exposure as one

What bankers & borrowers should do

  • Seek/consent to consolidation when cases involve the same account.
  • Compute dues accurately (include interest till filing date) to avoid jurisdiction disputes.
  • Press for expeditious disposal once consolidated—fewer adjournments, faster outcome.

Editor’s note: This explainer simplifies the concept of split jurisdiction in debt recovery matters and why consolidation at a single DRT ensures consistent, faster decisions.


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