NCLT Lawyer in Indore — IBC & Corporate Law Experts

NCLT Lawyer in Indore — IBC & Corporate Law Experts

Expert Consulting — Serving Clients Across India

Last reviewed: by Partner — IBC & Corporate Law, Accorg Consulting
Quick Answer

NCLT Lawyer in Indore — IBC & Corporate Law Experts at a glance

An NCLT or insolvency matter usually needs immediate review of default, board records, creditor position, and filing readiness under the Companies Act or IBC 2016.

  • Early case framing often decides whether the matter moves toward admission, defense, settlement, or restructuring.
  • Bench strategy, evidence quality, and procedural timing matter as much as the legal ground itself.
  • Founders, creditors, resolution professionals, and directors each need a different response path.

When clients usually contact us

Section 7, 9, or 10 insolvency filing or defense.
Oppression and mismanagement, deadlock, or governance dispute.
Merger, restructuring, liquidation, or urgent interim relief before NCLT.
Bench-specific guidance for Indore or pan-India NCLT matters.

NCLT Lawyer in Indore — Why You Need Local Expertise

An NCLT lawyer in Indore specialises in petitions before the National Company Law Tribunal under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) 2016 and the Companies Act 2013. Cases from Madhya Pradesh — including Indore, Bhopal, Jabalpur, Gwalior and Ujjain — are handled at the NCLT bench with jurisdiction over MP. Accorg Consulting's Indore-based NCLT team provides end-to-end representation: from petition drafting and filing to hearing arguments and resolution plan execution.

NCLT Cases We Handle from Indore & MP

  • CIRP as Financial Creditor — Section 7 application for banks, NBFCs, debenture holders; default ₹1 Cr+ threshold
  • CIRP as Operational Creditor — Section 9 application for vendors, suppliers, employees for unpaid dues
  • CIRP as Corporate Debtor — Section 10 voluntary insolvency filing to restructure debt and protect business
  • Resolution Plan Approval — Section 31 plan approval; representing Resolution Applicants before NCLT and CoC
  • Oppression & Mismanagement — Section 241-244 petitions for minority shareholder protection and board disputes
  • Pre-packaged Insolvency (PPIRP) — MSMEs with default up to ₹1 Cr can use faster PPIRP under IBC Chapter III-A
  • Liquidation Proceedings — Section 33 liquidation; representing liquidators, creditors and asset buyers
  • NCLT Appeals (NCLAT) — Appeals at National Company Law Appellate Tribunal against NCLT orders

Our IBC & NCLT Track Record

₹493 Cr
Insolvency resolved — financial creditor recovered full principal
200+
IBC and NCLT filings handled across India including MP
₹6,400 Cr
Total debt portfolio managed across all insolvency matters

IBC 2016 — Key Statutory Provisions for NCLT Matters

IBC SectionSubjectKey Threshold / Timeline
Section 7Financial Creditor initiates CIRPDefault ₹1 Crore+; NCLT to admit within 14 days
Section 9Operational Creditor initiates CIRP10-day demand notice (Form 3/4) before NCLT filing
Section 12CIRP timeline180 days + 90 days extension; hard cap 330 days
Section 14Moratorium (automatic stay)From admission to resolution plan approval — no suits against company
Section 31Resolution Plan approval by NCLTPlan must be approved by CoC with 66%+ voting share
Section 33Liquidation orderWhen no plan approved or plan fails — liquidator appointed by NCLT
Section 241-244Oppression & Mismanagement under Companies Act 201310% member threshold for petition; NCLT has wide discretionary powers

Our NCLT Process for Indore Clients

  1. Case Assessment (Free) — We evaluate your position: whether you are a creditor, debtor, or aggrieved shareholder, and identify the correct section and forum
  2. Pre-Filing Strategy — Demand notice (for operational creditors), internal negotiation, NPA documentation (for financial creditors), CoC strategy
  3. Petition Drafting & Filing — Precise NCLT petition with all supporting documents filed at the appropriate NCLT bench for MP
  4. Admission & IRP Appointment — Represent at admission hearing; assist in appointment of Interim Resolution Professional (IRP)
  5. CIRP Management — Attend CoC meetings, evaluate Resolution Plans, protect creditor interests throughout the 180-330 day process
  6. Resolution / Liquidation — Represent during Plan approval or liquidation process; recover maximum value for creditors

Why an Indore-Based NCLT Lawyer Is Your Advantage

  • Local Business Knowledge — We understand Indore and MP's industrial landscape — Pithampur manufacturing, textile sector dynamics, local MSME patterns — which informs better CIRP strategy
  • Immediate Availability — Urgent NCLT applications (stays, injunctions) require same-day response. Our Indore presence means no waiting for Delhi or Mumbai counsel to travel
  • CA + Advocate Combination — NCLT proceedings require both financial analysis (valuation, creditor waterfall) and legal argument. Our integrated team covers both
  • NCLAT & Supreme Court Network — For appeals beyond NCLT, we have Delhi-based NCLAT counsel in our network for seamless escalation

Related services: NCLT Lawyer India (National) · Insolvency Resolution · Shareholder Disputes

Documents we usually review first

  • Debt documents, default proof, invoices, notices, and demand correspondence.
  • Board resolutions, shareholding pattern, AoA, MoA, and company master data.
  • Financial statements, loan papers, bank statements, and operational records.
  • Prior notices, petitions, orders, and settlement communication if litigation already started.

How the engagement typically moves

  1. Initial review of facts, documents, forum, and urgency.
  2. Issue spotting, legal position mapping, and commercial risk assessment.
  3. Drafting, filing, reply, negotiation, or hearing preparation based on the matter stage.
  4. Follow-through on interim relief, final order strategy, or settlement execution.

What usually decides NCLT strategy

  • Whether the matter is creditor-driven, company-driven, or a governance dispute under the Companies Act.
  • Which bench, threshold, and evidence standard applies before filing or defending.
  • Whether settlement, admission defense, interim relief, or structured resolution offers the best outcome.

Typical NCLT matter types

Matter Type Usually Starts With Primary Objective
Section 7 financial creditor Loan default and debt record Admission of CIRP and recovery leverage
Section 9 operational creditor Invoice default and demand notice Pressure for payment or insolvency admission
Section 10 corporate debtor Internal distress assessment Structured insolvency initiation by the company
Oppression / mismanagement Shareholder conflict or governance abuse Control, protection, or corrective relief

Why Choose Accorg Consulting

  • Integrated legal and CA-led advisory model for disputes that have both legal and financial consequences.
  • Experience across NCLT, IBC, GST, FEMA, DRT, banking, and corporate conflict matters.
  • Track record highlights used across the site: 800+ court matters handled and pan-India advisory coverage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Below FAQs are included to cover follow-up questions Google and AI answer engines commonly expand on for this service.

What is NCLT and what does an NCLT lawyer do? +
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) is a quasi-judicial body in India that handles corporate disputes including insolvency under IBC 2016, oppression & mismanagement, company winding-up, and mergers. An NCLT lawyer specializes in filing and defending petitions before these benches, representing financial creditors, operational creditors, corporate debtors, and shareholders.
What is the minimum amount to file insolvency at NCLT? +
The minimum default threshold to trigger the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) at the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) is ₹1 crore for both financial creditors (Section 7 of IBC 2016) and operational creditors (Section 9 of IBC 2016) as of March 2020. This threshold was raised from the original ₹1 lakh by a Government of India notification during the COVID-19 pandemic and has since been retained at ₹1 crore. For Pre-Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP) under IBC — applicable to MSMEs with turnover below ₹250 crore — the same ₹1 crore threshold applies. It is important to note that the ₹1 crore figure refers to the default amount (amount overdue and unpaid), not the total outstanding loan. If your debt is close to the threshold, Accorg Consulting can assess whether your claim qualifies and advise on the best strategy — filing under IBC or pursuing recovery through DRT, SARFAESI, or civil courts. Contact us for a free case assessment.
How long does CIRP take under IBC 2016? +
The Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) under IBC 2016 has a statutory timeline of 180 days from the date of admission of the petition, extendable by NCLT for a further 90 days on application — making the total permissible period 270 days. Section 12 of IBC 2016 further provides that CIRP must mandatorily be completed within 330 days including litigation time (court orders, appeals). Beyond 330 days, NCLT must pass a liquidation order unless an appeal is pending before NCLAT or the Supreme Court. In practice, complex multi-creditor cases with multiple resolution applicants, valuation disputes, and NCLAT appeals regularly exceed 2 years. Factors that delay CIRP include: contested admission hearings, disputes over claim amounts in the CoC, challenges by promoters, and absence of resolution applicants for distressed assets. Pre-Packaged Insolvency (PPIRP) for eligible MSMEs offers a faster 120-day timeline. Accorg Consulting's NCLT lawyers work to expedite every CIRP stage — from IRP appointment to resolution plan approval — to protect creditor value.
Can a company settle an insolvency case after NCLT admission? +
Yes — under Section 12A of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) 2016, the corporate debtor and the applicant creditor can jointly apply to NCLT to withdraw the CIRP petition even after admission. However, this withdrawal requires approval of the Committee of Creditors (CoC) by a minimum of 90% voting share. Pre-admission settlement is significantly simpler — it requires mutual consent between the applicant and the corporate debtor and a formal application to NCLT for withdrawal of the petition under Rule 8 of the NCLT Rules. Settlement amounts typically include the principal debt, interest, legal costs, and any liquidated damages agreed upon. NCLT has in several landmark cases (Swiss Ribbons, Vidarbha Industries) clarified that IBC is not merely a debt recovery mechanism — it serves a wider public purpose of maximising asset value and keeping viable businesses as going concerns. If you are a corporate debtor seeking to settle or a creditor evaluating a settlement offer, Accorg Consulting advises on the legal implications, CoC voting strategy, and Section 12A compliance.
How do I file an NCLT petition from Indore? +
NCLT petitions for companies registered in Madhya Pradesh are filed before the NCLT bench having jurisdiction over the state. Our Indore-based team handles the complete petition — from cause identification, document collation, drafting and e-filing to hearing representation. Contact us for a free case assessment.
What is the minimum debt amount to file under IBC 2016? +
Under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) 2016, a financial creditor (bank, NBFC, bondholder) can file an application under Section 7 before NCLT if the corporate debtor has defaulted on a financial debt of ₹1 crore or more. An operational creditor (supplier, employee, service provider) can file under Section 9 when the operational debt owed is ₹1 crore or more and remains unpaid after a valid demand notice. This ₹1 crore threshold was introduced by the Government of India vide S.O. 1205(E) dated 24 March 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, replacing the earlier ₹1 lakh threshold. The corporate debtor itself can also file a voluntary insolvency application under Section 10 if it commits a default. It is important to note that the ₹1 crore refers to the default amount (amount due and unpaid), not the sanctioned loan limit. For matters below the ₹1 crore NCLT threshold, creditors may pursue recovery through the Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) for debts above ₹20 lakh, or through civil courts. Accorg Consulting advises creditors on the most effective recovery forum based on the nature and size of the debt.
Can I file an NCLT petition without a lawyer from Indore? +
Section 432 of the Companies Act 2013 allows parties to appear before NCLT in person or through an authorised representative. However, NCLT proceedings involve complex legal arguments, strict document requirements, and tight deadlines. Professional representation by an experienced NCLT lawyer significantly improves admission rates and outcomes — especially in contested IBC matters.
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113, B zone business park, Nipania Main Rd, Near Eicher Motors, Dewas Naka, Pipliya Kumar, Indore, Madhya Pradesh 453771
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