Supreme Court Grants Relief to Covid Widow, Allows Loan Settlement on Relaxed Terms

The Supreme Court has used its extraordinary powers under Article 142 of the Constitution to grant equitable relief to a widow whose husband died during the Covid-19 pandemic. The court permitted her to settle a bank loan for a reduced amount, directing Central Bank of India to release her property's title deeds upon payment. The bench acknowledged the bank's legal position was correct but ruled that enforcing it would cause the petitioner extreme hardship. The court clarified this order is specific to the case's peculiar facts and should not be treated as a precedent against the bank.

Key Points: SC Allows Covid Widow to Settle Bank Loan on Relaxed Terms

  • SC invokes Article 142 for complete justice
  • Relief for widow who lost husband in Covid second wave
  • Allows settlement of Rs 33 lakh over paid upfront amount
  • Directs bank to release property title deeds upon payment
3 min read

SC allows woman who lost husband during Covid to settle bank loan on relaxed terms

Supreme Court invokes Article 142 to grant relief to a widow who lost her husband during Covid, permitting a reduced loan settlement with Central Bank of India.

"Though the demand raised by the Bank is legally sustainable, we find that compliance thereof would lead to extreme hardship for the appellant. - Supreme Court Bench"

New Delhi, Jan 27

In an extraordinary exercise of its powers under Article 142 of the Constitution, aimed at doing "complete justice", the Supreme Court has granted relief to a widow who lost her husband during the second wave of Covid-19 by permitting her to settle a bank loan on relaxed terms and directed the Central Bank of India to release the title deeds of her residential property upon payment of a reduced amount.

A bench of Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi allowed the special leave petitions (SLPs) filed by Sumaiya Parveen, who had challenged the Madras High Court's refusal to revive an expired one-time settlement (OTS) offer in respect of a loan availed by her deceased husband.

Noting the "unusual and unfortunate circumstances" of the case, the CJI-led Bench said it was passing the order "purely on equitable considerations and by invoking our powers under Article 142 of the Constitution".

In its decision, the apex court noted that the petitioner's husband, proprietor of FILSA Leathers, had availed credit facilities of Rs 50 lakh from the Central Bank of India after mortgaging their residential house in Vellore district as security. He passed away in May 2021, during the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, and till then, the loan account was regular.

"The death of the appellant's husband brought further miseries as the subject account was classified as NPA and proceedings under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 were initiated," the bench noted.

The bank had offered an OTS of Rs 34.69 lakh against outstanding dues of about Rs 71 lakh as on January 2024. The deceased's wife deposited the upfront 10 per cent amount of Rs 3.46 lakh but could not pay the balance within the stipulated time.

Subsequently, the bank demanded a higher amount and issued a possession notice under the SARFAESI Act, prompting her to approach the Madras High Court, which dismissed her plea.

While observing that the bank's demand was "legally sustainable", the Supreme Court observed that strict compliance would cause "extreme hardship" to the petitioner.

"Though the demand raised by the Bank is legally sustainable, we find that compliance thereof would lead to extreme hardship for the appellant," the CJI-led Bench said.

Balancing equities, the top court directed that the ends of justice would be met if the petitioner deposits Rs 33 lakh over and above the upfront amount already paid.

"The appellant is granted eight weeks' time to deposit the amount of Rs.33,00,000 upon which further interest shall remain frozen. In case the appellant deposits the amount of Rs.33,00,000 within eight weeks from today, the Bank is directed to issue a no-dues certificate and release the original title deeds in favour of the appellant," the order said.

However, the apex court made it clear that if the amount is not deposited within the stipulated period, "the law will take its own course".

Observing that the relief was confined to the peculiar facts of the case, it added that the order "shall not be construed as a precedent to be relied upon against the respondent-Bank".

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I feel for the widow, I have a respectful criticism. The court says this won't set a precedent, but won't it encourage others in similar situations to approach courts hoping for similar relief? Banks have NPAs to manage and rules for a reason. A more systemic solution for Covid-affected families was needed, not case-by-case exceptions.
S
Sarah B
The fact that the account was regular until the husband's death is key. This wasn't a case of willful default. The bank classifying it as NPA so quickly after his death during a national crisis shows a lack of empathy. Good that the SC stepped in.
A
Aman W
Rs 33 lakh plus the 3.46 lakh already paid is still a massive amount for a widow to arrange in 8 weeks. I hope she has family support or can sell some assets. The court could have considered a longer payment schedule. But at least her home is saved from SARFAESI. Jai Hind.
K
Kavya N
This is why we need stronger social safety nets. A woman loses her husband, and instead of getting support, she's fighting the bank to keep her roof over her head. The government should have had a dedicated fund or policy for such Covid-orphaned financial liabilities. Better late than never, thanks to the SC.
D
David E
Interesting use of Article 142. It's a powerful tool for equity when the law is too rigid. The court acknowledged the bank's legal position was correct but chose humanity over strict legality. This is the spirit of justice.

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