In a significant intervention concerning the functioning of tribunal administration under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy regime, the Allahabad High Court has questioned the legality and necessity of a directive issued by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) Principal Bench, New Delhi, mandating “joint scrutiny” of filings made before the NCLT Allahabad Bench. The Court’s observations terming the directive as having “prima facie no justification” highlight deeper concerns around administrative overreach, decentralisation of tribunals, and procedural efficiency within the insolvency framework.
The controversy stems from an order dated 27 February 2026 issued by the Registrar of the NCLT Principal Bench directing that petitions filed before the Allahabad Bench be scrutinised jointly by both the Principal Bench in New Delhi and the Allahabad Bench. This effectively created a dual-layer scrutiny mechanism, altering the standard practice where local benches undertake scrutiny of filings independently.
The Company Law Tribunal Bar Association challenged this directive before the High Court, contending that the arrangement led to delays, repeated defect objections, and procedural inefficiencies. It was argued that filings made at Allahabad were being subjected to scrutiny in Delhi without statutory backing, thereby undermining the autonomy of the local bench and creating unnecessary administrative hurdles.
Hearing the matter, a Division Bench of Justice Ajit Kumar and Justice Swarupama Chaturvedi examined records placed before it, including data provided by the Union Government. The Court noted that, according to official charts dated 23 February and 2 March 2026, there was no pendency of cases under scrutiny at the Allahabad Bench at the relevant time. In light of this factual position, the Court observed that the joint scrutiny directive lacked any apparent administrative necessity.
The Court further recorded that adequate staffing was available at the Allahabad Bench, including a Deputy Registrar and Assistant Registrar, who were already handling scrutiny work. This finding directly undermined the justification advanced by the authorities—that joint scrutiny was required due to capacity constraints or to streamline processes.
Analytically, the case raises a crucial question about the limits of administrative control exercised by centralised tribunal authorities. While the NCLT Principal Bench may issue procedural directions, such directions must be grounded in demonstrable necessity and must not disrupt the statutory scheme of decentralised adjudication. The High Court’s prima facie view suggests that administrative convenience cannot override institutional structure without clear legal backing.
The dispute also highlights the tension between centralisation and functional autonomy within India’s tribunal system. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code envisages geographically distributed benches to ensure accessibility and efficiency. A system where filings in one bench are effectively controlled or scrutinised by another risks diluting this decentralised design, potentially leading to forum imbalances and procedural bottlenecks.
From a procedural standpoint, the joint scrutiny mechanism appears to have introduced duplication rather than efficiency. The Bar Association’s grievance that defects were repeatedly raised by the Principal Bench registry without resolution points to the dangers of multi-layered administrative intervention without clear accountability. Such practices can delay insolvency proceedings, where timelines are statutorily critical.
The High Court’s approach also reflects a broader judicial trend of scrutinising tribunal administration to ensure adherence to rule of law principles. While tribunals operate with a degree of administrative flexibility, their procedures must remain consistent with statutory mandates, fairness, and efficiency. Any deviation—especially one affecting litigants’ access to justice invites constitutional scrutiny under Article 226.
Importantly, the Union of India, through the Additional Solicitor General, submitted that the joint scrutiny arrangement was intended as a temporary measure to streamline processes and would be withdrawn once systems stabilised. However, the Court’s observations indicate that even temporary administrative measures must withstand scrutiny on grounds of necessity and proportionality.
The case also underscores the importance of data-driven administrative decision-making. The Court’s reliance on official charts showing zero pendency demonstrates that policy interventions must be based on empirical need rather than presumptive inefficiencies. In the absence of such data, administrative directives risk being characterised as arbitrary.
In conclusion, the Allahabad High Court’s prima facie finding against the NCLT’s joint scrutiny directive marks a significant assertion of judicial oversight over tribunal administration. The ruling signals that efficiency cannot be pursued at the cost of procedural integrity and institutional balance. As the matter progresses, it may have wider implications for how centralised authorities within tribunal systems exercise their administrative powers particularly in a regime like insolvency law, where procedural timelines and decentralised functioning are foundational to effectiveness.

