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Banking & Recovery Litigation — DRT / SARFAESI

Debt Recovery — DRT (RDB Act, 1993) & SARFAESI, 2002

Informational guide to the recovery of bank and financial-institution debts in India through the two principal statutory routes — an application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993, and the secured creditor's self-help enforcement of security interest under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI), read with the Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002. It explains NPA classification, the Section 13(2) demand notice and Section 13(4) measures, the borrower's remedy under Section 17 before the DRT, the bar on civil-court jurisdiction, the right of redemption, and the appeal to the DRAT — drawing on Mardia Chemicals v. Union of India (2004) and Celir LLP v. Bafna Motors (2023). The firm's practice covers DRT/DRAT and SARFAESI matters before the Debts Recovery Tribunals, the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal and the Delhi High Court, and allied recovery work before the Delhi District Courts at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket and Dwarka.

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Last Updated: 17 June 2026 Content Verified: checked against India Code & reported judgments

How a Bank Recovery Proceeds

A secured creditor — a bank, financial institution or asset reconstruction company — has two complementary routes once a loan turns bad: it may enforce its security interest itself under SARFAESI, and it may sue for the debt before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under the RDB Act. The two may run together. The flow below traces the common SARFAESI path from default to recovery.

1
Default & NPA Classification
2
Demand Notice — S.13(2), 60 Days
3
Borrower's Reply — S.13(3A)
4
Measures — S.13(4) Possession / Sale
5
Borrower's Remedy — S.17 DRT (45 Days)
6
Sale, Confirmation & Recovery

DRT Recovery and SARFAESI Enforcement

When a borrower defaults and the account is classified as a non-performing asset (NPA), a bank or financial institution has two statutory mechanisms to recover its dues, both designed to bypass the slow ordinary civil suit. The first is an application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under Section 19 of the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993 (originally the Recovery of Debts Due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, renamed in 2016). The Tribunal adjudicates the claim and issues a recovery certificate executed by a Recovery Officer. Section 18 of that Act bars the jurisdiction of the civil courts in such matters, saving only the writ jurisdiction of the High Court and Supreme Court.

The second, and far quicker, route is self-help enforcement of security interest under SARFAESI, 2002. Section 13(1) allows a secured creditor to enforce its security without the intervention of any court or tribunal. After classifying the account as an NPA, the creditor issues a Section 13(2) demand notice giving the borrower sixty days to clear the dues; on failure, it may take recourse to the Section 13(4) measures — taking possession of the secured assets (with the right to lease, assign or sell them), taking over management, appointing a manager, or calling upon the borrower's debtors to pay. Where physical possession is resisted, the creditor seeks the assistance of the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or District Magistrate under Section 14.

The borrower is not without remedy. Any person aggrieved by a measure taken under Section 13(4) may apply to the Debts Recovery Tribunal under Section 17 within forty-five days, and an appeal lies to the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal under Section 18 (now on a deposit of fifty per cent of the debt). The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that, given this efficacious statutory remedy, a writ petition under Article 226 should ordinarily not be entertained. The sale of the secured assets is governed by the Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002, which prescribe possession notices, valuation, a reserve price and mandatory sale notices.

Key Takeaways
  • A bank or financial institution has two statutory routes to recover a defaulted debt — an adjudicatory application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under Section 19 of the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993, and the faster self-help enforcement of security interest under the SARFAESI Act, 2002, which needs no court order to begin.
  • SARFAESI can be invoked only after the account is classified as a non-performing asset (NPA) per RBI norms, the secured debt is one lakh rupees or more, and the security is not of an exempted kind (agricultural land, pledge of movables) under Section 31.
  • The enforcement sequence is fixed: a Section 13(2) demand notice giving sixty days, consideration of the borrower’s Section 13(3A) representation (reasons for rejection within fifteen days — a mandatory safeguard recognised in Mardia Chemicals), and then the Section 13(4) measures (possession, sale, management takeover), with the Magistrate’s assistance for physical possession under Section 14.
  • The borrower’s remedy is an application to the DRT under Section 17 within forty-five days of a Section 13(4) measure; an appeal lies to the DRAT under Section 18 on a deposit of fifty per cent of the debt (reducible by the Tribunal to not less than twenty-five per cent). Because this remedy is efficacious, the Supreme Court has repeatedly declined to entertain writ petitions against SARFAESI action (Satyawati Tondon; Phoenix ARC).
  • The borrower’s right of redemption now ends when the auction sale notice is published, not at the later registration of the sale — Celir LLP v. Bafna Motors (2023), reading Section 13(8) after the 2016 amendment.
  • The DRT is a recovery forum, not a title court: where a genuine dispute of ownership or the validity of a sale or mortgage deed arises, the civil court’s jurisdiction survives the Section 34 bar — Central Bank of India v. Prabha Jain (2025), which also held the DRT cannot restore possession to a person who was never the borrower or in possession.

When SARFAESI & DRT Can Be Invoked

SARFAESI enforcement and DRT recovery are available only when certain statutory conditions are satisfied. The cards below summarise them.

A Secured Debt
There must be a debt owed to a bank, financial institution or asset reconstruction company that is backed by a valid security interest — a mortgage, hypothecation, charge or assignment. SARFAESI does not apply to purely unsecured loans.
Account Classified as NPA
The borrower's account must first be classified as a non-performing asset in accordance with the directions or guidelines issued by the Reserve Bank of India. Only then can a Section 13(2) notice be issued.
Outstanding Above the Threshold
SARFAESI applies only where the secured debt is one lakh rupees or more, and not where the amount due is less than twenty per cent of the principal and interest. Smaller dues fall outside the Act (Section 31).
Not an Excluded Asset
Section 31 exempts certain security interests — notably a security interest in agricultural land, a pledge of movables, and certain leases and conditional sales — from the operation of SARFAESI.
A Notified Secured Creditor
The creditor must be a bank, a financial institution or an asset reconstruction company notified for the purposes of the Act. Co-operative banks have been brought within SARFAESI by later notification and judicial interpretation.
DRT Pecuniary Limit (RDB Act)
For a recovery application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under the RDB Act, the debt due must be twenty lakh rupees or more; below that limit the bank's remedy is an ordinary civil suit.

Measures Available to the Secured Creditor

On the borrower's failure to comply with the Section 13(2) notice within sixty days, Section 13(4) permits the secured creditor to take one or more measures to realise the secured debt — taking possession of the secured assets (including the right to transfer them by lease, assignment or sale), taking over the management of the borrower's business, appointing a manager, or requiring any person who owes money to the borrower to pay it to the creditor instead. Possession may be symbolic or, with the Magistrate's assistance under Section 14, physical.

Independently or in addition, the creditor may file an original application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal under Section 19 of the RDB Act for adjudication of the debt and issue of a recovery certificate, which the Recovery Officer executes by attachment and sale. Where the SARFAESI sale does not fully satisfy the dues, Section 13(10) allows the creditor to apply to the DRT for the balance. The two statutes, as the Supreme Court held in Transcore, are complementary and together constitute a single remedy, so the bank need not withdraw its DRT application before invoking SARFAESI.

DRT Recovery vs SARFAESI Enforcement

The two routes differ fundamentally in their nature, speed and the role of the Tribunal. The first table contrasts them; the second sets out the forum and appeal structure.

FeatureDRT Recovery (RDB Act, 1993)SARFAESI Enforcement (2002)
NatureAdjudicatory — Tribunal decides the claim and issues a recovery certificate.Non-adjudicatory self-help — creditor enforces security without court intervention (S.13(1)).
Initiated byApplication (OA) by the bank/FI under Section 19.Demand notice by the secured creditor under Section 13(2).
Security neededNot essential — covers secured and unsecured debts.Essential — only a secured debt backed by a security interest.
Borrower's forumDefends the OA before the DRT; appeal to DRAT.Applies to DRT under Section 17 within 45 days against S.13(4) measures.
Pecuniary limitDebt of twenty lakh rupees or more.Secured debt of one lakh rupees or more (S.31 exclusions apply).
SpeedSlower — full adjudication of the claim.Faster — possession and sale outside court.

Both statutes oust the ordinary civil court: Section 18 of the RDB Act and the scheme of SARFAESI confine challenges to the Tribunal, the Appellate Tribunal and, on limited grounds, the writ jurisdiction of the High Court.

StageForumTime-limit
Challenge to S.13(4) measuresDebts Recovery Tribunal (S.17)Within 45 days of the measure
Appeal from DRT orderDebts Recovery Appellate Tribunal (S.18)Within 30 days (deposit of 50% of debt)
Further challengeHigh Court — writ under Article 226/227 (limited)Reasonable period
Bank's recovery claimDebts Recovery Tribunal (S.19 RDB Act)Within limitation for the debt

Step-by-Step SARFAESI Procedure

1
Classify the Account as NPA
The secured creditor first classifies the borrower's account as a non-performing asset in accordance with the directions and guidelines issued by the Reserve Bank of India. This classification is the foundation for every subsequent step.
2
Issue the Section 13(2) Demand Notice
A written notice is served on the borrower requiring repayment of the full secured debt within sixty days, failing which the creditor will exercise its rights under Section 13(4). The notice sets out the amount and the secured assets.
3
Consider the Borrower's Representation
If the borrower makes a representation or raises an objection under Section 13(3A), the creditor must consider it and communicate reasons for non-acceptance within fifteen days. This is a mandatory safeguard recognised in Mardia Chemicals.
4
Take Possession — S.13(4) / S.14
On failure within sixty days, the creditor takes possession of the secured assets by a possession notice (symbolic), and, where resisted, applies to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or District Magistrate under Section 14 for assistance to take physical possession.
5
Valuation, Reserve Price & Sale Notice
Before sale of immovable property the authorised officer obtains a valuation from an approved valuer, fixes a reserve price, and serves a thirty-day sale notice on the borrower, publishing the public notice in two leading newspapers (one vernacular) under Rule 8.
6
Auction, Confirmation & Balance Recovery
The asset is sold by public auction, tender, quotation or private treaty under Rule 9; the highest bid above the reserve price is confirmed and the purchaser deposits twenty-five per cent immediately. For any shortfall the creditor applies to the DRT under Section 13(10) or pursues its Section 19 OA.
Important Note
The two statutes are complementary, not mutually exclusive — a secured creditor may proceed under SARFAESI and simultaneously pursue, or fall back on, a Section 19 application before the DRT for any shortfall (Transcore v. Union of India). Note also the limited but real ouster of civil-court jurisdiction: the DRT and DRAT are the designated forums, and the High Court’s writ jurisdiction under Article 226 is available only on narrow grounds; the Supreme Court has cautioned that writ petitions should not be used to bypass the statutory remedy under Section 17 (United Bank of India v. Satyawati Tondon). The applicable limitation for a DRT recovery application is governed by the Limitation Act read with Section 24 of the RDB Act, so the date of default and acknowledgement of debt must be checked carefully.

Key Documents in a Recovery Matter

A SARFAESI or DRT recovery turns on a clear paper trail. The principal documents are listed below.

Loan / facility agreement and sanction letter
Mortgage / hypothecation deed creating the security interest
NPA classification record / statement of account
Section 13(2) demand notice (60 days)
Borrower's Section 13(3A) representation and reply
Section 13(4) possession notice (Appendix IV)
Valuation report and sale / auction notice (Rule 8)
Sale certificate / recovery certificate
Practical Tip
For a borrower, the single most important step is to act within the forty-five day window under Section 17 and to make a proper Section 13(3A) representation against the demand notice — raising specific, documented objections to the NPA classification, the amount claimed, or the valuation, rather than vague denials. Do not pin hopes on a writ petition; courts routinely send borrowers back to the DRT. If challenging the auction, move before the sale notice is published, because the right of redemption is now extinguished at that point (Celir LLP). Keep the fifty per cent DRAT pre-deposit in mind when planning an appeal, and apply early for its reduction to twenty-five per cent if funds are tight. For a creditor, ensure strict compliance with the notice, valuation, reserve-price and newspaper-publication requirements of the Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002 — most successful borrower challenges turn on procedural lapses.

Time-limits, Thresholds & Deposits

⏱ Key Reference Points — DRT & SARFAESI
SARFAESI demand notice — S.13(2)60 days to repay
Reply to S.13(3A) representationWithin 15 days
Borrower's application — S.17 DRTWithin 45 days
Appeal to DRAT — S.18Within 30 days
DRAT deposit — S.1850% of debt due
Sale notice to borrower — Rule 8(6)30 days
Public notice before first sale30 days
Notice for subsequent saleNot less than 15 days
Auction purchaser deposit25% immediately
Balance of purchase priceWithin 15 days
SARFAESI minimum (S.31)Debt of ₹1,00,000 or more
DRT pecuniary limit (RDB Act)Debt of ₹20 lakh or more

These figures are indicative and subject to amendment; the controlling Act, Rules and current Reserve Bank directions must always be checked, and the limitation for the underlying debt computed from the facts of each case.

Relevant Statutes

The recovery of secured debts is governed principally by the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993, the SARFAESI Act, 2002 and the Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002. The key provisions are reproduced below from the official text, followed by the statute list.

📖 Relevant Section — S.19 (RDB Act, 1993) +
19. Application to the Tribunal.—(1) Where a bank or a financial institution has to recover any debt from any person, it may make an application to the Tribunal within the local limits of whose jurisdiction— (a) the branch or any other office of the bank or financial institution is maintaining an account in which debt claimed is outstanding, for the time being; or (aa) the defendant, or each of the defendants where there are more than one, at the time of making the application, actually and voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or personally works for gain; or (b) any of the defendants, where there are more than one, at the time of making the application, actually and voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or personally works for gain.

The application is the bank's principal recovery proceeding before the Debts Recovery Tribunal; on adjudication the Tribunal issues a recovery certificate which the Recovery Officer executes by attachment and sale. Section 18 bars the jurisdiction of the civil courts in such matters, saving only the writ jurisdiction of the High Court and the Supreme Court. — Section 19, Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993 (Act 51 of 1993). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/1775.
📖 Relevant Section — S.13 (SARFAESI Act, 2002) +
13. Enforcement of security interest.—(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 69 or section 69A of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, any security interest created in favour of any secured creditor may be enforced, without the intervention of the court or tribunal, by such creditor in accordance with the provisions of this Act.

(2) Where any borrower, who is under a liability to a secured creditor under a security agreement, makes any default in repayment of secured debt or any instalment thereof, and his account in respect of such debt is classified by the secured creditor as non-performing asset, then, the secured creditor may require the borrower by notice in writing to discharge in full his liabilities to the secured creditor within sixty days from the date of notice failing which the secured creditor shall be entitled to exercise all or any of the rights under sub-section (4).

(4) In case the borrower fails to discharge his liability in full within the period specified in sub-section (2), the secured creditor may take recourse to one or more of the following measures to recover his secured debt — (a) take possession of the secured assets, including the right to transfer by way of lease, assignment or sale; (b) take over the management of the business of the borrower; (c) appoint any person as manager; (d) require any person who has acquired the secured assets or who owes money to the borrower to pay the secured creditor. — Section 13, Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (Act 54 of 2002). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/2006.
📖 Relevant Section — S.17 (SARFAESI Act, 2002) +
17. Application against measures to recover secured debts.—(1) Any person (including borrower), aggrieved by any of the measures referred to in sub-section (4) of section 13 taken by the secured creditor or his authorised officer under this Chapter, may make an application along with such fee to the Debts Recovery Tribunal having jurisdiction in the matter within forty-five days from the date on which such measure had been taken.

This is the borrower's principal statutory remedy. The Supreme Court in Mardia Chemicals struck down the original requirement to deposit seventy-five per cent of the claim as a condition for entertaining the application; the present scheme requires the deposit only at the stage of the appeal to the Appellate Tribunal under Section 18. Because Section 17 is an efficacious remedy, the courts have repeatedly declined to entertain writ petitions against Section 13(4) measures. — Section 17, Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (Act 54 of 2002). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/2006.
📖 Relevant Rule — Rule 8 (Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002) +
8. Sale of immovable secured assets.—(1) Where the secured asset is an immovable property, the authorised officer shall take or cause to be taken possession, by delivering a possession notice prepared as nearly as possible in Appendix IV to these rules, to the borrower and by affixing the possession notice on the outer door or at such conspicuous place of the property.

(2) The possession notice shall also be published, as soon as possible but in any case not later than seven days from the date of taking possession, in two leading newspapers, one in the vernacular language having sufficient circulation in that locality.

(5) Before effecting sale, the authorised officer shall obtain a valuation of the property from an approved valuer and, in consultation with the secured creditor, fix the reserve price, and may sell the asset by inviting quotations or tenders, by public auction or by private treaty. (6) The authorised officer shall serve to the borrower a notice of thirty days for the sale of the immovable secured assets. — Rule 8, Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002 (made under the SARFAESI Act, 2002). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/2006.
Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993 — Sections 17, 18 & 19
Establishes the Debts Recovery Tribunals and the Appellate Tribunal, confers on them jurisdiction over applications by banks and financial institutions for recovery of debts (Section 17), bars the jurisdiction of the civil courts save the writ jurisdiction of the High Court and Supreme Court (Section 18), and prescribes the bank's recovery application (Section 19). Originally the Recovery of Debts Due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, renamed in 2016.
View on India Code →
SARFAESI Act, 2002 — Sections 13, 14, 17 & 18
Enables a secured creditor to enforce its security interest without the intervention of any court or tribunal (Section 13), to seek the assistance of the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or District Magistrate to take possession (Section 14), and gives the aggrieved borrower a remedy before the Debts Recovery Tribunal (Section 17) with an appeal to the Appellate Tribunal (Section 18). Sections 35 and 37 give the Act overriding effect while making it additional to the RDB Act.
View on India Code →
Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002 — Rules 8 & 9
Prescribe the procedure for enforcing a security interest — the manner of taking possession of immovable and movable secured assets, the possession notice, valuation and reserve price, the mandatory thirty-day sale notice to the borrower, publication in two newspapers, and the conduct, confirmation and twenty-five per cent deposit on sale by public auction or other modes.
View on India Code →

Landmark & Recent Judgments

The following decisions of the Supreme Court of India have shaped the law on DRT recovery and SARFAESI enforcement. Each may be read in full on Indian Kanoon.

1 Recent — DRT vs Civil Court Jurisdiction Under SARFAESI (2025) Central Bank of India & Anr. v. Smt. Prabha Jain & Ors. Supreme Court of India | 2025 INSC 95 | Decided: 09.01.2025
Section 34 of the SARFAESI Act ousts civil court jurisdiction only in respect of matters which the DRT is empowered to determine under the Act — it does not oust civil court jurisdiction for all matters touching a mortgaged property. DRT jurisdiction under Section 17 is confined to challenging measures taken under Section 13(4); the DRT has no power to grant declarations regarding the validity of sale deeds or mortgage deeds executed prior to or outside the SARFAESI proceedings — such relief lies exclusively before the civil court under Section 9 CPC. A plaint containing multiple reliefs cannot be rejected in entirety under Order VII Rule 11 CPC merely because one relief is barred, where other reliefs remain maintainable.
View on Indian Kanoon →
2 Recent (2023) — Redemption Ends at Sale Notice Celir LLP v. Bafna Motors (Mumbai) Pvt. Ltd. Supreme Court of India | 2023 INSC 838 | Decided: 21.09.2023
After the 2016 amendment to Section 13(8), the borrower's right of redemption stands extinguished upon publication of the sale or auction notice, and no longer survives until registration of the conveyance. The Court protected the finality of the auction in favour of the purchaser and held that the High Court could not permit redemption after the sale notice had been issued.
View on Indian Kanoon →
3 Recent (2022) — No Writ Against SARFAESI Measures Phoenix ARC Pvt. Ltd. v. Vishwa Bharati Vidya Mandir Supreme Court of India | (2022) 5 SCC 345 | Decided: 12.01.2022 | M.R. Shah & B.V. Nagarathna, JJ.
A writ petition under Article 226 against measures taken under SARFAESI, including a Section 13(4) action, is not maintainable when the efficacious remedy under Section 17 exists — and this is so even where the secured creditor is an asset reconstruction company, a private entity. Entertaining such a writ is an abuse of the process of the court.
View on Indian Kanoon →
4 Recent (2019) — CJM Competent Under S.14 Authorised Officer, Indian Bank v. D. Visalakshi Supreme Court of India | 2019 SCC OnLine SC 1242 | Decided: 23.09.2019
The Court held that the Chief Judicial Magistrate in a non-metropolitan area is competent, at par with the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, to assist a secured creditor in taking possession of a secured asset under Section 14. Their powers being equivalent, a secured creditor may approach the CJM where there is no CMM, resolving the conflict among the High Courts.
View on Indian Kanoon →
5 Landmark (2018) — Symbolic Possession & S.13(3A) ITC Ltd. v. Blue Coast Hotels Ltd. Supreme Court of India | (2018) 15 SCC 99 | Decided: 19.03.2018
The Court held that symbolic possession is sufficient to preserve the secured creditor's status under Section 14, so a creditor that has taken only symbolic possession before sale remains a secured creditor entitled to seek physical possession. Section 13(3A) is mandatory, but its breach will not avail a borrower whose conduct has been merely to seek time rather than repay.
View on Indian Kanoon →
6 Recent (2018) — S.17 Maintainable on Possession Hindon Forge (P) Ltd. v. State of U.P. Supreme Court of India | Civil Appeal No. 10873 of 2018 | Decided: 01.11.2018 | R.F. Nariman, J.
A borrower's application under Section 17(1) is maintainable once a possession notice is issued and actual possession is taken, and need not await dispossession through a Magistrate. Setting aside the Allahabad High Court Full Bench, the Court held that the right to approach the DRT matures when the borrower loses actual or physical possession of the secured asset.
View on Indian Kanoon →
7 Recent (2016) — Protected Tenant Not Dispossessed Vishal N. Kalsaria v. Bank of India Supreme Court of India | (2016) 3 SCC 762 : AIR 2016 SC 530 | Decided: 20.01.2016
A protected tenant under the Rent Control Act cannot be dispossessed in a SARFAESI action initiated by the bank against the landlord-borrower. The provisions of SARFAESI do not override the protection of a genuine tenant, and the bank takes the secured asset subject to such tenancy; a tenant cannot be evicted merely because no written lease is on record.
View on Indian Kanoon →
8 Landmark (2011) — S.14 Possession, Remedy is S.17 Kanaiyalal Lalchand Sachdev v. State of Maharashtra Supreme Court of India | (2011) 2 SCC 782 | Decided: 07.02.2011 | D.K. Jain, J.
Against an order of the Magistrate under Section 14 assisting the creditor to take possession, the aggrieved party's remedy is an application to the DRT under Section 17, not a writ petition. Reaffirming Satyawati Tondon, the Court held that the existence of the statutory forum displaces the discretionary writ jurisdiction in ordinary recovery disputes.
View on Indian Kanoon →
9 Landmark (2010) — Exhaust the Statutory Remedy United Bank of India v. Satyawati Tondon Supreme Court of India | (2010) 8 SCC 110 | Decided: 26.07.2010
Where SARFAESI provides an efficacious statutory remedy by way of an application under Section 17 and an appeal under Section 18, the High Court should ordinarily not entertain a writ petition under Article 226. The Court deprecated the routine grant of interim orders in recovery matters and stressed that public dues must be realised expeditiously.
View on Indian Kanoon →
10 Landmark (2008) — Two Acts Are Complementary Transcore v. Union of India Supreme Court of India | (2008) 1 SCC 125 | Decided: 29.11.2006 | Arijit Pasayat & S.H. Kapadia, JJ.
The Court held that withdrawal of the original application pending before the DRT is not a pre-condition to invoking SARFAESI. The RDB Act and the SARFAESI Act are complementary and together constitute a single remedy, so the doctrine of election does not apply; a bank may pursue both simultaneously. The Section 13(2) notice is a measure that crystallises only with the Section 13(4) action.
View on Indian Kanoon →

Recent Developments

2016 — Renaming & IBC Interface
RDDBFI Act Renamed the Recovery of Debts and Bankruptcy Act, 1993
The 1993 Act was renamed and recast to sit alongside the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. A creditor may now choose between DRT recovery, SARFAESI enforcement and, for corporate debtors, insolvency proceedings, depending on the nature and size of the default.
Ongoing — Digital Enforcement
The Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules now permit service of notices through electronic mode in addition to the traditional modes, and e-auctions have become the norm, with the Reserve Bank and the Government continuing to streamline timelines and the integration of recovery with digital auction platforms.
E-auctions, E-service of Notices & Streamlined Timelines

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SARFAESI Act?

The SARFAESI Act, 2002 allows banks, financial institutions and asset reconstruction companies to enforce a security interest and recover non-performing assets without going to court. After classifying the account as an NPA and issuing a sixty-day demand notice under Section 13(2), the secured creditor can take possession of and sell the secured assets under Section 13(4).

What is the difference between the DRT route and SARFAESI?

Under the RDB Act the bank files an application before the Debts Recovery Tribunal, which adjudicates the claim and issues a recovery certificate. SARFAESI is self-help — the secured creditor enforces the security itself without a court or tribunal. The two are complementary, and a bank may pursue both simultaneously.

How much notice must the bank give before taking possession?

The Section 13(2) demand notice must give the borrower sixty days to repay the secured debt in full. Only if the borrower fails within those sixty days can the creditor take recourse to the Section 13(4) measures, including taking possession of the secured assets.

What can a borrower do against a SARFAESI action?

A borrower aggrieved by a Section 13(4) measure may apply to the Debts Recovery Tribunal under Section 17 within forty-five days. An appeal lies to the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal under Section 18, on a deposit of fifty per cent of the debt. The borrower can also make a representation under Section 13(3A) after the demand notice.

Can I file a writ petition in the High Court against the bank?

Ordinarily no. The Supreme Court has held in Satyawati Tondon, Kanaiyalal Sachdev and Phoenix ARC that, because Section 17 provides an efficacious statutory remedy, the High Court should not entertain a writ under Article 226 against SARFAESI measures, save in exceptional cases such as a complete lack of jurisdiction.

Does SARFAESI apply to agricultural land?

No. Section 31 of the SARFAESI Act expressly exempts a security interest in agricultural land from the operation of the Act, along with certain pledges, leases and conditional sales. However, land merely recorded as agricultural but actually used for commercial purposes may not enjoy this exemption.

Until when can a borrower redeem the mortgaged property?

Following the 2016 amendment to Section 13(8) and the decision in Celir LLP (2023), the borrower's right of redemption is extinguished once the sale or auction notice is published. Earlier, redemption survived until the registration of the sale; that is no longer the position.

What is the minimum amount for which SARFAESI can be used?

SARFAESI applies only where the secured debt is one lakh rupees or more, and not where the amount due is less than twenty per cent of the principal and interest. For a recovery application before the DRT under the RDB Act, the debt must be twenty lakh rupees or more.

What is the role of the Magistrate under Section 14?

Where the borrower resists, the secured creditor may request the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or District Magistrate under Section 14 to assist in taking physical possession of the secured asset. The Magistrate, on an affidavit furnishing the required particulars, passes an order and may appoint an officer or commissioner to take and hand over possession.

How is the secured property sold and at what price?

Under Rule 8 the authorised officer obtains a valuation from an approved valuer, fixes a reserve price, and serves a thirty-day sale notice with publication in two newspapers. The asset is sold by public auction, tender, quotation or private treaty; the highest bid above the reserve price is confirmed and the purchaser pays twenty-five per cent immediately and the balance within fifteen days.

Where are DRT and SARFAESI matters handled in Delhi?

SARFAESI applications under Section 17 and bank recovery applications under the RDB Act are filed before the Debts Recovery Tribunals at Delhi, with appeals to the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal. Writ challenges, where maintainable, lie before the Delhi High Court. The firm also handles allied recovery work before the Delhi District Courts.

Knowledge Check

A short quiz on DRT recovery and SARFAESI enforcement. Choose the best answer; the explanation appears after each question.

⚖️ Debt Recovery (DRT / SARFAESI)

Key Terms

NPA (Non-Performing Asset)
A loan account that has stopped generating income for the lender because the borrower has defaulted, classified as such per Reserve Bank guidelines. NPA classification is the trigger for SARFAESI action.
Secured Creditor
A bank, financial institution or asset reconstruction company in whose favour a security interest has been created and which is entitled to enforce it under SARFAESI.
Security Interest
A right, title or interest of any kind created over property to secure repayment of a debt — typically a mortgage, hypothecation, charge or assignment.
DRT
The Debts Recovery Tribunal, which adjudicates banks' recovery applications under the RDB Act and hears borrowers' applications under Section 17 of SARFAESI.
DRAT
The Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal, which hears appeals from orders of the DRT, including under Section 18 of SARFAESI on a deposit of fifty per cent of the debt.
Recovery Certificate
The certificate issued by the DRT on adjudicating a bank's claim, executed by the Recovery Officer through attachment and sale of the borrower's property.
Symbolic Possession
Possession taken on paper by a possession notice without physically dispossessing the borrower, as distinct from actual or physical possession taken with the Magistrate's assistance under Section 14.
Reserve Price
The minimum price, fixed by the authorised officer after valuation, below which the secured asset may not be sold at auction under the 2002 Rules.
Right of Redemption
The borrower's right to clear the dues and reclaim the mortgaged property; after the 2016 amendment it stands extinguished on publication of the sale notice.
ARC
An Asset Reconstruction Company, registered with and regulated by the Reserve Bank, which acquires and resolves non-performing assets and may itself enforce security interests under SARFAESI.
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This is an informational guide and is reviewed periodically against the official sources cited above. If any provision appears outdated or an inadvertent error is noticed, it may be pointed out using the contact details on this page so that the content can be reviewed and corrected. Readers should verify the current statutory text and case law from authentic sources before relying on it.

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