[INDONESIA-NEWS] JKTP - IBRA Loses Another Legal Fight against Defaulters

From: indonesia-p@indopubs.com
Date: Thu Jun 15 2000 - 18:40:04 EDT


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   IBRA loses another legal fight against defaulters
   
   Business News - June 16, 2000
   
   JAKARTA (JP): The Supreme Court has rejected a bankruptcy appeal filed
   by the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency (IBRA) against palm oil
   producer PT Sumi Asih, marking another failure in the agency's legal
   battles against debt defaulters.
   
   Sustaining the Jakarta Commercial Court's late April ruling, the
   Supreme Court ruled that IBRA should file the law suit at the district
   court instead of at the bankruptcy court.
   
   "Because the case requires a complicated proving process of evidence,
   it should be filed at the district court, instead of the bankruptcy
   court," the Supreme Court's ruling said.
   
   IBRA has, so far, filed bankruptcy suits with the commercial court
   against five uncooperative debtors but none of the cases have been won
   by IBRA .
   
   They are PT Tirtamas Comexindo, PT Westkalindo Pulp Papermill, PT A
   Latief Corporation (out-of-court settlement), PT Ometraco Corporation
   and PT Sumi Asih.
   
   The Supreme Court ruling, dated June 8, was signed by a panel of
   judges chaired by Supreme Justice Paulus E. Lotulung.
   
   The ruling stressed that there were differing views between IBRA and
   Sumi Asih on the amount of matured debts Sumi Asih owed to IBRA,
   adding, "It is beyond the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court to make
   a ruling on this issue."
   
   The Supreme Court ruling stated the resolution on the dispute about
   the different views in the amount of debts would take a complicated
   and timely process of evidence proving, which is not within the
   jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court, which has a limited time frame
   in deciding a case.
   
   The 1998 Bankruptcy Law stipulates that the bankruptcy court must
   decide a case within a period of not more than 30 days.
   
   The law also stresses that the bankruptcy court, unlike a district
   court, adopts the principle of simply proving the evidence.
   
   IBRA filed a bankruptcy suit against Sumi Asih at the Jakarta
   Commercial Court in late March for not paying matured debts worth Rp
   25 billion and US$6.2 million.
   
   Sumi Asih, however, disputed the accuracy of the amount of unpaid
   debts, saying it should be much lower than the above claimed.
   
   The Jakarta Commercial Court accepted Sumi Asih's dispute and rejected
   IBRA's bankruptcy suit in late April. IBRA then filed an appeal with
   the Supreme Court.
   
   IBRA's legal division head, Agustus Sani Nugroho, said earlier that
   IBRA, like many other parties, had expressed great concerns against
   "funny" verdicts made by the country's courts on bankruptcy cases.
   
   "The point is not that the creditor always has to win the case, but
   legal certainty is at stake here," he said.
   
   Bankruptcy lawyer Andrey Sitanggang said creditors often lost a case
   due to an "X" factor, not a legal factor.
   
   "Creditors are often frustrated by illogical ruling," Andrey said.
   
   In another case at the Jakarta Commercial Court, majority creditors of
   publicly listed PT Anwar Sierad voted to approve the debt
   restructuring proposed by the company, but with a few conditions
   attached.
   
   The debt restructuring agreement involved a debt to equity swap and a
   15- year tenor bond issuance.
   
   Set as prerequisites to the debt restructuring agreement by the
   creditors are the completion of a planned merger between Anwar Sierad
   with its sister company, PT Sierad Produced.
   
   The creditors also said the debt restructuring agreement would be
   automatically canceled if Anwar Sierad's other sister companies,
   namely, Sierad Produce and Sierad Grain (currently filed for
   bankruptcy) were declared bankrupt.
   
   Still another case at the commercial court is state owned PT Dok &
   Perkapalan Kodja Bahari, which managed to survive a bankruptcy threat
   for the fourth time on Wednesday, when the Jakarta Commercial Court
   rejected a bankruptcy suit filed by its foreign creditor.(udi)

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