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Banking & Financial Disputes: UAE & India

Dispute resolution

Banking and financial disputes: UAE and India

A dispute between a financial institution and its customer runs one of two ways — the institution pursuing the customer (recovering a debt, enforcing security, acting on a cheque or guarantee, driving an insolvency), or the customer pursuing the institution (over a product that was unsuitable, undisclosed or misrepresented at the point of sale, not merely one that lost money). Both run across the UAE, India and the corridor between them.

Which way does the dispute run?

Almost every banking dispute is the same relationship seen from one side or the other.

The institution pursuing the customer — banking and finance disputes. A lender recovering an unpaid facility, enforcing a mortgage or pledge, acting on a bounced cheque, calling a guarantee or driving an insolvency. How that is done differs sharply between the two countries — set out below — and is the subject of the two banking-disputes guides above.

The customer pursuing the institution — financial mis-selling. A claim that a product was sold without regard to its suitability, without adequate disclosure of its risks, costs or commissions, or on a misrepresentation — judged on the conduct at the point of sale, not with hindsight. This is the subject of the two mis-selling guides above.

Where they meet — the defensive counterclaim. The directions are not watertight. A borrower facing recovery will often answer that the facility or product at the centre of it was itself mis-sold — an unsuitable hedge, a structured note taken as security, an investment-linked policy pledged against a loan. Run well, that is not a separate case but a defence and counterclaim within the recovery, and it is frequently where these matters are decided.

How the two systems differ — and why it changes your strategy

What matters most for a cross-border client is that the UAE and India behave differently on the questions that actually decide a case. The deep treatment sits in the four guides; the contrasts that most often change the strategy are these.

The questionUAEIndia
Can a lender enforce security without going to court?Generally no — no SARFAESI-style self-help; enforcement is court- or execution-supervised. Set-off, financial collateral, netting and some DIFC/ADGM or asset-specific structures can differYes — a secured lender can enforce under SARFAESI without a court order, subject to notice and a DRT challenge
How is a dishonoured cheque treated?Largely a civil matter since 2022 — the cheque is directly enforceable for its amount; bad-faith conduct can still draw penaltiesA criminal matter under section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, alongside civil recovery
Which insolvency or restructuring forum?The onshore Bankruptcy Court under the UAE restructuring-and-bankruptcy lawThe IBC before the NCLT for companies; the DRT for bank recovery
Who is the conduct regulator for mis-selling?CBUAE onshore; the DFSA (DIFC) and FSRA (ADGM) in the free zonesRBI (banking), IRDAI (insurance) and SEBI (securities and advisers)
What actually recovers a loss?The courts, DIFC/ADGM courts or arbitration; Sanadak for eligible consumer complaints — not the regulatorThe courts, consumer commissions or the relevant ombudsman — not the regulator
The pivotal mis-selling testWhether you were classed a retail or a professional clientThe regulator’s conduct rules for the product, and your status under them

One point the table compresses: in DIFC and ADGM matters the client-classification record can matter as much as the product documents — a client treated as professional is owed less protection than a retail one, but the classification itself can be challenged where the process was defective.

If my investment lost money, can I bring a mis-selling claim?

No — and this is where most claims are won or lost. Mis-selling is about the conduct at the point of sale: whether the product was suitable for you, whether its risks, costs and commissions were disclosed, and whether anything material was misrepresented. A product that was properly sold and simply lost money is not mis-sold; a product that was unsuitable or misdescribed can found a claim even if it is currently in profit. The case is built from the sale documents, the suitability and disclosure record and the advice actually given — not from the size of the loss.

The cross-border corridor

Indian and NRI clients are sometimes advised and banked through the Gulf, so a dispute can straddle both systems. When it does, strategy turns on three questions — governing law, forum and enforcement: which law governs the facility or the advice, which forum can hear the claim (the onshore or DIFC/ADGM courts, an Indian regulatory, consumer or civil forum, or arbitration), and how any judgment or award is enforced across the border. A UAE judgment from a listed superior court has been enforceable in India under the 2020 reciprocating-territory notification, and arbitral awards travel under the New York Convention; India-side assets, guarantors or borrowers may need parallel steps through the DRT, SARFAESI, insolvency or consumer routes. The guides are written to be read together — the UAE pages leading on private-banking, free-zone and offshore issues, the India pages on Indian-regulated products and India-side remedies.

Key terms

  • SARFAESI — the Indian Act that lets a secured lender enforce its security without a court order, subject to notice and a challenge before the DRT.
  • DRT (Debts Recovery Tribunal) — the Indian forum for bank recovery actions above the statutory threshold.
  • IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code) — India’s code for corporate insolvency, heard before the NCLT.
  • Sanadak — the UAE’s independent ombudsman for banking and insurance complaints, within defined limits.
  • Retail vs professional client — the classification, central to the UAE conduct regimes, that sets how much protection you are owed.
  • Suitability — the duty to match a product to the client’s knowledge, circumstances and objectives at the point of sale.
  • Bancassurance — the sale of insurance through a bank channel, a recurring mis-selling vector in India.
  • Free-look period — the window under Indian insurance rules to return a newly issued policy without penalty.

ATB Legal acts on both sides of this relationship — for lenders, and for borrowers and guarantors, in recovery, security, cheque, guarantee and insolvency disputes; and for customers, and where instructed institutions, in mis-selling and suitability claims — onshore, in the DIFC and ADGM, and along the India–UAE corridor.

Related

FAQ — Banking & financial disputes

Cross-border and guarantee questions, answered.

Can a UAE bank seize my property or salary without going to court?
Generally no. UAE enforcement is court- or execution-supervised — there is no SARFAESI-style self-help repossession of secured assets, so a lender must proceed through the courts, or through the execution court on a dishonoured cheque. (Set-off, financial collateral, netting and some free-zone or asset-specific structures can allow non-court routes.) India is different: a secured lender there can enforce under the SARFAESI Act without a court order, subject to notice and a challenge before the Debts Recovery Tribunal.
Is a bounced cheque a crime in the UAE?
Largely no, since the 2022 reform. A dishonoured cheque is now directly enforceable as a civil instrument for its face amount, without a criminal complaint. Bad-faith conduct — closing the account or stopping the cheque to defeat payment — can still attract penalties. In India, a dishonoured cheque remains a criminal matter under section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, alongside civil recovery.
I’ve been sued by my bank, but the product was mis-sold to me — can I rely on that?
Often, yes — as a defence and counterclaim within the recovery, rather than a separate action. If the facility, hedge or security at the centre of the bank’s claim was itself unsuitable or misrepresented, that can be raised against its case. It has to be run from the outset, built on the sale and suitability record, not introduced late.
I’m an NRI advised in Dubai on an offshore product — whose rules apply?
It depends on where the product was booked and advised, and on the contract’s governing-law and forum terms — which is exactly what has to be established first. One matter can engage UAE onshore, DIFC or ADGM forums, an offshore wrapper’s law and Indian remedies at once, with the loss assessed across both systems. These are handled UAE-led, with the India side run in parallel.
Does complaining to the regulator get my money back?
Rarely on its own. Regulators — the CBUAE, DFSA and FSRA in the UAE, and the RBI, IRDAI and SEBI in India — supervise and sanction firms; they do not generally pay your loss. Money is recovered through the courts or arbitration, the consumer commissions, or an ombudsman — and the right ombudsman depends on the product: in the UAE, Sanadak for banking and insurance; in India, the RBI Integrated Ombudsman for banking and NBFCs, the Insurance Ombudsman for insurance, and SEBI’s SCORES route for securities. A realistic plan usually sequences these rather than relying on any one.
Can a bank enforce my personal guarantee?
Usually yes, and often directly. A guarantor’s liability is typically co-extensive with the borrower’s in India and joint and several in the UAE, so the bank can pursue the guarantor without first exhausting the borrower or the security. Enforcement is court- or execution-supervised in the UAE; in India it runs through the Debt Recovery Tribunal, SARFAESI against any security the guarantor gave, or insolvency. The defences are largely accessory.
I’m a director who personally guaranteed my company’s loan, and it has defaulted — am I personally liable?
Generally yes. A personal guarantee puts your own assets behind the company’s debt, and the company’s financial distress does not shield you: in India a personal guarantor to a corporate debtor can be pursued under the IBC even while the company is in moratorium, and in the UAE the guarantor is pursued through the courts. Worth testing early is whether the guarantee was validly given, what it actually covers, and whether anything has discharged it.
What is the difference between a personal guarantee and a corporate guarantee?
A personal guarantee is given by an individual — usually a promoter, director or owner — and exposes that person’s own assets. A corporate guarantee is given by a company, typically a parent or group member standing behind an affiliate’s borrowing, and turns on whether it was properly authorised and given for genuine corporate benefit. The enforcement mechanics are similar; the defences differ, especially on authority.
Can the bank pursue me as guarantor without first suing the borrower or enforcing its security?
Usually yes. Because guarantor liability is co-extensive (India) or joint and several (the UAE), the lender generally need not exhaust its remedies against the borrower, or realise its security, before calling the guarantee — unless the guarantee itself says otherwise. Whether the demand was valid and made in time is often the first thing to check.
Can I be released from a guarantee — for example if the bank varied the loan or released security without telling me?
Possibly. A guarantee is accessory to the underlying debt, so a guarantor can be discharged where the principal contract was varied, or security released, without consent; where the guarantee was never validly constituted or authorised; or where the demand was defective. In India these discharge grounds sit in the Contract Act; in the UAE they follow the civil rules on suretyship. Each turns on the facts and the wording of the guarantee.
Does my guarantee survive the borrower’s insolvency or bankruptcy?
Generally yes. In India a guarantor’s liability is co-extensive with the borrower’s, and the Supreme Court has confirmed that the IBC moratorium protecting a corporate debtor does not shield its personal guarantor, with personal-guarantor insolvency itself brought within the Code. In the UAE the guarantor is pursued under the applicable bankruptcy and civil framework. The borrower’s insolvency is rarely, by itself, a defence for the guarantor.
Was my company’s guarantee properly authorised — and does it matter?
It can be decisive. A corporate guarantee given outside the company’s powers, or without the board and (where required) shareholder approvals, may be open to challenge. In India sections 185 and 186 of the Companies Act 2013 govern guarantees involving related parties; in the UAE the questions are the directors’ authority and corporate benefit. It is one of the strongest defences a corporate guarantor has, and worth checking at the outset.
Can a personal guarantee be enforced across borders — a UAE guarantee against Indian assets, or the reverse?
Often, yes. Where the guarantor, the assets or the judgment sit on the other side of the corridor, a bank may enforce a UAE judgment in India under the 2020 reciprocating-territory notification, or rely on the New York Convention for an arbitral award, alongside parallel steps on the India side through the DRT, SARFAESI or insolvency. Cross-border guarantee enforcement is best planned on both sides at once.
Is an on-demand bank guarantee the same as a personal guarantee?
No — and the difference matters. An on-demand bank guarantee (or a letter of credit) is an autonomous instrument: the bank must usually pay on a conforming demand regardless of the underlying dispute, and payment is restrained only on clear evidence of fraud. A personal or corporate guarantee securing a facility is a suretyship — accessory to the debt, so the guarantor can raise the borrower’s defences. The two are litigated very differently.
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