Digital marketing firm Alphaom takes InMobi to NCLT over non-payment of dues

Bengaluru-based advertising tech unicorn InMobi has been taken to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) by Alphaom Marketing over alleged non-payment of dues amounting to Rs 2.34 crore.

According to Alphaom’s petition, a copy of which is with Tech2, Japan’s SoftBank-backed InMobi Technology owes the digital marketing company Rs 1.52 crore for a value-added service campaign.

Alphaom levied interest charges at 18 percent, amounting to Rs 82 lakh, over the principal amount of Rs 1.52 crore as on July 2019, when it moved the NCLT.

The National Company Law Tribunal.

“We are contesting this claim on merits and since the matter is sub judice in NCLT, we are unable to comment further,” an InMobi spokesperson said.

Alphaom did not respond to Tech2 queries. The story will be updated to include the company’s comments.

A single-judge bench of Rajeswara Rao Vittanala is hearing the case. InMobi didn’t attend two of the three hearings held so far, sources said.

In May 2016, InMobi asked Alphaom to run a campaign, which was done and volumes were delivered to the accused, the petition says.

Subsequently, two invoices — of Rs 1.43 crore and Rs 9 lakh — were raised in June and July which InMobi failed to honour.

On August 17, 2016, Alpha wrote a mail to InMobi. According to the petition, the company “never raised an objection” and “categorically acknowledged its debt” to Alphaom. Still, InMobi continued to delay the payment on “some frivolous grounds”.

The complaint has been filed under Section 9 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act, which says if after 10 days from the date of delivery of notice or invoice that demands payment, the money has not been paid, the creditor can file an application before relevant authorities for initiating a corporate insolvency resolution process.

(Also read: InMobi ties up with China’s APUS in bid to challenge Google)

InMobi in September raised $45 million for its mobile content platform Glance from Mithril Capital.

InMobi, founded by Naveen Tiwari who is also the CEO, has raised $320 million and has SoftBank, Kleiner Perkins, Sherpalo Ventures and Lightspeed as its lead investors.

Recently, the company also acquired video-content platform Roposo in a $20 million cash-and-stock deal.