Business Standard

Kalanithi to appeal in Delhi HC for control of SpiceJet

- T E NARASIMHAN & GIREESH BABU write

Media tycoon Kalanithi Maran and his KAL Airways will be approachin­g the Delhi High Court for a direction to restore him as the promoter of SpiceJet. This comes right after an arbitratio­n tribunal rejected his claims on account of non-issuance of share warrants by the airline company.

Media tycoon Kalanithi Maran and his KAL Airways will be approachin­g the Delhi High Court (HC) for a direction to restore him as the promoter of SpiceJet.

This comes after an arbitratio­n tribunal rejected his claims on account of nonissuanc­e of share warrants by the airline company. The tribunal, last week, ruled in favour of SpiceJet and its present promoter-chairman, Ajay Singh, saying non-issuance of the warrants could not be treated as a breach of their prior agreement.

Sources said they had partially won, as the tribunal also asked SpiceJet to refund ~5.79 billion, the subscripti­on amount Maran made for warrants and preference shares (which if done would have amounted to 24 per cent of the equity). However, the HC would be petitioned for restitutio­n of the airline’s ownership to Maran and KAL.

“We had demanded the return of applicatio­n money paid towards the issue of warrants and preference shares. Since neither were allotted by Spicejet and since the refunds, too, were not forthcomin­g we had to resort to legal remedies. Our plea has been accepted by the panel of arbitrator­s and these amounts have been ordered to be repaid in full, with accumulate­d interest,” said S L Narayanan, chief financial officer of Maran’s Sun Group.

Adding: “Our fundamenta­l ground is on the doctrine of restitutio­n which ought to apply in this case, since SpiceJet attributed its inability to honour contractua­l commitment­s due to impossibil­ity of performanc­e. Therefore, as a natural corollary, we believe the erstwhile promoters ought to be restored to their earlier position with respect to the share transfer transactio­n.”

Maran sold his 58.46 per cent stake in SpiceJet to Ajay Singh for ~2 in 2015, after a financial crunch crippled its operation. Maran accused SpiceJet of breach of agreement, for not issuing him 189 million share warrants and preference shares, despite his ~6.79 billion infusion.

The warrants, SpiceJet contended, could not be issued as it did not get the BSE’s approval. The tribunal held Maran was entitled to refund of ~5.79 billion. Maran had actually sought ~13.23 billion, arguing loss due to non-issue of the warrants. The tribunal did not accept this, as it had decided SpiceJet did not violate the agreement.

It has also asked both sides to see if preference shares could be issued to Maran, subject to him fulfilling certain terms of the agreement. Maran will be entitled to refund of an additional ~2.7 billion if there is no agreement on issue of preference shares. The refund amount is lower as the tribunal allowed a countercla­im by the airline.

 ??  ?? Kalanithi Maran had sold his 58.46 per cent stake in SpiceJet to Ajay Singh for a nominal ~2 in 2015
Kalanithi Maran had sold his 58.46 per cent stake in SpiceJet to Ajay Singh for a nominal ~2 in 2015

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