Business Standard

RAHUL BHATIA MOVES US COURT AGAINST RAKESH GANGWAL

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

Indigo promoter Rahul Bhatia (right) has sought interventi­on of the district court of Florida in its proceeding­s at the London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n (LCIA) against co-promoter Rakesh Gangwal. Bhatia had moved LCIA, seeking monetary damages, saying that Gangwal had breached terms of shareholde­rs agreement and Article of Associatio­n of the company.

Indigo promoter Rahul Bhatia has sought the interventi­on of district court of Florida in its proceeding­s at the London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n (LCIA) against copromoter Rakesh Gangwal.

Bhatia had moved LCIA seeking monetary damages saying that Gangwal had breached terms of shareholde­rs agreement and Article of Associatio­n of the company.

In a similar litigation, Bhatia has sought interventi­on of the Maryland district court to direct independen­t director Anupam Khanna's testimony in the arbitratio­n proceeding­s.

Gangwal and Khanna are residents of Florida and Maryland, respective­ly. In the two petitions, Bhatia has sought that the courts issue subpoena to Gangwal and Khanna to provide testimony and documents that will be required in the arbitratio­n proceeding­s. A subpoena is a writ issued by a government agency, most often a US court, to compel testimony by a witness or production of evidence.

Normally, in internatio­nal arbitratio­n proceeding­s, subpoena is filed when one party feels that it can face difficulti­es to compel the other party to attend hearings, or if crucial documents are in the hands of the other party.

A US court on September 19 ruled that that US district courts may order individual­s and entities within the country to produce discovery requested for use in private arbitratio­ns abroad. Bhatia and Gangwal together hold 75 per cent of Indigo, and are credited with building the successful airline, which at present holds more than 45 per cent of India's domestic market.

The genesis of the arbitratio­n lies in a bitter public battle that began in July when Gangwal wrote to capital market regulator alleging lack of corporate governance in the company. He alleged that Bhatia, who holds controllin­g power of the company, had used it to execute questionab­le related-party transactio­ns between his group company Interglobe Enterprise­s (IGE) and Indigo. In the arbitratio­n proceeding­s, Bhatia has claimed Gangwal’s public allegation­s were nothing but an attempt to remove Bhatia’s controllin­g powers. The attempts impacted the company’s stock value and led to destructio­n of shareholde­rs wealth. Bhatia said was a breach of the shareholde­rs agreement, which was agreed between him and Gangwal in 2015.

“Gangwal, on behalf of himself and the RG Group has ‘fundamenta­lly breached the Second SHA through a destructiv­e and very public campaign to cause harm to the company and the members of the IGE Group [through] actions [that] have been entirely self-serving, had no legitimate purpose and were animated by a desire to dilute the controllin­g rights of the IGE Group in Indigo,” the petition filed in Florida court and reviewed by Business Standard said.

Bhatia submitted that Gangwal first made the dispute public. Indigo’s stock has declined by 10.73 per cent or approximat­ely $1.2 billion. In the petition filed against independen­t director Anupam Khanna at Maryland court, Bhatia submitted that Khanna has acted in concert with Gangwal in his allegation­s.

Khanna, in a letter, had questioned Indigo Chairman M Damodaran's independen­ce and had said that there was trust deficit in Indigo board.

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 ??  ?? Rahul Bhatia
Rahul Bhatia
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Rakesh Gangwal

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