Deccan Chronicle

Deepa, Deepak declared heirs of Jaya’s property worth crores

- J. STALIN | DC

Giving a quietus to the long pending issue as to who will inherit the vast properties worth about several hundreds crores of rupees of former chief minister late J. Jayalalith­aa, the Madras high court has declared J. Deepa and J. Deepak, her niece and nephew, as her class–II legal heirs and said they are entitled to inherit her estate.

A division bench comprising Justices N. Kirubakara­n and Abdul Quddhose made the declaratio­n while allowing the petition filed by J. Deepak, which sought to grant letters of administra­tion in respect of the properties and credits of deceased J.

Jayalalith­aa.

The bench held that the petitioner J. Deepak and the respondent J. Deepa are the class II legal heirs of J. Jayalalith­aa, being the son and daughter of her brother late J. Jayakumar.

The petitioner and the respondent are entitled to the letters of administra­tion in respect of the estate held individual­ly by Jayalalith­aa, as mentioned in the affidavit of valuation filed by the petitioner.

The petitioner and the respondent shall allot a few properties, according to their discretion and create a registered public trust in the name of their late aunt J. Jayalalith­aa for the purpose of doing public and social service as per their affidavits filed before this court within eight weeks, the bench added and posted the matter after eight weeks for reporting compliance with regard to creation of trust.

The bench also upheld an order of the single judge rejecting the caveat filed by impleading petitioner­s’ namely, AIADMK party cadres K. Pugazhenth­i and P. Janakirama­n, opposing the grant of Letters of Administra­tion to J. Deepak and J. Deepa.

The Madras high court has suggested that only a part of Veda Nilayam, the residence of former CM J. Jayalalith­aa, be converted into a memorial if the Tamil Nadu government is keen on it.

The court suggested that, instead of making the entire property in Poes Garden a memorial, the government may consider making use of a portion of the property for a memorial and the rest of the property could be put to better use as the “Official Residence-cum-Office of the Chief Minister of the state”.

The HC suggestion­s come on Wednesday even as the TN government has promulgate­d an ordinance to take over Veda Nilayam ‘temporaril­y’.

THE MADRAS HC has suggested that only a part of Veda Nilayam, the residence of former CM J. Jayalalith­aa, be converted into a memorial if the government is keen on it.

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