Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Delhi HC attaches assets held by Singh brothers’ investment firms

- Aditi Singh aditi.s@livemint.com

The Delhi high court on Monday ordered the attachment of assets held by two investment companies of brothers Malvinder Singh and Shivinder Singh, former owners of Ranbaxy Laboratori­es Ltd.

The warrant of attachment was issued after Daiichi Sankyo of Japan moved a petition seeking the execution of the court’s January 31 order upholding the enforceabi­lity of a ₹3,500 crore arbitratio­n award against the Singh brothers and others.

All assets disclosed by Oscar Investment­s Ltd and RHC Holding Pvt. Ltd in their December 2 2016 and March 14, 2017 affidavits submitted to the court will be attached under the order. The assets include shares, moveable and immovable property, art as well as debts owed to the two companies.

The court also prohibited the two companies from operating their bank accounts, except for the purpose of payment of salaries to employees and satisfacti­on of statutory debts.

Justice Jayant Nath further directed the other judgment debtors, i.e. Singh brothers and others, to submit an “up-todate” affidavit declaring all the unencumber­ed assets held by them.

Meanwhile, the February 19 order by the court directing Singh brothers and others to maintain status quo with respect to the remaining “unattached” assets held by them, directly or indirectly, would continue.

The counsel appearing for Daiichi Sankyo, P V Kapur, submitted that as per the civil procedure code, the assets held by the two companies should be attached and an attachment officer should take custody of any such assets.

On January 31, the court had upheld the enforceabi­lity of the award passed by a Singaporea­n Tribunal, which found Singh brothers and others guilty of making false claims in a self-assessment report and of fraudulent­ly misreprese­nting and concealing the “genesis, nature and severity of the US regulatory investigat­ions” of Ranbaxy when Daiichi Sankyo bought their 34.82% stake for $2.4 billion in 2008. The total deal value was $4.6 billion.

NEW DELHI: THE COURT ALSO PROHIBITED THE TWO FIRMS FROM OPERATING THEIR BANK ACCOUNTS

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