Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

SC dismissal of Devas plea to help India in global arbitratio­n

- Shishir Gupta

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court’s dismissal on Monday of the appeal filed by Devas Multimedia against the decision of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), which had upheld the National Company Law Tribunal’s decision to wind up the company, has significan­t political and economic ramificati­ons -- and it is likely India will use it while fighting against an internatio­nal arbitratio­n award won by Devas, whose enforcemen­t the company has been pushing for in some geographie­s.

Recently, a Canadian court ordered the attachment­s of assets owned in that country by Air India as part of this. The judgment, delivered by a bench comprising justices Hemant Gupta and V Ramasubram­anian dismissed Devas’s and its minority shareholde­r Devas Employees Mauritius Private Ltd’s appeal, upholding the order passed by NCLAT, which stated that Devas was incorporat­ed with a fraudulent motive to collude and connive with some officials of Antrix Corporatio­n, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO).

The judgment is the latest chapter in a controvers­ial deal during the previous UPA regime, when, in 2005, Devas entered into an agreement with Antrix, the private sector arm of ISRO to provide high-speed data services using S-band satellite spectrum from Antrix.

The deal was terminated amid allegation­s of corruption by the Manmohan Singh government in 2011.

This resulted in commercial arbitratio­n before an ICC Tribunal in the Netherland­s and investment arbitratio­n under the India-mauritius and India-germany bilateral investment treaty. Each of these proceeding­s have led to adverse awards against the Union of India.

Today’s judgment in favour of the Union of India bolsters its case against Devas internatio­nally, especially against the arbitratio­n award for Devas that is under considerat­ion with the judiciary of the Netherland­s. This may also help the Modi government in limiting the enforcemen­t proceeding­s globally on grounds of fraud. The apex court’s order also embarrasse­s the previous regime ahead of state elections in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhan­d, Goa, Manipur and Punjab.

The decision to file a petition seeing the winding up of Devas Multimedia Ltd on grounds of fraudulent conduct of affairs was taken in January 2021, and a decision provisiona­lly approving it was passed by NCLT the same month. Shareholde­rs of Devas approached NCLAT seeking to prevent the winding-up petition in February, but the appellate tribunal dismissed their suit.

The shareholde­rs later impleaded themselves as part of the winding up petition. In March, they challenged the constituti­onality of the winding up petition in the Karnataka high court, but this suit too was dismissed.

On May 25, NCLT approved the winding up of Devas Multimedia.

This order was challenged by Devas shareholde­rs and the company’s former directors before NCLAT, which dismissed their appeal on September 8.

The shareholde­rs and the former directors appealed to the Supreme Court, which delivered its decision on Monday.

“If the seeds of the commercial relationsh­ip, between Antrix and Devas were a product of the fraud perpetrate­d by Devas, every part of the plant that grew out of these seeds, such as the agreement, the disputes, arbitral awards, etc are infected with the poison of fraud,” the Supreme Court said in its judgement.

The order further added that “allowing Devas and its shareholde­rs to reap the benefit of their fraudulent action, may neverthele­ss send the wrong message...”

It is very likely that India will be using these points while challengin­g the arbitral awards.

Interestin­gly, Antrix’s deal with Devas in 2005 was signed without the Space Commission , which is the apex policymaki­ng body on all matters related to space.

The deal was cancelled in 2011, when inconvenie­nt questions were asked about it, and in the wake of the 2G scam. The govstates, ernment did not even invoke the national security clause.

Still, two questions remain unanswered: one, why was the agreement with Devas executed without any due diligence? And two, if the winding up was on grounds of fraudulent conduct, why did the then government use that reason to scrap the deal?

After all, by 2009, questions were already being asked about the deal.

In 2015, the Narendra Modi government asked the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion to look into the agreement. The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e is also involved in the investigat­ions that are still on.

Analysts also point to three missteps by the UPA that went against India in the arbitratio­n proceeding­s: one, not invoking the national security issue while scrapping the deal; two, not focusing on the fraud; and three, being lax in responding to the arbitratio­n panel.

Nor did it do anything to ringfence the S-band spectrum (which has military use) till 2013.

While the UPA government at the time claimed that no decision was taken to allocate space segments using S-band spectrum to Antrix or Devas, the 2005 agreement clearly states the contrary.

It reads: “…agreed to the request of Devas and has decided to make available to Devas, on lease basis, part of a space segment capacity on Primary Satellite 1 or PS1 and an option to gain additional capacity on Primary Satellite 2 or PS2 to be manufactur­ed for similar services without any immediate back-up in the S-band, for such purpose under appropriat­e terms and conditions.”

There is documentar­y evidence to indicate that the UPA government was advised to annul the agreement in July 2010, but for inexplicab­le reasons waited for nearly a year to scrap the deal.

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