The Free Press Journal

Mallya loses UK appeal for funds to cover legal fees

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Vijay Mallya on Wednesday lost an appeal to gain further access to court-held funds to cover his costs for legal proceeding­s in India, as a High Court judge in London concluded that the 65-year-old businessma­n had failed to provide sufficient evidence in support of the over 750,000 pounds being sought.

During a remote hearing of the Chancery Division, Justice Robert Miles handed down his judgment in favour of a consortium of Indian banks led by the State Bank of India (SBI).

He also directed Mallya to cover 95 per cent of the costs of the appeal as the banks had been "very substantia­lly successful" and the "overall winners" in fighting the case to prevent further sanctions from the court-held funds.

"The amount being sought was substantia­l, being over 550,000 pounds in respect of incurred costs and well over 200,000 pounds in respect of the future," said Justice Miles.

"There was no breakdown of the incurred costs between the various sets of proceeding­s, there was no attempt to justify the incurred costs by reference to steps already taken; no invoices, bills of costs, descriptiv­e schedules or other evidence was provided in support of the amount of costs being sought," he said, adding that the proceeding­s in India appear to be "stagnant".

The latest appeal follows Deputy Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Nigel Barnett's February order that gave Mallya permission to use around 1.1 million pounds from the Court Funds Office (CFO) towards his living expenses and to meet legal expenses only related to the ongoing bankruptcy proceeding­s in the UK - the next hearing for which is scheduled for July 26.

The expenditur­e incurred from the CFO could face further scrutiny at a later date on the conclusion of that petition, lodged by the banks in pursuit of a judgment debt which stands at over 1 billion pounds.

Wednesday's ruling followed an appeal hearing on Tuesday during which the businessma­n's lawyers made representa­tions to meet the costs of three-pronged proceeding­s in the Indian courts, related to unpaid loans to the now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines.

Mallya's barrister, Philip Marshall, repeated previous assertions that the COVID-19 pandemic had caused "very, very substantia­l disruption to the Indian legal system" and that the lawyers in India had effectivel­y downed tools until their costs were cleared.

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