Business Standard

NCLTrefuse­sstay onTataSons’EGM

Disobedien­ce of judicial orders on Mistry’s part, said the court

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) refused to grant a stay on Tata Sons’ decision to call an extraordin­ary general meeting (EGM) on February 6, the aim being to remove ex-head Cyrus Mistry as a director from its board.

Shapoorji Pallonji group firms Cyrus Investment­s and Sterling Investment Corporatio­n had sought interim relief in the contempt petition against Tata Sons, already dismissed by the tribunal on January 18. However, while dismissing the contempt plea, NCLT had allowed the Mistry firms to file an affidavit on the issue. Accordingl­y, the latter on Tuesday asked for interim relief, seeking a stay on the E GM.

Nothing doing, we've already said the EGM may proceed, said an NCLT bench of BS VP ra sad Kumar and V Nallasenap­athy. Nor did they seem to approve of the stand taken by Mistry’s lawyer, who wanted the tribunal to first hear the contempt petition. The tribunal apparently said he was not cooperatin­g, that it was a case of disobedien­ce of judicial orders, said lawyers close to Tata. The bench, though, has given a final chance for Mistry’s counsel to argue on the merits of the petition at the next hearing on February 13-14. The Mistry companies have challenged the removal of Cyrus Mistry as Tata Sons chairman and have made allegation­s of oppression and mismanagem­ent in the holding company. Aryama Sundaram, appearing on Tuesday on behalf of the Mistry companies, was also pressing on the maintainab­ility of the petition and then on the merits. The issue was triggered by Tata Sons, which had challenged the maintainab­ility of the petition on grounds of the petitioner­s actually holding only 2.17 per cent of the issued share capital, far less than the statutory requiremen­t of 10 per cent in the Companies Act.

On this, NCLT said, “We again made it clear that this bench has not prevented the main petition because we held in our order dated December 22, 2016 that ‘maintainab­ility’ would be taken up as part of the arguments of the respondent.”

It also said the respondent (Tata Sons)’d refused to argue on maintainab­ility before completion on merits of the main petition. Tata's counsels said after Tuesday's developmen­ts that it had “establishe­d the unpreceden­ted and frivolous nature of the petition filed by Mistry, that he has no case to argue and that all his allegation­s are towards a personal vendetta to try and damage the Tata brand”.

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