Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Tata Sons had nothing to do with ₹22 crore fraud: NCLT

- Maulik Vyas Tata Sons’ ousted chairman Cyrus Mistry

MUMBAI: The Mumbai bench of National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) in its order dismissed all allegation­s against Ratan Tata and Tata Sons Ltd, saying it did not find merit in any of the issues raised.

The tribunal in its 368-page order, which was uploaded on the tribunal website on late Thursday, ruled that the Tata Sons Ltd board had nothing to do with the fraudulent transactio­n of ₹22 crore that ousted chairman Cyrus Mistry had alleged in his plea.

“As to the allegation of fraudulent transactio­n worth of ₹22 crore, no doubt, it has come out in the forensic investigat­ion conducted by Deloitte revealing the EX-CEO of Air Asia India indulged in that fraud, with which none of the directors of Air Asia India has been connected, whereby a fraud committed by a CEO cannot be attributed as fraud committed by the directors of that company,” said the division bench of a Mumbai division bench of NCLT, presided over by BSV Prakash Kumar and V Nallasenap­athy in its ruling.

The tribunal further said that when the issue came before the Tata Sons board on September 26, 2016, the board had unanimousl­y decided to take the investigat­ion to its logical conclusion and later, Air Asia India had lodged an FIR against its former chief executive and other private individual­s.

“This (Mistry’s) petition speaks nothing about espousing the cause of corporate governance or seeking remedies of oppression and mismanagem­ent of the company, in fact, the Articles of Associatio­n against which these petitioner­s making hue and cry were unanimousl­y approved either by the father of Cyrus (Mistry) or by Mr Cyrus,” said the order.

“…though amendments have come to these Articles long before, they did never become a problem to these Petitioner­s until before Mr Cyrus’s removal.”

According to the judgment, a copy of which was reviewed by

the Tata Group submitted that all the issues raised by Mistry happened between 1993 and 2008; therefore, those issues cannot be issues before this National Company Law Tribunal solely because Cyrus Mistry was removed as executive chairman.

“I have not been surprised at all with the decision. I never thought that there was any merit in the allegation­s. Simply because if the allegation­s were correct then they should have been made while Mr Mistry was in the saddle,” said JN Gupta, co-founder, proxy advisory firm Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services.

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