The Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear Sahara
Group’s plea seeking modification in its order restraining Subrata Roy
from going abroad till the Group hands over title deeds of its
properties worth Rs. 20,000 crore to SEBI.
A bench
headed by Justice K.S. Radhakrishnan, before whom the matter was
mentioned by Sahara’s counsel, said that it will consider the Group’s
plea on Friday in chamber.
Sahara had moved the apex
court on October 29, claiming that there was a mistake in its October
28 order restraining Mr. Roy from leaving the country till it hands
over title deeds of its properties to SEBI.
The
bench had on Wednesday refused to pass any interim order for allowing
Mr. Roy to go abroad before his Group files a review petition seeking
to modify the earlier order.
Senior advocate C.A.
Sundaram, appearing for the Group, had submitted that he is not seeking
review of the order but only pointing out the difference in the
decision which was uploaded on the Supreme Court website and the order
passed in the open court.
The counsel had submitted
that while passing the order, the apex court had said if documents are
not handed over to the market regulator within three weeks only then
Mr. Roy would be restrained from going abroad.
Holding
that it was playing “hide and seek” and cannot be trusted any more, the
court had directed Sahara Group to hand over title deeds of its
properties to SEBI.
Making it clear that there is no
“escape” from depositing the investors’ money with the market
regulator, the apex court had asked Sahara to also give valuation
reports of properties to SEBI which will verify worth of assets.
The
court was hearing three contempt petitions filed by SEBI against Mr.
Roy, the two firms — Sahara India Real Estate Corp Ltd. (SIREC) and
Sahara India Housing Investment Corp Ltd. (SHIC) — and their directors.
It
had on August 31 last year directed the Sahara Group to refund Rs.
24,000 crore by November end. The deadline was further extended and the
companies were directed to deposit Rs. 5,120 crore immediately and Rs.
10,000 crore in first week of January and the remaining amount in first
week of February.
The group, which had handed over draft of Rs. 5,120 crore on December 5, 2012 has failed to pay the rest of the amount.
It
had directed the two companies to refund the money to their investors
within three months with 15 per cent interest per annum. It had also
said SEBI can attach the properties and freeze the bank accounts of the
companies if they fail to refund the amount.
The two
companies, their promoter Mr. Roy and directors Vandana Bhargava, Ravi
Shankar Dubey and Ashok Roy Choudhary were told to refund the collected
money to the regulator.
No comments:
Post a Comment