Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Vijay Mallya Tells SC He Will Pay Up Rs.4,000 Crore

Darpan News Desk, 30 Mar, 2016 01:20 PM
    The Supreme Court was told on Wednesday that liquor baron Vijay Mallya has offered to pay Rs.4,000 crore to settle outstanding dues against the grounded Kingfisher Airlines on account of loans extended by a consortium of 13 banks headed by the SBI.
     
    The apex court bench of Justice Kurien Joseph and Rohinton F. Nariman was also told that Mallya has offered another Rs.2,000 crore that he expects to get if he wins his suit against multinational General Electric.
     
    Senior counsel C.S. Vaidyanathan, appearing for Mallya and Kingfisher Airlines, said the proposal to settle the dues was made to the chief general manager of the State Bank of India on Wednesday morning.
     
    As Mally's proposal to the SBI was given to the court in a sealed cover, Vaidyanathan urged the court to let it remain in the sealed cover -- suggesting it should not reach the media.
     
    Vaidyanathan said: "Negotiations were going on for the settlement of the matter but unfortunately the matter reached the media."
     
    Justice Joseph said the media had only highlighted the amount recoverable from Mallya's grounded airlines.
     
    However, soon thereafter, senior counsel S.S. Naganand, representing the SBI-led consortium of 13 banks, spilled the beans by disclosing the details of the proposal made by Mallya.
     
    Naganand told the court that the SBI needed a week's time to consider the proposal made by Mallya at the level of lead banks chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya and submitted that way back in 2013 the bank had filed a suit claiming Rs.6,903 crore plus interest thereon.
     
    Accepting Naganand's plea, the court gave the consortium a week's time. It said the next hearing will be held on April 7.
     
    On a query from the bench about Mallya's location, his counsel Vaidyanathan said he was still abroad but had held two video conferencing sessions with bank officials after the SBI filed a petition in the apex court seeking his personal appearance.
     
    Initially, a consortium of 13 banks led by the SBI had moved the apex court seeking to restrain him from leaving the country. But by the time the petition by SBI was heard by the apex court on March 9, Mallya had left for London.
     
    On March 9, Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi told the court that Mallya left India soon after they moved applications on March 2 before Bengaluru-based Debt Recovery Tribunal to restrain Diageo from paying him $75 million.
     
    The consortium of 13 banks led by the SBI has challenged the Karnataka High Court's March 4 refusal to pass an interim order restraining Mallya from leaving the country and impounding his passport.
     
    The banks are seeking the recovery of Rs.9,000 crores, saying the secured assets which Mallya pledged against the loans was not even 1/15th of the loan they had advanced to his now defunct Kingfisher Airlines.
     
    Besides SBI, the other banks who gave loans to Kingfisher include State Bank of Baroda, State Bank of Mysore, Axis Bank, Corporation Bank, Federal Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, Jammu and Kashmir Bank, IDBI Bank, Punjab National Bank, Punjab and Sind Bank, UCO Bank and United Bank of India.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Daydreaming, reality run in opposite directions

    Daydreaming, reality run in opposite directions
    While tracking brain activity in people who imagined scenes or watched videos, researchers have discovered that as people daydream, its path through the brain runs opposite reality....

    Daydreaming, reality run in opposite directions

    To get hired, tone down political references on CV

    To get hired, tone down political references on CV
    Rather than improving your chances of getting hired, including your political leanings within your resume may actually put you at a disadvantage in your job hunt,...

    To get hired, tone down political references on CV

    The Ultimate Gift Guide: Triggers And Extenders On The Market To Improve Your Phone Selfies

    The Ultimate Gift Guide: Triggers And Extenders On The Market To Improve Your Phone Selfies
    ATLANTA — Not all selfies are created equal. Some are blurry, are poorly framed or miss the action entirely because you might be scrubbing your thumb fishing for a virtual shutter button as the moment passes you by.

    The Ultimate Gift Guide: Triggers And Extenders On The Market To Improve Your Phone Selfies

    Failed marriage bad for older couples' heart

    Failed marriage bad for older couples' heart
    Older couples in a bad marriage - particularly female spouses - face a higher risk of heart disease than those in a good marriage, finds the first nationally representative study of its kind....

    Failed marriage bad for older couples' heart

    Unveil your mind at first-ever sex exhibition

    Unveil your mind at first-ever sex exhibition
    With over 200 erotic objects, a sex exhibition titled "The Institute of Sexology" was Thursday opened for public at the prestigious Wellcome Collection in London....

    Unveil your mind at first-ever sex exhibition

    Early maturity heightens depression risk in boys too

    Early maturity heightens depression risk in boys too
    Entering puberty ahead of their peers increases depression risk over time in both sexes - not just in girls as commonly thought, new research shows....

    Early maturity heightens depression risk in boys too