SC orders to attach Sahara's Aamby Valley
Unhappy with Sahara's
"roadmap" to repay duped investors by July 2019, the Supreme Court
attached the group's jewel-in-the-crown standalone real estate asset in
Maharashtra — Aamby Valley property — as a foolproof measure to ensure the
recovery of money it owes investors.
But first, the Special Bench of
Justices Dipak Misra, Ranjan Gogoi and A.K. Sikri ordered Sahara to place on
record a list of unencumbered properties which would be put up for public
auction to recover over Rs. 14000 crore the group owes as principal sum towards
its debt. The SEBI lawyer submitted that the interest towards the debt
currently stands over Rs. 36,000 crore.
At one point, Justice Gogoi asked
why the court should even bother to ask Sahara for a list of other auctionable
properties when the group already has Aamby Valley, which has a declared worth
of Rs. 39,000 crore. Tightening the
screws on the group, the court recorded that Aamby Valley was itself
"substantial" enough for the recovery of the amount.
Justice Gogoi said the Supreme Court
had had enough of assembling every other week to collect "token
amounts" from Sahara, and would now want a sure shot way of ensuring that
Sahara settled its debts without dragging on.
Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, for Sahara, pleaded that Ambi Valley was
the group's cash cow and the main source of generating revenue.
"If you take away all my
resources, I will not have anything to generate money. What will I tell my
banks?" Mr. Sibal asked.
"This is not a question of
banks. This is a question of obeying court orders," Justice Misra replied.
Justice Misra observed that the
only way to ensure compliance was to get the list of properties in Sahara's
possession which have absolutely no encumbrances whatsoever. Justice Gogoi succinctly put to Mr. Sibal,
"Either you speed up your schedule of repayment or we will go ahead with
the auction of your properties to settle your debts. The 2019 roadmap is too
long." "Don't do this. There
are businesses there (Aamby Valley). There are hotel resorts. Already there is
a restraint order on the property from this court..." Mr. Sibal argued.
"An attachment is different
from mere restraint... You say you want to keep Aamby Valley. God help you.
Then give us other properties which we can order to be put up for public
auction and fetch money," Justice Misra observed. "I need some breathing time. I need two
weeks time to identify these properties for the list and fetch the Rs. 14,779
cr towards the principal amount," Mr. Sibal submitted.
At one point, Mr. Sibal submitted
that he should be heard for two hours before the court passes an order. "Look at how much time we have given
you... It has been over a year. And even now Mr. Sibal wants two hours?"
Justice Gogoi snubbed.
Justice Gogoi repeated that first
Sahara should file the list of encumbered properties which can be put up for
auction.
"Once the properties are
auctioned, then we will have to see how much of the Rs. 14000 crore need to be
paid to all and sundry depositors... There are over 30 applications in this
court from various persons who claim to have paid you money.... then once
payments are made, we will release Ambi Valley.... But first the money,"
Justice Gogoi explained the court's plan.
Mr. Sibal claimed 85 per cent of
the investors have been paid. "So once Rs. 14000 crore is got from the
auction and put it in the Sahara-SEBI account... Who will the money be paid
to?" Mr. Sibal asked.
"We will deal with that
then... first the money," Justice Gogoi repeated.
The court asked for the list of
unencumbered properties by February 20, the next date of hearing.
Meanwhile, Sahara paid an
instalment of a little over Rs 600 crore on Monday. The court in the
previous hearing had refused to give it any extension to pay the amount, and
even threatened to send Sahara group chief Subarata Roy back to Tihar Jail.
"We are not sending you to
custody because you have paid the money," Justice Misra observed.
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