Mallya told to pay £200,000 to Indian banks

Tuesday 19th June 2018 15:15 EDT
 
 

The UK High Court has ordered Vijay Mallya to pay a minimum of 200,000 pounds towards the costs incurred by 13 Indian banks in their legal battle to recover alleged dues. Last month, Judge Andrew Henshaw had refused to overturn a worldwide order freezing Mallya's assets and upheld an Indian court's ruling that a consortium of 13 Indian banks led by State Bank of India (SBI) were entitled to recover funds amounting to nearly 1.145 billion pounds.

As part of the judgment, the court has also ordered Mallya to pay costs towards registration of the worldwide freezing order and of the Debt Recovery Tribunal of Karnataka's judgment in Britain. "The court ordered that Mallya pay the banks' costs. The standard order is that the court will assess those costs unless the parties can otherwise agree a figure for what should be paid," said a legal expert familiar with the case.

The court's assessment of costs is a separate process, which ends with another court hearing before a specialist costs judge in the UK. But in the meantime, Mallya must pay 200,000 pounds towards this legal costs liability. In a high court ruling dated May 8, Judge Henshaw had refused to overturn a worldwide order freezing Mallya's assets and upheld an Indian court's ruling that the consortium of 13 Indian banks - State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Corporation bank, Federal Bank Ltd, IDBI Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, Jammu and Kashmir Bank, Punjab and Sind Bank, Punjab National Bank, State Bank of Mysore, UCO Bank, United Bank of India and JM Financial Asset Reconstruction Co. Pvt Ltd - were entitled to recover funds amounting to nearly 1.145 billion pounds.

Mallya's appeal refused

The legal costs owed to the banks emerged in a subsequent order by the same judge. "The First Defendant's (Mallya) application for permission to appeal is refused. Any further application for permission to appeal should be made to the Court of Appeal to be dealt with by a judge of that court," the judgment notes. Mallya, who is also fighting extradition to India on fraud and money laundering charges worth an estimated £900 million, has since filed an appeal notice at the Court of Appeal, which includes an application for permission to appeal. Permission will only be granted if the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success or there is some other compelling reason for the appeal to be heard.

Mallya is due back at Westminster Magistrates' Court in London next month for the final hearings in his extradition case. A hearing for closing arguments to be presented by his defence team and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), on behalf of the Indian authorities, was scheduled for July 11 but is now likely to take place on July 31.

ED submits 2nd chargesheet against Mallya

Enforcement Directorate (ED) has submitted a second prosecution complaint (chargesheet) in a special court against Mallya, UB Holdings and now defunct Kingfisher Airlines, along with others. They have been charged for laundering £999 million which they had fraudulently availed as loan from State Bank of India-led consortium of 17 banks. The chargesheet said that Mallya used his Force India Formula One Team (private company registered in London) in Formula One car racing and Royal Challenger Bangalore (RCB IPL team) for money laundering.


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