New Delhi: Price range service SpiceJet and its chairman and managing director Ajay Singh have filed a evaluate petition earlier than the Delhi excessive courtroom, looking for reduction from an earlier path requiring the airline to deposit ₹144.5 crore inside 4 weeks in its long-running arbitration dispute with Kalanithi Maran and KAL Airways Pvt. Ltd.
Justice Subramonium Prasad, who heard the matter on Tuesday, adjourned the listening to to 13 April after events sought time. Nonetheless, the courtroom orally noticed that submitting a evaluate petition doesn’t absolve SpiceJet of its obligation to adjust to the order to deposit the quantity by 14 April.
“It’s important to adjust to the order. The truth that you have got filed this software just isn’t a passport to not adjust to the order,” Justice Prasad remarked.
The evaluate follows the excessive courtroom’s 18 March order, the place it rejected SpiceJet’s plea looking for modification of its January path. The airline had proposed furnishing an unencumbered immovable property price roughly ₹148 crore as safety, as a substitute of constructing a money deposit. Nonetheless, the courtroom declined to just accept this various and insisted on a money deposit.
The evaluate plea assumes significance as SpiceJet is going through a extreme liquidity crunch because of flight disruptions linked to the West Asia battle. Round 22,000 passengers and seven,000 workers have been affected because of the battle, senior counsel Amit Sibal informed the courtroom.
In accordance with submissions made earlier earlier than the courtroom, almost 40% of the airline’s flights function on Gulf routes, lots of which have been affected, resulting in cancellations and monetary stress.
The excessive courtroom in January directed SpiceJet to deposit ₹144.5 crore, following which it approached the Supreme Court docket, which refused to intrude with the excessive courtroom path. SpiceJet then moved the excessive courtroom in early March looking for to switch the order by providing property as a substitute of money. The courtroom rejected this request on 18 March and requested the airline to deposit the quantity inside 4 weeks, following which SpiceJet has filed a evaluate petition.
The apex courtroom additionally imposed prices of ₹1 lakh on the airline for prolonging the litigation.
The refusal meant SpiceJet was required to adjust to the excessive courtroom’s 19 January order inside six weeks, prompting the airline to file a number of pleas looking for modification of the path. The excessive courtroom recorded that SpiceJet had admitted that ₹194.51 crore was due and payable beneath earlier Supreme Court docket instructions. After adjusting for ₹50 crore already deposited, ₹144.51 crore stays excellent.
The dispute dates again to January 2015, when Kalanithi Maran and KAL Airways transferred their 58.46% stake in SpiceJet to Ajay Singh at a time when the airline was going through acute monetary misery. As a part of the transaction, Maran and KAL Airways infused about ₹679 crore into the airline in the direction of issuance of convertible warrants and choice shares.
Maran later alleged that these devices weren’t issued beneath the brand new administration and sought a refund. The matter was referred to arbitration earlier than a three-member tribunal comprising retired Supreme Court docket judges.
In July 2018, the tribunal rejected Maran’s ₹1,323 crore damages declare however directed SpiceJet to refund ₹579 crore, together with curiosity, regarding the warrants and choice shares.
Each side challenged elements of the award earlier than the Delhi Excessive Court docket, triggering extended enforcement proceedings, appeals and interim orders throughout courts.
SpiceJet has maintained that it has already paid about ₹730 crore to Maran and KAL Airways, together with the principal quantity of ₹579 crore and round ₹150 crore in the direction of curiosity.
The dispute continues to stay a major authorized and monetary overhang for the airline, which has in recent times confronted liquidity pressures, plane grounding because of unpaid dues, and insolvency petitions from lessors and collectors.
Queries emailed to Spicejet have been unanswered until press time.






