Supreme Court rejects Sahara’s plea for deferring auction of Aamby Valley

Time & Us
Last Updated: September 12, 2017 at 1:44 am

New Delhi: In a fresh setback to Subrata Roy Sahara, the Supreme Court of India on Monday rejected Roy’s plea to defer the auction of Sahara Group’s Aamby Valley city in Maharashtra and ordered the auction to go on as per schedule.

The court appointed the Registrar general of Bombay High court as Supreme court’s representative and said, “the Official Liquidator is permitted to carry out the auction as per procedure and during the auction the Registrar General of the High Court of Bombay, who is designated as Supreme Court appointee, shall remain personally present to over see the physical auction at the auction venue at Mumbai.”

SC bench headed by the chief justice of India, Dipak Misra added, “He, who thinks or for that matter harbours the notion that he can play with law, is under wrong impression.”

In its order the court rued the fact that Subrato Roy had used the court as a ‘laboratory’ and said, “ We are constrained to state that the respondent-contemnor (Roy) in his own way has treated this Court as a laboratory and has made a maladroit effort to play, possibly thinking that he can survive on the ventilator as long as he can.”

Subrata Roy-owned Sahara Group’s Aamby Valley city in Maharashtra was put up for auction on August 14th, 2017, in keeping with the Supreme Court order for its sale to recover the money owed to investors.

The official liquidator, attached to the Bombay high court, published a notice inviting bids for the property located in the lush green Sahyadri mountain ranges close to the popular hill station of Lonavala. The reserve price has been fixed at Rs 37,392 crore.

“The ultra-exclusive chartered city has residential options ranging from the timber chalets to fabulously modern and customised villas in distinct architectural styles and several amenities such as golf course, airport, hospital, adventure sports, retail, entertainment, international school and hospitality,” the notice said.

Up for bidding are 6,761.64-acre Aamby Valley City Development, 1,409.87 acre of land surrounding the project and another 321.66 acre in the adjoining Satara district.

Roy had earlier sought permission for an agreement with Victor Koenig UK Limited for an investment of US $ 1.67 billion in Aamby Valley. The court allowed Sahara to begin negotiations but refused to put the auction on hold.

The auction is the fallout of the court’s April 27 order that found Sahara guilty of contempt in a dispute with the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

Sahara has been ordered to refund millions of small investors who put money in its two schemes that were declared illegal by the market regulator.

The company has so far paid a little over Rs 11,000 crore and wanted time till July 2019 to deposit remaining Rs 14,779 crore with Sebi.