Friday, June 13, 2014

No Clarity Yet on Marans' Whereabouts









13th June 2014 07:57 AM


CHENNAI: As the CBI is tightening the noose around the Maran brothers, accused in the secret telephone exchange scam, the whereabouts of former Telecom Minister Dayanidhi and his elder borther and media czar Kalanidhi, remains a mystery.
It is learnt that the central agency that is probing the case has summoned them to appear before the investigation team on Monday.
EVen as strong rumours are doing the rounds that Dayanidhi and Kalanidhi, who is the owner of the multi-million Sun Group, have left for Brazil to watch the football carnival, a person close to the Dayanidhi has refuted it.
“Dayanidhi is in Chennai,” he told Express, maintaining that the rumours were wrong.
However, CBI sources said the brothers have been strictly directed to appear before them and cut short any foreign trip they are undertaking.
According to sources intelligence agencies suspect that the brothers could have flown out of the country from some other cities in the country.
The case has it that Dayanidhi, who was the Union Telecom Minister between 2004 and 2007, abused his official position to draw 323 telephone lines to his residence at Boat Club in Chennai, which was used to upload signals of the Sun TV Network owned by his brother Kalanidhi Maran.
The scam that caused several hundred crores of loss to the state-run BSNL came to light after an expose by the Express which revealed a secret report prepared by the CBI in 2007 about the illegal exchange set up at his residence.
Hansraj Saxena, former senior executive of the Sun TV Network and once the Man Friday of the Marans, had confessed to the CBI that he had knowledge about the illegal use of the BSNL lines to upload the signals of the channels of the network.
The CBI, which has collected material evidences of the scam, had summoned Dayanidhi Maran and Kalanidhi Maran to appear before it on Monday for interrogation.

Hotel Buhari Set to Give Way for Metro

Hotel Buhari opposite Central railway station in the city | R Satish Babu
Buhari opposite Central railway station in the city | R Satish Babu


 13th June 2014 07:32 AM


Buhari Hotel, a landmark for decades opposite the Central Railway Station, will vanish, paving the way for the Metro Rail.
Clearing the decks for the landmark to be razed, the Madras High Court with a “heavy he art” dismissed the petition of Buhari Sons even while admitting violation of Rule of Law in the resumption of lands.
Justice V Dhanapalan, after hearing the petition challenging the GO directing the group to vacate the land and hand over possession for Chennai Metro Rail Project, in a common order said the Court was constrained to hold that there is a violation of Rule of Law by the authorities. “With a heavy heart, by giving due respect to the ratio decidendi of the Supreme Court, we are left with no other choice but to follow the same under Article 141 of the Constitution,” the judge said. The petitioners were tenants of the building constructed by a Trust, the Rajah Sir Ramasamy Mudaliar Choultry. The bone of contention is the 1.33-acre land, given to build a choultry in 1888.
In 1958 the government allowed A M Buhari to construct the building and carry out business and a lease deed was executed on January 31, 1959 for 20 years with an option for renewal. Thereafter a GO was issued vesting the land with the Official Trustee under a scheme framed by the High Court.
The Court observed that the Government did not take any order either from the scheme court or from the Administrator General and Official Trustee (AGOT) Court. “Though there were attempts by the executive to file applications — one by Chennai Metro Rail Limited and the other by District Collector, subsequently, the same were withdrawn. So, it is clear that there was no order made by AGOT Court, the court of competent jurisdiction to permit handover  of the possession of the land in its control to the government, for resumption,” the Court observed.
The government bypassing an act under which the entrustment has been made, would amount to violation of the basic structure of the Constitution and the power of separation which has been demarcated could not be usurped by one organ on its own, it was noted.
“The facts and the position in law are that the buildings constructed on the piece of government land did not belong to government, the petitioners were in possession of the buildings and by virtue of enactments binding on the Government, the petitioners could be dispossessed, if at all, only in pursuance of a decree of a Civil Court obtained in proceedings properly initiated,” the court added.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

சென்னை: சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்ற வழக்கறிஞர்கள் நாளை, ஆர்ப்பாட்டம்



12ஜூன்
2014 
00:05




சென்னை: சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்ற வழக்கறிஞர்கள் சங்க பொதுக்குழு கூட்டம் நடந்தது. 

இதில், விடுமுறை இல்லாமல், 365 நாட்களும் நீதிமன்றங்கள் இயங்க வேண்டும் என்ற, தலைமை நீதிபதியின் திட்டத்தால், வக்கீல்கள் தரப்பில் எதிர்கொள்ளும் பிரச்னைகளை விளக்கி, மனு அனுப்ப வேண்டும். 

வழக்குகளின் தேக்கத்தைக் குறைக்கவும், விடுமுறை இன்றி நீதிமன்றங்கள் இயங்கும் திட்டத்தை எதிர்த்து நாளை, ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் நடத்தப்படும். 

இவ்வாறு, தீர்மானங்கள் நிறைவேற்றப்பட்டன.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Bad loans a cause of concern: RBI

RBI Deputy Governor R. Gandhi releases a publication at an event organised by Assocham in New Delhi on Saturday.
RBI Deputy Governor R. Gandhi releases a publication at an event organised by Assocham in New Delhi on Saturday.

PTI:The Hindu 31 May 2014

Reserve Bank Deputy Governor R. Gandhi on Saturday expressed concern over bad loans and said banks should strengthen their internal credit appraisal systems to minimise the risk of default.
“The final (NPA) figure for March 2014 is yet to be known; while some may view this ratio as reasonable, given the economic conditions prevalent in the country and elsewhere, the total stressed assets in the banking system (including restructured standard assets) as at December 2013 was 10.13 per cent of the gross advances of the banks, which is a cause of concern for the Reserve Bank,” he said.
The gross non-performing assets (NPAs) or bad loans of the domestic banking system were 4.4 per cent of gross advances, he said at an event organised by Assocham in Delhi.
To minimise the risk of default, he said, “There is a growing need for banks to strengthen their internal credit appraisal system that is on their credit assessment and risk management mechanisms.”
At the same time, he said, banks should consider using external credit appraisals in conjunction with their own assessment.
“This would mean getting the house in order and at least on this score, banks would be on stronger ground. Banks would still be vulnerable to other factors, such as economic slowdown or policy changes or wilful defaults. But, one area of concern would be plugged,” Mr. Gandhi said.
“We can see that among the proactive steps that a bank can take to stem the problem of increasing level of NPAs and stressed assets, use of credit ratings is an important one,” he added.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

RBI Governor Against Artificial Fixing Of Bad Debts

Financial Express-06 April 2014


Raghuram Rajan's hard talk to banks: Stop looking for artificial fixes on bad loans-


RBI governor Raghuram Rajan on Friday asked banks to stop looking for ‘artificial fixes’ in dealing with bad loans and make efforts to ‘fix things up the right way’.
Postponing recognition is not forbearance, he said, referring to banks that had approached RBI to consider treating bad loans with forbearance and postpone recognising these as bad loans.
Rajan said the focus must be on treating performing assets. “I think when we do that, we clean up our balance sheets; the markets will (then) be willing to provide finance to institutions that had these balance sheets and, thereby, create a space in financing. So, let’s not try to find artificial fixes. Let’s go about fixing it the right way,” he said.
“Because I am not telling our banker friends who are working very hard at this point to deal with some of these problems and put the banks back on track. I think the time will tell what distinguishes the men from the boys and women from the girls and the truly good bankers will figure out ways to put their balance sheets back on track, put their banks back on track.”
He said it was a shame that so many people in the country did not have access to banking. “There has to be a way around this. We have to give people good savings products, We have to give people good investment products. Looking inwards, we have to look at what regulations make sense and what don’t make sense,” he said.

Settlement Deed


As per Settlement Deed – Compromise entered into – duly attested by the counsel of opp. party – as per law ,the widow of only deceased son of original owner was the legal heir and entitled for the disputed land in the absence of will deed contrary to it , others are not entitled to any share – high court not interfered – Apex court dismissed the appeal = SHIV MURAT (D) BY LRS. ………APPELLANTS Vs. SATYAWATI & ORS. ……… RESPONDENTS =2014 ( Apr.Part ) judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41383

  As per Settlement Deed – Compromise  entered into – duly attested by the counsel of opp. party – as per law ,the widow of  only deceased son of original owner was the legal heir and entitled for the disputed land in the absence of will deed contrary to it , others are not entitled to any share – high court not interfered - Apex court dismissed the appeal = 

The  respondent  filed  a   fictitious
compromise before  the  learned  Settlement  Officer,  Consolidation  which,
according to  the  appellant,  was  procured  by  fraud.  According  to  the
compromise filed by the respondent, the entire property in  dispute  becomes
the bhumidari  of  the  respondent  and  the  respondent  becomes  the  sole
beneficiary of the property.

5. The appellant challenged the compromise as  fraudulent  on  two  grounds,
firstly, the appellant could not have entered  into  such  compromise  which
goes entirely against his favour and secondly,  the  compromise  deed  filed
before the Settlement Officer, Consolidation purports to bear the  signature
of the appellant which was attested by one  Shri  Prabhakar  Nath  Advocate.
However, Shri Prabhakar Nath Advocate was the lawyer of  the  respondent  in
appeal before the Settlement Officer,  Consolidation.  The  appellant  never
instructed on the compromise deed. The appellant  claimed  that  he  had  no
knowledge of the compromise  deed.  The  Settlement  Officer,  Consolidation
passed the ex-parte order dated 31.1.1983 and disposed of the  appeal  filed
by the respondent. As a result  of  this  Order,  the  entire  property  was
recognized in the name of the respondent.=
The appellant thereafter filed  an  application  for  setting  aside  the
Order of the Settlement Officer, Consolidation claiming that the  Settlement
Officer had committed error by  not  taking  into  consideration  that  Shri
Prabhakar Nath Pathak Advocate was in fact the lawyer of the respondent  and
he, in collusion with the respondent, had obtained this ex-parte  Order.  It
is further claimed by  the  appellant  that  he  was  not  allowed  to  lead
evidence regarding the deed compromise.=

    The  settlement  deed
produced by the respondent before the Court of Assistant Settlement  Officer
has been relied upon by the courts below to  come  to  the  above  mentioned
conclusion and the same has been concurred with by the High  Court. 
 As  per
the material evidence produced on record, the land in dispute was  purchased
by one Mstt. Tapesara, since deceased, who was the  mother  in  law  of  the
respondent.  
Further,  the  settlement  deed  goes  on  to  show  that   the
respondent is the widow of the only son of Shri Mahadeo and  his  wife  Mstt
Tapesara who purchased the land. 
The appellant, on the other  hand,  is  the
son of Mstt. Tapesara’s sister, Mstt. Jageshara  who  does  not  become  the
legal heir on the death of the owner. 
Therefore, on the death  of  the  only
son of the owner of the land, her daughter in law becomes the legal heir  of the property in absence of any will to prove  the  contrary.  
Moreover,  the
settlement deed states that the two parties  share  amicable  relations  and
wish to live peacefully. 
Therefore, they have, on their free  will,  entered
into a compromise on the issue since the litigation  was  not  in  the  best
interest of either  of  the  parties.  
Therefore,  in  the  absence  of  any
material evidence on record, we are of the opinion that  the  appellant  has
failed to prove his right on the land in dispute. 
We  are  not  inclined  to
interfere with  the  concurrent  findings  of  the  original  and  appellate
authority which establish that a compromise had been  entered  into  between
the parties which was duly verified by Advocate Shri Pathak. 
Hence, we  hold
that the High Court was correct in not interfering with the findings of  the
original and appellate authorities, particularly, when both the  authorities
have  concurrently  relied  upon  the  compromise  deed.   
The   appeal   is
accordingly dismissed. Interim orders dated 27.9.2004  and  7.12.2007  shall
stand vacated.

2014 ( Apr.Part ) judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41383
GYAN SUDHA MISRA, V. GOPALA GOWDA
NON REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5766 OF 2007
  
SHIV MURAT (D) BY LRS. ………APPELLANTS
Vs.
SATYAWATI & ORS. ……… RESPONDENTS

J U D G M E N T
  
V.Gopala Gowda, J.

This appeal is filed by the appellant questioning the correctness of
the judgment and final Order dated 3.8.2004 passed by the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad in Civil Misc. Writ Petition No. 9989 of 1985
urging various facts and legal contentions in justification of his claim.
2. Necessary relevant facts are stated hereunder to appreciate the case of
the appellant and also to find out whether the appellant is entitled for
the relief as prayed in this appeal.
The land in question relates to plot no. 182/1, 184/1, 184/2 and 184/3
situated in village Madhupur, Pargana Musali, Tehsil Chunar, District
Mirzapur (now Sonbhadra). The name of the appellant was recorded as the
Sirdhar of these plots before the consolidation of the plots began.
However, during the process of consolidation, the respondent, allegedly by
fraud, got her name entered in the revenue records.
3. The appellant filed an objection under Section 12 of the U.P.
Consolidation of Holdings Act against the entry of the name of the
respondent in the revenue records. The objection was allowed by the
Consolidation Officer vide Order dated 11.1.1982.
4. Aggrieved by the Order, the respondent filed an appeal in the Court of
Settlement Officer, Consolidation. The respondent filed a fictitious
compromise before the learned Settlement Officer, Consolidation which,
according to the appellant, was procured by fraud. According to the
compromise filed by the respondent, the entire property in dispute becomes
the bhumidari of the respondent and the respondent becomes the sole
beneficiary of the property.
5. The appellant challenged the compromise as fraudulent on two grounds,
firstly, the appellant could not have entered into such compromise which
goes entirely against his favour and secondly, the compromise deed filed
before the Settlement Officer, Consolidation purports to bear the signature
of the appellant which was attested by one Shri Prabhakar Nath Advocate.
However, Shri Prabhakar Nath Advocate was the lawyer of the respondent in
appeal before the Settlement Officer, Consolidation. The appellant never
instructed on the compromise deed. The appellant claimed that he had no
knowledge of the compromise deed. The Settlement Officer, Consolidation
passed the ex-parte order dated 31.1.1983 and disposed of the appeal filed
by the respondent. As a result of this Order, the entire property was
recognized in the name of the respondent.
6. The appellant thereafter filed an application for setting aside the
Order of the Settlement Officer, Consolidation claiming that the Settlement
Officer had committed error by not taking into consideration that Shri
Prabhakar Nath Pathak Advocate was in fact the lawyer of the respondent and
he, in collusion with the respondent, had obtained this ex-parte Order. It
is further claimed by the appellant that he was not allowed to lead
evidence regarding the deed compromise.
7. The learned Settlement Officer, vide Order dated 23.6.1984, rejected the
application of the appellant on the basis of the compromise deed which was
attested by the advocate.
8. Against the said Order, the appellant filed a Revision Petition being
Revision Petition No. 10 before the learned Deputy Director of
Consolidation. The same was dismissed vide Order dated 11.12.1984.
9. The appellant filed Civil Misc. Writ Petition No. 9899 of 1985 in the
High Court of Judicature at Allahabad which was also dismissed vide order
dated 3.8.2004.
10. The High Court opined that the learned Settlement Officer had already
dismissed the application on the basis of the settlement entered into
between the parties and verified by Advocate Shri Prabhakar Nath who had
been the lawyer of the appellant. The High Court perused the impugned
Orders and opined that a finding of fact has been recorded by the courts
below that the compromise deed had been signed by the appellant and his
signature had been duly verified by his counsel Shri Prabhakar Nath Pathak.
These finding of facts are not open to interference by the High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution. Hence, this appeal.
11. We have heard both the sides and carefully perused the material
evidence on record produced before us by the parties. The settlement deed
produced by the respondent before the Court of Assistant Settlement Officer
has been relied upon by the courts below to come to the above mentioned
conclusion and the same has been concurred with by the High Court. As per
the material evidence produced on record, the land in dispute was purchased
by one Mstt. Tapesara, since deceased, who was the mother in law of the
respondent. Further, the settlement deed goes on to show that the
respondent is the widow of the only son of Shri Mahadeo and his wife Mstt
Tapesara who purchased the land. The appellant, on the other hand, is the
son of Mstt. Tapesara’s sister, Mstt. Jageshara who does not become the
legal heir on the death of the owner. Therefore, on the death of the only
son of the owner of the land, her daughter in law becomes the legal heir of
the property in absence of any will to prove the contrary. Moreover, the
settlement deed states that the two parties share amicable relations and
wish to live peacefully. Therefore, they have, on their free will, entered
into a compromise on the issue since the litigation was not in the best
interest of either of the parties. Therefore, in the absence of any
material evidence on record, we are of the opinion that the appellant has
failed to prove his right on the land in dispute. We are not inclined to
interfere with the concurrent findings of the original and appellate
authority which establish that a compromise had been entered into between
the parties which was duly verified by Advocate Shri Pathak. Hence, we hold
that the High Court was correct in not interfering with the findings of the
original and appellate authorities, particularly, when both the authorities
have concurrently relied upon the compromise deed. The appeal is
accordingly dismissed. Interim orders dated 27.9.2004 and 7.12.2007 shall
stand vacated.

………………………………………………………………………J.
[GYAN SUDHA MISRA]

………………………………………………………………………J.
[V. GOPALA GOWDA]
New Delhi,
April 4, 2014