Tata Sons Moves SC Against NCLAT Order Reinstating Cyrus Mistry as Company Chairman
Tata Sons Moves SC Against NCLAT Order Reinstating Cyrus Mistry as Company Chairman
Cyrus Mistry, a scion of wealthy Shapoorji Pallonji family, was in a coup removed as Chairman of Tata Sons in October 2016.

New Delhi: Tata Sons on Thursday moved the Supreme Court against the December 18 order of the NCLAT reinstating Cyrus Mistry as the company’s chairman.

In a big win for Mistry, the NCLAT had restored him as executive chairman of Tata Sons and ruled that appointment of N Chandrasekaran as the head of the holding company of salt-to-software conglomerate was illegal.

Mistry was reappointed chairman of Tata Sons and three group companies — TCS, Tata Industries & Tata Teleservices, Maharashtra.

The NCLAT however stayed the operation of the order with respect to reinstatement for four weeks to allow Tatas to appeal. Setting aside a lower court order, the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) also quashed the conversion of Tata Sons into a private company from a public firm.

Tata Sons sought the stay on the tribunal’s order till its appeal is decided in view of the TCS board meeting on January 9. An urgent hearing has been sought on January 6 when the SC reopens after winter break.

Mistry, a scion of wealthy Shapoorji Pallonji family, was in a coup removed as Chairman of Tata Sons in October 2016. He was the sixth chairman of Tata Sons and had taken over in 2012 after Ratan Tata. He was later also removed as director on board of Tata Sons.

However, Mistry and Tata family patriarch Ratan Tata had reportedly falling out over key investment decisions, including manufacturing of world's cheapest car Nano.

Mistry, whose family owns 18.4 per cent stake in Tata Sons, challenged his removal in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). The case of oppression and mismanagement against Tata Sons and 20 others, including Ratan Tata, filed by Mistry family entities - Cyrus Investments and Sterling Investments - were however in March 2017 dismissed by the NCLT ruling that they were not eligible to pursue the allegations.

Section 244 of the Companies Act, 2013 allows a shareholder of a company to bring an oppression and mismanagement case against the firm if it holds not less than one-tenth of the issued share capital.

On appeal, the Cyrus Mistry firms had secured a partial win at the NCLAT, which waived the 10 per cent shareholding requirement but remitted the matter to the NCLT. In July last year, the NCLT rejected Mistry's petition to reinstate him and found no merit in his allegations of operational mismanagement and oppression of minority shareholders.

Mistry had approached the appellate tribunal against the verdict of Mumbai NCLT. The NCLAT had reserved its judgment after completion of arguments from both sides in July this year.

According to a report, Mistry is unlikely to take up a board position at any of these companies. He will likely appoint nominee directors to the board, who would enforce best corporate governance practices, a report in Business Standard said.

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