Post Tata Sons debacle,
Here’s what Cyrus Mistry is up to
While committed to taking his legal battle against Tata Sons to its
logical conclusion, Mistry is planning to start his own new venture
Post Tata Sons debacle, Here’s what Cyrus Mistry is up to
By Aveek Datta
Forbes India
The pitched corporate battle that began on October 24, 2016, with Cyrus
Mistry being sacked as chairman of Tata Sons, continued on February 6,
2017 with his removal as a director on the board of the holding company
of the conglomerate, in which his family holds an 18.4 percent stake.
While Tata Sons may have been successful in removing all traces of
Mistry from its headquarters at Bombay House, it may still be premature
for them to claim victory, since a long-drawn legal battle is all but a
given.
Mistry, 48, and his family’s investment firms that have moved court
against Tata Sons, its directors, the Tata Trusts and their nominees,
fought tooth and nail to obtain a stay on the extraordinary general
meeting (EGM) of Tata Sons’ shareholders where a resolution seeking his
removal was to be put to vote. The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT),
which is hearing the main petition alleging oppression of shareholders
and mismanagement, refused to grant the stay. The petitioners then moved
the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) in New Delhi, but
to no avail.
Consequently, the EGM went ahead on February 6 and, as expected, the
shareholders of Tata Sons passed a resolution to remove Mistry as a
director of the company.
Sources close to the developments at Bombay House say that neither side
is willing to let up.
Whichever party loses a case at any court of law
will invariably appeal the decision in a higher court, they say, till
all legal options are exhausted by either side.
It started with the Mistry family firms—Cyrus Investments and Sterling Investment—challenging NCLT’s refusal to grant a stay on the EGM, and
their unwillingness to take an immediate decision on the maintainability
of their petition at the NCLAT.
Tata Sons has claimed that Mistry’s petition is not maintainable since
his family firms hold only 2.17 percent of the issued share capital of
the company (including ordinary and preference shares).
A petition filed under Section 241 and 242 of the Companies Act of 2013
is not maintainable if the petitioners hold less than a tenth of the
issued share capital of the company, or represent less than a tenth of
the total number of shareowner members.
But in the interest of hearing a
case, a court of law can always waive this condition.
While the NCLAT has refused to intervene in the matter, it did provide
some relief to Mistry by observing that when his case comes up for final
hearing at the NCLT, the court should decide on the issues of
maintainability and waiver first, and only then decide on the case based
on merit.
The NCLAT further stated that if the tribunal’s Mumbai bench ruled in
favour of Mistry, it could always issue an order to restore him as a
director of Tata Sons.
Meanwhile, sources close to Mistry say he is chalking out his next
professional pursuit.
“When Cyrus had left the Shapoorji Pallonji Group to take over as Tata
Sons chairman, he had handed over the day-to-day management of the group
to his brother, Shapoor,” says the source.
“Though he is back in the family business, he is clear that Shapoor
should continue running the business. While he will support his brother
in the management of the group, he is also planning to start a new
venture of his own.
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