City
Epaper

Delhi Gymkhana Club: SC adjourns plea against NCLAT order for two weeks

By IANS | Updated: August 31, 2021 21:35 IST

New Delhi, Aug 31 The Supreme Court on Tuesday adjourned, for two weeks, an appeal against the NCLAT ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 31 The Supreme Court on Tuesday adjourned, for two weeks, an appeal against the NCLAT order directing the suspension of the general committee of the Delhi Gymkhana Club and appointment of a Centre-nominated administrator to manage the affairs of the Club.

A bench of Justices A.M. Khanwilkar, Sanjiv Khanna, and J.K. Maheshwari said: "List these matters on September 13 before appropriate bench wherein one of us (Justice Khanna), is not a Member."

One of the appeals has been filed by the directors of the board (general committee) of the club under Section 423 of the Companies Act, 2013. The NCLAT's order had also directed that acceptance of new membership or fee or any enhancement in the fee of waitlist applications be kept on hold till disposal of the petition before the NCLT. The appeal argued that NCLAT order is wholly untenable in law, and virtually spells the death knell of the club and other like institutions.

"The Hon'ble NCLAT has without any basis and in an arbitrary manner suspended and substituted the GC of the Club with an Administrator to be nominated by Respondent No.I/Union of India. It is submitted that this appointment, which supplants corporate democracy, is drastic, vastly excessive, has far-reaching consequences, and is usually a remedy of the last," said the appeal.

A battery of senior advocates such as Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Harish Salve, Kapil Sibal, and C. Aryama Sundaram are appearing for parties in the matter.

The appeal added: "It is respectfully submitted that Government are not and ought not to concern themselves with the affairs of private members clubs. Without prejudice to the foregoing, the impugned order even otherwise suffers from non-application of mind as the present GC was democratically elected at the AGM held on December 31, 2020, and the allegations do not pertain to this GC, but admittedly to the period from 2013-2018."

The NCLAT had said the club's policy under which membership of a person attains hereditary character and general public seeking membership being made to wait for decades, is certainly prejudicial to the public interest. The appeal contended that there is no "public interest" within the meaning of Section 241 (2) of the Companies Act, in the functioning of a club which functions for the benefit of its private members, especially when it is functioning within the parameters of its charter documents.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: NclatNew DelhiSanjiv KhannaUnion Of IndiaSupreme CourtHarish SalveThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls as Supreme Court Postpones AGR Dues Hearing to Oct 6

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls By 6% Ahead of Supreme Court Hearing On Rs, 9450 Crore AGR Dues

NationalDelhi Metro Tragedy: Woman Falls or Jumps From Supreme Court Station; Investigation Underway

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Rise by 1%: Telecom Stock Jumps 15% in One Month After Government Signals Support on AGR Dues

NationalSupreme Court Rejects Jacqueline Fernandez’s Plea to Dismiss Rs 215 Crore Money Laundering Charges Linked to Sukesh Chandrashekhar

International Realted Stories

InternationalUK protesters stand in solidarity with PoJK's fight for civil rights

InternationalToddler 'Aryatara Shakya' is anointed as "Kumari" the Living goddess after undergoing ancient ritual

International"Israel encouraged by India as we share anti terrorism views," says Israeli envoy to India

InternationalWorld leaders laud Trump's 20-point peace plan to end conflict in Gaza

InternationalSouth Korea: Cabinet approves govt reorganisation bill abolishing prosecution office