City
Epaper

SC to hear today SpiceJet's plea against grounding of engines

By IANS | Updated: September 20, 2024 08:50 IST

New Delhi, Sep 20 The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Friday a plea filed by low-cost ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 20 The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Friday a plea filed by low-cost carrier SpiceJet against the Delhi High Court directive requiring the debt-ridden airline to ground three engines over repetitive failures to pay its lessors.

As per the causelist published on the apex court website, a bench headed by CJI D.Y. Chandrachud and comprising Justices J.B. Pardiwala and Manoj Misra will take up the matter for hearing on September 20.

Previously on September 17, the last date of listing, Spicejet’s plea was taken up for hearing due to paucity of time.

SpiceJet had earlier mentioned its special leave petition before CJI Chandrachud for an urgent hearing challenging the Delhi High Court’s refusal to interfere with a directive requiring the low-cost carrier to ground three engines.

A division bench of the Delhi High Court upheld a single-judge bench’s order asking Spicejet to ground three engines by February 16, apart from taking steps to ensure that the engines are re-delivered to lessors within 15 days.

SpiceJet had moved an appeal before the division bench of the High Court and prayed for an urgent hearing against the decision of the single-judge bench of Justice Manmeet Singh Arora.

In his judgment, Justice Arora observed, “The defendant (SpiceJet) is a defaulter and has no legal and contractual right to continue the use of the engines. The inability of the defendant to pay the admitted outstanding dues is writ large on the face of the record and in fact, permitting the defendant to continue the use of the engines without payment would only cause financial distress to the plaintiff (lessors).”

SpiceJet was permitted to continue the use of the engines after it undertook before the Delhi High Court on May 29 that it would repay the outstanding lease amounts along with the weekly payments.

The Delhi High Court had clarified that the return of the engines does not absolve the airline from its liability of payments which have admittedly fallen due.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalTN Weather Dept predicts heavy rains in 10 districts on Nov 21

BusinessA Historic Day: The Art of Living Awarded Two National Recognitions for Water Conservation

BusinessDrive Daily With Confidence Using These Car Safety Essentials

InternationalUS appreciates partnership with India to dismantle terror-linked networks

TechnologyUNICEF lauds India for ‘significant progress’ in poverty reduction, investments in children

National Realted Stories

NationalK'taka leadership change: High command said nothing nor discussed in CLP meeting, says Parameshwara

NationalAl-Falah varsity founder also accused of cheating Bhopal gas victims 24 years ago

NationalJharkhand HC flags major discrepancies in JSSC merit list, seeks explanation

NationalUS appreciates partnership with India to dismantle terror-linked networks

NationalCore sector growth stays flat in October