City
Epaper

Delhi HC restrains Ashneer Grover from creating third party rights in BharatPe shares

By IANS | Updated: April 30, 2024 17:25 IST

New Delhi, April 30 The Delhi High Court on Tuesday issued a restraining order against Ashneer Grover, the ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 30 The Delhi High Court on Tuesday issued a restraining order against Ashneer Grover, the former Managing Director of BharatPe, preventing him from creating any third-party interests or rights in the 16,110 shares transferred to him by the fintech company's co-founder, Bhavik Koladiya.

The order was issued by Justice Prateek Jalan in response to an interim application filed by Koladiya as part of his ongoing suit against Grover.

The court stressed that Grover must refrain from making any third-party arrangements related to the shares until the conclusion of the legal proceedings.

Grover, who joined BharatPe, co-founded by Koladiya and Shashvat Nakrani in 2017, as the third co-founder in 2018, had publicly stated last year that he would not involve any third parties in these shares.

This development follows a division bench's order earlier this year for an expedited trial of a suit filed by Nakrani, seeking to prevent Grover from alienating, transferring, or creating any third-party rights in the "unpaid shares" purchased from him.

Previously, a single judge bench had denied Nakrani's request to restrain Grover from creating third-party rights in the unpaid shares, rejecting an interim application in the suit.

In March this year, the high court issued an order restraining Grover from making defamatory and derogatory statements against the fintech company, its office bearers, or officials. In November last year, the court imposed a fine of Rs 2 lakh on Grover. Justice Pratibha M Singh had directed Grover to remove his tweets, including one calling the SBI Chairperson petty, within 48 hours.

The court had also mandated the Economic Times to take down an article, based on letters written by Grover to the RBI Chairman.

BharatPe had approached the HC months after Grover and his wife were dismissed from the company in 2022 over allegations of misappropriation of funds. In its suit, BharatPe has claimed damages worth Rs 88.67 crore from Grover, his wife, and his brother for alleged cheating and misappropriation of funds.

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

InternationalMost powerful solar flare occurred in 1.5 months recorded

InternationalMosquitoes carrying West Nile Virus found near Netanya

NationalGovt and agency should find conspirators of Malegaon bomb blast: Bhaiyaji Joshi

Aurangabad11-year-old girl severely burnt after touching high-voltage wire in Gangapur

FootballPunjab FC start their Durand Cup campaign with late win over Karbi Anglong

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySouth Korean President Lee calls for measures to curb fake news on YouTube

TechnologyDPIIT ieam visits Bengaluru to boost IoT and Deep-Tech innovation

TechnologyIndia's smartphone exports hit record $7.72 billion in Q1FY26, Apple leads with $6 billion

TechnologyIndia’s chip market poised to scale $110 billion by 2030

TechnologyQ1 Earnings Review: Brokerages give mixed outlook, earnings downgrade ratio drops