The Hindu 21.04.2017
Supreme Court allows NDMC to e-auction Taj Mansingh
Taj Mansingh Hotel on Thursday.R.V. Moorthy
Hotel to get six months to wind up if Tatas lose bid
The Supreme Court on Thursday gave the green signal to the New Delhi
Municipal Council (NDMC) to e-auction the Taj Mansingh Hotel.
A
bench of Justices P.C. Ghose and Rohinton Nariman agreed with the NDMC’s
argument that the first right of refusal is in-built in the very
process of e-auction as the highest offer is open before bidders.
This
way, the NDMC convinced the court that there was no need to provide the
Tata Group’s Indian Hotels Company (IHCL), which had “collaborated”
with the NDMC in the latter half of the 1970s to construct and run the
five-star hotel, the first right of refusal to match the highest bid at
the auction.
The court, however, said the NDMC should keep in mind
the blemishless manner in which the Tatas had run the hotel for over
three decades, and this legacy should feature the foremost at the
auction.
The court observed that in case the Tatas lose out in the
auction, they should be gracefully given a period of six months to wind
up their commitments at the hotel and leave.
“We
respect the decision of the honourable Supreme Court and intend to
participate in the e-auction when it is held. We stay committed to our
colleagues and guests, whose loyalty and trust remains our biggest
asset.” a spokesperson of Taj Hotel said in Mumbai.
Agrees with HC
The
Supreme Court has in a way confirmed the conclusions arrived at by the
Delhi High Court in the latter’s 52-page judgment on October 27, 2016.
The
High Court judgment had held that “unless there is a social or a
welfare purpose or any other public interest which is served, an asset
held for the benefit of the public if commercially exploited, should be
by way of an auction or an open competitive bidding because it would
then fetch the maximum revenue.”