"We are rejecting (the appeals)," a bench comprising justices R F Nariman and S K Kaul said while upholding the July three judgement of the high court.
The appeals were filed in the apex court by the airline and its co-founder Ajay Singh.
A division bench of the high court had asked SpiceJet to deposit the money, saying, "there is nothing worthwhile" in the petitions to show its finances were precarious or that its cash position was so stretched that it could not comply with its single judge order asking it to deposit the amount.
It had said that part of the amount could be secured by a cash deposit of Rs 250 crore and the balance by a bank guarantee of Rs 329 crore.
SpiceJet and Singh had challenged before the division bench the July last year's interim order passed by a single judge alleging that the court did not have the jurisdiction.
The single judge's order had come on a civil suit by Sun TV group's chief Kalanithi Maran and his Kal Airways.
In their suit, Maran and his airline company had sought issuance of stock warrants in SpiceJet to them as per a sale purchase agreement (SPA) of 2015 which had led to the transfer of ownership of the budget carrier to Ajay Singh.
Apart from ordering that the amount be deposited in the court, the single judge had also asked Spicejet and Maran to appoint an "arbitral tribunal" to decide the share transfer dispute between them in a year.
The amount was to be deposited in five instalments with the first one in August 2016, the court had said.
The board resolution was passed on the court's direction.
Under the SPA, Maran and Kal Airways had transferred their entire 350,428,758 equity shares (58.46 per cent stake) in the airline to Ajay Singh.
According to the SPA, Maran and Kal were to receive the redeemable warrants in return for the amount they were to give to the airline towards operating costs and debt payment, Maran had said in his plea.
It had also claimed that every penny had been utilised towards operations and discharge of liabilities.
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