This is despite the fact that it cut the reserve price to USD 12.5 million from the earlier USD 22.5 million upon the Bombay High Court's direction in a related case.
Mallya owes around Rs 1,000 crore to the Service Tax department. He also owes more than Rs 9,000 crore to 17 banks. The businessman is believed to have fled to the UK in March last year to avoid arrest over the alleged loan defaults.
Of the service tax claim, Rs 535 crore is the levy on ticket sales, which his now defunct Kingfisher airline (KFA) did not deposit with the department after collecting it from the passengers. The remaining amount is interest and other levies.
The latest bidding was conducted by MSTC on March 15-16, a senior official of the department told PTI today, adding it failed despite reduction of reserve price to USD 12.5 million.
The only bidder who participated in the e-auction was the US-based Aviation Solution LLP which quoted just Rs 17 crore (USD 2.65 million), the official said.
Mallya left the country on March 2, 2016. Indian courts have issued warrants against him in various cases.
Meanwhile, the Karnataka High Court has appointed Registrar of Companies as an official liquidator in the case related to bank loan default by KFA. The court ordered that all the properties of KFA should be taken over by the official liquidator.
Apart from Mallya's jet, the department has also attached other properties including seven KFA aircraft, some spare engine parts of aircraft and Kingfisher House.
"We are waiting for the next hearing on the matter by Bombay High Court which is slated for month-end before taking a decision as to whether all the attached properties should be handed over to the official liquidator," the official said.
During the jet's auction in July 2016, a United Arab Emirates-based aviation support company had offered a paltry Rs 1.09 crore against the Service Tax department's reserved price of Rs 152 crore for the flying machine.
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