Tata group counsel also said that Mistry or his group did not oppose the changes made to the articles of association of Tata Sons more than a decade ago.
"Cyrus Mistry himself was selected by a committee under article 118 and he himself is challenging that today. He is challenging the very article under which he was selected," Tata Sons counsel Abishek Manu Singhvi told the NCLT today.
The Tata counsel also dismissed Mistry's claim that his group suffered losses due to the mismanagement of Tata Group companies which took place after these arbitrary changes were made to the articles of association of Tata Sons.
"Indubitably, the petitioners have greatly enjoyed the fruits of their investment in Tata Sons," he said adding all the allegations look like "a complete afterthought".
Stating that Mistry's allegation "of lack of corporate governance" is "bogey," he said in fact, the petitioners have voted in favour of the introduction of these articles in 2000.
Mistry's father Pallonji Mistry, who attended that board meeting, also did not object then. Even when in 2014 article 121A was freshly inserted there was no objection, Singhvi said.
"How can these articles be considered bad only on October 24, 2016", Singhvi wondered.
Terming Mistry group's counsel Aryama Sundaram's plea as "conditional, opportunistic and of no value," Singhvi said they are oral and not written complaints and how could he say that article 121 A is bad now.
The Mistry group had in November moved the NCLT Mumbai bench seeking to amend its petition demanding action against Tata Sons for "oppression" of minority shareholders and "mismanagement" of Tata Group companies.
Cyrus Investments and Sterling Investments filed the amendment pleas on November 3 and the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) had in September allowed Mistry firms' plea seeking a waiver of the 10 per cent minimum shareholding eligibility criterion, to be able to move the tribunal against Tata Sons.
Mistry is locked in a legal battle with the Tatas since his sacking as chairman of Tata Sons on October 24, 2016, and removal as a director on February 6, 2017.
The appellate tribunal had said although Mistry's companies did not meet the minimum shareholding norm, under exceptional circumstances, this statutory requirement can be waived.
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