The Supreme Court has on Monday brought the Metal Scrap
Trade Corporation (MSTC) of the presently defunct, Amrapali Group of Companies
and its directors, to auction. All it happened to ensure speedy disposal of
attached properties. The SC has also directed them to deposit the cash with the
apex court registry.
The
Apex Court said that the funds collected through auction of properties will
help in speedy completion of stalled projects and bringing back the confidence
of home buyers.
A
bench of Justices Arun Mishra and U U Lalit accepted the suggestion of senior
advocate R Venkataramani, appointed as court receiver by the top court for
auctioning of the attached properties of Amrapali.
The
top court directed the relevant documents of the attached properties, which
were with the Debt Recovery Tribunal be given to the MSTC, which would auction
the assets and deposit the amount with the apex court registry.
The
top court also asked Orissa State Housing Board, to deposit Rs. 34 crore with
the apex court registry, which had been deposited by Amrapali Group with it for
developing a housing project.
Similarly,
the top court also asked the Raipur Development Authority to deposit Rs. 19
crore with the apex court registry.
The
counsel for Raipur Development Authority said that Rs. 19 crore was deposited
by Amrapali Group for the lease of three land plots for development into a
housing society but the agreement was never fulfilled and the authority had to
cancel the contract.
The
top court took strong exception of non-compliance of its order of depositing
the home buyers' money by Surekha Group and directed that its directors Vishnu
Surekha, Navneet Surekha and Akhil Surekha will have to remain present on
December 2, if they do not deposit Rs. 167 crores with the apex court registry
within six weeks.
"There
are adverse finding against you all in the forensic audit and despite that you
have not complied with our orders to return the money. Forensic auditors have
found that there was a transaction of Rs. 167 crore. It was home buyers money
and you have to return that money or face the consequences," the bench
said.
The
top court also restrained the Noida Authority from creating any rights or
alienating the land of the Amrapali Heartbeat City, of which the lease it has
recently cancelled.
The
court took on record the third report of forensic auditors with regard to the
Heartbeat city project of Amrapali and others.
On
September 11, the top court had warned the homebuyers of now defunct Amrapali
Group that their unwillingness to pay the outstanding dues may lead to winding
up of the stalled projects due to financial crunch.