A bench comprising justices Pinaki Chandra Ghose and Amitava Roy dismissed the plea by Harish Chandra Gupta seeking joint trial in all the cases on the ground that the FIRs were common and the alleged offences pertained to same transaction.
"There would be hotchpotch if such a prayer seeking clubbing of trials is entertained. How can the defence be same if the conspiracies are different? Looking at the facts of the cases, we are satisfied that they are not the part of the same transaction," the bench said.
Senior advocate Aman Lekhi, appearing for Gupta, said that eight different charge sheets have been filed against him and proceeding are going on individually.
"This is not proper as mandate of law says that there should be a joint trial in all the cases. In each case, the recommendations by the screening committee are composite and unanimous. In all cases, the material witnesses are common, so there should be joint trial," Lekhi said.
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In May, a special court had also dismissed Gupta's plea seeking joint trial in several cases against him in the coal block allocation scam saying all the matters were at different stages.
Some of the cases in which Gupta was summoned as accused
by the court include those relating to alleged irregularities in allocation of Thesgora-B Rudrapuri coal block to accused firm Kamal Sponge Steel and Power Ltd (KSSPL) and allocation of Moira and Madhujore (North and South) coal blocks in West Bengal's Raniganj area to Vikash Metal and Power Ltd.
While ordering framing of charges against Gupta and others in the case involving KSSPL, the court had observed that then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was kept in the dark by him. It said Gupta had prima facie violated the law and the trust placed on him on the issue of coal block allocation.