"The petition is dismissed," said a division bench of Chief Justice Manjula Chellur and Justice M S Sonak.
The court, however, extended for 12 weeks an interim stay granted last year to the merger order passed by the Union Ministry of Corporate Affairs on February 12, 2016.
Soon after the merger order was passed, FTIL, now known as 63 Moons, had approached the high court.
Section 396 gives power to the central government to merge companies in public interest.
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FTIL counsels argued that use of section 396 in this way was illegal, considering that the liability of NSEL was yet to be established.
"If the power to amalgamate is being used to mulct (extract money from) shareholders and stakeholders of a parent company with putative liabilities of a subsidiary, it could only be done after existence of such a liability is established upon adjudication," an FTIL lawyer had argued.
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