High Court Joint Registrar Rakesh Pandit sent the matter before the court for framing of issues after Tharoor, Goswami and the TV channel by way of affidavits endorsed the documents and the annexures filed by each of them along with the civil suit.
The Joint Registrar had on January 18 fixed the case for conclusion of admission or denial of documents, a procedure laid down in the Civil Procedure Code (CPC) which enables rival parties to a civil suit to admit or deny papers submitted in court.
Tharoor, through three different applications, had also sought a direction from the high court to restrain the TV channel from broadcasting any show relating to his wife's death till the probe was completed by the Delhi Police.
Justice Manmohan had, however, refused to restrain the journalist and his news channel from airing news or debates relating to the mysterious death of Tharoor's wife but had said it has to be "tempered and balanced".
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Goswami and the channel had contended that they have been cautious and had never imputed that the Congress leader was guilty.
Tharoor's law suit had referred to the broadcasting of news items from May 8 to 13, 2017 when the TV channel claimed to have aired a programme connected to the death of his wife.
The suit, filed through advocate Gaurav Gupta, had denounced the news, claiming that the recordings were released in a sensational manner so as to appease the viewers and had created a non-existing controversy by maligning his public life and image. It had said that the police was probing the matter and had also lodged an FIR.