MCA, in its petition, has claimed that the BCCI cannot "direct" it to implement the recommendations made in the 159-page report submitted by the three-member Lodha committee to the Supreme Court.
According to MCA, it is governed by the rules of the Mumbai Charitable Trust Act.
The petition is likely to come up for hearing before a division bench of the High Court on September 30.
In July, Pawar, after a meeting of the MCA's managing committee, had said he was going to retire from cricket administration.
The Supreme Court, in July, had directed BCCI and the state cricket associations to implement all the recommendations of the Lodha committee within six months.
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