Sahara, along with two others, has been dragged into a USD 350 million lawsuit filed by a Hong Kong-based investor in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, seeking attachment of Indian group's two prized hotel assets - Plaza and Dream Downtown in New York.
The lawsuit has been filed by JTS Trading Ltd, which had proposed to partner UAE-based Trinity White City Ventures and arrange loans from Swiss banking giant UBS to acquire Sahara's three overseas hotels - Grosvenor House in London and the two in the US.
"Sahara was at one time in discussions with Trinity but had no knowledge of the dealings between Trinity and JTS," the statement said.
"This is a private dispute between two parties who have had a falling out," Sandeep Wadhwa, Head of Corporate Finance at Sahara Group, said in the statement.
Also Read
In the lawsuit filed against Trinity, Sahara and UBS, JTS has alleged that Trinity cut it off from the deal for direct negotiations with Sahara. JTS has also accused Sahara and UBS of having "aided and abetted" the UAE firm in breaching its "fiduciary duties" under their agreement.
The court has passed an 'order to show cause', asking Sahara India Pariwar to show cause in the court on July 8 why "an order should not be made" for attaching the group's interest in the Plaza and Dream Downtown hotels in New York.
Sahara sources said this lawsuit will have no bearing on its fund-raising exercise as a deal is already in final stages with another investor.
JTS was to invest USD 850 million for a 70 per cent stake in a private equity fund for the acquisition, while Trinity was to contribute USD 250 million for a 30 per cent stake. UBS was to provide senior debt facilities for the transaction.