The apex court, headed by then Chief Justice T S Thakur, on January 2 had said that a person was disqualified from holding any post if he "has been an office bearer of BCCI or a State Association for a cumulative period of 9 years".
At the outset, senior advocates Anil Divan and Gopal Subramaniam, who have been appointed as amicus curiae to assist the court, submitted nine names in sealed covers for the proposed panel of administrators which will supervise the administration of BCCI through its Chief Executive Officer.
"We may not have the nine member committee. It may be too large. We hope and trust that there are no names which are above 70 (years of age)," the bench said, adding that at present, it was not deciding or dropping any name.
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Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, representing public bodies which were permanent members to BCCI, said all the three bodies have been "integral constituent" of BCCI and have been promoting cricket and employing cricketers.
"We have not only been downgraded but the rule that no public servant or minister would represent them, are affecting us adversely," he said.
by senior advocate Vikas Singh, representing Kerala Cricket Association, and barred him from advancing further arguments today.
During the hearing, the two amicus curiae said they had no objection if the names suggested by them were revealed to the counsel of other parties. The court, however, ordered that the cover, containing the names, be re-sealed till it takes a decision on January 24.
The bench asked Subramaniam as to whether the list provided by him contained any name of a person over 70 years of age.
As Subramaniam answered in affirmative, the bench reacted sharply and questioned the particular suggestion.
"Amicus curiae (Gopal Subramaniam) mentioned before the court and the January 2 order was modified a day after. He did not serve any notice upon us and came before the court and got the order modified. I take serious objection to this. There was no such recommendation which was accepted by the court," Sibal said.
To this, Subramaniam said, "I just brought the matter to the court's notice as an amicus and it was corrected. You (Sibal) are casting aspersions on me".
The Attorney General then intervened and said he was privy to the proceedings, but was appearing for the first time as the counsel on behalf of Railways and other public bodies.
Rohatgi said the Lodha panel was formed to look into the
IPL spot-fixing issue and later its scope got widened.
He referred to the inapplicability of certain suggestions of the panel and gave illustration of DDCA, saying it is a company and how can it be governed by regulations when there is a specific (company) law to deal with it.
During the hearing, Sibal referred to the decision to remove BCCI President Anurag Thakur and Secretary Ajay Shirke, and said "nobody is left to deal with BCCI's financial issues with ICC. Ad hoc arrangements cannot run. You have thrown us all out."
He said BCCI contributes 70 per cent to the revenue of the ICC and has been getting 22 per cent shares in revenue from the world sports body which now plans to reduce it to 11 per cent.
He objected to the idea of court appointing administrators and said "we give the names and you decide".
Subramaniam objected to the submission and said that the whole issue is now being reopened and it has been the fact that BCCI was seeking time to implement reforms.
Sibal said that BCCI had said it would "try to persuade" state associations.
Earlier, the apex court had come down heavily on the defiant BCCI brass and removed Thakur and Shirke as President and Secretary for "obstructing" and "impeding" its directions for overhauling governance in the cricket body.
It had said that the BCCI will now be overseen by a committee of administrators.
The court had also slapped Thakur with contempt and perjury notices for filing a false affidavit over writing to ICC on the issue of autonomy.