The submission was made before a bench of justices Indira Banerjee and V K Rao during the hearing of the airline's appeal contending that the dispute has to be decided by arbirtration and the single judge of the high court had exceeded his jurisdiction.
The single judge's decision had come on a plea of Sun Group chief Kalanithi Maran and his Kal Airways for issuance of stock warrants in SpiceJet to them, as per a sale-purchase agreement (SPA) of 2015 that had led to the transfer of ownership of the budget carrier to its co-founder Ajay Singh.
"How can a court pass an interim order when it cannot pass the final order," Sundaram argued and added that "the approach taken by the single judge was erroneous. He exceeded his jurisdiction. There is an error committed by the single judge."
The arguments, which remained inconclusive, will resume tomorrow.
More From This Section
Apart from ordering deposit of the amount in the court,
Justice Manmohan Singh had earlier asked Spicejet and Maran to appoint an arbitral tribunal to decide the share transfer dispute between them in a year.
Market regulator SEBI had earlier expressed its inability before the single judge to approve the board resolution passed by SpiceJet for issue of warrants in favour of Maran and his Kal Airways.
The board resolution was passed on the court's direction.
Under the sale and purchase agreement (SPA), Maran and Kal Airways had transferred their entire 350,428,758 equity shares (58.46 per cent stake) in the airline to Ajay Singh.
According to the SPA, Maran and Kal were to receive the redeemable warrants in return for around Rs 679 crore that they were to give to the airline towards operating costs and debt payment, Maran had said in his plea.
It had also claimed that every penny had been utilised towards operations and discharge of liabilities.