The Supreme Court today stayed for 10 days the ongoing trial in a disproportionate assets case before a Bangalore court against Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa.
A bench comprising justices BS Chauhan and AK Sikri, however, said that the civil proceedings, pending before the same trial court in Bangalore, will go on.
The civil proceedings relate to the plea of various companies alleging that some of the properties, shown as part of the disproportionate assets of the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, actually belonged to them.
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The bench also issued notice to the director General Vigilance on the petition filed by AIADMK chief Jayalalithaa. Senior advocate Ranjit Kumar, appearing for the petitioner, said grave prejudice would be caused if the criminal trial is not stayed. The apex court had on May 13 said it was not inclined to stay the trial in the Bangalore court in the DA case against Jayalalithaa and others. It, however, had allowed the chief minister to withdraw the plea and move the Karnataka high court.
The chief minister had sought a stay on the trial till the lower court decides the plea of Lex Property Development (P) Ltd, a Chennai-based firm.
The company has claimed that the properties, which have been attached by the authorities as ‘benami’ holdings of Jayalalithaa, in fact, belonged to it and said this plea be decided first before the lower court proceeds with the trial.