Jaidev Thackeray, the son of the late Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray, today told the Bombay High Court that he had tried to maintain cordial relations with his brother Uddhav, particularly in the last few years, but the latter was unresponsive.
Jaidev has challenged before the High Court Thackeray's will of December 2011, which bequeaths a substantial part of the estate to Uddhav and does not give Jaidev anything.
"We have not met or talked to each other since the petition was filed. Uddhav does not return my phone calls or reply to my text messages though I have tried to keep our relations cordial," he said during a cross-examination by Uddhav's lawyer Rohit Kapadia before Justice Gautam Patel.
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The cross-examination focused on his two statements in an affidavit. Jaidev has said that his father, Bal Thackeray, once told him that Uddhav handed him a set of documents and he signed them. Jaidev has also contended that his father had told him that he wanted to give him a share in the family property.
During cross-examination, Jaidev said he had not discussed these (alleged) facts with Uddhav, because his father did not want any discord between the brothers.
Asked why he did not find out what documents Uddhav had given to his father to sign, Jaidev said Bal Thackeray had said he did not want a discord between the brothers, so he (Jaidev) did not pursue the matter.
Replying to a question as to why he left 'Matoshree', the Thackeray residence, to never return, Jaidev, whose relations with his father were strained, said it was due to an incident in the family which he would not like to talk about now or even in future. This incident had nothing to do with his father, he added.