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IHCL shareholders fear Mistry will take battle to court

Cyrus Mistry quit from the boards of all listed Tata companies on Monday

Cyrus Mistry, Bombay House, Tata Group

Cyrus Mistry leaves from Bombay House in Mumbai. Photo: Kamlesh Pednekar

Press Trust of India Mumbai
A day after Cyrus P Mistry's sudden decision to quit from the boards of six Tata group companies, Indian Hotels Company Ltd (IHCL) shareholders at the EGM on Tuesday expressed concern over his taking the battle to the courts.

Following Mistry's decision, there was no voting on removing him as the director at the IHCL extraordinary general meeting, but shareholders showed concern over the ousted Tata Sons Chairman's intention of taking a legal course in the ongoing boardroom war at the over $100 billion group.

Mistry quit ahead of five Tata companies-- Indian Hotels, Tata Steel, Tata Motors, Tata Power and Tata Chemicals-- calling EGMs starting from today (December 20) to remove him as a director on company boards in view of his abrupt removal from the group's holding firm Tata Sons on October 24.
 
Ratan Tata, a scion of the conglomerate's founding family, replaced him as chairman of the group's holding company.

In a dramatic turn to India's biggest boardroom spat, while quitting on Monday from the boards, Mistry launched a scathing broadside against Ratan Tata vowing to shift his fight to a "larger platform".

At today's EGM, 35 shareholders expressed their views to interim chairman Ratan Tata along with Tata Trusts trustee R K Krishna Kumar and Sir Dorabji Tata Trust Managing Trustee R Venkataramanan who attended the meeting.

IHCL Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Rakesh Sarna chaired the meeting, in which directors, including Deepak Parekh, Mehernosh Kapadia and Nadir B Godrej, were also present.

Most of the shareholders said the public spat, which could have been resolved amicably, has damaged the Tata brand and decreased the market value of the company.

"This hassle is not good for the image of the company. There was no need to wash dirty linen in public," said one of the shareholders, Jahangir Batliwala.

Echoing a similar view, Aloysious Mascarenhas said Mistry should have resigned long back.

"I request Mistry not to take the legal course as it takes long long time and is also not good for the image of the company," he said.

Former Managing Director GIC Mahesh Rao said somewhere down the line maturity was lacking in the case of Mistry.

"The group was run by Ratan Tata for so many years and there was not a single controversy. Reputation doesn't come with paying high dividends, but it comes with how gracefully and with dignity you run the company. No amount of criticism is going to touch this group.

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First Published: Dec 20 2016 | 4:18 PM IST

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