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NEW DELHI: The defence ministry has scored a major legal victory against AgustaWestland in Italy and will be able to recover Rs 1,927 crore of the Rs 2,380 crore it had paid the Italian firm for supply of 12 VVIP helicopters.
After scrapping the deal, the ministry on January 1 decided to cash the three bank guarantees given by AgustaWestland through Deutsche Bank to recover its payments — around 45% of the total contract value of 556 million euros.
Within days of the decision to cash the bank guarantees, AgustaWestland approached two former chief justices of India — Justices G B Patnaik and S H Kapadia — asking whether India would be legally entitled to cash the guarantees since it had part performed the contract by supplying three of the 12 helicopters.
Armed with these opinions, AgustaWestland stalled MoD's decision to cash the bank guarantees by moving an Italian court, which on March 17 restrained India from recovering the money from the firm, the UK-based subsidiary of Italian conglomerate Finmeccanica.
MoD appealed against this in a higher court in Italy armed with an opinion of then additional solicitor general Gourab Banerjee, who extracted a series of Supreme Court judgments, given the fact that both the bank guarantees and performance bond expressly subjected themselves to Indian law, to counter the opinion of the two ex-CJIs.
Brushing aside AgustaWestland's defence, the appeal court struck down the March 17 order restraining India from cashing the bank guarantees except the logical correction - the cost of the three helicopters to be deducted from the money to be recovered by cashing the bank guarantees.
A three-judge bench headed by Laura Cosentini said in its order, "Considering that none of the guarantees was connected to a specific contractual obligation, that each was enforceable for any breach claimed by the ministry of defence, and that to support the enforcement evidence was brought of criminally relevant facts, we believe that the enforcement (cashing of bank guarantee) was fully legitimate, and was not affected by any abusive or fraudulent conduct."
Upholding MoD's decision to cash the bank guarantees, the bench asked AgustaWestland International Ltd and Agusta Westland SPA to reimburse the ministry 50% of its legal fees quantified at 20,000 euros plus ancillary due
India wins big in Italy, to get Rs 1,927 crore from Agusta - The Times of India
After scrapping the deal, the ministry on January 1 decided to cash the three bank guarantees given by AgustaWestland through Deutsche Bank to recover its payments — around 45% of the total contract value of 556 million euros.
Within days of the decision to cash the bank guarantees, AgustaWestland approached two former chief justices of India — Justices G B Patnaik and S H Kapadia — asking whether India would be legally entitled to cash the guarantees since it had part performed the contract by supplying three of the 12 helicopters.
Armed with these opinions, AgustaWestland stalled MoD's decision to cash the bank guarantees by moving an Italian court, which on March 17 restrained India from recovering the money from the firm, the UK-based subsidiary of Italian conglomerate Finmeccanica.
MoD appealed against this in a higher court in Italy armed with an opinion of then additional solicitor general Gourab Banerjee, who extracted a series of Supreme Court judgments, given the fact that both the bank guarantees and performance bond expressly subjected themselves to Indian law, to counter the opinion of the two ex-CJIs.
Brushing aside AgustaWestland's defence, the appeal court struck down the March 17 order restraining India from cashing the bank guarantees except the logical correction - the cost of the three helicopters to be deducted from the money to be recovered by cashing the bank guarantees.
A three-judge bench headed by Laura Cosentini said in its order, "Considering that none of the guarantees was connected to a specific contractual obligation, that each was enforceable for any breach claimed by the ministry of defence, and that to support the enforcement evidence was brought of criminally relevant facts, we believe that the enforcement (cashing of bank guarantee) was fully legitimate, and was not affected by any abusive or fraudulent conduct."
Upholding MoD's decision to cash the bank guarantees, the bench asked AgustaWestland International Ltd and Agusta Westland SPA to reimburse the ministry 50% of its legal fees quantified at 20,000 euros plus ancillary due
India wins big in Italy, to get Rs 1,927 crore from Agusta - The Times of India