Mumbai, July 17: After a major boost when the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) won a legal battle against the World Sports Group (WSG), it has suffered a blow as the Bombay High Court appointed arbitrator passed an award in favour of now defunct IPL side Deccan Chargers which may see the Indian board having to shell out Rs 4800 crore to Deccan Chronicle Holdings (DCHL).
A BCCI official said the turn of events was surprising, but a final decision will be made only after going through the complete order. An appeal though is on the cards from the board against the award.
"To be honest, it has come as a surprise and it would be fascinating to see what the Ld. Arbitrator has relied upon and one can only make a proper assessment only upon reading the order but you can be sure that the BCCI would go in appeal against this award since it does have a very good case," a BCCI official told IANS.
To go back to the case, Deccan Chargers had approached the Bombay HC and with an eye on the IPL franchise agreement, the process of arbitration started with Justice (retd) C.K. Thakar as the sole abitrator. DCHL had claimed damages of Rs 6046 crore plus interest and charges as per reports.
The BCCI had obviously brought in it's own reasoning to the whole decision behind the termination and made its own claim.
Earlier, in a majority decision, an Arbitral Tribunal consisting of Supreme Court Justices (Retd) Sujatha Manohar, Mukunthakam Sharma and SS Nijjar have upheld the termination of the media rights agreement for overseas territories with World Sports Group (WSG) by the BCCI on June 28, 2010.
The
BCCI
had
accused
the
then
chairman
of
its
IPL
Governing
Council
Lalit
Modi
of
committing
fraud
on
BCCI
in
collusion
with
WSG
officials
to
the
tune
of
Rs
425
crore.
In
a
complete
vindication
of
the
hard
stand
taken
by
the
BCCI
office
bearers
including
N.
Srinivasan
then
Secretary,
the
Arbitral
award
has
allowed
the
BCCI
to
appropriate
the
amounts
lying
in
escrow
pending
the
arbitration.
This
sum
is
to
the
tune
of
over
Rs
800
crore.
P Raghu Raman Senior Counsel who represented the BCCI said: "Now that a binding arbitration award has clearly pointed out the fraudulent conduct of Lalit Modi and others from WSG group, the police complaint given by BCCI to prosecute these persons at least at this stage should be acted upon."