Latha suffers setback in film dispute

July 11, 2018 01:18 am | Updated 01:50 am IST - NEW DELHI

The Supreme Court on Tuesday set aside a Karnataka High Court decision to quash criminal proceedings against Tamil actor Rajinikanth’s wife Latha on a private complaint filed by a movie distribution company for the post-production work on the Tamil film Kochadaiyaan .

The Bench, headed by Justice Ranjan Gogoi, said its order should not be perceived as a comment on the merits of the case.

The court’s order came on an appeal filed by Ad Bureau Advertising Pvt. Ltd. against an order passed by the High Court on March 10, 2016, quashing criminal proceedings pending before a magistrate court in Bengaluru.

The criminal proceedings quashed by a single judge of the Karnataka High Court on March 10, 2016 relates to a “fictitious letter” under the name of ‘The Publishers and Broadcasters Welfare Association of India, Press Club Bangalore’ used by Ms. Latha to obtain a gag order from a Bengaluru Civil and Sessions Court against 77 publications from reporting the legal tussle with Ad Bureau.

However, on verification, the welfare association denied issuing any such letter. It even went ahead to describe the letter as “fake and fabricated”.

Though an FIR was registered by the Karnataka police, the single judge order quashing the criminal proceedings proved to be a roadblock for further investigation into the case.

In its appeal, the distribution firm contended that Latha sold the post-production work of the film, directed by her daughter Soundarya, to it through a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on April 25, 2014.

The firm said it was sold the exclusive distributive rights for Tamil Nadu, providing for 12% pre-release profit duly guaranteed by Ms. Latha.

The special leave petition alleged that the distribution company invested ₹10 crore on April 28, 2014, on the basis of the assurance given by Ms. Latha.

The petition alleged that Ms. Latha further requested for an additional amount of ₹20 crore on the same terms as per the MoU. The distribution firm, however, withheld disbursement “as it came to light that the respondent (Latha Rajnikanth) was fraudulently and malafidely diverting funds for discharging her own personal liabilities and for her benefits as per inquiries conducted by various public sector banks”.

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