The dispute between YES Bank promoters -- Rana Kapoor and Madhu Ashok Kapur (widow of co-founder Ashok Kapur) -- might be heading for an out-of-court settlement, with both parties appearing to be in favour of such an arrangement, according to people familiar with the developments.
“It will be nice, as nobody wants a situation like this. We will certainly favour an out-of-court settlement,” a person close to Madhu Kapur told Business Standard, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.
In 2009, a few months after Ashok Kapur’s death in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack, Madhu Kapur had requested the bank for a board position but the proposal was rejected.
Earlier this month, she requested the bank to appoint her daughter, Shagun Kapur Gogia, as her nominee board member.
Kapur then filed a petition in the Bombay High Court, requesting a stay on the bank’s annual general meeting and alleged she had not been consulted on the appointment of three directors -- Diwan Arun Nanda, Ravish Chopra and M R Srinivasan -- in violation of the bank’s articles of association.
While the court refused to order a stay on the AGM, it directed YES Bank to advance its board meeting by a month to June 27 and consider Gogia’s appointment as a director on the bank’s