On October 26, the Bombay High Court granted Zee Entertainment relief by issuing an injunction against Invesco’s call for an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM).

“The Bombay HC has restrained Invesco from taking any action in furtherance of their requisition notice (to call an EGM),” said Nirav Shah, a partner at law firm DSK Legal. “The court will now have to decide whether the requisition notice is valid or not on the grounds raised by Zee and until the court decides this, the meeting requisitioned by Invesco cannot be held,” he explained.

“There will be an injunction in terms of prayer clause (a) of the Interim Application, restraining Defendants Nos. 1 and 2 (including their employees, agents and anyone acting by, through or under them) from taking any action or step in furtherance of the Requisition Notice dated 11th September 2021, including calling and holding an EGM under Section 100(4) of the Companies Act, 2013,” the court said in its October 26 order.

The court observed that directing Zee Entertainment to call an EGM would be potentially non-compliant. It further said that there is a fundamental flaw in Invesco’s construct.

“Invesco assumes that resolutions at EGM are somehow special, more sacrosanct than resolutions proposed by the board,” it said.

Zee had sought an injunction against Invesco from taking any action or steps as part of its requisition notice including calling and holding an EGM.

On October 22, the court reserved its order in the matter when Zee had argued that the call for an EGM by its largest shareholders Invesco and OFI Global was illegal and invalid.

Invesco wanted to remove Zee Entertainment Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Punit Goenka and appoint six independent directors on the board of the company.

Gopal Subramanium, the counsel for Zee Entertainment, said the board of a listed company needs an optimum balance between executive and non-executive directors. The change that Invesco wanted to bring in would defeat that purpose. Zee also noted that prior permission was needed from the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting to make any such change.