London: In an unusual move, a five-star hotel was turned into a court in the UK to allow a wheelchair-bound 86-year-old father of a multi-millionaire NRI hotel tycoon to give evidence against his son in a 50 million pound property dispute. Jasminder Singh, 62, head of the Radisson Blu Edwardian hotels empire, is being sued by his father Bal Mohinder Singh, who accuses him of abandoning the Sikh tradition of sharing family property by excluding him from the business. The younger Singh is said to be worth around 415 million pound, but the dispute is said to involve 50 million pound.
Singh senior who requires 24-hour care, was unable to attend the High Court due to ill-health, so the unusual decision was taken for his evidence to be heard in a conference room at the five star ‘May Fair Hotel’ He came in a wheel chair to give evidence against Jasminder. Singh senior said the case is not about the money but about tradition and his son’s failure to abide by the ancient “Mitakshara” system, which implies a sharing of family wealth. Giving evidence, he said he was unhappy about the 800 million pound hotel group’s decision in 2010 to remove him as a director. Ian Croxford, for Jasminder, asked him “in 2009, 2010 you were removed as a director of the Edwardian group, and when that happened you were unhappy. You felt that you were capable of making a continuing contribution to the company.” Singh senior replied “yes”.