US court awards Rs 2,000 crore to 4 Indian brothers in decades-old property feud

A United States jury ordered a hefty multibillion-dollar sum in damages in a legal feud involving five Indian-origin brothers.

The verdict came in a 21-year-old land dispute wherein Haresh Jogani was ordered to pay his four brothers over Rs 2,000 crore in damages and further divide up shares of their property empire in Southern California, as per a Bloomberg report.

The property empire includes about 17,000 apartments worth billions of USD more.

The 2003 lawsuit, which finally came to a head with a jury awarding billions and property division, had undergone 18 appeals, generations of attorneys and five judges in the Los Angeles Superior Court. The trial began over allegations that Haresh Jogani had breached a long-standing partnership with his siblings. As per reports, the hearing on punitive damages is listed for Monday, and it could see an addition to the existing Rs 2,000 crore award.

The case has also drawn parallels from some lawyers to the fictional Victorian-era probate case that the famous Charles Dickens wrote about in his novel — Bleak House. Jogani v. Jogani is the new Jarndyce v. Jarndyce, but with a twist, Bloomberg reported.

“At the end of the book (Bleak House), there was no money, hence the name. That is not the case here. There are billions here that remain to be distributed,” the report quoted one of the attorneys representing Chetan and Rajesh Jogani.

The Jogani brothers, natives of Gujarat, erected a fortune in the global diamond trade, with a presence in Europe, Africa, North America and the Middle East.

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