Faridkot maharaja’s daughters inherit assets worth `20K cr
After over a two-decade-long wait, two daughters of the erstwhile maharaja of Faridkot are set to inherit assets worth a staggering `20,000 crore that include Faridkot House in Delhi’s posh Central Vista, two forts, vintage cars and jewellery.
The ex-royals struck the fortune after a local court ruled that Faridkot’s former ruler Sir Harinder Singh Brar’s 31-year-old will was “fictitious” and “forged” by servants in connivance with lawyers and others.
Brar’s eldest daughter Amrit Kaur had challenged the will in 1992 which had entitled a trust as the caretaker of the estates and assets including the Faridkot House at Copernicus Marg near India Gate, palace and Manimajra Fort in Faridkot in Punjab, properties in Mashobra, Shimla, besides bank deposits, jewellery and vintage cars including a Rolls Royce.
The assets of the Maharaja, who died in 1989, include large number of properties in Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana and Hyderabad.
Chief judicial magistrate Rajnish Kumar Sharma on Thursday declared that the will was “forged and fabricated”, making Amrit Kaur and her sister, Deepinder Kaur, heir to the estate and assets worth `20,000 crore under the Hindu Succession Act, according to the Maharaja’s family’s advocate Vikas Jain.
His third daughter Maheepinder Kaur died in 2000 in Shimla. Amrit Kaur resides in Sector 10, Chandigarh while Deepinder Kaur is in Kolkata.
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