
With Sreesanth and Rahul Dravid (Image-X) The long shadow of a ten -year case concerning the former India of Rychly Bowler Sreesantho came to the Supreme Court again and pulled Rajasthan Royals to the reflector. In 2012, Sreesanth was expelled from the IPL season after he suffered a knee injury during the training match in Jaipur. Royals, who insured their players in a special emergency policy worth over 8 8.7 Crore, claimed around RS 82 lakh and claimed that the injury left him inappropriate to participate this year. But the insurance company saw things differently. United India Train’s insurance rejected the claim and insisted that Sreesanth had been injured since 2011, which was not published in the admission of policy. According to them, this previous injury could affect its availability, which caused the Royals’ claim to be invalid. This matter went to the National Consumer Commission, which stood up on the connection with the franchise and ordered the insurer to pay. However, the company has since appealed to the Supreme Court, where the case is now revised. In the Royals court, Sreesanth had never stopped the tip of the tip, and that the only reason the season was missing was the injury of the fresh knees that suffered during the insured period. Their advisor even pointed out that fitness certificates were submitted at the time of insurance, while another arrived after knee injury. The Judge Vikram and Sandeep Mehta bench asked if the tip injury was formally published. They also noted that if the insurer knew about the injury, they could refuse to cover or charge a higher bonus. Meanwhile, the matter remains unresolved. The Supreme Court asked the insurance company to submit other documents, including Sreesanth’s fitness certificates and original policy applications. Until then, a ten -year dispute between the cricket franchise and its insurer still persists, while Royals still waiting to answer their claim.