Court Oversees Inheritance Dispute Over Sunjay Kapur's Estate
Introduction
The Supreme Court of India is currently handling a complicated legal battle regarding how to divide and control the assets left behind by the businessman Sunjay Kapur.
Main Body
The legal case focuses on a request by Rani Kapur, who wants to cancel the RK Family Trust. She claims that the trust was created using fake documents in 2017, during a time when she was recovering from a stroke and could not give her informed consent. As a result, she argues that she lost control of the Sona Group estate. To resolve this, the court appointed former Chief Justice Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud as a mediator to help Rani Kapur, Priya Kapur, and other family members reach an agreement. However, recent events suggest that the mediation process is failing. Rani Kapur has filed a new application stating that Priya Kapur and the directors of Raghuvanshi Investment Private Limited (RIPL) are trying to take over the company's management and money without her agreement. She pointed to a board meeting scheduled for May 18 as proof that they are trying to ignore the court's mediation. While RIPL's lawyers argue that their actions follow Reserve Bank of India rules, Rani Kapur believes these moves could permanently remove family assets. Consequently, the court has set a hearing for May 14 to decide if temporary restrictions should be placed on the respondents.
Conclusion
The court will continue to monitor the mediation process while dealing with urgent requests to keep the estate's current status unchanged.
Learning
🚀 THE POWER MOVE: Moving from 'But' to 'However' and 'Consequently'
At the A2 level, you likely connect your ideas using simple words like and, but, and so. To reach B2, you need Logical Connectors. These are words that act like road signs, telling the reader exactly how two ideas relate.
🔍 The Discovery
Look at these three pivots from the text:
-
"However..." Used to introduce a contrast or a problem.
- A2 style: "The court is helping, but the process is failing."
- B2 style: "The court is helping. However, the process is failing."
-
"Consequently..." Used to show a direct result (stronger than 'so').
- A2 style: "They ignored the court, so the judge set a hearing."
- B2 style: "They ignored the court. Consequently, the court has set a hearing."
-
"As a result..." Similar to consequently, but often used to explain a cause-and-effect chain.
- Example from text: "...she could not give her informed consent. As a result, she argues that she lost control."
🛠️ The B2 Upgrade Guide
| Instead of... | Try using... | Why? |
|---|---|---|
| But | However / Nevertheless | It sounds more professional and academic. |
| So | Consequently / Therefore | It shows a logical conclusion rather than just a sequence. |
| Because | Due to the fact that | It allows you to build more complex sentence structures. |
💡 Pro Tip for Fluency
Notice that However and Consequently usually start a new sentence and are followed by a comma.
- Incorrect: I was tired however I studied.
- Correct: I was tired. However, I studied.
By mastering these three anchors (However, Consequently, As a result), you stop speaking in simple lists and start speaking in logical arguments.