Wadia and Rajan Pillai Kerala businessman
Rajan Pillai secured control of the group in the late 1980s, becoming known in India as the 'Biscuit Raja'. In 1993, the
Wadia Group acquired a stake in Associated Biscuits International (ABIL), and became an equal partner with
Danone in Britannia Industries Limited. In what
The Economic Times referred to as one of [India's] most dramatic corporate sagas, Pillai ceded control to Wadia and Danone after a bitter boardroom struggle, then fled his Singapore base to India in 1995 after accusations of defrauding Britannia, and died the same year in
Tihar Jail.
Wadia and Danone The Wadias' Kalabakan Investments and Group Danone had two equal joint venture companies, Wadia BSN and
United Kingdom registered Associated Biscuits International Holdings Ltd., which together held a 51 percent stake in Britannia. The ABIH tranche was acquired in 1992, while the controlling stake held by Wadia BSN was acquired in 1995. It was agreed that, in case of a deadlock between the partners, Danone was obliged to buy the Wadia BSN stake at a "
fair market value". ABIH had a separate agreement signed in 1992 and was subject to British law. Wadia was to be Danone's partner in the food and dairy business, and product launches from Groupe Danone's were expected but never materialised despite the JV being in existence for over 11 years in India. In addition, the partners agreed there would be the right of first refusal to buy out the remaining partner in the event of the other wishing to sell its holding. In June 2006, Wadia claimed Danone had used the Tiger brand to launch biscuits in
Bangalore. Wadia also filed a case in the
Bombay High Court for a breach of a non-competition clause in that connection. The court ordered Danone not to alienate, encumber or sell shares of Avesthagen. In September 2007, the
Foreign Investment Promotion Board of India rejected Danone's claims that it did not need a non-compete waiver from the Wadias to enter into business in India alone. After a prolonged legal battle, Danone agreed to sell its 25.48% stake in Britannia to Leila Lands, which is a Wadia group entity based in
Mauritius, and quit this line of business. The deal was valued at $175–200 million. With this buy-out, Wadia holds a majority stake of 50.96%.
Intellectual property dispute In a separate dispute from the shareholder matters, the company alleged in 2006 that Danone had violated its intellectual property rights in the Tiger brand by registering and using
Tiger in several countries without its consent. Britannia claimed the company found out that Danone had launched the Tiger brand in
Indonesia in 1998, and later in
Malaysia,
Singapore,
Pakistan and
Egypt, when it attempted to register the Tiger trademark in some of these countries in 2004. Whilst it was initially reported in December 2006 that agreement had been reached, it was reported in September 2007 that a solution remained elusive. The dispute was resolved in 2009 with
Britannia securing rights to the Tiger brand worldwide, and Danone paying ₹220 million to utilise the brand. == Partnerships ==