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Asia

India Supreme Court Taps Ex-CJI Chandrachud to Mediate High-Profile Estate Dispute

The Supreme Court of India has appointed former Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud to mediate a dispute between Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur over the estate of Sunjay Kapur, the late chairman of Aston Martin in India.
The Supreme Court of India has appointed former Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud to mediate a dispute between Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur over the estate of Sunjay Kapur, the late chairman of Aston Martin in India.
The Supreme Court of India has appointed former Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud to mediate a dispute between Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur over the estate of Sunjay Kapur, the late chairman of Aston Martin in India. / NPR / Photography

The Supreme Court of India has appointed former Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud to mediate a high-profile estate dispute between two women claiming entitlements to the assets of Sunjay Kapur, the late chairman of Aston Martin in India, who died in late 2024.

The court's order, issued on 7 May 2026, directed the dispute between Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur — both of whom were married to Sunjay Kapur at different periods — into private mediation before Chandrachud, who served as India's 50th Chief Justice before retiring from the bench. The case centres on personal assets whose control and distribution remain contested more than a year after Sunjay Kapur's death.

A complicated marriage history, a contested estate

Sunjay Kapur's marital history is central to understanding the dispute's complexity. Priya Sachdev Kapur was Kapur's first wife; the two shared a life in fashion and public prominence before their separation. Rani Kapur, his second wife, managed business interests alongside him and was present at the time of his death in November 2024.

When Sunjay Kapur died, both women moved to assert claims over his personal assets. The nature and extent of those assets have not been publicly detailed in court filings reported by wire services. What is clear is that negotiations between the two parties — conducted through lawyers over the intervening months — failed to produce an agreement, prompting both sides to seek judicial resolution.

The dispute landed before the Delhi High Court before ascending to the Supreme Court, which on 7 May exercised its authority under the Mediation Act to refer the matter directly to Chandrachud. Sources did not specify what portion of Sunjay Kapur's estate is at stake, nor did they detail the specific assets in contention.

Why the Supreme Court acted

The decision to bypass conventional trial proceedings and appoint a former Chief Justice as mediator signals the court's assessment that the dispute is amenable to settlement outside the adversarial courtroom — and that the parties require a figure of sufficient institutional weight to broker an agreement.

Chandrachud's appointment carries practical and symbolic dimensions. Practically, mediation under his chairmanship offers both Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur a confidential process in which proposed settlements cannot be used as admissions in any subsequent litigation. Symbolically, the Supreme Court's willingness to deploy its most senior retired jurist reflects the premium the court places on resolving intra-elite property disputes without prolonged public litigation.

That tendency — to steer wealthy, well-represented disputants toward mediated outcomes rather than extended bench hearings — is consistent with the Supreme Court's broader approach to commercial and family disputes involving parties with substantial resources. The court has increasingly treated such referrals as a matter of docket management as much as justice delivery.

What the sources do not tell us

The wire reports available to Monexus do not specify the financial value of the disputed estate, the nature of the assets — whether liquid investments, real property, equity holdings, or other holdings — or the specific basis of each woman's claim. Nor do the sources indicate whether either party has alleged wrongdoing by the other, or whether the dispute is purely a question of legal entitlement under inheritance or matrimonial law.

The sources also do not report on Chandrachud's own recusals, availability, or whether any timetable for the mediation has been set. A mediated settlement, if reached, would require confirmation by the Supreme Court before taking effect. If mediation fails, the case returns to the court's regular docket.

Stakes and the road ahead

For Priya Sachdev Kapur and Rani Kapur, the mediation represents both an opportunity and a risk. An agreed settlement concludes the matter swiftly and without further public disclosure of financial details. A failed mediation restarts litigation that could stretch across years and invite press scrutiny neither party has sought.

The appointment of Chandrachud — who in his two-year tenure as Chief Justice presided over several of the court's most consequential decisions on constitutional and commercial matters — reflects the Supreme Court's assessment that this dispute warranted something beyond routine referral. Whether that investment of judicial capital produces a settlement will depend on factors the 7 May order does not reveal.

Monexus will continue tracking the case as proceedings develop.

This publication's wire feeds carried the Supreme Court order from Indian Express and LiveMint on 7 May 2026. The substance of the dispute — two wives, one estate, no agreement — has been reported consistently across outlets without material variation in the core facts.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire