Crackhouse club owners drop legal action against DBKL
Application withdrawn as city hall had not blacklisted duo from doing business in capital
The judicial review application has been dropped as Kuala Lumpur City Hall had revoked the licence for Crackhouse Comedy Club and not blacklisted its owners from registering businesses in the capital.
KUALA LUMPUR – The two owners of the Crackhouse Comedy Club today withdrew their application to challenge the action of Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) in revoking the club’s business licence and banning the duo from starting any business in the city permanently.
Lawyer M. Pravin, representing Mohamad Rizal Johan Van Geyzel and Shankar R Santhiram, informed High Court judge Datuk Amarjeet Singh that his clients did not intend to proceed with the judicial review application because DBKL only revoked the licence of the comedy club rather than impose a blacklist on the duo from registering their businesses in Kuala Lumpur.
“DBKL in its affidavit-in-reply confirmed that they (Rizal, Shankar) have never been blacklisted from registering their business in Kuala Lumpur.
“Therefore, we withdraw this judicial review application without any cost,” he said at today’s proceedings set for the hearing of the judicial review application, which was also attended by lawyer Khalisa Badrul Amini who represented DBKL and former Kuala Lumpur mayor Datuk Seri Mahadi Che Ngah as respondents.
Judge Amarjeet allowed Rizal and Shankar to withdraw the judicial review application without any costs.
On May 23, the high court granted leave to the duo to initiate judicial review proceedings against DBKL.
Rizal and Shankar filed the judicial review application on November 24 last year, among other things, seeking a declaration that the decision to revoke the business licence of the comedy club and ban them from registering any business in Kuala Lumpur for life was unconstitutional.
source – Bernama