Nagpur: Koradi Police have registered a cheating case against 83-year-old businessman Mohabbat Singh Kapoor Singh Tuli, associated with Tuli Public School in Bokhara, and his brother Ravinderpal Singh Gurulal Singh Tuli (61). The duo is accused of secretly transferring a four-acre ancestral plot in Mouza Bokhara—valued at ₹20 crore—without informing the other legal heirs.
The complaint was filed by Bachittar Singh Kapoor Singh Tuli (71), a resident of Clark Town, Jaripatka, and younger brother of the accused.
According to police, the Tuli family owns multiple high-value properties across Nagpur and Punjab. The disputed plot originally belonged to Kapoor Singh Dayal Singh Tuli, father of five sons—Gurulal Singh, Inderjit Singh, Mohabbat Singh, Dalip Singh, and Bachittar Singh.
Their respective shares in the ancestral estate were fixed as:
• Gurulal – 32%
• Inderjit – 16%
• Mohabbat – 16%
• Dalip – 16%
• Bachittar – 20%
Family rules required mutual consent for any sale or transfer of ancestral property.
After Kapoor Singh’s death in 1983, the family continued managing properties jointly. Due to internal disputes, the assets were formally divided through arbitration in 2010. The four-acre Bokhara land remained under a power of attorney issued in the name of Mohabbat Singh Tuli.
Investigators said Mohabbat Singh allegedly abused this authority. In January 2025, he transferred the entire plot to his brother Ravinderpal Singh for just ₹9.85 lakh, an amount drastically lower than the current market valuation of ₹20 crore. No intimation was given to the remaining co-owners.
Feeling cheated, Bachittar Singh approached Koradi Police, leading to the registration of a cheating case against the accused brothers. Further investigation is underway.









