By R. Jai Krishna 

NEW DELHI--India's top court dismissed Nokia Corp.'s recent appeal of a lower-court order related to a continuing tax dispute that has cast a shadow over the Finnish company's $7.5 billion deal to sell its handset business to Microsoft Corp.

Nokia had asked India's Supreme Court to reverse an earlier ruling by another court that it saw as unfavorable. While that court had ordered tax authorities to revoke the freeze on the assets of Nokia's handset factory in Chennai, it ordered the company to make a guarantee against any future tax liabilities.

Nokia has resisted making the guarantee because Indian tax authorities want future liabilities and a deposit for those liabilities paid in cash. Future liabilities have been estimated to be in excess of $3.4 billion and the court wants Nokia to pay about $500 million up front.

The Supreme Court on Friday declined to reverse that ruling.

As a result, the factory, which is critical to the smartphone business Microsoft is purchasing, remains frozen.

"Nokia is disappointed by today's decision," the company said in an emailed statement. It said an offer it made to resolve the solution is "fair" for all sides.

"Nokia regrets the anxiety this extended legal process has caused its employees" and "will now consider its next steps. It will not comment further at this point."

An Indian tax official declined to elaborate on the decision beyond what the court said.

Nokia has said the Indian tax dispute won't affect the timetable of the Microsoft deal, which is slated to close by the end of March. The 8,000-employee factory churns out millions of devices annually and builds 20 different models, but if it remains frozen by tax authorities, it cannot be immediately transferred to Microsoft.

In that case, Nokia would have to make phones in India for Microsoft on a contract basis.

The dispute with Indian authorities dates back to a EUR250 million ($346 million) tax claim against Nokia, mainly relating to taxes that the authority said the Finnish company avoided by wrongfully claiming an exemption on software exports. The total tax bill also includes claims that the tax authority has not yet made.

On Friday, the Supreme Court asked Nokia to pay the earlier tax demand and provide a deposit on its guarantee for future tax liabilities of 35 billion rupees ($570 million), although liabilities could be higher. Nokia needs to make the payments to get the factory unfrozen.

Juhana Rossi and Prasantsa Sahu contributed to this article.

Write to R. Jai Krishna at krishna.jai@wsj.com

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