Skip to content
rawlaw unfiltered legal news
  • Home
  • News
  • Videos
  • Bookmarks
  • Profile
  • facebook.com
  • twitter.com
  • t.me
  • instagram.com
  • youtube.com

Declines to Declare High Court Judgment Illegal: “Remedy Lies in Recall or Appeal Under Article 136”; Reaffirms Procedural Discipline and Alternative Remedies

Home » Declines to Declare High Court Judgment Illegal: "Remedy Lies in Recall or Appeal Under Article 136"; Reaffirms Procedural Discipline and Alternative Remedies
Supreme Court Declines to Declare High Court Judgment Illegal: "Remedy Lies in Recall or Appeal Under Article 136"; Reaffirms Procedural Discipline and Alternative Remedies
Posted inNews

Supreme Court Declines to Declare High Court Judgment Illegal: “Remedy Lies in Recall or Appeal Under Article 136”; Reaffirms Procedural Discipline and Alternative Remedies

Court’s Decision The Supreme Court dismissed the writ petition filed under Article 32 of the Constitution. The petition sought to declare a Bombay High Court judgment as illegal. The Supreme…
Posted by Rawlaw January 17, 2025

Recent News

  • Delhi High Court upholds revocation of letter of administration — “Obtained after 22 years by suppressing widow and daughter; probate court cannot reward concealment” while dismissing heirs’ appeal
  • Delhi High Court grants default bail in NDPS case — “Extension of investigation without producing accused is a gross illegality; right to statutory bail flows from Article 21” while setting aside trial court orders
  • Delhi High Court holds insurer liable for tractor–trolley death and recalculates compensation — “Trailer accident flows from insured tractor; welfare object of Motor Vehicles Act cannot be defeated by technicalities” while marginally enhancing award
  • Delhi High Court declines to quash reassessment at threshold — “Limitation under Section 149 post-Ashish Agarwal requires factual computation by Assessing Officer” while remanding matter
  • Delhi High Court upholds finding on genuineness of Will despite dismissal of probate — “Proof of execution can stand independent of probate relief; secondary evidence admissible on proof of loss” while rejecting son’s challenge
Copyright 2025 — Raw Law. All rights reserved.
Scroll to Top