Ram Kali v. Madhu

Delhi High Court · 22 Sep 2025 · 2025:DHC:8571
Tara Vitasta Ganju
C.R.P. 361/2024
2025:DHC:8571
civil petition_dismissed Significant

AI Summary

The High Court held that revision under Section 115 CPC is not maintainable against interim orders that do not finally dispose of the suit, dismissing the petition accordingly.

Full Text
Translation output
C.R.P. 361/2024
HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Date of Decision: 22.09.2025
C.R.P. 361/2024
SMT RAM KALI .....Petitioner
Through: Mr. Devendra Kumar, Adv.
VERSUS
SMT MADHU .....Respondent
Through: None.
CORAM:
HON'BLE MS. JUSTICE TARA VITASTA GANJU TARA VITASTA GANJU, J.: (Oral)
JUDGMENT

1. This Court had vide order dated 17.09.2025 directed as follows:-

"3. The present Petition has been filed by the Petitioner
under Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
seeking to challenge an Order dated 04.10.2024 passed by
the learned District Judge-03, Rohini Courts, North District,
Delhi [hereinafter referred to as “Impugned Order”] in the
matter captioned as Madhu v. Ram Kali. By the impugned
Order, the Order dated 06.06.2024 passed by the learned
Trial Court in 29 CS SCG 498/21 captioned Ram Kali v.
Madhu has been stayed till the final disposal of the present
Petition.
4. The maintainability of this Petition is a subject matter of
challenge. It is no longer res integra that the provisions of
Section 115 of the CPC cannot be invoked except where an
order, if made in favour of the revisionist, would have
4,794 characters total
finally disposed of the suit or proceedings. This is set out in
the proviso to Section 115 of the CPC below:-
“Section 115 – Revision
The High Court may call for the record of any case which has been
decided by any Court subordinate to such High Court and in which
no appeal lies thereto, and if such subordinate Court appears
(a) to have exercised a jurisdiction not vested in it by law, or
(b) to have failed to exercise a jurisdiction so vested, or

(c) to have acted in the exercise of its jurisdiction illegally or with material irregularity, the High Court may make such order in the case as it thinks fit: Provided that the High Court shall not, under this section, vary or reverse any order made, or any order deciding an issue, in the course of a suit or other proceeding, except where the order, if it had been made in favour of the party applying for revision would have finally disposed of the suit or other proceedings.” [Emphasis Supplied] 4.[1] The Supreme Court in Shiv Shakti Coop. Housing Society, Nagpur v. Swaraj Developers & Ors.[1] has held that unless the order if given in favour of the party applying for the revision would have given finality to the suit or other proceeding, a revision is not maintainable. The relevant extract of the Shiv Shakti case is set out below: “32. A plain reading of Section 115 as it stands makes it clear that the stress is on the question whether the order in favour of the party applying for revision would have given finality to suit or other proceeding. If the answer is “yes” then the revision is maintainable. But on the contrary, if the answer is “no” then the revision is not maintainable. Therefore, if the impugned order is interim in nature or does not finally decide the lis, the revision will not be maintainable. The legislative intent is crystal clear. Those orders, which are interim in nature, cannot be the subject-matter of revision under Section 115. There is marked distinction in the language of Section 97(3) of the Old Amendment Act and Section 32(2)(i) of the Amendment Act. While in the former, there was a clear legislative intent to save applications admitted or pending before the amendment came into force. Such an intent is significantly absent in Section 32(2)(i). The amendment relates to procedures. No person has a vested right in a course of procedure. He has only the right of proceeding in the manner prescribed. If by a statutory change the mode of procedure is altered, the parties are to proceed according to the altered mode, without exception, unless there is a different stipulation.” 4.[2] In the case of Gayatri Devi v. Shashi Pal Singh[2], the Supreme Court while relying on the Shiv Shakti Coop. Housing Society case has held that an order interim in nature or which does not finally decide the lis, cannot be challenged by way of a revision under Section 115 CPC. “14. In the first place, it appears to us that the revision petition before the High Court was wholly incompetent in view of the amended provision of Section 115 CPC. The revision petition was entertained at the stage of interlocutory proceedings. As laid down by this Court in Shiv Shakti Coop. Housing Society v. Swaraj Developers [(2003) 6 SCC 659] an order interim in nature or which does not finally decide the lis, cannot be challenged by way of a revision under Section 115 CPC.”

5. Learned Counsel for the Petitioner requests for some time to take instructions in the matter.”

2. After some arguments, the learned counsel for the Petitioner seeks and is granted permission to withdraw the present petition with liberty to file an appropriate proceeding before the appropriate forum for redressal of his grievances.

3. The Petition is dismissed as withdrawn with liberty as prayed for. The pending Application also stands closed.

TARA VITASTA GANJU, J SEPTEMBER 22, 2025