Skip to content

ADVOCATETANMOY LAW LIBRARY

Research & Library Database

Primary Menu
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Countries198
    • National Constitutions: History, Purpose, and Key Aspects
  • Judgment
  • Book
  • Legal Brief
    • Legal Eagal
  • LearnToday
  • HLJ
    • Supreme Court Case Notes
    • Daily Digest
  • Sarvarthapedia
    • Sarvarthapedia (Core Areas)
    • Systemic-and-systematic
    • Volume One
09/04/2026
  • Legal Matter

Supreme Court Daily Digest (April 4th, 2026): Arbitration, Sanction for prosecution, Oral inquiry, Cancellation of bail

The Supreme Court Daily Digest for April 4, 2026, summarizes various legal cases ranging from arbitration and public employment to service law and criminal procedure. Key highlights include principles of natural justice, abandonment of proceedings, and the distinct requirements for contract termination and blacklisting, emphasizing procedural fairness and judicial restraint in administrative matters.
advtanmoy 04/04/2026 26 minutes read

ยฉ Advocatetanmoy Law Library

  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
Supreme Court of India

Home ยป Law Library Updates ยป Sarvarthapedia ยป Law ยป Legal Matter ยป Supreme Court Daily Digest (April 4th, 2026): Arbitration, Sanction for prosecution, Oral inquiry, Cancellation of bail

Sarvarthapedia

Sarvarthapedia (Core Areas)

Table of contents
  1. One-line summary for each case
  2. Supreme Court Daily Digest for April 4th, 2026.
    1. 1. RAJIV GADDH V. SUBODH PARKASH, 2026 INSC 302
    2. 2. SAMARENDRA NATH KUNDU & ANR. V. SADHANA DAS & ANR., 2026 INSC 304
    3. 3. JAI PRAKASH SAINI V. MANAGING DIRECTOR, U.P. COOPERATIVE FEDERATION LTD. & ORS., 2026 INSC 305
    4. 4. DEEPESH MAHESWARI AND ANR. V. RENU MAHESWARI AND ORS., 2026 INSC 306
    5. 5. J. SRI NISHA & ORS. V. THE SPECIAL DIRECTOR, ADJUDICATING AUTHORITY, DIRECTORATE OF ENFORCEMENT & ANR., 2026 INSC 309
    6. 6. UNION OF INDIA & ORS. V. SUNIL KUMAR RAI & ORS., 2026 INSC 311
    7. 7. SATINDER SINGH BHASIN V. GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI & ORS., 2026 INSC 310
    8. 8. M/S A.K.G. CONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPERS PVT. LTD. V. STATE OF JHARKHAND & ORS., 2026 INSC 312
    9. 9. SYED MOHAMMED GHOUSE PASHA KHADRI V. SYED MOHAMMED ADIL PASHA KHADRI & ORS., 2026 INSC 314
    10. 10. PUNJAB & SIND BANK V. SH. RAJ KUMAR, 2026 INSC 313
    11. 11. COMMISSIONER, DELHI POLICE & ANR. V. UTTAM KUMAR, 2026 INSC 314
  3. Core Conceptual Spine of the Digest
    1. Abuse of Process and Finality of Proceedings
    2. Procedural Bars and Threshold Doctrines
      1. Cognizance and Sanction
      2. Maintainability and Procedural Remedies
    3. Natural Justice and Fair Procedure
      1. Audi Alteram Partem and Evidentiary Fairness
      2. Notice, Hearing, and Civil Consequences
    4. Substantive Fairness and Judicial Review
      1. Doctrine of Proportionality
      2. Judicial Restraint in Administrative Matters
    5. Specialized Doctrinal Clusters
      1. Arbitration and Procedural Discipline
      2. Economic Law and Regulatory Coherence
      3. Service Law and Employment Governance
      4. Criminal Law: Bail and Post-Grant Conduct
      5. Personal Law and Evidentiary Limits
  4. Cross-Cutting Meta-Connections
    1. Procedural Integrity vs Substantive Justice
    2. Stage-Specific Legality
    3. Rights vs Conduct
    4. Formalism vs Equity
  5. Network Summary (Conceptual Flow)
    1. Entry Nodes
    2. Middle Nodes (Intersections)
    3. Exit Nodes (Doctrinal Outcomes)

One-line summary for each case

Daily Digest Archive

Read Next

  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 24, 2026)
  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 31, 2026): De Novo Trial, Rent Control, Quashing of FIR, Promissory Estoppel
  • Transgender Persons Amendment Act 2026

1. RAJIV GADDH V. SUBODH PARKASH (2026 INSC 302): A fresh application under Section 11 of the Arbitration Act is not maintainable when the party had previously abandoned the earlier arbitration proceedings arising from the same cause of action.

2. SAMARENDRA NATH KUNDU & ANR. V. SADHANA DAS & ANR. (2026 INSC 304): Subordinate police officers not removable solely by the government are not entitled to Section 197 Cr.P.C. sanction protection, and a subsequent notification cannot invalidate a cognizance validly taken years earlier.

3. JAI PRAKASH SAINI V. MANAGING DIRECTOR, U.P. COOPERATIVE FEDERATION LTD. & ORS. (2026 INSC 305): An employee cannot be dismissed in a major penalty proceeding without holding an oral enquiry and examining witnesses when the charges are denied by the employee.

4. DEEPESH MAHESWARI AND ANR. V. RENU MAHESWARI AND ORS. (2026 INSC 306): A minor legal heir is not bound by a succession certificate granted in proceedings where he was not impleaded and the public notice was defective, and an application under Order IX Rule XIII CPC is maintainable to set aside such an ex-parte order.

Read Next

  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 24, 2026)
  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 31, 2026): De Novo Trial, Rent Control, Quashing of FIR, Promissory Estoppel
  • Transgender Persons Amendment Act 2026

5. J. SRI NISHA & ORS. V. THE SPECIAL DIRECTOR, DIRECTORATE OF ENFORCEMENT & ANR. (2026 INSC 309): The Adjudicating Authority cannot proceed with a show cause notice under FEMA when the Competent Authority has passed a reasoned order refusing to confirm asset seizure for lack of evidence, while an appeal against that order is pending.

6. UNION OF INDIA & ORS. V. SUNIL KUMAR RAI & ORS. (2026 INSC 311): Junior Engineers who have completed four years of service at Level 8 (Grade Pay Rs. 4,800) are entitled to Non-Functional Upgradation to Level 9 (Grade Pay Rs. 5,400) under the 7th CPC, irrespective of whether they reached Level 8 by promotion or through the MACP scheme.

7. SATINDER SINGH BHASIN V. GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI & ORS. (2026 INSC 310): Bail was cancelled and the entire deposit of Rs. 50 crores was forfeited as the petitioner failed to make genuine attempts to settle claims of allottees, fabricated documents, and siphoned off funds during the CIRP moratorium.

Read Next

  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 24, 2026)
  • Supreme Court Daily Digest (March 31, 2026): De Novo Trial, Rent Control, Quashing of FIR, Promissory Estoppel
  • Transgender Persons Amendment Act 2026

8. M/S A.K.G. CONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPERS PVT. LTD. V. STATE OF JHARKHAND & ORS. (2026 INSC 312): An order of blacklisting is not an automatic consequence of contract termination and must be preceded by a specific and unambiguous show cause notice proposing blacklisting, distinct from the notice for termination.

9. SYED MOHAMMED GHOUSE PASHA KHADRI V. SYED MOHAMMED ADIL PASHA KHADRI & ORS. (2026 INSC 314): The High Court was justified in dismissing the second appeal as no substantial question of law arose where courts below concurrently found that the office of Sajjadanashin was governed by custom permitting nomination by the incumbent.

10. PUNJAB & SIND BANK V. SH. RAJ KUMAR (2026 INSC 313): The High Court erred in interfering with the punishment of dismissal of a Senior Manager on the ground of parity with co-delinquents holding lower ranks, as higher authority carries higher accountability.

11. COMMISSIONER, DELHI POLICE & ANR. V. UTTAM KUMAR (2026 INSC 314): A candidate who absents himself from a mandatory stage of a public recruitment process despite a clear stipulation that the schedule is final is not entitled to a second chance on grounds of minor illness.


Supreme Court Daily Digest for April 4th, 2026.

Supreme Court Daily Digest
Date: April 4th, 2026

1. RAJIV GADDH V. SUBODH PARKASH, 2026 INSC 302

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe | Subject: Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996; Res Judicata; Abandonment of Proceedings

Fact: The appellant and respondent jointly participated in a bank auction for land in Hoshiarpur, Punjab. To resolve disputes, they executed three agreements on 02.04.2013, which contained an arbitration clause. The respondent invoked arbitration, and an Arbitrator was appointed. The respondent later ceased participation, refused to accept the arbitratorโ€™s authority, and an award was passed. After the Supreme Court upheld the validity of the underlying land auction on 09.07.2021, the respondent issued a fresh notice and filed a new application under Section 11 of the Arbitration Act for appointment of an arbitrator, which was allowed by the High Court.

Issue: Whether a fresh application under Section 11 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, is maintainable when the respondent had previously abandoned the earlier arbitration proceedings arising from the same cause of action.

Reasoning: The Court held that the jurisdiction under Section 11 is primarily to determine the existence of an arbitration agreement. However, the principles of Order 23 Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, which bar the institution of a fresh suit on the same cause of action without the courtโ€™s leave, apply to proceedings under Section 11(6) of the Arbitration Act. The respondentโ€™s communication refusing to participate in the earlier proceedings clearly constituted abandonment. The subsequent Supreme Court judgment on the validity of the auction did not create a fresh cause of action for the respondent, as the dispute between the parties was not the subject matter of that appeal.

Legal Principles: The principles of res judicata and abandonment, as embodied in Order 23 Rule 1 CPC, apply to proceedings under Section 11 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. A litigant who abandons arbitration proceedings cannot be permitted to file a fresh application on the same cause of action.

Highlights the Words: abandonment of the proceedings, fresh cause of action, principles of Order 23 Rule 1, Public Policy, cannot be permitted to abuse the process of Court.


2. SAMARENDRA NATH KUNDU & ANR. V. SADHANA DAS & ANR., 2026 INSC 304

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice J.B. Pardiwala and Justice Manoj Misra | Subject: Criminal Procedure Code, 1973; Section 197; Sanction for Prosecution of Police Officers

Fact: The complainantโ€™s husband died following a lathi charge on an election day. She filed a complaint against three police officials, including the appellants (an Officer-in-Charge and a Police Constable). The Magistrate took cognizance. The High Court quashed proceedings against a co-accused, a senior officer, for want of sanction under Section 197 Cr.P.C., but the Supreme Court reversed the High Court, holding that sanction was required for him. The Magistrate then extended the benefit of the Supreme Courtโ€™s order to the appellants, which was set aside by the High Court.

Issue: Whether the appellants (a Sub-Inspector and a Constable) were entitled to the protection of Section 197 Cr.P.C., which requires prior government sanction for prosecuting public servants for acts done in official duty.

Reasoning: The protection of Section 197(1) Cr.P.C. applies only to public servants who are not removable from office without the sanction of the Government. As subordinate rank police officers, the appellants could be dismissed by the Inspector General of Police, not solely by the government. Therefore, the benefit of the earlier judgment in favour of the co-accused (who was an Assistant Commissioner of Police) was not available to them. Regarding a subsequent 2010 state notification extending protection under Section 197(2) to subordinate police, the Court held that the bar applies at the stage of taking cognizance. Since cognizance was taken in 2001, long before the notification, the subsequent notification could not nullify a valid cognizance order.

Legal Principles: The bar of Section 197(1) Cr.P.C. applies only to officers who are removable by the government alone. The requirement for sanction must exist on the date cognizance is taken; a subsequent grant of protection cannot invalidate a validly taken cognizance. A post-cognizance sanction will not save the proceedings.

Highlights the Words: previous sanction, acting or purporting to act in the discharge of official duty, subordinate rank officers, post-cognizance sanction, the bar applies at the stage of cognizance.


3. JAI PRAKASH SAINI V. MANAGING DIRECTOR, U.P. COOPERATIVE FEDERATION LTD. & ORS., 2026 INSC 305

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Manoj Misra | Subject: Service Law; Disciplinary Proceedings; Principles of Natural Justice; Oral Enquiry

Fact: The appellant was dismissed from service and ordered to recover money based on charges of embezzlement and short delivery of paddy. He challenged the order, arguing that no oral enquiry was held, no witnesses were examined, and he was not given an opportunity to cross-examine. The respondents argued that his reply was evasive, amounting to admission of the charges, making a full-fledged oral enquiry unnecessary.

Issue: Whether a major penalty of dismissal can be imposed in a disciplinary proceeding where the charges are denied by the employee, but no oral enquiry is held and no witness is examined to prove the charges.

Reasoning: The Court found that the appellant had denied the charges, so there was no categorical admission. In a departmental enquiry, unless the charge is admitted, the burden to prove the charge lies on the employer. The service rules required observance of natural justice, including the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses. Relying on Chamoli District Co-operative Bank Limited v. Raghunath Singh Rana, the Court held that unless the charged employee accepts guilt, an enquiry must be held where the department leads evidence and presents witnesses for cross-examination. Even for documentary evidence, if not admitted, a witness must be examined to prove the documents.

Legal Principles: An employee cannot be dismissed in a major penalty proceeding without a fair oral enquiry when the charges are denied. The employer must lead evidence and allow cross-examination. An evasive reply to a charge-sheet does not amount to an admission of guilt. The principles laid down in Sur Enamel and Stamping Works Ltd. v. Workmen and State of Uttaranchal v. Kharak Singh were reaffirmed.

Highlights the Words: no oral enquiry was held, admission of the charge, burden to prove the charge, principles of natural justice, enquiry stood vitiated, de novo enquiry.


4. DEEPESH MAHESWARI AND ANR. V. RENU MAHESWARI AND ORS., 2026 INSC 306

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Augustine George Masih | Subject: Code of Civil Procedure, 1908; Order IX Rule XIII; Succession Certificate; Minorโ€™s Rights

Fact: The respondents obtained a succession certificate for their fatherโ€™s retiral benefits. The appellant No. 1, a minor son of the deceased from a different wife, was not impleaded. A public notice was issued, but it did not clearly specify the proceedings. Upon attaining majority, the minor filed an application under Order IX Rule XIII CPC to set aside the ex-parte order granting the certificate, which was rejected by all lower courts, including the High Court, on the ground that he was not a necessary party.

Issue: Whether a minor, who was a legal heir, is bound by a succession certificate granted in proceedings where he was not impleaded and the public notice was defective, and whether an application under Order IX Rule XIII CPC is maintainable in such a case.

Reasoning: The Court held that the minor was legally incapacitated from responding to the public notice or initiating proceedings. The respondents were aware of his existence but failed to ensure appointment of a lawful guardian for him. Furthermore, there were material discrepancies in the application, including mis-stating the status of the minorโ€™s mother. The Court clarified that the scope of Section 96 (appeal) and Order IX Rule XIII CPC is distinct, with the latter providing a wider jurisdiction to set aside an ex-parte decree upon showing sufficient cause. The High Court erred in holding that the minor was not a necessary party and suffered no prejudice.

Legal Principles: A minor cannot be expected to respond to a public notice or initiate legal proceedings. An application under Order IX Rule XIII CPC is maintainable even after an appeal is dismissed, as it confers a wider jurisdiction to set aside an ex-parte decree upon showing sufficient cause. Where an application for a succession certificate is defective or material facts are suppressed, the certificate is liable to be revoked under Section 383 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925.

Highlights the Words: legally incapacitated, no prejudice was caused, scope of Section 96 and Order IX Rule XIII are distinct, material discrepancies, perverse, the minor was never impleaded.


5. J. SRI NISHA & ORS. V. THE SPECIAL DIRECTOR, ADJUDICATING AUTHORITY, DIRECTORATE OF ENFORCEMENT & ANR., 2026 INSC 309

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta | Subject: Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999; Section 37A; Show Cause Notice; Concurrent Proceedings

Fact: The appellants were issued a show cause notice (SCN) for alleged violation of FEMA by acquiring foreign shares without RBI approval. Simultaneously, proceedings under Section 37A FEMA for seizure of assets were initiated, where the Competent Authority passed a reasoned order refusing to confirm the seizure, finding no violation. Despite this, the Adjudicating Authority proceeded with the SCN. The High Court dismissed the challenge to the SCN, holding that Section 37A proceedings are independent and its order was being appealed.

Issue: Whether the Adjudicating Authority could proceed with the show cause notice for violating FEMA when the Competent Authority had, in a reasoned order under Section 37A(3) FEMA, refused to confirm the seizure of assets, holding that there was no evidence of a violation.

Reasoning: The Court held that a writ petition against an SCN can be entertained in exceptional circumstances, such as a patent lack of jurisdiction or abuse of process. The High Courtโ€™s observation that the seizure proceedings had no bearing on the SCN was premature, as it effectively effaced the findings of the Competent Authority, which were under challenge in appeal. The Adjudicating Authorityโ€™s final order heavily relied on the High Courtโ€™s observations to reject the Competent Authorityโ€™s findings. The Court found this to be an abdication of the Appellate Authorityโ€™s powers. The proceedings were revived from the SCN stage, and the Appellate Authority was directed to first decide the appeal against the Competent Authorityโ€™s order.

Legal Principles: While a writ against an SCN is not normally maintainable, interference is permissible in exceptional cases where the notice suffers from patent lack of jurisdiction or amounts to an abuse of process. The findings of the Competent Authority under Section 37A(3) FEMA, which refused to confirm a seizure for lack of evidence, have a bearing on the adjudication proceedings under Section 16 FEMA. The Adjudicating Authority cannot undo that order while an appeal is pending.

Highlights the Words: special provisions relating to assets held outside India, patent lack of jurisdiction, the very foundation of the SCN stood effaced, impliedly efface the findings, tantamounts to abdicating the powers of the Appellate Authority.


6. UNION OF INDIA & ORS. V. SUNIL KUMAR RAI & ORS., 2026 INSC 311

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Pankaj Mithal and Justice S.V.N. Bhatti | Subject: Service Law; Seventh Central Pay Commission; Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU); MACP

Fact: Junior Engineers (JEs) in the Border Road Organisation (BRO) were placed at Level 6 (Grade Pay of Rs. 4,200). After 20 years of service, under the MACP scheme, they reached Level 8 (Grade Pay of Rs. 4,800). They claimed entitlement to Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU) to Level 9 (Grade Pay of Rs. 5,400) after four years in Level 8, as recommended in Para 7.4.13 (iv) (b) of the 7th CPC. The government rejected their claim on the ground that NFU applied only to officers whose entry-level Grade Pay was Rs. 4,800, not to those who reached it via MACP.

Issue: Whether Junior Engineers who have completed four years of service at Level 8 (Grade Pay Rs. 4,800), albeit after reaching that level through the MACP scheme, are entitled to Non-Functional Upgradation to Level 9 (Grade Pay Rs. 5,400) under the 7th Central Pay Commissionโ€™s recommendations.

Reasoning: The Court held that the plain reading of Para 7.4.13 (iv) (b) of the 7th CPC does not prescribe an entry-level Grade Pay of Rs. 4,800 as a condition precedent for NFU. The only condition is the completion of four years of service in Level 8. The denial of the benefit on the ground of how one reached Level 8 (by promotion or MACP) amounts to adding an additional condition not present in the recommendation. The view taken by the Madras High Court, which was confirmed by the Supreme Court in other cases, was that the benefit of NFU to Grade Pay of Rs. 5,400 must be granted upon completion of four years in the Grade Pay of Rs. 4,800, irrespective of whether it was gained by promotion or ACP/MACP.

Legal Principles: Central Pay Commission recommendations, once accepted, create enforceable rights. The plain language of the recommendation must be given effect to, and no additional conditions can be read into it.

Highlights the Words: Non-Functional Upgradation, entry-level Grade Pay, amounts to adding additional conditions, preponderance of consideration, the plain reading.


7. SATINDER SINGH BHASIN V. GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI & ORS., 2026 INSC 310

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Nongmeikapam Kotiswar Singh | Subject: Criminal Law; Cancellation of Bail; Violation of Bail Conditions; Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016

Fact: The petitioner, a director of a real estate company, was granted bail by the Supreme Court in a case related to non-delivery of units in a โ€˜Grand Veniceโ€™ project. Key conditions included not committing a similar offence, depositing Rs. 50 crores, and making every possible attempt to settle the claims of allottees. Multiple allottees filed applications for cancellation of bail, alleging violation of conditions. They pointed to incomplete construction, failure to execute settlement agreements, siphoning of company funds during the CIRP moratorium, and fabrication of documents.

Issue: Whether the bail granted to Satinder Singh Bhasin should be cancelled for violating the condition that he shall make every possible attempt to settle the claims of the allottees, and for prima facie committing similar offences and fabricating documents.

Reasoning: The Court conducted a detailed review of the proceedings over several years. It found that despite numerous opportunities, the project was incomplete, and most allottees had neither received possession nor refund, indicating no genuine attempt to settle. The Court noted serious discrepancies, including double allotments and a deed of assignment that included a reference to GST, which was enacted years later, pointing to fabrication of documents. Furthermore, it found that Rs. 74 crores were transferred from a group company to related entities after the CIRP moratorium, which prima facie violated the condition of not committing a similar offence. The Court concluded that the condition of settlement was not complied with in letter and spirit.

Legal Principles: Bail granted on specific conditions, especially those meant to remedy the harm caused to victims (e.g., settling claims), can be cancelled if the conditions are intentionally violated. The Court has the power to forfeit the bail deposit in terms of the bail order. Conduct of an accused subsequent to the grant of bail, including the commission of similar offences, fabrication of evidence, and failure to fulfill undertakings, are valid grounds for cancellation. The principle of actus curiae neminem gravabit (an act of the court shall prejudice no one) does not protect a litigant who has acted in bad faith.

Highlights the Words: cancellation of bail, every possible attempt to settle, hoodwinking, fabrication of documents, siphoning of funds, the condition has not been complied with in letter and spirit, forfeit the entire amount.


8. M/S A.K.G. CONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPERS PVT. LTD. V. STATE OF JHARKHAND & ORS., 2026 INSC 312

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe | Subject: Contract Law; Termination of Contract; Blacklisting; Principles of Natural Justice; Proportionality

Fact: The appellant-contractor was awarded a contract for constructing an Elevated Service Reservoir (ESR). The top dome collapsed. After an inquiry, the department issued a single order terminating the contract and blacklisting the contractor for five years. The contractor challenged both actions. The High Court upheld both. The contractor argued that no proper show cause notice for blacklisting was given.

Issue: Whether an order of blacklisting can be passed as a logical consequence of an order of termination without a separate and specific show cause notice proposing blacklisting.

Reasoning: The Court upheld the termination order, finding the evidence of negligence overwhelming. However, it set aside the blacklisting order. The Court distinguished between the two actions: termination relates to past and existing contracts, while blacklisting has severe future consequences, barring the contractor from future business. The Court held that a decision to blacklist is not automatic or a logical consequence of termination. It requires a separate application of mind and a specific show cause notice proposing blacklisting, as required by Rule 10.5 of the state rules and principles of natural justice. The initial show cause notice, which did not mention blacklisting, was insufficient.

Legal Principles: The decisions to terminate a contract and to blacklist a contractor are distinct and must be exercised independently. Blacklisting, being stigmatic and exclusionary, cannot be imposed mechanistically. It must be preceded by a clear, unambiguous, and specific show cause notice that the proposed punishment is blacklisting, and must comport with the principles of natural justice and reasonableness.

Highlights the Words: termination and blacklisting, logical consequence of a decision of termination, distinct standards, patently infirm, stigmatic and exclusionary in nature, conflated with proceedings for blacklisting, the show cause notice falls short.


9. SYED MOHAMMED GHOUSE PASHA KHADRI V. SYED MOHAMMED ADIL PASHA KHADRI & ORS., 2026 INSC 314

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice M.M. Sundresh and Justice Vipul M. Pancholi | Subject: Muslim Law; Office of Sajjadanashin; Succession; Custom; Evidence

Fact: A dispute arose over succession to the office of Sajjadanashin (spiritual head) of a Dargah. The original Sajjadanashin nominated his grandson (Respondent No. 1) as his successor through a Khilafatnama (Ex. P-72) after his own son (the respondentโ€™s father) predeceased him. The appellant, a younger son of the original Sajjadanashin, claimed the office based on other documents. The Trial Court and First Appellate Court decreed the suit in favour of Respondent No. 1, a decision upheld by the High Court in second appeal.

Issue: Whether the High Court was justified in dismissing the second appeal on the ground that no substantial question of law arose, given the concurrent findings of fact by the courts below regarding the validity of the nomination and the custom governing succession to the office of Sajjadanashin.

Reasoning: The Supreme Court held that the High Courtโ€™s jurisdiction under Section 100 CPC is confined to substantial questions of law. The courts below had concurrently found that the office of Sajjadanashin was hereditary and the incumbent had the authority to nominate a successor. The Khilafatnama (Ex. P-72) was duly proved, and the allegations of interpolation were not substantiated. The documents relied upon by the appellant (a power of attorney and an affidavit) were held to be insufficient to confer the office. The Court reiterated that a power of attorney cannot create succession rights. Since the findings were based on appreciation of evidence and were not perverse, no interference was warranted.

Legal Principles: The office of Sajjadanashin is a spiritual office, distinct from that of a Mutawalli. Succession to such office is governed by custom and usage, which may include nomination by the incumbent. A power of attorney is merely an instrument of agency and cannot transfer ownership or create rights of succession to a religious office. In a second appeal, the High Court cannot re-appreciate evidence unless the findings are perverse or based on no evidence.

Highlights the Words: Sajjadanashin, Jan-Nasheen, Khilafatnama, mere suspicion cannot displace a document, power of attorney cannot operate as a mode of succession, no substantial question of law arose.


10. PUNJAB & SIND BANK V. SH. RAJ KUMAR, 2026 INSC 313

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Satish Chandra Sharma | Subject: Service Law; Disciplinary Proceedings; Quantum of Punishment; Doctrine of Proportionality; Judicial Review

Fact: The respondent, a Senior Bank Manager, was dismissed from service for conniving with a subordinate officer and a gunman to misappropriate customer funds. The co-delinquents were given lesser punishments (compulsory retirement and lowering by two stages). The High Court converted the respondentโ€™s dismissal into compulsory retirement, holding that the punishment was discriminatory and violated Article 14 of the Constitution, as there was no substantial difference in their roles.

Issue: Whether the High Court was justified in interfering with the quantum of punishment (dismissal) and substituting it with compulsory retirement on the ground of parity with co-delinquents who held lower ranks and were given lesser punishments.

Reasoning: The Supreme Court allowed the Bankโ€™s appeal. It held that the High Court erred in equating the respondent, a Senior Manager, with his co-delinquents. Higher the authority, higher the accountability. The respondentโ€™s role carried a greater degree of responsibility, and his failure to supervise constituted a more serious misconduct. The Court reiterated that judicial interference with punishment is warranted only if it is shockingly disproportionate or perverse. The punishment of dismissal for a senior manager involved in financial misappropriation did not shock the conscience of the Court. The principle of parity cannot be applied mechanically without considering the differing roles and responsibilities of the delinquents.

Legal Principles: Courts sitting in judicial review will not normally substitute their own conclusion on the quantum of punishment. Interference is only warranted if the punishment is in outrageous defiance of logic, shocks the conscience of the court, or is disproportionately harsh. The doctrine of parity under Article 14 applies to equals; employees holding different ranks with different levels of responsibility are not similarly situated.

Highlights the Words: higher the authority, higher the accountability, grossly disproportionate, shockingly disproportionate, equating a branch manager with its gunman seems to be in outrageous defiance of logic, the principle of parity.


11. COMMISSIONER, DELHI POLICE & ANR. V. UTTAM KUMAR, 2026 INSC 314

Court: Supreme Court of India | Bench: Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Satish Chandra Sharma | Subject: Service Law; Recruitment; Public Employment; Judicial Review; Laches

Fact: The respondent applied for the post of Constable. He was scheduled for the Physical Endurance and Measurement Test (PE&MT) on 14.01.2024 but did not appear, citing cold and fever. He claimed to have submitted three representations seeking a rescheduled date. The advertisement clearly stated the PE&MT schedule was final and unalterable. The CAT directed the authorities to allow him to take the test with the next batch, and the High Court upheld this order.

Issue: Whether a candidate who absents himself from a mandatory stage of a public recruitment process, despite a clear stipulation in the advertisement that the schedule is final, is entitled to a second chance on grounds of ill health.

Reasoning: The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, calling the respondentโ€™s conduct irresponsible. The Court noted that out of nearly a lakh of aspirants, only the respondent sought a reschedule. His illness was not so severe that he could not even report for the test. The Court held that by not showing up, he forfeited his chance. The stipulation in the advertisement was binding. The CAT and High Court erred in granting relief based on unresponded-to representations, as no enforceable right was created. The Court rejected the argument that his backward community status should tilt the scales, stating that grace, charity, or compassion ought to stay at a distance in public employment matters to ensure a fair playing field.

Legal Principles: The terms of a public recruitment advertisement are binding. A candidate who fails to comply with a mandatory condition, such as appearing for a test on a specified date, cannot claim a right to be accommodated later. Courts must exercise restraint in granting relief to candidates who display a lack of initiative and tardy conduct, especially when it prejudices other candidates who followed the rules.

Highlights the Words: irresponsible, frittered away a golden opportunity, public employment is scarce, lacking in drive and initiative, the stakes are high, grace, charity or compassion ought to stay at a distance.


Core Conceptual Spine of the Digest

Abuse of Process and Finality of Proceedings

  • Abuse of Process of Court
  • Res Judicata
  • Finality of Litigation

Cluster Links:

  • Connects to Abandonment of Proceedings โ†’ Rajiv Gaddh v. Subodh Parkash (2026 INSC 302)
  • Connects to Fresh Cause of Action (negated)
  • Connects to Writ against SCN (exceptional interference) โ†’ J. Sri Nisha v. ED (2026 INSC 309)
  • Connects to Concurrent Proceedings & Jurisdictional Discipline

Procedural Bars and Threshold Doctrines

Cognizance and Sanction

  • Cognizance
  • Sanction for Prosecution

Cluster Links:

  • Time of cognizance determines legality โ†’ Samarendra Nath Kundu v. Sadhana Das (2026 INSC 304)
  • Links to Jurisdictional Bars
  • Links to Protection of Public Servants vs Accountability

Maintainability and Procedural Remedies

  • Order IX Rule XIII CPC
  • Appeal vs Recall Jurisdiction

Cluster Links:

  • Wider scope than appeal โ†’ Deepesh Maheswari v. Renu Maheswari (2026 INSC 306)
  • Links to Natural Justice
  • Links to Legal Incapacity (Minorโ€™s Rights)

Natural Justice and Fair Procedure

Audi Alteram Partem and Evidentiary Fairness

  • Principles of Natural Justice
  • Right to Cross-Examination

Cluster Links:

  • Mandatory oral enquiry when charges denied โ†’ Jai Prakash Saini v. U.P. Cooperative Federation (2026 INSC 305)
  • Separate notice requirement in punitive consequences โ†’ AKG Construction v. State of Jharkhand (2026 INSC 312)
  • Links to Burden of Proof in Departmental Proceedings
  • Links to Procedural Fairness vs Administrative Efficiency

Notice, Hearing, and Civil Consequences

  • Show Cause Notice
  • Blacklisting

Cluster Links:

  • Blacklisting โ‰  automatic consequence of termination โ†’ AKG Construction case
  • Links to Stigmatic Orders and Future Civil Disabilities
  • Links to Proportionality Doctrine

Substantive Fairness and Judicial Review

Doctrine of Proportionality

  • Doctrine of Proportionality

Cluster Links:

  • Limited interference with punishment โ†’ Punjab & Sind Bank v. Raj Kumar (2026 INSC 313)
  • Links to Article 14 Equality Doctrine
  • Links to Hierarchy-based Accountability (โ€œhigher the authority, higher the accountabilityโ€)

Judicial Restraint in Administrative Matters

  • Judicial Review
  • Laches

Cluster Links:

  • Courts should not create rights contrary to rules โ†’ Commissioner of Delhi Police v. Uttam Kumar (2026 INSC 314)
  • Links to Binding Nature of Recruitment Rules
  • Links to Equality of Opportunity in Public Employment

Specialized Doctrinal Clusters

Arbitration and Procedural Discipline

  • Arbitration Agreement
  • Section 11 Arbitration Act

Cluster Links:

  • Limited scope but subject to procedural bars โ†’ Rajiv Gaddh case
  • Links to Res Judicata
  • Links to Abandonment = waiver of rights

Economic Law and Regulatory Coherence

  • FEMA Adjudication
  • Concurrent Proceedings

Cluster Links:

  • Findings in one proceeding affect another โ†’ J. Sri Nisha case
  • Links to Jurisdictional Error
  • Links to Appellate Hierarchy Discipline

Service Law and Employment Governance

  • MACP Scheme
  • Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU)

Cluster Links:

  • Plain meaning rule โ†’ Union of India v. Sunil Kumar Rai (2026 INSC 311)
  • Links to Statutory Interpretation (Literal Rule)
  • Links to Administrative Non-Arbitrariness

Criminal Law: Bail and Post-Grant Conduct

  • Bail Conditions
  • Cancellation of Bail

Cluster Links:

  • Violation of undertakings โ†’ Satinder Singh Bhasin v. NCT Delhi (2026 INSC 310)
  • Links to Good Faith vs Bad Faith Conduct
  • Links to Restitutionary Justice for Victims

Personal Law and Evidentiary Limits

  • Customary Succession
  • Substantial Question of Law

Cluster Links:

  • No reappreciation of facts โ†’ Syed Mohammed Ghouse Pasha Khadri v. Adil Pasha Khadri (2026 INSC 314)
  • Links to Evidentiary Finality
  • Links to Limits of Second Appeal Jurisdiction

Cross-Cutting Meta-Connections

Procedural Integrity vs Substantive Justice

  • Abuse of process โ†” Natural justice โ†” Judicial restraint
  • Seen across: Rajiv Gaddh, Sri Nisha, AKG Construction

Stage-Specific Legality

  • Cognizance stage โ†’ Samarendra Kundu
  • SCN stage โ†’ Sri Nisha
  • Enquiry stage โ†’ Jai Prakash Saini

Rights vs Conduct

  • Clean hands doctrine (implicit) connects:
    • Bail violation (Bhasin)
    • Recruitment negligence (Uttam Kumar)
    • Arbitration abandonment (Rajiv Gaddh)

Formalism vs Equity

  • Strict rules prevail in:
    • Public employment (Uttam Kumar)
    • Sanction law (Kundu)
  • Equity allowed in:
    • Minor protection (Deepesh Maheswari)

Network Summary (Conceptual Flow)

Entry Nodes

  • Natural Justice
  • Abuse of Process
  • Judicial Review
  • Rule of Law

Middle Nodes (Intersections)

  • Proportionality
  • Procedural Bars
  • Evidentiary Burden

Exit Nodes (Doctrinal Outcomes)

  • Dismissal / Punishment Upheld
  • Proceedings Quashed / Revived
  • Rights Recognized or Denied

This Sarvarthapedia-style network shows that the entire digest converges on a single structural idea:
law as a system of stage-sensitive procedural discipline constrained by fairness, and guarded against abuse.


Tags: 4th April ARBITRATION Supreme Court Daily Digest

Post navigation

Previous: Rule of Law vs Rule by Law and Rule for Law: History, Meaning, and Global Evolution
Next: Americaโ€™s Defence Preparedness in April 2026: Hypersonic Missiles, Iran War, and Defense Strategy
Communism
Sarvarthapedia

Manifesto of the Communist Party 1848: History, Context, and Core Concepts

Arrest
Sarvarthapedia

Latin Maxims in Criminal Law: Meaning, Usage, and Courtroom Application

Abolition of Slave Trade Act 1807: Facts, Enforcement, and Historical Context

British Slavery and the Church of England: History, Theology, and the Codrington Estates

United States of America: History, Government, Economy, and Global Power

Biblical Basis for Slavery: Old and New Testament Laws, Narratives, and Interpretations

Rule of Law vs Rule by Law and Rule for Law: History, Meaning, and Global Evolution

IPS Cadre Strength 2025: State-wise Authorised Strength

Uric Acid: From 18th Century Discovery to Modern Medical Science

Christian Approaches to Interfaith Dialogue: Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant, and Pentecostal Views

Origin of Central Banking in India: From Hastings to RBI and the History of Preparatory Years (1773โ€“1934)

Howrah District Environment Plan: Waste Management, Water Quality & Wetland Conservation

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023: Sections (1-358), Punishments, and Legal Framework

Bengali Food Culture: History, Traditions, and Class Influences

  • Sarvarthapedia

  • Delhi Law Digest

  • Howrah Law Journal

  • Amit Aryaย vs Kamlesh Kumari:ย Doctrine of merger
  • David Vs. Kuruppampady: SLP against rejecting review by HC (2020)
  • Nazim & Ors. v. State of Uttarakhand (2025 INSC 1184)
  • Geeta v. Ajay: Expense for daughter`s marriage allowed in favour of the wife
  • Ram v. Sukhram: Tribal women’s right in ancestral property [2025] 8 SCR 272
  • Naresh vs Aarti: Cheque Bouncing Complaint Filed by POA (02/01/2025)
  • Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita 2023 (BNSS)
  • Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam 2023 (BSA): Indian Rules for Evidence
  • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023
  • The Code of Civil Procedure (CPC)
  • Supreme Court Daily Digest
  • U.S. Supreme Court Orders
  • U.k. Supreme Court Orders
United Kingdom, UK

Abolition of Slave Trade Act 1807: Facts, Enforcement, and Historical Context

British Slavery and the Church of England: History, Theology, and the Codrington Estates

British Slavery and the Church of England: History, Theology, and the Codrington Estates

USA, America

United States of America: History, Government, Economy, and Global Power

Biblical Basis for Slavery, english slave trade

Biblical Basis for Slavery: Old and New Testament Laws, Narratives, and Interpretations

2026 ยฉ Advocatetanmoy Law Library

  • About
  • Global Index
  • Judicial Examinations
  • Indian Statutes
  • Glossary
  • Legal Eagle
  • Subject Guide
  • Journal
  • SCCN
  • Constitutions
  • Legal Brief (SC)
  • MCQs (Indian Laws)
  • Sarvarthapedia (Articles)
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • FAQs
  • Library Updates