Vishnu Traders
v.
State Of Haryana And Others
(Supreme Court Of India)
Special Leave to Petition (Civil) No. 17110-11 Of 1993 | 02-11-1993
2. The grievance of the petitioner is that the conditions for grant of stay vary widely from Bench to Bench in the High Court and that while in an earlier case CWP No. 6074 of 1993 and connected cases, a Division Bench had ordered unconditional stay on 17-6-1993 and continued the same order on 7-9-1993, in the present case the Bench had imposed a condition of payment of 25 per cent of the demand
3. In the matters of interlocutory orders, principle of binding precedents cannot be said to apply. However, the need for consistency of approach and uniformity in the exercise of judicial discretion respecting similar causes and the desirability to eliminate occasions for grievances of discriminatory treatment requires that all similar matters should receive similar treatment except where factual differences require a different treatment so that there is assurance of consistency, uniformity, predictability and certainty of judicial approach
4, We set aside the order under appeal. There will be an interim stay for eight weeks. It is submitted that the matters are listed for final hearing on 30-11-1993. If the matters are not disposed of before eight weeks, petitioners may seek further stay and the prayer in that behalf be listed before the appropriate Bench. The Chief Justice of the High Court will list all similar and connected matters before some specific Bench whichever it might be
5. The special leave petitions are finally disposed of accordingly.
Advocates List
For
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE JUSTICE M. N. VENKATACHALIAH (CJI)
HON'BLE JUSTICE S. MOHAN
Eq Citation
(1995) SUPPL. 1 SCC 461
LQ/SC/1993/954
HeadNote
Constitution of India — Art. 136 — Stay — Variation in conditions for grant of stay from Bench to Bench in High Court — Unconditional stay granted in earlier case — In present case, condition of payment of 25% of demand imposed — Held, in matters of interlocutory orders, principle of binding precedents cannot be said to apply — However, need for consistency of approach and uniformity in exercise of judicial discretion respecting similar causes and desirability to eliminate occasions for grievances of discriminatory treatment requires that all similar matters should receive similar treatment except where factual differences require a different treatment so that there is assurance of consistency, uniformity, predictability and certainty of judicial approach — Chief Justice of High Court to list all similar and connected matters before some specific Bench — Central Excise — Stay