amahesh wrote:GFWA had filed a legal petition several months ago against the EDC/IDC hike.
Can anyone please share if there has been any decision on it.
Food for Thought
What’s after the High Court verdict is once out? Does the buck stop here? If we lose in the litigation, shall we file any appeal or accept the verdict? Perhaps majority of us would prefer to go for an Appeal in the higher forum, since we cannot abandon the struggle halfway. Same logic also applies to the HUDA, Haryana Govt and Builders also. My point is : High Court is not the last stop and ultimate relief giver. After losing a case in the High Court one may file an Appeal before the Division Bench of the same High Court (if the order is from the Single Bench) or directly before the Supreme Court. Even after losing the case in the Division Bench the party can appeal to the Supreme Court. Even after losing in Supreme Court it can appeal to a larger bench in the Supreme Court. When a Petitioner or Respondent files an Appeal before the Supreme Court challenging the Order of a High Court, alongwith his ‘Petition to Appeal’ he also files a ‘Stay Application’ and gets it registered under the ‘urgent’ category in the Registry of the Supreme Court and gets it listed on priority basis. Then on the very day of admission of the said Appeal, the Supreme Court with the order of issuing the notices to all the parties for filing their Counter Affidavits (replies) also grant ‘stay’ on the operation of the High Court’s Order. After receiving notices, the Respondents then file their Counter Affidavits through their Counsels. Then the Petition also gets a chance to access the copies of the Counter Affidavits and file his ‘Rejoinder’ if any. Thereafter, the Respondents would be asked to file their replies to the said rejoinder. It takes at least six months in civil cases. Then, the matter is listed for argument. Here the Petitioner doesn’t pursue the matter with the Registry of the Court for early listing of the matter, because on the very first day he has got the relief (may be temporary) from the Court, by the way of ‘stay’. It is the Respondent who has to pursue and follow it up. When it is listed for argument, on most of the dates the case is adjourned or left over for the next date of hearing, i.e. after 3-6 months. By this way the case lies pending for several years. In our case, suppose we win (hopes so), then the respondent party (HUDA, Haryana Govt and Builders in this case) may file Appeal in the Supreme Court. For appealing in the Supreme Court we have to raise funds, find a good lawyer and follow it up on a regular basis. But a Government has a battery of lawyers already empanelled in all the Courts through out the Country to file petitions/appeals and monitor the progress. Moreover, the Government Authority has money, patience and manpower to manage the cumbersome and tedious judicial/litigation process of our country, which we don’t have. If the Government manages to obtain a stay order from the Supreme Court (my experience says, in 90% of appeal cases Supreme Court grants the stay), it would have a strong alibi for withholding the work as-is-where-is. Its strong plea would be that the matter is sub judice. Getting the stay vacated in Supreme Court is not an easy task. Hence, even after winning the case in High Court we would still remain as loser. If the litigation lingers for 4-5 years, it would be a severe blow to us. Even if we win the case finally in the Supreme Court most of us would not await for celebrating the same, since in the meantime they would do distress sell of their property at Greater Faridabad for which they have invested their hard earned money so far and dreamt their own home.