Can High Court Dismiss a Second Appeal for Non-Compliance of Office Objections and Non-Payment of Costs? — Karnataka HC
Quick Facts
Case Title: Kamalamma & Another v. Honnappaji
Decision Date: 11-07-2025
Court: High Court of Karnataka, Bengaluru
Judge: Hon’ble Mr. Justice H.P. Sandesh
Appeal Under: Section 100 CPC (Regular Second Appeal No.1024 of 2022)
Procedural Issue: Dismissal for non-payment of costs (₹500) and non-compliance of office objections
Outcome: Appeal dismissed for non-compliance
Practical Impact
BINDING ON: All subordinate courts and benches of Karnataka HC
PERSUASIVE FOR: Other High Courts grappling with procedural dismissals
OVERRULES: None
DISTINGUISHES: N.A.
FOLLOWS: Established CPC provisions on costs & compliance
Metadata Summary
Bench: Single-Judge (Justice H.P. Sandesh)
Citation: NC:2025:KHC:25434
Precedent Value: Binding in Karnataka; persuasive elsewhere
Type of Law: Civil Procedure
Questions of Law:
Can non-payment of court-fixed costs and failure to comply with office objections warrant summary dismissal?
Scope of inherent and CPC powers to enforce procedural rules.
What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note
Reinforces that High Courts may invoke Section 100 CPC read with their inherent powers to strike off appeals for procedural default.
Courts need not await a substantive hearing where costs are unpaid and office objections remain unaddressed.
Advocates must strictly adhere to cost orders and office requirements or risk summary disposal.
Summary of Legal Reasoning
Section 100 CPC empowers High Courts to hear second appeals, but non-compliance with preliminary requirements (cost payment; office objections) invites exercise of inherent power to dismiss.
Judicial discipline and docket management justify dismissal without entering merits.
No need for elaborate inquiry into case substance where appellant fails to satisfy preconditions.
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