Wednesday, 23 January 2013

No interlocutory injunction can be granted unless it is in aid of a substantive relief


All that could then be filed, therefore, would be a bare 

suit for injunction restraining another party from parting with 
property.  The interlocutory relief would also be identical till 
such time as the injunction is made permanent.  Such a suit 
would  not  be  maintainable  because  :-  (a)  an  interlocutory 
injunction can only be granted depending on the institutional 
progress  of  some  proceeding  for  substantial  relief,  the 
injunction itself must be part of the substantive relief to which 
the plaintiff’s cause of action entitles him.  In support of this 
proposition, he relies on  Siskina  (Cargo Owners) Vs.  Distos

    Compania Navieria SA
1979 AC 210
   , Fourie Vs.     Le Roux
2007 (1) WLR 320; 2007 (1) All ER 1087
    and Adhunik
Steels Ltd. Vs.     Orissa Manganese and Minerals Pvt. Ltd.
 2007 (7) SCC 125 at 136
   ; 
(b) the cause of action for any suit must entitle a party for a 
substantive  relief.  Since the substantive relief can not be 
asked for as the dispute is to be decided by the arbitrator, the 
only relief that could be asked for would be to safeguard a 
property which the plaintiff may or may not be entitled to 
proceed against, depending entirely on the outcome of another 
proceeding, in another jurisdiction, or which the country has 
no seisin; (c) in such a suit, there would be no pre-existing 

right to give rise to a cause of action but the right is only 
contingent / speculative and in the absence of an existing / 
subsisting cause of action, a suit can not be filed; (d) the 
absence  of  an existing  / subsisting cause of action  would 
entail the plaint in such a suit to be rejected under Order VII 
Rule 11a.  Further, no interlocutory injunction can be granted 
unless it is in aid of a substantive relief and therefore a suit 
simply praying for an injunction would also be liable to be 
rejected under Order VII Rule 11; (e) no interim relief can be 
granted unless it is in aid of and ancillary to the main relief 
that may be available to the party on final determination of 
rights in a suit.  Learned counsel refers to State of Orissa Vs. 
    Madan Gopal Rungta 1952(1) SCR 28

    in support of the submission; (f) such 
a suit would be really in the nature of a suit for interim relief 
pending an entirely different proceeding.  It is settled law that 
by an interim order, the Court would not grant final relief. 
The nature of such a suit would be to grant a final order that 
would in fact be in the nature of an interim order.

http://supremecourtofindia.nic.in/outtoday/ac701905p.pdf

(20129 SCC 552.


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