Government of Gujarat vs EBRAHIMSA SALIMSA BANVA — 625/2024
Case under Gujarat (bombay) Prohibition Act, 1949 Section 66(1)(B). Disposed: Uncontested--DISPOSED OF on 14th March 2026.
CC - CRIMINAL CASE
CNR: GJJN060009012024
e-Filing Number
-
Filing Number
625/2024
Filing Date
06-08-2024
Registration No
625/2024
Registration Date
06-08-2024
Court
TALUKA COURT, MALIA
Judge
1-PRINCIPAL CIVIL JUDGE & J.M.F.C
Decision Date
14th March 2026
Nature of Disposal
Uncontested--DISPOSED OF
Acts & Sections
Petitioner(s)
Government of Gujarat
Adv. APP
Respondent(s)
EBRAHIMSA SALIMSA BANVA
Hearing History
Judge: 1-PRINCIPAL CIVIL JUDGE & J.M.F.C
Disposed
WARRANT OF ARREST
WARRANT OF ARREST
WARRANT OF ARREST
WARRANT OF ARREST
| Date | Purpose | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 14-03-2026 | Disposed | |
| 13-03-2026 | WARRANT OF ARREST | |
| 06-03-2026 | WARRANT OF ARREST | |
| 04-02-2026 | WARRANT OF ARREST | |
| 12-12-2025 | WARRANT OF ARREST |
Final Orders / Judgements
Summary: The court discharged the accused under Section 281 of the Indian Code of Criminal Procedure, finding the case to be a "dead stock" matter with no reasonable prospects of prosecution. The court held that despite the accused being at large for an extended period, the prosecution failed to present the accused in court or provide any valid justification, making further proceedings unjustifiable and burdensome to the courts. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
Summary: The court discharged the accused under Section 281 of the Indian Code of Criminal Procedure, finding the case to be a "dead stock" matter with no reasonable prospects of prosecution. The court held that despite the accused being at large for an extended period, the prosecution failed to present the accused in court or provide any valid justification, making further proceedings unjustifiable and burdensome to the courts. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
Browse Related Cases
Explore other courts