Supriya Suresh Bhoir vs Nil — 2/2026
Case under Indian Succession Act Section 370. Disposed: Uncontested--ALLOWED OTHERWISE on 24th March 2026.
Civil M.A. - Civil Misc. Application
CNR: MHRG090000562026
e-Filing Number
10-01-2026
Filing Number
4/2026
Filing Date
13-01-2026
Registration No
2/2026
Registration Date
13-01-2026
Court
Civil Judge, J.D. and J.M.F.C., Roha
Judge
1-C.J.J.D. J.M.F.C Roha
Decision Date
24th March 2026
Nature of Disposal
Uncontested--ALLOWED OTHERWISE
Acts & Sections
Petitioner(s)
Supriya Suresh Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Shubham Suresh Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Sujay Suresh Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Sarvesh Suresh Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Satyam Suresh Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Anusaya Bhiku Urf Bhikaji Bhoir
Adv. GHAYLE MAHESH YASHWANT
Respondent(s)
Nil
Hearing History
Judge: 1-C.J.J.D. J.M.F.C Roha
Disposed
Arguments
Arguments
Proclomation
| Date | Purpose | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 24-03-2026 | Disposed | |
| 10-03-2026 | Arguments | |
| 05-03-2026 | Arguments | |
| 13-01-2026 | Proclomation |
Final Orders / Judgements
Summary: The Civil Judge at Roha granted a Succession Certificate under Section 372 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, to the wife and four children of deceased Suresh Bhikaji Bhoir (along with his mother) to claim Rs. 80,000 deposited in his HDFC Bank account. The court found the applicants to be Class-I heirs with valid documentation (death certificate, bank account extract, and identity proofs), no objections were raised despite public notice, and the deceased was domiciled within the court's jurisdiction, thus permitting issuance of the certificate upon payment of requisite court fees. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
Summary: The Civil Judge at Roha granted a Succession Certificate under Section 372 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, to the wife and four children of deceased Suresh Bhikaji Bhoir (along with his mother) to claim Rs. 80,000 deposited in his HDFC Bank account. The court found the applicants to be Class-I heirs with valid documentation (death certificate, bank account extract, and identity proofs), no objections were raised despite public notice, and the deceased was domiciled within the court's jurisdiction, thus permitting issuance of the certificate upon payment of requisite court fees. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
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