RANA PRATAP CHAND vs MITHILESH CHAND — 43/2026
Case under Code of Civil Procedure Section 24. Disposed: Contested--Rejected on 25th March 2026.
Misc. Civil Cases
CNR: UPGK010011192026
Filing Number
101/2026
Filing Date
10-Feb-2026
Registration No
43/2026
Registration Date
10-Feb-2026
Court
District and Session Judge
Judge
1-District and Sessions Judge
Decision Date
25-Mar-2026
Nature of Disposal
Contested--Rejected
Last updated 24-Apr-2026
Acts & Sections
Petitioner(s)
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1.RANA PRATAP CHAND
Adv. CHATURBHUJ SHUKLA
Respondent(s)
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1.MITHILESH CHAND
Case History
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Case disposedDisposed
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25-Mar-2026
OrderView PDF
The District Judge of Gorakhpur rejected the applicant Rana Pratap Chand's transfer petition filed under CPC Section 24, dismissing his request to transfer the original suit (No. 932/2022) from the Civil Judge (Junior Division) at Bansiganj, Gorakhpur to another competent court. The court found that while the applicant cited his chronic illness (heart disease, diabetes, BP) and distance from the court as grounds for transfer, these reasons were insufficient and legally untenable, and the case could proceed through his advocate or via video conferencing. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
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25-Mar-2026
Disposed
District and Sessions Judge
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24-Mar-2026
Order/Disposal
District and Sessions Judge
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10-Mar-2026
Hearing
District and Sessions Judge
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24-Feb-2026
Hearing
District and Sessions Judge
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21-Feb-2026
Hearing
District and Sessions Judge
-
10-Feb-2026
First hearing
Initial hearing scheduled
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10-Feb-2026
Case filed
Registration No. 43/2026
The District Judge of Gorakhpur rejected the applicant Rana Pratap Chand's transfer petition filed under CPC Section 24, dismissing his request to transfer the original suit (No. 932/2022) from the Civil Judge (Junior Division) at Bansiganj, Gorakhpur to another competent court. The court found that while the applicant cited his chronic illness (heart disease, diabetes, BP) and distance from the court as grounds for transfer, these reasons were insufficient and legally untenable, and the case could proceed through his advocate or via video conferencing. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
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