INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 1 (1) vs CHARU BATRA — SLP(C) No. 20087/2026
Case under Direct Taxation : Income Tax Act, 1961, Wealth Tax Act, 1957, Gift Tax Act, 1958, Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940, Business Profit Tax Act, 1947 [Other Than Matters Covered by Categories 1602-1605] Section IV-B. Status: Disposed.
CNR: SCIN010124142026
Filing Date
25-Feb-2026
Registration No
SLP(C) No. 20087/2026
Diary Number
12414/2026
Order Date
15-May-2026
Document Type
ROP - of Main Case
Disposal Type
Delay Condoned and matter dismissed(including all pending Ias)
Last updated 14-Jun-2026
Acts & Sections
Petitioner(s)
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1.INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 1 (1)
Adv. SUDARSHAN LAMBA
Respondent(s)
-
1.CHARU BATRA
Case History
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Case disposedDisposed
-
15-May-2026
Fresh
Hon'ble The Chief Justice and Hon'ble Mr. Justice Joymalya Bagchi
-
25-Feb-2026
Case filed
Registration No. SLP(C) No. 20087/2026
Common Record of Proceedings — heard with connected matters
Lead cases: SLP(C) No.; W.P.(C) No.
Summary: Supreme Court of India Hearing Records This document contains three Supreme Court hearing records from April-May 2026: 1. PIL-W Case (Keshav Jindal vs Registrar, Supreme Court) - Justice Alok Aradhe presided. Out of 328 consolidated diary petitions, the court granted permission to withdraw 11 specific matters, dismissing them as withdrawn. For the remaining matters, the court granted 8 weeks to cure procedural defects, failing which they will be dismissed without further reference. 2. Miscellaneous Applications (Union of India vs Ravi Kumar Gupta) - Justice Atul S. Chandurkar presided. The court dismissed 10 petitions as withdrawn. Additionally, one petition (Diary No. 70147/2025) was disposed as infructuous due to subsequent events. For the remaining matters from a batch of 372 cases, the court again granted 8 weeks to cure defects before dismissal. 3. Miscellaneous Application (Venkatrao vs Deputy Commissioner, Bagalkot) - Justice N.V. Anjaria presided. The court permitted withdrawal of 27 specific petitions from a large batch of 707 cases. The remaining matters received the standard 8-week extension to cure defects. All three orders follow similar patterns: selective withdrawals are permitted, and remaining matters face dismissal unless procedural compliance is achieved within 8 weeks. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
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