GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI vs SUMANJIT KAUR . — C.A. No. 5488/2007

Case under Section XIV-A. Status: Disposed.

Disposed

CNR: SCIN010168412006

Filing Date

05-Jul-2006

Registration No

C.A. No. 5488/2007

Diary Number

16841/2006

Order Date

03-Jun-2010

Document Type

ROP - of Main Case

Disposal Type

Disposed Off

Last updated 29-Jun-2026

Acts & Sections

Section XIV-A

Petitioner(s)

  1. 1.GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI

    Adv. ANIL KATIYAR

Respondent(s)

  1. 1.SUMANJIT KAUR .

Case History

  1. Case disposedDisposed

  2. 03-Jun-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  3. 02-Jun-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  4. 01-Jun-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  5. 31-May-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  6. 26-May-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  7. 25-May-2010

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  8. 02-Dec-2009

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  9. 18-Aug-2009

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  10. 16-May-2008

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  11. 26-Nov-2007

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  12. 25-Sep-2007

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  13. 29-Aug-2007

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  14. 14-May-2007

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  15. 02-May-2007

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  16. 24-Nov-2006

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  17. 18-Sep-2006

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  18. 05-Jul-2006

    Case filed

    Registration No. C.A. No. 5488/2007

casestatus.in Summary

Summary of C.A. No. 5488/2007 The Supreme Court disposed of Delhi Government's appeal concerning salary disputes at Khalsa Middle School by recording a settlement agreement between parties. The school management agreed to implement government reservation policy by advertising and filling vacant positions (including OBC and SC reserved posts); the government committed to expeditiously releasing grant-in-aid once vacancies are filled. The appeal was disposed with no costs awarded. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

Explore other courts

Search Another Case