City
Epaper

SC likely to recall order extending limitation period for filing court cases

By IANS | Updated: September 23, 2021 17:55 IST

New Delhi, Sep 23 The Supreme Court on Thursday, taking into consideration the improved Covid situation, observed that ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 23 The Supreme Court on Thursday, taking into consideration the improved Covid situation, observed that it would recall its April 27 order, extending the limitation period to file cases, from October 1.

A bench headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana, and comprising Justices L. Nageswara Rao and Surya Kant, said the suo motu extension of limitation period will be withdrawn on October 1, and, after that, the usual limitation period, of 90 days, for filing cases in courts will be restored.

On April 27, the top court, taking into account the second Covid wave, had relaxed the statutory period for filing petitions, including election petitions. On Thursday, the bench, reserving the order, said: "We will pass orders."

Attorney General K.K. Venugopal submitted before the bench that the Covid situation has improved and currently, there was no containment zone in the country, and that the order relaxing the limitation period can be recalled. "If there are any containment zones in Kerala or at some other place, then they can approach the court," he added.

Agreeing with his submission, the Chief Justice said: "I think we can lift the order."

A counsel in the matter contended that the limitation period be extended till the year-end as there was an apprehension of a third Covid wave. Terming this submission pessimistic, the bench quipped: "Please do not invite the third wave."

Senior advocate Vikas Singh, representing the Election Commission, suggested instead of 90 days, 45 days limitation period may be granted for filing election petitions. He added that the statutory period should start running from now, instead of October 1.

The AG said that an exception on limitation period may be carved out for the poll body.

The Election Commission, however, claimed that EVMs and VVPAT machines used in polls of six states Assam, Kerala, Delhi, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal are currently stuck and cannot be used for future elections.

It has contended that the apex court's direction on an extension of limitation period created a situation where it cannot re-use of the EVMs and VVPAT machines in upcoming polls. The poll body argued these machines are lying unused, as they have to be preserved as evidence if there were an election petition in connection with polls, against the backdrop that limitation period is not running against the probable petitioners. The bench noted that if it were to have 90 days benefit now, it might result in litigation in future.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Vikas singhSurya KantSupreme CourtElection Commission
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalKeralam Assembly Election 2026: Polling to Be Held in Single Phase on April 9, Counting of Votes on May 4

NationalTamil Nadu Assembly Election 2026: Voting on April 23, Counting on May 4

NationalWho Is Harish Rana? Man in Coma for 12 Years Gets Right to Die After Supreme Court Order

MumbaiMumbai: Retired Bank Manager, Family Held in ‘Digital Arrest’ for 35 Days; ₹1.83 Crore Lost to Cyber Fraud in Mulund

InternationalDonald Trump's Global Tariffs Illegal : US Supreme Court Deals Major Blow to President

Politics Realted Stories

PoliticsAssam Congress spokespersons circulating forged documents of foreign governments, alleges state BJP

PoliticsKC Venugopal makes cash-distribution allegations against Palakkad BJP candidate, District Collector submits report

Politics"Vote for a Puducherry run by its own people": Rahul Gandhi urges voters to vote for Congress ahead of assembly polls

Politics"Women's perspectives will finally be heard": Sachetataa Foundation President hails Reservation Bill

PoliticsAssam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma slams Congress over 'fabricated documents', targets Pawan Khera