Police duty-bound to implement court orders, says Hyderabad HC

The court had restrained rival claimants from interfering with the possession of land at Hydershakote in Rajendranagar mandal.

Update: 2016-10-22 19:55 GMT
Hyderabad High Court

Hyderabad: The Hyderabad High Court has ruled that it is the duty of the police to obey the order of the court when it has ordered protection to individuals.
Justice M.S. Ramachandra Rao, while saying it was illegal of the Cyberabad police to not provide police protection to the petitioners, noted: “It  is settled  law that  police aid to enforce the orders of injunction can be granted not only by the civil court in exercise of its power  under Section  151  CrPC  but also under Article 226 of the Constitution by this court.”

The judge was allowing a petition by Ms A. Bharathi and others challenging the inaction of the police in    providing  police aid to implement an order granted in their favour on September 24, 2009, by the Second Additional District and Sessions  Judge,  Ranga  Reddy district. The court had restrained rival claimants from   interfering with the possession of land at Hydershakote in Rajendranagar mandal.

Directing the police to provide aid to the petitioners, the judge relied on a previous High Court judgement in Satyanara-yana Tiwari  v Station House Officer of  Santhosh-nagar Police Station, which stated: “No authority  in  the  state,  revenue  or  police,  can  ignore  the  finding  of  the  civil  court  or  refuse  to  take  steps  to  see  that  the  order  of  the  civil  court  is  implemented  and  the  party,  in  whose favour there is the order of the civil court, gets all help to maintain  the  law  and  order  and  not  allow  the  other  party  to  contravene the injunction order and create law and order problem.”

The judge pointed out that the lower court had held that the petitioners had prima facie right and title in the property, and that rival claimants did not have any document. The rival claimants entered the premises, put up notice boards and tried to dig a borewell on the land.

The judge noted that as the police did not provide aid to the petitioners, the rival claimants had entered the land. Allowing the case of the petitioners, Justice Rama-chandra Rao directed the rival claimants to pay Rs 10, 000 as costs to the petitioners.

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