Case Law
Subject : Civil Procedure - Pleadings
JABALPUR: The High Court of Madhya Pradesh has permitted a petitioner to amend the memo of parties to correct a typographical error, emphasizing the court's pragmatic approach to procedural mistakes, especially at the pre-notice stage. The order was passed in the case of Maha Veer Jain vs The State of Madhya Pradesh.
The petitioner, Maha Veer Jain, filed an application in Writ Petition No. 14534 of 2025, seeking to correct a mistake in the list of parties. It was submitted to the court that due to a typographical error, the "Collector, Morena" had been incorrectly identified as the "Collector, Datia" in the petition's memo of parties.
The High Court took a lenient view of the error, noting a crucial procedural point: notice had not yet been issued to the respondents in the main writ petition. The bench observed that since the proceedings were at a nascent stage, allowing the correction would prevent future complications and ensure the correct parties were impleaded.
The court stated, "Since notice is not yet issued in the petition, application is allowed."
Consequently, the High Court directed the petitioner to: 1. File an amended memo of parties within one week. 2. Incorporate the necessary correction in the main petition within the same one-week timeframe.
The court ruled that formal notice would be issued to the respondents only after the petitioner files the corrected documents. The order also noted that counsel for several respondents had already accepted notice.
The High Court has scheduled this case to be heard along with a related matter, Writ Petition No. 5599/2021, and has directed the respondents to file their counter-affidavits within four weeks. This procedural order underscores the principle that clerical errors in pleadings can be rectified without prejudice to the opposing party, particularly before the formal commencement of arguments.
#CivilProcedure #MemoOfParties #MadhyaPradeshHC
S.138 NI Act Not Attracted Without Endorsement of Part Payments on Cheque: Kerala High Court
02 May 2026
High Courts Can't Act as Appellate Courts Under Article 227: Supreme Court Restores Executing Court's Valuation
02 May 2026
Status of Property as Joint or Partitioned is Triable Issue, Plaint Can't Be Rejected Under Order VII Rule 11 CPC: J&K&L High Court
02 May 2026
Quashing SC/ST Atrocities Proceedings Post-Compromise and Reformative Education Allowed: Madras HC Madurai Bench
02 May 2026
Rehab Land Allotment Without Verification of Entitlement is Invalid; Fraud Renders Orders Null: Bombay High Court
02 May 2026
Repair Permissions Don't Prove Structure Existed Before 1962 Datum Line: Bombay High Court
02 May 2026
Gujarat HC Warns Police of Contempt for Ignoring SC Noise Pollution Directives: Strict 10 PM-6 AM Loudspeaker Ban
02 May 2026
Regular Congregational Prayers on Private Land Not Absolute Right, Subject to Regulation: Allahabad High Court
02 May 2026
Co-Convict on Parole No Bar to Furlough for Life Convict Seeking Daughter's School Admission: Delhi High Court
02 May 2026
Unsigned Employment Contract Can Determine Notional Income in Motor Claims: Bombay High Court
02 May 2026
Login now and unlock free premium legal research
Login to SupremeToday AI and access free legal analysis, AI highlights, and smart tools.
Login
now!
India’s Legal research and Law Firm App, Download now!
Copyright © 2023 Vikas Info Solution Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved.