Certified Copies and Execution of Decrees
Subject : Civil Law - Civil Procedure
In a crisp procedural ruling, the Kerala High Court has nudged a lower court toward timely compliance, ensuring that litigants do not remain trapped between an undrawn decree and stalled execution proceedings. Justice Basant Balaji disposed of an original petition seeking directions for the prompt preparation of a decree in a long-pending appeal, offering clear guidance on certified copies and execution stays.
The dispute traces back to O.S. No. 416 of 2013 before the Munsiff Court, Thalassery, which culminated in a decree dated 30 October 2019. Respondent M.K. Shaji preferred an appeal (A.S. No. 12 of 2024) accompanied by a delay condonation application (I.A. No. 2 of 2024). The appeal was disposed of on 16 November 2024, yet the decree formalities apparently remained incomplete. Petitioner Cheriyakaran Bindu approached the High Court through OP(C) No. 802 of 2025, seeking a direction to the Principal Sub Court, Thalassery, to draw up the decree so that execution could proceed smoothly.
The petitioner essentially complained that despite the disposal of the appeal, the lower court had not prepared the decree, hampering her ability to enforce the underlying decree. On the other side, the respondent’s stand was implicit in the earlier delay condonation proceedings. The High Court did not dwell on lengthy factual contests; instead, it focused on the administrative lapse that had arisen after the appeal order.
The High Court first called for a status report on the certified copy application. It noted that a copy application had already been filed and processed in respect of the connected interlocutory order. Importantly, another application (Ext.P6) seeking the appeal judgment and decree had been returned with the remark that “A.S. No. 12 of 2024 is not decreed.” This administrative snag prompted the following clarification from the Bench.
Justice Basant Balaji minced no words in directing the lower court:
> “The Court below was directed to verify as to whether any order is passed in the appeal after Ext.P5 order is passed. If the appeal itself is dismissed as consequential to Ext.P5 and application is filed for getting the certified copy of the judgment, the same shall be issued without delay.”
The Court further observed:
> “If the application is pending as on today, the execution proceedings shall be kept in abeyance till the certified copy is issued.”
These observations underscore the High Court’s emphasis on administrative efficiency while protecting the interests of both parties during the transition from appeal disposal to execution.
Disposing of the original petition, the High Court left it open for the Principal Sub Court, Thalassery, either to issue the certified copy of the appeal judgment and decree without delay (if the appeal stood dismissed) or to maintain the status quo on execution proceedings until the copy is furnished. The ruling sends a clear administrative signal: once an appeal is disposed of, decree formalities and certified copies must follow expeditiously, lest execution be frozen in the interim.
This measured intervention is likely to encourage lower courts across the state to tighten their decree-drawing processes and respond swiftly to copy applications, thereby reducing the friction that often stalls successful litigants from reaping the fruits of their decrees.
View the social posts created for this story.
decree preparation delays - copy application handling - execution abeyance orders - appeal status verification - lower court compliance - procedural directions - judgment finalization
#KeralaHighCourt #CivilProcedure
Kerala High Court Adopts Calcutta Child Custody Guidelines
02 Jun 2026
High Court Upholds Acquittal in Murder Case Citing Tainted Investigation and Ante-Dated FIR
03 Jun 2026
Incorrect Statutory Provision in Bail Appeal Does Not Bar Substantive Rights: Punjab and Haryana HC Grants Bail in UAPA Case
03 Jun 2026
Merit Prevails: Rajasthan HC Protects Meritorious Candidates in Teacher Recruitment, Orders Institutional SOPs
03 Jun 2026
Broadcaster Liable for Defamatory Content if Editorial Control Exists Despite Third-Party Origin: Madras High Court
08 Jun 2026
Delhi Court Denies Bail to Cook in Hotel Fire
09 Jun 2026
Allegations of Unfair Means in Recruitment Are Serious, Cannot Quash FIR Under Section 528 BNSS: Rajasthan High Court
09 Jun 2026
Aerial Right of Way for Transmission Lines Vests with State; Individual Compensation Claims Rejected: J&K&L High Court
09 Jun 2026
Sikkim High Court Mandates Disclosure of Recruitment Exam Merit Lists Subject to No-Social-Media-Publication Undertaking
09 Jun 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.